Funeral Liturgy
August 9, 2021
Our brother James Gavin, OFM Cap., passed gently into eternal life in the early hours of Sunday, August 1, 2021.
Brother James was born in Stranooden, County Monaghan, Ireland, on June 8, 1932, the seventh of eleven children born to Joseph and Catherine (Clerkin) Gavin, who worked a ten-acre farm to provide a living for their family. Such was life at that time that James, not unlike his siblings, received the bare minimum of education – grade school only – before leaving school in 1946 to help manage the family farm. Beginning in 1954, he became quite literally a “journeyman laborer”, working variously as a farm hand, cabinet maker and furniture repairman as he began to think of leaving Ireland for North America. On a Monday evening in March 1956, he boarded a ship in Belfast headed for Birmingham, England, where he would spend a year working as a toolmaker and making friends before finally flying to Canada in June, 1957.
It was while working for the Canadian National Railway that James chanced to meet Fr. Raymond Cadwallader, a native of Braddock, PA, and professor at Duquesne University, striking up a friendship that led him at long last to come to Pittsburgh and eventually to the Capuchin friars. James stayed with Father Cadwallader while he found work as a janitor at Mercy Hospital, and then as a technician at Buckley Dental Laboratory in downtown Pittsburgh. For several years James was tutored in American life and history by his priestly friend and patron, who instilled in him a desire to learn and to read that remained with him for the rest of his life. He became a U.S. Citizen on September 17th, 1965.
From his earliest years, James treasured his Catholic faith with an Irish passion, rich and deep. He seldom missed an opportunity to attend Mass and receive communion, often spending hours in the Catholic churches he found along the way as he journeyed to America. He would tell with some pride of how he “took the pledge” to abstain from alcohol at the tender age of 8 – not too early at all according to James’ pious sensibilities. Even as a young lay man his life was filled with moments and experiences of divine providence, and so it must have seemed to him when Father Cadwallader, a Third Order Franciscan of the St. Augustine Fraternity in Lawrenceville, introduced him to our confrere Angelus Shaughnessy, OFM Cap., in 1959. It was the beginning a process of discernment that would lead to his making application to the our Capuchin Province of St. Augustine in 1962.
As a somewhat “older” candidate at that time (30 years of age!) his application process was somewhat extended, but time revealed both James’ determination and the authenticity of his vocation. Inquiries made on his behalf revealed a deeply prayerful man of strong faith, modesty, dependability and charity.
He was invested with the Capuchin habit on February 21, 1964, as Brother Louis, the religious name that he bore faithfully until the friars were allowed to return to their baptismal names four years later in 1968. He professed the gospel counsels of Poverty, Chastity and Obedience on February 22, 1965, vows which he would treasure and observe devotedly for the rest of his life.
James posed a bit of a puzzle to his superiors as far as placing him in an apostolate: he was obviously a diligent worker but little in his curriculum vitae matched up with the more regular array of tasks that the brothers engaged in from day to day. He energetic and dependable, but he was undereducated and often difficult to understand with his rapid and accented brogue. He did poorly in aptitude testing due to his lack of familiarity with American testing methods and procedures that most high-school students would routinely complete. “Stock clerk” and “truck mechanic” showed up as areas of promise, but the results were unreliable because he had misunderstood the instructions for completion. As a result, James was initially engaged in the work of “fraternal service” which could – and did – include all sorts of domestic chores in friary kitchens, laundries and grounds. His earliest assignments kept him in the Pittsburgh area at St. Mary Monastery in Herman and St. Augustine Friary in the Lawrenceville neighborhood before being assigned to assist in maintenance of our novitiate property then found in Annapolis, MD.
But in 1974 what would largely define the rest of his life’s work; he found men and women who needed him. Brother James was assigned to St. Cecilia Parish in Rochester, PA, as a pastoral assistant and began a ministry of being who he was: a person of the people. With the exception of a four-year stint at Capuchin College in Washington, DC from 1983-87, he held assignments that would routinely bring him into contact with believers and non-believers alike from differing cultures, social classes, races and traditions in Whitesville, WV, Baltimore and Philadelphia. To each and all Brother James became a true brother to them, an ambassador of good will and a herald of the Gospel.
Despite his meager formal education, Brother James was a grand master of the human experience: neither age, nor race, nor social standing nor religious affiliation could present an insurmountable barrier to his engaging personality and genuine interest. He was quick to extend welcome and offer assistance, especially to visitors. He knew what it was to be a “pilgrim and stranger,” and to benefit from the kindness of others. His compassionate heart was readily at the service of those who were suffering or struggling: A man of deep feelings, he was able to appreciate the difficulties that people had to wrestle with from day to day, while his prayerful demeanor and deeply spiritual nature provided consolation and valued counsel to troubled souls he encountered. He was a regular recipient of cards, notes and letters expressing pleasure, relief and gratitude at having met him or been the recipient of his efforts and prayers on their behalf. He was a faithful correspondent who could find himself overwhelmed during the holiday season with cards and letters, his responses often running into the summer months.
His years of service at St. Cecilia Parish in Rochester, PA, from 1974 until 1981 earned him recognition from the Father James Reed Council of the Knights of Columbus as Man of the Year in 1985. In July, 2002, Brother James was presented with the National Brotherhood Award at the 31st Religious Brothers Conference in Cambridge, MA. Of his ten years serving at St. John the Evangelist parish in Center City Philadelphia (1993-2013) a friar once remarked: “The Province makes very few ideal assignments, but this was one of them.” The parish saw him as their “ambassador to the world,” known and loved by virtually all who met him at the church doors, outside the church doors and on any of Philly’s streets where he would roam.
James was unflinchingly proud of his Irish heritage and often signed a letter or message as “Brother James of Stranooden,” or “of Ireland”. He kept abreast of international matters with enthusiasm and was always quick to share news from abroad with the friars, both individually and at the friary table during meals
From the day of his profession of vows, James valued above all else fidelity to his vows and to his life of prayer; he pursued these relentlessly. He was a truly humble friar, but he was hardly meek: He had little patience with friars who were slack in their prayer life or anyone who showed disrespect to the Mass or the Church. Few, if any, of the young men who entered Capuchin formation during his time escaped without hearing James admonish them: “If you don’t pray, you don’t stay!” He was ever aware of his own human weaknesses and sins and placed great value upon the Sacrament of Reconciliation, especially when he found it difficult to reconcile his own emotions with perceived slights or wrongdoing by others. Especially in his later years he was much concerned about making amends with family members and anyone whom he feared he may have offended, devoting much effort to peacemaking in his relationships.
Even though he was a man of strong, he worked hard to maintain his humility and not take himself too seriously. He was full of light-hearted quips and scripture quotes that could soften a harsh judgement or sharp remark by others. His Irish wit and brogue provided a balm to many hurts and fears and gained him rapport with rich and poor alike. Like St. Francis, he was willing to be a “fool for Christ” and spared little of himself in order to strengthen the faith, hope and love of others for God.
His long labors eventually took their toll on his health, and in 2013 at 81, he returned to Pittsburgh for a well-earned rest. With His health slowly failing, he soon moved to Vincentian Home in Pittsburgh’s North Hills where he remained until his death. He was seldom short of visitors and well-wishers and continued to cultivate good relationships.
At about 2:15 on the morning of Sunday, August 1st, 2021, James greeted Sister Death peacefully, his many good works having gone before him.
He was predeceased by siblings Edward, Patrick, John, James, Thomas and Susan (Ennis). He is survived by his sisters Mary Gavin of Victoria, Australia, and Kathleen McGarry of County Kildare, Ireland; and by brothers Joseph of Devon, England, and Eugene of Stranooden, Ireland.
________________________________________________________________________
Viewing and Visitation
Sunday, August 8, 2021
7:00 p.m.
St.Augustine Church, OLA Parish
225 37th Street
Pittsburgh (Lawrenceville), PA
A Vigil Service was conducted beginning at 8:00 p.m.
________________________________________________________________________
Funeral Mass of Resurrection
August 9, 2021
10:00 a.m.
St.Augustine Church, OLA Parish
Video is available at our Vimeo Channel.
Burial followed the Mass at Saint Augustine Cemetery
Millvale (Shaler Twshp), PA.
________________________________________________________________________
Memorial donations to honor the life of our brother James
may be made online
to the Capuchin Franciscan Friars
or to the address in the footer below.
This article has been corrected after learning that James' sister Susan (Ennis)
passed to the Lord in April 2021.