Eulogy for my father. He became a Roman Catholic priest three years after our mother died.
That makes me the son of a preacher man.
Father Ernie died on Thanksgiving Day 2001. His funeral was held at Lady of Refuge, in Long Beach, California.
His grandkids had all gone up to present the communion gifts
(wine and hosts) at his funeral mass. Celeste's (our daughter) eyes were swollen and tears
poured down her cheeks as she walked with the rest of the grandkids. A
huge lump was growing in my throat as I watched her crying. So it was
that I walked up to the pulpit to give the eulogy. I fiddled with the
papers until the lump in my throat subsided.
I pulled my shoulders back and looked at the full church. "Let me preface this eulogy by stating that I am a storyteller," I said, to the congregation. "And I never let the facts get in the way of the truth."
I had begun to write our father's eulogy while on the plane
down from Seattle
to Los Angeles.
I was only able to come up with snippets of memories of bygone days. I
asked my siblings to help me out and they, too, gave me more snippets of their
memories of Dad from bygone days. How can I honor our father at his
funeral with only snippets? How can I condense the meaning of his life
for us into a few minutes? This was becoming a daunting task for a son
who was grieving for his father.
It was the night before the funeral and the eulogy was not
yet complete, much less meaningful. I asked my father, as I went to
sleep, to help me out. Now, my father was a morning person, whereas the
rest of the Montoyas are night people. So, of course, my father woke me
up at 5:00 am with
information I did not know.
Many of you considered him as an angel. And I found out that he really was an angel. He told me (at 5am in the early morning) that he used to be an angel in heaven. Not only that, but he was a special angel. He was an accountant angel. One day he asked God to make him human so that he could come down here and help people and maybe even become a priest.
Many of you considered him as an angel. And I found out that he really was an angel. He told me (at 5am in the early morning) that he used to be an angel in heaven. Not only that, but he was a special angel. He was an accountant angel. One day he asked God to make him human so that he could come down here and help people and maybe even become a priest.
God loved our father very much, but He had some concerns
about our father. "Ernie," God said, "You are not very
funny, you can't dance and you can't even sing. Granted those are not
talents that an accountant needs, but if you are going to be a priest and if
you want people to listen to you, those talents are really helpful."
Accountant Angel, Ernie, was not to be discouraged. He matter-of-factly
replied, "You're God. Do something."
And God did.
God must have really loved his accountant because he gave
him some very special teachers who would turn this angelic accountant into a
loving and funny man. God figured that Ernie was going to need rhythm so He
would turn him into a Chicano. Dad was born in Bernalillo, New Mexico
to Miguel and Catalina Montoya.
Dad almost slipped back into becoming an accountant.
He even attended accounting classes in college. So God quickly got him a
job as a mailman. Dad learned to art of talking and listening on his mail
routes.
Accountants tend to be very "by the rule" kind of
guys, and Dad was no exception. So God gave our dad, our Uncle Mike as an
older brother. Uncle Mike taught Dad that there is more to life than
obeying all the rules. There is gusto in life and sometimes you just have
to go for it, even if it means breaking some of the rules.
But this wasn't enough. Dad needed humor in his life
and he needed it desperately. So God gave our dad, Amy. Now Amy
means love. And Amy married our dad and gave him love and humor.
Mom would set traps for Dad to make him laugh. She made up stories just
to make him laugh. She would hide behind doors, curtains, or furniture and
scare him. Then she would laugh and laugh and he would too. She
pushed Dad outside his comfort zone with new ideas. One day, after Mom
finished reading a book on plants, she talked Dad into going outside and
threatening the lemon tree with an axe if it did not produce lemons. Dad
could never refuse Mom. He felt stupid yelling at the lemon tree.
To our delight and amazement, that lemon tree grew two huge lemons. It produced
lemons year-round from then on.
But that wasn't enough. So God gave our dad,
Mushroom. As his first child, Mushroom delighted our dad and made him
laugh a lot as he learned to walk, talk, and do what kids do that are so
funny.
But that wasn't enough. So God gave our dad, Rick. Now Rick
was a whirling dervish and very funny, indeed. We would often hear Dad
yell. "It never fails!" as Rick would knock over a glass of milk or
water. Mom and I remembered Dad's laughing as he watched 2-year-old Rick
move all of the front room furniture to the middle of the living room.
Rick knew no bounds and the results of his efforts to accomplish the impossible
were often met with laughter.
But that wasn't enough. So God added John. John is the
master of physical comedy. John could copy Dad's jesters so well.
And John would pull his stunts in the most embarrassing moments. Dad
would yell at John, "Aye ya ya ya yai! When are you gonna grow
up!?!?" Of course that was not John's role. So, to our delight, John never
grew up. Dad was talking to John, not long ago, and told John that when
Dad was ordained he asked God to give him ten more years. He told John
that he did not feel bad about dying because God had given Dad 11 years.
At which point, John declared, "You dummy, you should have asked for
20."
But that was still not enough.
So God now added Raymond. Raymond is the "knower
of all things". As the "knower of all things" Raymond was
aware of all things that went on around the house. (Now I don't know if
this is really appropriate to say in church, but certainly God must have a
sense of humor.) One night after everyone had gone to bed, Raymond heard
Dad get out of bed to use the bathroom. And then he heard mom get out of bed to use the other bathroom. Raymond
jumped at the opportunity and sneaked into Mom's side of the bed before Dad got
out of the bathroom. Dad climbed into bed (in the dark) and gave who he
thought was mom, a love pat on the thigh. At which point, Raymond, in his
deepest voice, yelled out, "'Hey, what do you think you're
doing?!?!?" Mom heard Raymond and turned on the lights as she
entered the bedroom. She echoed Raymond with her own, "Hey Ernie,
what do you think you're doing!?!?!" The redder dad's face turned
the harder Raymond and mom laughed.
And still, with all of these silly boys and a clown for a
wife, this was not enough. So God pulled out his secret weapon, our
sister, Mary. Mary melted Dad's heart. She was Daddy's little girl.
And he was so proud of her. After Mom died, it was Mary who could make Dad
listen to reason. He listened to her when she ordered him to see a
doctor. He listened to her when she talked about family tensions and how
to ease them. And, in turn, Mary could never say no to Dad's
requests. He would look at her with his puppy dog eyes and say to her, "I ask so little of you."
And Dad learned. How could he avoid learning with all
of these special teachers that God had given him? By the time he became a
priest, he was a funny man who knew no strangers. He talked and listened
to everyone. He never did learn to sing or dance, but he did learn the
art of eating and talking. God had his own jokes for Ernie too. God
gave Dad thumbs that would rise when Dad was full. That way, Dad knew
when to stop eating. We still laugh whenever we see anyone with their
thumbs up in a restaurant.
Dad learned his lessons well and we all got to benefit from
his life.
When Dad was dying in the hospital, I remember asking, "Would you like a
miracle?" Dad replied, "No, whatever is God's will is what I
want." I pleaded, "What if it's God's will for you to ask for a
miracle? Jesus didn't go around just healing everybody. He waited to be asked." To which he countered, "No. It is whatever God's will
is." To which I re-countered, "What if it's God's will that I
ask you if you would like a miracle?" He just said, "It's OK,
It's OK. I want to go home. I miss your mom." And so it is that dad is gone and we will all miss
him.
You did a good job, Dad, and we are all proud of you.
Thank you all for listening." You did a good job, Dad, and we are all proud of you.
The congregation stood up and gave a standing ovation. I had never seen that happen in a Catholic church.
1 comment:
This is probably one of your finest pieces. I cherish the hope that you will find a way to incorporate your family’s past and present into a book. Perhaps it would be a collection of memories, like many of your pieces here. Or, just by chance, it might be the outrageous tale of a boy growing up in similar circumstances who has an astonishing assortment of people enter and change the course of his journey, then say “Pip-pip, Old Chap! Cheerie-bye!” And be off. Or stay, and weather the torrents of rain, love, spirits and creatures that come to churn the story just a leetle more. I can always hope.
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