Book Signing at St.Mark Centerville Store
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Servant Priest
A new book paints a loving portrait of the life of Father Philip Hoelle, a
Marianist priest who shaped countless lives over during decades.
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(Embedded image moved to file: pic12760.jpg)thumbnail imagePhilip C. Hoelle
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Buy the Book
Dakota Center
Chaminade 250th Celebration
July 08, 2011 - A Kettering couple has published a biography of a beloved
Marianist priest who quietly inspired countless lives.
Joseph and Joanne Kepes will sign copies of their newly published book,
Philip C. Hoelle, S.M.: Servant Priest, from 4 to 7 p.m. on Friday, July
15, at St. Mark Bookshop in Centerville.
Before the Rev. Philip C. Hoelle, S.M., died in 2005 at the age of 93, he
founded the Dakota Center in west Dayton, co-founded the Dayton
Christian-Jewish Dialogue and helped build the University of Dayton's
Marian Library into the world's largest repository of printed material
about Mary, the mother of Jesus. In 1993, the University of Dayton's
National Alumni Association awarded him the Christian Service Award. He was
the first recipient of the Dakota Center's Founder's Award for 30 years of
service to minority youth.
All proceeds from the $10 book will be donated to the Dakota Center.
"His genius lay in his gentle ability to inspire others. For him, people
are what mattered most," said Joseph Kepes, who along with his wife Joanne,
weaved together Hoelle's life story through interviews and a review of his
publications and letters. Their friendship with the priest spanned nearly
six decades. Kepes, professor emeritus of physics, taught at the University
of Dayton for nearly 40 years. His wife earned a master's degree in
religious studies at the University.
The couple liken Hoelle to Blessed William Joseph Chaminade, a French
priest who survived the French Revolution and founded the Society of Mary
(Marianists) in 1817.
"To us, he was like a gentle, quietly moving river. When the river comes to
a barrier, the water slowly builds up and either flows around the obstacle
or goes over it," they wrote in the book's postscript. "It is amazing how
much he did, doing it so quietly and persistently that most people did not
realize what he had accomplished. There is no question that Philip C.
Hoelle is a saint."
The Rev. Bertrand Buby, S.M., professor emeritus of religious studies who
teaches in the International Marian Research Institute on campus, calls the
book a "lively, accurate and clear narrative" that paints a memorable
portrait of a quiet, modest priest who "truly helped Mary carry out her
mission of bringing Jesus to others."
The book is available online through the North American Center for
Marianist Studies (http://www.nacms.org) and at St. Mark Bookshop, 895 S.
Main St., in Centerville.
For more information, contact Joseph and Joanne Kepes at 937-434-2580.
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University of Dayton News
Servant Priest
A new book paints a loving portrait of the life of Father Philip Hoelle, a
Marianist priest who shaped countless lives over during decades.
Image Gallery
(Embedded image moved to file: pic12760.jpg)thumbnail imagePhilip C. Hoelle
Related Links
Buy the Book
Dakota Center
Chaminade 250th Celebration
July 08, 2011 - A Kettering couple has published a biography of a beloved
Marianist priest who quietly inspired countless lives.
Joseph and Joanne Kepes will sign copies of their newly published book,
Philip C. Hoelle, S.M.: Servant Priest, from 4 to 7 p.m. on Friday, July
15, at St. Mark Bookshop in Centerville.
Before the Rev. Philip C. Hoelle, S.M., died in 2005 at the age of 93, he
founded the Dakota Center in west Dayton, co-founded the Dayton
Christian-Jewish Dialogue and helped build the University of Dayton's
Marian Library into the world's largest repository of printed material
about Mary, the mother of Jesus. In 1993, the University of Dayton's
National Alumni Association awarded him the Christian Service Award. He was
the first recipient of the Dakota Center's Founder's Award for 30 years of
service to minority youth.
All proceeds from the $10 book will be donated to the Dakota Center.
"His genius lay in his gentle ability to inspire others. For him, people
are what mattered most," said Joseph Kepes, who along with his wife Joanne,
weaved together Hoelle's life story through interviews and a review of his
publications and letters. Their friendship with the priest spanned nearly
six decades. Kepes, professor emeritus of physics, taught at the University
of Dayton for nearly 40 years. His wife earned a master's degree in
religious studies at the University.
The couple liken Hoelle to Blessed William Joseph Chaminade, a French
priest who survived the French Revolution and founded the Society of Mary
(Marianists) in 1817.
"To us, he was like a gentle, quietly moving river. When the river comes to
a barrier, the water slowly builds up and either flows around the obstacle
or goes over it," they wrote in the book's postscript. "It is amazing how
much he did, doing it so quietly and persistently that most people did not
realize what he had accomplished. There is no question that Philip C.
Hoelle is a saint."
The Rev. Bertrand Buby, S.M., professor emeritus of religious studies who
teaches in the International Marian Research Institute on campus, calls the
book a "lively, accurate and clear narrative" that paints a memorable
portrait of a quiet, modest priest who "truly helped Mary carry out her
mission of bringing Jesus to others."
The book is available online through the North American Center for
Marianist Studies (http://www.nacms.org) and at St. Mark Bookshop, 895 S.
Main St., in Centerville.
For more information, contact Joseph and Joanne Kepes at 937-434-2580.
News Home
Publications
Student-Produced Media
For the News Media
UD In the News
Archives
Search
(Embedded image moved to file: pic19357.gif)Search
More Options >>
(Embedded image moved to file: pic02324.gif)Print this pagePrint this
page
(Embedded image moved to file: pic06477.gif)E-mail this pageE-mail
this page
Related Links
Events Home
Flyer Athletics News
Research Institute News
(Embedded image moved to file: pic05108.gif)University of Dayton
Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Careers at UD | Contact UD
©2010 University of Dayton






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