tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2241294419067504520.post4855125611551432023..comments2022-10-06T12:01:47.245-04:00Comments on DoS News: Obituary for Fr. Michael H. WolfUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2241294419067504520.post-36633639201193384392011-01-07T10:18:42.524-05:002011-01-07T10:18:42.524-05:00Jerome Birchmeier and I were the first pair of alt...Jerome Birchmeier and I were the first pair of altar boys in our class at St. Mike's in Maple Grove Twp. We were trained by high school seniors Joe Birchmeier and Joe Princinski Fr. Wolf was our gentle and longsuffering pastor who guided us cassocked and surpliced rookies through the confusing array of bell ringing, ceremonial raising of his cape, endless bowing and genuflecting, various offertory and consecration deliveries, Latin incantations and responses, holding the paten under the chin of every communicant at the communion railing without chinking it against adams apples, necklaces or the chalice, while catching errant and unseen crumbs from the Blessed Sacrament hosts, etc. <br /><br />Fr. Wolf also made regular visits to the school classrooms where he was a special guest for catechism, history or math classes. Toward the end of the school year, he'd load two buses with altar boys, choir members and 3 or 4 of our Dominican chaperon/prison guard nuns and we'd spend the day at The Brockway Skating Rink in Saginaw or Lake Lansing Amusement Park just east of MSU, as his way of saying thanks for contributing to our parish family. <br /><br />Fr. Wolf was a tall, friendly man who had a fast gait and walked erect except for a small forward lean from the shoulders up. He was quick to flash a smile and ask how one was doing on that particular day -- a decided improvement over his grumpy fellow German heritage predecessor Fr. Bosler, who was genuinely feared by every St. Mike's school kid and by at least 98% of their parents. <br /><br />I can't imagine how many lives Fr. Wolf affected for the good -- I'd never witnessed any conversions that his obit describes -- as everyone in Maple Grove was absolute Catholic in those days (fear of Fr. Bosler probably had something to do with SRO crowds at Sunday and Holy Day of Obligation masses alike). <br /><br />Fr. Wolf finally got some help for several years from Fr. Larry Greiner (another German - note a pattern here?), who was the first priest that we'd ever met who was likely to start the mass with a brief monologue. He didn't exactly have perfect pitch for those "high mass" celebrations, but we saw the priestly pair as a great working team for our growing parish. Besides celebrating daily and Sunday masses, they hosted weekly confessions by the hundreds, visited hospitalized parishioners in Saginaw, Flint and Owosso weekly, administered all the parish affairs, and along with a dozen nuns, put on a an annual May Day celebration complete with a parade in and around the massive church, that featured hundreds of bouquets of live flowers picked from the area fencerows, ditchbanks and woodlots, countless flowery dresses and white first communion style suites, and lots of songs including "Oh Mary We Crown Thee", cued up by a nun with a pitchpipe. When Fr. Griener was eventually transferred to the parish is Onaway in Presque Isle County, his quip gave away his preference to stay with his St. Michael Parish family: "They call it Onaway because it's Onaway to Alaska!" Fr. Wolf received sporadic assistants from the diocese after that as he reassumed the full burden of administering to his parish family. <br /><br />Fr. Wolf was a Godly man who most could benefit by emulating. He served the people of St. Michael Parish with distinction, patience and grace...a mentor by example and a true priest of the people. God Bless you Father Michael Wolf.<br /> <br />Bob Bishop<br />Maple Grove St. Mike's Class of 1964<br />Residing in DeWitt MI with wife Kathy (Smith from Saginaw), <br />Members of the Catholic Community of St Jude.Mathew Treadwellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03371463883627570022noreply@blogger.com