logo
Seminary schoolmate reflects on Pope Leo's humble beginnings at St. Augustine Seminary High School

Seminary schoolmate reflects on Pope Leo's humble beginnings at St. Augustine Seminary High School

Yahoo05-06-2025
Few people have known Pope Leo for as long as those who attended St. Augustine Seminary High School with him.
Seminary schoolmate Father Thomas Becket Franks saw the signs that Robert Prevost was special more than five decades ago.
Walking in to the St. Procopious Abbey in Lisle, Illinois, Father Thomas 'Becket' Franks is – in some ways – walking down memory lane.
Sifting through his yearbooks from St. Augustine Seminary High School in Holland, Michigan, he has found photos of his most famous schoolmate: Robert Prevost, the man who would become Pope Leo XIV.
'Probably the most humble person I've ever met and yet at the same time, the most helpful person,' he said.
Father Becket, as he's known in the abbey, was a sophomore when Prevost arrived in the St. Augustine dorms as a freshman in the fall of 1969.
Special Coverage: Pope Leo
'We were away from family, away from neighborhood friends,' he said. 'Bob, as I still refer to him, was quiet but involved in everything.'
Prevost was a member of the student government, debate team, tennis team and patriotism club – a group that discussed U.S. politics, government and the nation's role in current events.
'When you spoke with him or talked to him, he listened intently. He would look right at you, and listen intently,' Father Becket said. 'What he was doing was formulating a response, or how to respond to you. It was never flippant, nothing really quick. He was never 'off the cuff.' Even in discussions you knew what he was saying he had been thinking about for a while.'
Prevost was a member of the Reader's Theatre. Each year, each class at St. Augustine would write a comedic play spoofing life at the seminary.
Pope Leo's singing sparks global social media campaign to unite believers
'He liked to portray Father Jim Sheridan. Now, at the time and as a high school kid, Bob had a lot of hair, a lot of hair. I think even curly, or wavy I should say. But Father Jim Sheridan was bald. So, as part of that portrayal of Jim Sheridan, Bob would put a hat on and made his mutton chops on his face, because Father Jim Sheridan had big sideburns,' Father Becket said.
Pervost's outfit predated the Blues Brothers, but he was clearly 'on a mission from God.'
Father Becket said one of Prevost's favorite activities was singing and the school chorus.
'He's a great singer,' he said. 'You can hear it now when he chants at mass.'
More: Augustinian order's principles reflected in Pope Leo's life
At the villa at St. Benedict Senior Living Community, Father Becket serves as chaplain. He celebrated mass in the century-old Sacred Heart Chapel, where he now quotes his own classmate.
'Everyday I've been adding some words from Pope Leo … so basically every day is a little teaching from someone I know and went to high school with,' he said.
He has known Pope Leo for 56 years. The two still correspond.
They'll always be connected by their shared experience at the seminary and in the pages of these yearbooks, which he signed with the same clarity and warmth that defines his priesthood: 'Tom, best of luck always, Bob Prevost.'
'I look back now 50-some years on and I see the beginnings of holiness and great maturity. A great thinker and a great gift to the world,' Father Becket said. 'I think he learned the way of holiness. I think we're going to encounter an extremely holy person, and every time I look at him now, I'm thinking I can see the beginnings of a saint way back in high school.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Read All About It: True Tales of Men and Fiction
Read All About It: True Tales of Men and Fiction

New York Times

time6 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Read All About It: True Tales of Men and Fiction

To the Editor: Re 'Attention, Men: Books Are Sexy!,' by Maureen Dowd (column, Aug. 3): Backpacking solo in 1995, reading voraciously, I met one of the loves of my life in Ubud, Bali. I was on a veranda overlooking rice paddies when Cherie, who was traveling with her mother, brazenly snatched the book I had my nose so buried in that I had not noticed her staring at me. It was a Penguin paperback, 'How Much Land Does a Man Need? And Other Stories,' by Leo Tolstoy. Cherie's eyes got wide, and I could tell she approved of my choice of authors, and my bookish interest in that collection of stories, to the exclusion of all around me. She told me that's sexy right then and there. We talked long into the night. The trip to Bali became ever better after that. Even her mother liked me. Lifetime memories. All because I was reading Tolstoy. Gowan McAvityBedford, N.Y. To the Editor: Maureen Dowd writes compellingly about men and fiction. Jane Austen of course is wonderful for men and women, and I read her voraciously because she is so good with language and thought. An added appeal is hearing the thoughts of a woman on men that we can all recognize: that our social posturing is just that, and a conscious female observer can see through it. I find myself far less interested in nonfiction. When I travel, I read a novel or a short story collection from the land I will visit rather than a travel guide — say, José Saramago before going to Portugal — because it tells me about how people there think, their worldview. It makes me feel at home and more understanding of the culture than any guidebook. Bill EslerChicago To the Editor: Maureen Dowd laments that men are reading less and reports, 'Women make up 80 percent of fiction sales.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Famous birthdays for Aug. 5: Mark Strong, Patrick Ewing
Famous birthdays for Aug. 5: Mark Strong, Patrick Ewing

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Famous birthdays for Aug. 5: Mark Strong, Patrick Ewing

Aug. 5 (UPI) -- Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. They include: -- Writer Guy de Maupassant in 1850 -- Filmmaker John Huston in 1906 -- U.S. Gen. Hazel Johnson in 1927 -- Astronaut Neil Armstrong in 1930 -- Hockey Hall of Fame member Herb Brooks in 1937 -- Actor Loni Anderson in 1945 -- Actor Erika Slezak in 1946 (age 79) -- Musician David Hungate (Toto) in 1948 (age 77) -- Musician Eddie Ojeda (Twisted Sister) in 1955 (age 70) -- Actor Maureen McCormick in 1956 (age 69) -- Musician Pete Burns (Dead or Alive) in 1959 -- Musician Pat Smear (Nirvana/Foo Fighters) in 1959 (age 66) -- Basketball Hall of Fame member Patrick Ewing in 1962 (age 63) -- Actor Mark Strong in 1963 (age 62) -- Musician Jeff Coffin (Dave Matthews Band/Béla Fleck and the Flecktones) in 1965 (age 60) -- Actor Jonathan Silverman in 1966 (age 59) -- Filmmaker James Gunn in 1966 (age 59) -- Musician Adam Yauch (Beastie Boys) in 1964 -- Actor Stéphanie Szostak in 1975 (age 50) -- Celebrity chef David Chang in 1977 (age 48) -- Musician Whit Sellers (Old Dominion) in 1978 (age 47) -- Actor Jesse Williams in 1981 (age 44) -- Musician Travie McCoy (Gym Class Heroes) in 1981 (age 44) -- Olympic runner/bobsledder Lolo Jones in 1982 (age 43) -- Actor Adam Irigoyen in 1997 (age 28) -- Actor Olivia Holt in 1997 (age 28) -- Musician Yungblud in 1997 (age 28) -- NBA player Anthony Edwards in 2001 (age 24) -- Actor Josie Totah in 2001 (age 24) -- Actor Albert Tsai in 2004 (age 21) Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store