It is not insignificant that Msgr. William B. Smith died on
the vigil of the Conversion of St. Paul, January 24, 2009, and was buried on
the Feast of St. Thomas Aquinas. His personally chosen homilist – Msgr. James T.
O’Connor - did himself proud in a true-to-life presentation of Smith from the
heart. Msgr. O’Connor was a classmate of Smith in seminary. They did
simultaneous doctorates (O’Connor in Dogmatic Theology, Smith in Moral
Theology), taught at Dunwoodie together for decades forming a terrible
triumvirate of profound and precise orthodoxy with Msgr. Austin Vaughan as
rector. They lived across the hall from each other on the south side of the
second floor of Dunwoodie. They vacationed together with close friends in
uncomfortably hot places in summer when seminary was out, never in the winter
when business was business. The Smith I knew came alive profoundly in the
homily: the basic scene was “the desk” surrounded by piles of papers (that grew
exponentially over the years) where Smith – “priest and victim” – crafted
Immaculate Heart of Mary homilies, classes and world class papers on moral
theology with insight and loving care. I must say I wept again as O’Connor
followed Smith’s explicit instruction that the Memorare to our Lady be recited
at his funeral. The entire Church did it. And then the music! I was done for.
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