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Dom Francis
Kline, O.C.S.O.
1948-2006
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Memorials may be made to
The Father
Francis Memorial Building Fund
Mepkin Abbey
1098 Mepkin Abbey Road
Moncks Corner, SC 29461. |
Moncks’ Corner, SC—Abbot Francis Kline, 57, died Aug. 27 at his home at
Mepkin Abbey after a long illness. Born Joseph Paul Kline III in
Philadelphia, PA, he was the son of Joseph P. Kline and Vanetta Hiltner
Kline of Brigantine, NJ.
Joseph grew up in Philadelphia, PA, and attended the Nativity of the Blessed
Virgin Mary Elementary School and St. Joseph Preparatory, a Jesuit high
school. He began playing the organ for church services when he was ten years
old. At age 15, he played his first organ recital. Joseph went on to study
with Alexander McCurdy of the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia before
entering the Julliard School as a student of Vernon de Tar. During his last
year at Julliard (1970-71), he performed the complete organ works of J.S.
Bach in 14 recitals in several Manhattan venues, including the Church of the
Ascension and St. Michael’s Church. The Christian Science Monitor took
notice of this Bach series in an editorial and the New York Times ran a
feature article on the 21-year-old. The Philadelphia Musical Fund Society
sponsored the Bach Cycle the next year at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in
Philadelphia. Each of the 13 recitals was recorded by Albert Borkow of
Columbia Records the night before the performances. These concerts are still
heard on the radio. He played recitals in many of the major churches in New
York City, he has been broadcast on the Voice of America, and he was
featured soloist at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia.
Joseph’s professional musical career came to an abrupt halt when he entered
the Trappist monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani in 1972. This is when he
took the name Francis. Following Solemn Profession at Gethsemani, Francis
was sent to Rome to study theology at the Benedictine Athenaeum, Sant’
Anselmo, earning an STB in 1984. In 1986, he was ordained a priest and
appointed Novice Director for the community at Gethsemani. In 1990, he was
elected third Abbot of Mepkin Abbey, a foundation of Gethsemani in the same
Cistercian Order, and received the Abbatial Blessing from Bishop David B.
Thompson on March 19, 1990.
Abbot Francis gave retreats for monasteries of his Order, as well as a few
lectures and conferences for seminaries and parishes on a limited basis, as
his cloistered lifestyle permitted. He published articles on patristic
subjects, the theology of St. Bernard, liturgy and spirituality. His first
book, Lovers of the Place: Monasticism Loose in the Church, is published by
The Liturgical Press. He wrote a second book during his illness, which he
finished in January of this year, and that will be published by Cistercian
Publications in the spring of 2007. He also served on the boards of
institutes, seminaries and foundations, including the Gaylord and Dorothy
Donnelley Foundation.
As a young monk, Francis received permission of his superiors to take up
music again and to integrate it into his monastic life. He played a limited
number of recitals since then, including Piccolo Spoleto engagements. Of a
Bach recital in France, Abel Gaborit of Harmoniques wrote: “Not very often
does an audience hear such music-making: a perfect interpretation, the
spiritual intent of Bach finely articulated, a performance that lifted the
screen between the music and the listeners.”
In additional to his musical reputation, Abbot Francis was well known in the
Low Country for his work with the Diocese of Charleston and with the
environmental community. During the 1990s, he served, from the monastery, as
the Director of the Office of Prayer and Worship for Diocese of Charleston,
and was a member of the Central Committee for the Synod of Charleston.
The environmental community called on him to help bring sometimes
conflicting parties together to preserve open space in Berkeley County,
especially along the Cooper River. He was the driving force behind the
establishment of the Cooper River Forum and other environmental initiatives.
Under his leadership, on August 15, 2006 Mepkin Abbey signed a conservation
easement on 3,128 acres owned by the monastery, protecting this land from
commercial development in perpetuity.
During his time as Abbot, Mepkin celebrated four solemn professions and
received numerous men in other stages of formation. Mepkin also accepted
Nuestra Senora de la Esperanza, a community of Trappistine nuns in Equador,
as a daughter house. With the support of many friends and benefactors,
Mepkin built a new church, the Clare Boothe Luce Library and Conference
Center, a senior wing for aging monks, and renovated the monks’ kitchen,
refectory and guests’ refectory, and the administration building.
In addition to his parents, Fr. Francis is survived by two brothers, Ronald
Kline and his wife Carlene of Rochester, NY, and Mark Kline and his wife
Kathy of Marlton, NJ, and 6 nieces and nephews.
A memorial service will be held in the Luce Gardens at Mepkin Abbey on
Thursday, Aug. 31 at 5 p.m.
The Mepkin community requests that in lieu of flowers memorials be made to
The Father Francis Memorial Building Fund (Mepkin Abbey, 1098 Mepkin Abbey
Road, Moncks Corner, SC 29461) for two projects Fr. Francis had envisioned.
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