Father John Dede was canon lawyer,
seminary rector
By Mary Ann Wyand
Father John F. Dede, a retired diocesan
priest who also was a canon lawyer and
seminary rector, died on April 20 in
Clearwater, Fla., where he had lived during
his retirement
years. He was 82.
Before his
retirement in
1997, Father Dede
had served as pastor
of St. Margaret
Mary Parish in
Terre Haute, his
hometown. The
former St. Margaret
Mary
School, which
was renovated for
use as a parish center, is named in his honor.
Two brothers were ordained priests and
five sisters entered religious life.
Archbishop Daniel M. Buechlein was
the principal celebrant for the Mass of
Christian Burial on April 25 at St. Margaret
Mary Church. Burial followed at Calvary
Cemetery in Terre Haute.
Msgr. Frederick Easton, vicar judicial of
the archdiocese, was the homilist and
remembered Father Dede as a friend, priest,
pastor, canonist and liturgist.
[Father] John Dede truly touched the
lives of many people in his 80-plus years,
Msgr. Easton said in the homily. He
whose first love was the study and celebration
of the sacred liturgy consented to study
at the Pontifical Lateran University the
laws of the Churchcanon lawso that as
a member of the Society of St. Sulpice he
might share that knowledge with seminarians who needed that formation.
Father Dede shared with me and my
classmates at St. Marys Seminary in
Baltimore the love of the law of the Church
and its role in and among the people of
God, Msgr. Easton said. He did it also at
St. Johns Seminary in Plymouth, Mich. It
is said that he was the only one his community
members knew who could make the
study of canon law interesting.
Msgr. Easton said Father Dede truly felt
honored to have been appointed rector of
St. Mary Seminary and to serve the Church
in Metropolitan Tribunals in two archdioceses.
He used his pastoral skills as the pastor
of St. Margaret Mary [Parish], where he is
remembered for so many good thingscelebrant
of the Eucharist [and] his love and
care for the sick and the poor.
Msgr. Easton said Father Dedes love and passion for the liturgy was expressed
in his prayerful manner of leading the
assembly and his interest in the work of the
Second Vatican Council.
He also loved the Liturgy of the
Hours, Msgr. Easton said. At his request,
the open breviary lies upon his chest in the
coffin. This is symbolic of his love for the
official prayer of the Church.
Providence Sister Mary Beth Klingel,
parish life coordinator of St. Margaret
Mary Parish, said Father Dede served the
south side Terre Haute parish for 24 years
and she ministered with him there as a pastoral
associate for 21 of those years.
He recognized peoples gifts and he
enabled them to use their gifts [in ministry],
Sister Mary Beth said. He really
believed in people assuming their roles. He
also was very committed to serving the sick and the shut-ins. He visited them regularly,
and he also had a real devotion to serving
the poor. Our food pantry outreach started
while he was pastor here.
She also remembered Father Dede as a
priest who loved the liturgy and eagerly
implemented the liturgical reforms of the
Second Vatican Council.
He also was an extremely knowledgeable
canon lawyer, Sister Mary Beth said,
and many people turned to him for
advice.
She said Father Dede completed many
years of distinguished ministry in formation
work for seminarians with the Society of
St. Sulpice.
Obviously, they saw him as a capable
person as a teacher of canon law, she said.
I also think they recognized his administrative
abilities because he did, I guess, a fantastic job at the seminary. He utilized his
education well in service of the Church.
John F. Dede was born on April 30,
1922, in Terre Haute to Arthur H. and
Helena (OLeary) Dede. He attended St.
Ann School in Terre Haute then completed
his high school and seminary education at
the former minor seminary and college at
Saint Meinrad before graduating from the
Saint Meinrad School of Theology.
He earned two masters degrees and a
canon law degree while studying at The
Catholic University of America in
Washington, D.C., the University of
Fribourg in Germany, the University of
Detroit in Michigan for coursework in clinical
psychology and the Pontifical Lateran
University in Rome for canon law.
He was ordained to the priesthood by
Archbishop Paul C. Schulte on May 27,
1947, at Saint Meinrad Archabbey Church
then was released to the Society of
St. Sulpice, which he served for 25 years.
Father Dede celebrated his first Mass on June 1, 1947, at St. Ann Church in Terre
Haute, his home parish.
His first clergy appointment was serving
as a professor at St. Charles College in
Catonsville, Md., in 1947.
In 1949, Father Dede pursued graduate
studies at the Lateran University and
University of Fribourg.
In 1952, Father Dede began serving as a
professor at St. Mary Seminary and
University in Baltimore, and also was
appointed academic dean there. He also
served the Archdiocese of Baltimore as a
censor of books.
In 1963, he was named a professor and
academic dean at St. John Seminary in
Plymouth, Mich., while also serving the
Archdiocese of Detroit as a pro-synodal
judge in the Metropolitan Tribunal.
In June 1966, Father Dede was named
president-rector of St. Mary Seminary and
University in Baltimore, where he served
until June 30, 1972, when he took an academic
leave of absence to study at the University of Detroit.
On July 5, 1973, he was named pastor
of St. Margaret Mary Parish in Terre Haute,
where he served until his retirement on
July 2, 1997.
Father Dede also served the archdiocese
as dean of the Terre Haute Deanery for two
terms, beginning on Oct. 18, 1982, and
Oct. 18, 1985.
On May 4, 1984, he began 13 years of
ministry as a judge for the Metropolitan
Tribunal in the archdiocese.
He moved to Florida two years ago.
Surviving are a brother, Father Paul
Dede, who is pastor of St. Jude the Apostle
Parish in Spencer, and four sisters,
Providence Sister Eileen Dede, Providence
Sister Mary Mark Dede, Providence Sister
Kathleen Dede and Benedictine Sister
Patricia Ann Dede.
He was preceded in death by his parents
as well as a brother, Father James Dede,
and a sister, former Providence Sister
Angele (Marcella) Dede.