From St. Paul comes this great vocation story about a man who had his head in the clouds, but kept his feet on the ground:

Renaissance man Deacon Douglas Ebert, 62, is moving on to a new vocation that has been calling him for a long time.

After working as a commercial airline pilot for 30 years, while simultaneously designing and restoring executive railroad cars, playing guitar with the Flying Boxcars rock band, writing and producing music for himself and jazz guitarist Boday, cooking meals in a railroad dining car in Seattle and waiting tables at the Lex­ing­ton in St. Paul, Deacon Ebert will be ordained a priest at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 30, at the Cathedral of St. Paul.

The fourth son of Vernon and Betty, Deacon Ebert wanted to follow his own path after graduating from St. Thomas Aca­demy, just like his older brothers. Although he had considered attending Nazareth Hall high school seminary, Deacon Ebert also considered a vocation with the Jesuits while attending Regis Col­lege in Denver, where one of his classmates and friends was a North Dakota farmer and crop duster.

“I got to go fly with him and got interested in [flying],” Deacon Ebert said. “I went by way of the U.S. Air Force and flew transport planes in Vietnam,” flying many wounded and dead soldiers from 1968 to 1973.

“I was in my 20s and I’d see somebody born in ’52 or ’53 and see a casket going back, and I’d think of the families,” he said. “It was distressing to see what was happening to these young people.”

When Deacon Ebert was hired by American Air­lines in 1973, he knew that airline pilots often pursued second careers during their off time, in part, to be pre­pared for a possible career-ending health issue.

Since he had started working in the railroad business in college, Deacon Ebert con­tinued his interest in private railroad cars, serving as president of the American Association of Private Rail­road Car Owners. During the 1970s, he broke into the music business, writing, producing, playing and recording with the Flying Boxcars and owning a music store.

Occasionally he hears some of the music he worked on with jazz guitar-player Boday playing on the radio.

“I get royalty checks once in a while, but not enough to live on,” he quipped.

Deacon Ebert quit going to Mass for about 20 years during his 20s and 30s. But, his prayer life never died, he said.

“Even while I was away from the church, the call was still there,” he said. “I decided in my mid- to late-40s that I would continue my career and focus on becoming a priest.”

He started reading Scripture on his own during layovers from flying, and he began attending daily Mass whenever possible, before officially returning to the Catholic Church in 1988.

He also attended an an­nual retreat at the Jesuit Retreat House in Lake Elmo, where “being around other men in different careers and seeing their faith” nourished his vocation, Deacon Ebert said.

He began getting out of his many businesses as opportunities arose, so when he was offered an early retirement from American Air­lines in 2003, he took it.

He began taking pre-theology classes at the St. Paul Seminary while still living in Chicago, he said. The Jesuits helped with his discernment and ad­vised him to talk with Archbishop Harry Flynn, who allowed him to enter the seminary.

Read the rest at the link. And keep this man and all those who are approaching ordination in your prayers!

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