Exclusive from the Summer 2019 issue of

By Emily Stimpson Chapman

鈥淚鈥檓 home.鈥

In the days since 黑料社鈥檚 Board of Trustees elected him to serve as the school鈥檚 seventh president, that鈥檚 the thought to which Father David Pivonka, TOR, 鈥89, keeps coming back: 鈥淚鈥檓 home.鈥

Is he excited? Yes. Is he nervous? A little. Is he eager to get started? He already has; although his installation won鈥檛 happen until students return, his appointment was effective immediately.

But in the midst of all the emotions, all the work, all the chaos of getting a job and starting it in the same day, there is joy in the knowledge that he has finally come home to Franciscan. And for that, Father Dave is grateful.

So, too, is 黑料社.

The First Home

How did a Franciscan friar who grew up in Durango, Colorado, end up calling a Catholic university in Ohio, home?

In large part, the credit goes to Father Dave鈥檚 parents, Bob and Margi Pivonka. During an era when most Catholic families struggled to raise children in the faith, the Pivonkas prayed daily that one of their children (five boys and one girl) would have a religious calling. They also were living witnesses to the faith. Through Margi鈥檚 ongoing struggle with multiple sclerosis (she was diagnosed with the disease when Father Dave was just 5 years old), they helped their children see how faith in Christ could bring beauty out of suffering.

With the help of that witness, Father Dave says, 鈥淚 was always serious about my faith鈥攏ot perfect, but there was never a time I didn鈥檛 go to Mass and confession.鈥

There also was never a time (at least that he can remember) when he didn鈥檛 think about becoming a priest. Although Father Dave joked with his siblings that he would never become a priest, 鈥渂ecause I would have to go to school for too long,鈥 the question was always there, in the back of his mind. Later, after he began studying at Fort Lewis College in Durango, the question moved to the forefront. What direction was God calling him?

So, in 1985, Father Dave decided to step back from his life and wrestle more intensely with the question. He left college, said goodbye to his family and girlfriend, and signed up for a year on the road with NET Ministries.

For nine months, Father Dave traveled the country with 11 other young adults, sharing the Gospel with middle schoolers and high schoolers. It was, Father Dave says, 鈥淭he most formative experience I ever had.鈥 Not only did it help him decide to move forward toward the priesthood, but he also learned about 黑料社 (then the University of Steubenville).

鈥淚鈥檇 never heard of it before,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淚 was heading to play basketball, but instead of walking into the gym, accidentally walked into the middle of a presentation on 黑料社. I was too embarrassed to walk out, so I stayed. After that 鈥榗hance鈥 meeting, I decided to apply.鈥

He also applied to Benedictine College in Kansas. Both schools accepted him, but Benedictine was closer to Colorado, so that tipped the scales in its favor. He was all set on going there, when his parents dropped a bombshell: His dad was closing up his medical practice in Durango and his parents were moving to Guam.

鈥淎t that point, I decided it didn鈥檛 matter where I went to school,鈥 says Father Dave. 鈥淣othing was going to be close to home. So, I chose Franciscan.

In August 1986, his parents sold their home and boarded a plane bound for the South Pacific. Two days later, Father Dave boarded a different plane, the one that would take him to the University. 鈥淲ell, I guess I鈥檓 going home,鈥 he thought as the plane landed in Pittsburgh.

A New Home

Although in Colorado Father Dave had studied political science (with an eye on law school), at Franciscan, he focused on theology and philosophy (with an eye on seminary). He started a men鈥檚 household, Instruments of Peace, and spent a semester interning on campus with the University鈥檚 Catholic Evangelization Training School. All the while, he was still discerning, not so much the priesthood (鈥淚 was pretty settled on that by the time I arrived,鈥 he says), but more specifically what kind of priest he wanted to be: diocesan or religious?

His time at Franciscan helped answer that question.

鈥淚 always had an affinity for religious life,鈥 Father Dave says. 鈥淢y parents had a lot of OFM friends [Order of Friars Minor], and as one of five boys, the idea of brotherhood appealed to me. I wanted brothers, and I wanted to be a brother. Plus, I knew there was greater range of ministry in religious life. I wasn鈥檛 sure if I could see myself in a parish for 40 years.鈥

Once he was at Franciscan, that affinity for religious life grew, strengthened in part by his time with his household brothers and a deepening understanding of 鈥渢he support, encouragement, and accountability鈥 a brotherhood could offer. It also was strengthened by his time with the TOR friars.

鈥淥ne of the things I liked when I met the friars was how different they were from one another,鈥 he explains. 鈥淭hey were all going after the Lord, but not in the same way. I appreciated the diversity. It can be challenging . . . really challenging, but God uses those challenges to sanctify us. When I look at Jesus鈥 apostles, they were very different men, but Jesus called each of them to follow him. I love that.鈥

The TOR charism of 鈥metanoia鈥 also appealed to Father Dave.

鈥淚 learned that word on NET,鈥 he explains. 鈥淚t means 鈥榗onstant conversion,鈥 that conversion is a process, it鈥檚 ongoing. The first time I heard it, I thought, 鈥榊es, this is the spiritual life. It鈥檚 a continual journey.鈥欌

By the end of his three years at Franciscan, Father Dave was ready to apply to the TORs. He did. He was accepted. But doubts lingered.

鈥淢y mom and dad have a really beautiful marriage,鈥 he explains. 鈥淭hey just celebrated their 60th anniversary this past June. They made marriage attractive. I wasn鈥檛 pursuing the priesthood because I didn鈥檛 want to get married. My challenge was reconciling the desire to be married and the desire to be a priest. At one point, I was feeling down about it and thinking maybe I was pursuing the wrong path.鈥

A conversation with Father Augustine Donegan, TOR, however, put those doubts to rest.

Father Dave recalls, 鈥淗e told me, 鈥楾o say no to a marriage is to say no to something good and beautiful, so there should be a sadness there.鈥 That helped.鈥

Settling In

In May of 1989, Father Dave graduated with his BA in theology. That fall, he began his postulancy with the TORs, in Loretto, Pennsylvania. He professed his first vows in 1991, and then headed to the Washington Theological Union in D.C. to work on both his MDiv and MA in theology, with a concentration in canon law.

Before completing the degrees, however, he needed to do an apostolic year of service. Much to his surprise, the TORs sent him back to Franciscan, where he spent the 1994-1995 school year working in the Office of Evangelistic Outreach, helping coordinate Born of the Spirit Retreats and Festivals of Praise.

After the year ended, Father Dave professed solemn vows and returned to Washington to finish his degree. He was ordained to the transitional diaconate that November, then went south to Tampa, Florida, to serve in a parish. He was there when Father Mike called and put a question to him: After his ordination, would he want to come back to Franciscan?

Father Dave said yes, not expecting the order to agree. He was wrong. Not only did the TORs assign him to Franciscan, but they also agreed to Father Dave鈥檚 request to have his ordination on campus, something that had never been done before.

On May 4, 1996, Brother Dave Pivonka became Father Dave Pivonka in a packed Finnegan Fieldhouse.

鈥淪omeone once said to me, 鈥楬ow awful you were ordained in a fieldhouse.鈥 But it wasn鈥檛 awful,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was beautiful.鈥

The next day, in Christ the King Chapel, Father Dave offered his first Mass, and Father Mike announced he would serve at Franciscan as director of Household Support and adjunct professor of theology.

Father Dave worked in that position for two years, until, in 1998, Father Mike asked him to take on a new role, as his personal assistant.

While the two worked and traveled together, Father Dave learned a great deal about preaching and prayer. He also learned how to lead.

鈥淲e all know Father Mike was a spiritual leader, but he worked hard at being a good administrator and was focused on passing those lessons on to me,鈥 he explains. 鈥淗e taught me how to handle a schedule, how to tell people no, to delegate and prioritize. Every book he gave me to read was about time management or leadership. He even gave me a book on speed reading. I don鈥檛 think I finished that one.鈥

In 1999, less than a year after Father Dave started working in the President鈥檚 Office, Father Mike told him he was ready to step down. They discussed the possibility of Father Dave taking Father Mike鈥檚 place, but ultimately determined he wasn鈥檛 ready for that.

What he was ready for was more leadership. In 1999, Father Dave took over the Youth Conference Office, and in just four years expanded the number of youth conferences from 3 to over 10. Then, in 2003, he accepted another job on campus: vice president of Mission and Planning.

During that time, Father Dave also took doctorate-level classes at the University of Pittsburgh and Duquesne University. Unlike other friars, who worked on their doctorates over the summer, Father Dave spent his summers speaking at and managing youth conferences. So, he did the work gradually, and finally, in 2005, earned his educational doctorate, writing his thesis on 鈥淐atholic Education in a Post-Modern World.鈥

Leaving Home

With his doctorate in hand, Father Dave next headed to Gaming, Austria, where he spent three years as director of Franciscan鈥檚 Austrian Study Abroad Program. While there, he also wrote two books, Spiritual Freedom: God鈥檚 Life-Giving Gift and Hiking the Camino: 500 Miles With Jesus, a memoir of his pilgrimage with Father Joe Lehman, TOR, on the Camino de Santiago.

Father Dave was still in Gaming, when his provincial, Father Christian Oravec, TOR, called. After 12 years of service with Franciscan, the TORs wanted him in Washington, D.C., as director of Post-Novitiate Formation.

鈥淒on鈥檛 worry, though,鈥 Father Christian told him. 鈥淚 have a feeling you鈥檒l get back to Steubenville someday.鈥

Father Dave spent the next four years in D.C. He also continued writing, speaking, and studying, earning an executive juris doctorate (a law degree for professionals who don鈥檛 plan to practice law) from Concord University School of Law of Purdue University Global, an experience he valued not just because of the education, but 鈥渂ecause of the process of learning through an online program.鈥

By 2012, however, Father Dave was feeling what he describes as 鈥渢ension鈥 between his work in Post-Novitiate Formation and the increasing requests for him to preach and write. After sharing this tension with Father Michael Higgins, TOR, the minister general of the Third Order Regular, the TOR community offered him the chance to focus all his energies on preaching, evangelization, and spiritual renewal.

That鈥檚 what he鈥檚 done for the last seven years as Director of Franciscan Pathways. Although his home base has been the TOR friary in Pittsburgh, Father Dave has been on the road for almost 25 days a month, every month, speaking at conferences, retreats, and parish missions.

He鈥檚 also written two more books鈥Encounter Jesus: From Discovery to Discipleship with Deacon Ralph Poyo, and Breath of God: Living a Life Led by the Holy Spirit; produced a video series with 4PM Media鈥The Wild Goose: Developing a Deeper Relationship With the Holy Spirit; and is now close to finishing Metanoia, yet another book and accompanying video series on conversion.

Through it all, however, Father Dave sensed, like Father Christian did, that he would go back to Franciscan. That sense was confirmed on May 21, 2019, when the Board of Trustees unanimously elected him to serve as the school鈥檚 seventh president.

Father Dave had been asked to apply for the position a month earlier, following the resignation of Father Sean O. Sheridan, TOR.

鈥淎t first, I wrestled with the question of whether or not I wanted the job,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a hard question for a friar to answer, because I want what the Lord wants. But, the more I prayed about it, the more excited I got about the possibility of serving as president and living in Steubenville again. The Lord was definitely working in my heart. At a certain point, I realized if I wasn’t offered the job, the Lord was going to have some explaining to do.鈥

By mid-May, the board narrowed down the possible candidates to two, and when Father Dave arrived on campus for an interview, one of the trustees greeted him with two words, 鈥淲elcome home.鈥

Those were the right words.

鈥淚n many ways, this place has been my home for 33 years,鈥 says Father Dave. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 two-thirds of my life. I love this University, and I don鈥檛 believe the best is behind us. There are great people here, great students, and we are positioned to do wonderful things.鈥

Home Building

Father Dave knows the work ahead won鈥檛 be easy.

鈥淚t鈥檚 becoming more and more difficult to form young people,鈥 he explains. 鈥淭hings that, 20 years ago, students would have thought were crazy, are becoming normative for them. So we have to help young people see that things they think of as moral and normal are actually rooted in the culture and not the kingdom of God.

鈥淚n St. Louis, Pope St. John Paul II prophetically told a group of young people, 鈥榃hen you separate truth from freedom, the moral fabric of society begins to unravel.鈥 That鈥檚 where we find ourselves today. We鈥檙e told that freedom means doing whatever you want and truth is believing whatever you want, and we are witnessing the very moral fabric of our society unravel before our very eyes. If there ever was a need for an academic institution to speak truth into that chaos, it鈥檚 right now.鈥

Father Dave also knows that Franciscan can鈥檛 accomplish that goal simply by doing what it did 20 years ago.

He explains, 鈥淭he Holy Father has said that there is a current of grace that goes through the Church. I like that idea. Sometimes people see grace not as a current but more like a lake behind them, and they keep trying to pull from that. But you can only do that so many times before it鈥檚 dry. So, it鈥檚 not my desire to go back to how things were in 1989. I love Father Mike, but I don鈥檛 want to do what he did. We can鈥檛 do what he did.鈥

He continues, 鈥淚n D.C., I did an internship at Children鈥檚 Hospital, and the pediatric surgeon said to me that in the old days, they treated children like little adults. So, if they gave an adult a whole aspirin, they鈥檇 give a child half an aspirin. Then, they realized medicine has to be done differently for children. Well, we have to do things differently for young people today: how we articulate information, how we provide formation. We can鈥檛 do what we did 20 years ago. So, the question is: What does God want us doing now? This is something that Father Mike witnessed to: listening to what the Spirit is saying now.鈥

Going forward, Father Dave wants to build on what Franciscan has done under Father Sheridan: Giving young people a challenging Catholic education that helps them to think with the Church and equips them to live lives of discipleship as 鈥渕others and fathers, entrepreneurs and teachers, scientists and historians鈥攊n every arena in the world as well as in Church ministry.鈥

Alongside that work, however, Father Dave wants to see the University equip those students to enter into an honest and loving dialogue with the world.

鈥淚 would love the University to become a model of greater charity and a vehicle of dialogue and discussion,鈥 he says. 鈥淪ome people may hear that and say 鈥榊ou鈥檙e wishy-washy.鈥 That鈥檚 the last thing I am. But we have to reach out to people. We have to engage and encounter people who are not like us, who think differently, who live differently. We have to enter into the messiness of this world.鈥

He continues, 鈥淭his is at the heart of the Incarnation. It鈥檚 what Jesus did. He didn鈥檛 only spend time with people who thought like him and agreed with him. He went to the sick, the marginalized, the outcast. He wasn鈥檛 concerned by what people would say when he prayed with the prostitute. Because of this, people hated him. We should be prepared for the same reaction. But Jesus commanded us to love those who are not like us, to love our enemies. We must not dismiss them, and we can’t demonize them.鈥

How do you do that, though?

Several years ago, Father Dave asked himself that question and began praying about who his 鈥渆nemy鈥 was. He settled on the head of Planned Parenthood.

鈥淚 decided to not just pray for her, but really pray for her, intentionally, specifically, daily, during Holy Hours and while at Mass,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 started sending her Christmas cards and Easter cards. I don鈥檛 know if she saw them, but I always told her I was praying for her and her children.

鈥淚n the process, something changed in my heart. She became a person for me. I saw her as a mom, with the same hopes and dreams, fears and anxieties for her kids that my sister has for hers. She wasn鈥檛 just the head of Planned Parenthood anymore. She was a person who really mattered鈥攖o me and, more importantly, to God. I still disagree with what she promotes. I pray every day for greater respect for the beauty and sanctity of human life. But something changed in me toward her, my 鈥榚nemy.鈥欌

Seeing those who disagree with us as people who are loved by God, and who we鈥檙e called to love and respect, is, Father Dave believes, the key to entering into a dialogue that can transform the culture.

He explains, 鈥淚n Evangelium Gaudium, Pope Francis said when we tear down the walls, what we see are faces and stories. My concern is that we鈥檙e not seeing faces anymore. Instead, we are creating this wall and hiding behind it.

鈥淏ut Jesus didn鈥檛 do that. He tore down the wall, went out, and spent time with Pharisees, prostitutes, and tax collectors. St. Francis did something similar. He stood on the edge of the Umbrian valley, looked out, and said, 鈥楾he world is going to be my cloister. My brothers and I aren鈥檛 going to hide from the world or run away from it. We are going to bring Christ to it.鈥 That is what I want 黑料社 to do.鈥

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