"Remembering Monsignor Lantz" by Fr. Chris House

It was February of 2001 and I was at CTK for the funeral Mass of a family friend. I was fifteen months away from priesthood ordination. After the Mass, I was speaking with then Father Lantz in the sacristy about how seminary was going. At the end of the conversation I remember him saying to me “who knows, maybe the bishop will assign you here next year.” Fast forward over those fifteen months, it was ordination week in late May when Bishop Lucas informed me that I would be assigned to Christ the King as parochial vicar. I remember coming to see Father Lantz that afternoon to talk about the assignment that would begin July 1; it was also the beginning of a treasured friendship over the next twenty plus years.
My initial time at CTK was short but I learned a good deal from Msgr. Lantz during that time, as well as in the years to come. For me, as a new priest, he was a kind mentor. He was never heavy-handed nor did he lord over me as his assistant. Living with him, there was always laughter in the rectory and I felt that it was my home as much as his, something that not every assistant could say in living with their pastor (even though we both knew, clearly, that he was the boss).
I was blessed to continue working with Msgr. Lantz after being here at CTK. He was the director of Lay Ministry Formation and I served as director of the liturgy specialization track. He was named director of the Permanent Diaconate Program and I served as associate director for spiritual formation and eventually succeeded him as director. Msgr. Lantz wore many hats while being a parish priest, something I learned from him early on, and he wore those many hats well. When he was honored with the title of “monsignor” in late 2002, it was a well-deserved accolade (and one that he enjoyed).
In April of 2012, we were at the Villa Maria on Lake Springfield for a deacon formation weekend. It was a sunny Saturday morning. We were outside down by the lake when he told me that he had been asked to take a new assignment that July and would be ending sixteen years as pastor of CTK. It was the only time that I ever saw him shed tears. He loved this parish and its people with his whole heart. It gave me great joy when Bishop Paprocki named Msgr. Lantz pastor emeritus of CTK when he took on senior priest status in July of 2022. I was hoping that after a year of rest in retirement that we might see “Monz” pop in and out of the parish from time to time; sadly, this hope will not be realized.
As heartbroken as I am, and as many of you are also, I thank God for the gift of Monsignor Lantz’s life and his ministry among us. I also give thanks for his friendship over my entire priesthood until now. For those in the parish family who came to CTK after Msgr. Lantz’s time here, I am sorry that you missed out on knowing quite a character. Some parishioners have reminisced recently about Monsignor using the image of the “many mansions” found in John’s Gospel in his funeral homilies. This reference from John by our Lord points to the fact that God desires for us to dwell with Him, intimately and forever, in heaven. May that be the reality that the good Monsignor now knows. May it be our reality one day too.
Thank you, Lord, for raising up a kind and loving shepherd in our time. Thank you, Monsignor Lantz, for your ministry among us; you are loved and you will be missed. May you now hear the words of our Lord: “well done, my good and faithful servant. Come, share your master’s joy (Mt. 25:23).”








