Priest Recalls the Faith of His Grandfather John Wayne

Grandson remembers the handwritten letters 'The Duke' wrote to God and his conversion to Catholicism.

(photo: Wikipedia)

John Wayne, for many, was a Hollywood legend who symbolized true masculinity and American values. To Father Matthew Muñoz, though, he was simply “granddaddy.”

“When we were little we’d go to his house, and we’d simply hang out with granddaddy; and we’d play, and we’d have fun: a very different image from what most people have of him,” Father Muñoz told EWTN News on a recent visit to Rome.

Father Muñoz was 14 years old when his grandfather died of cancer in 1979. In his lifetime, “The Duke” won three Oscars, the congressional Gold Medal, and was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Of all those achievements, though, Father Muñoz is most proud of just one: his grandfather’s conversion to the Catholic faith.

“My grandmother, Josephine Wayne Saenz, had a wonderful influence on his life and introduced him to the Catholic world,” said 46-year-old Father Muñoz, a priest of the Diocese of Orange in California. 

“He was constantly at Church events and fundraisers that she was always dragging him to, and I think that, after a while, he kind of got a sense that the common secular vision of what Catholics are and what his own experience actually was were becoming two greatly different things.”

Father Muñoz’s grandparents married in 1933 and had four children, the youngest of whom—Melinda—is his mother. The couple civilly divorced in 1945, although, as a Catholic, Josephine did not remarry until after Wayne’s death. She also never stopped praying for her husband’s conversion, a prayer which was answered in 1978.

“He was a great friend of the archbishop of Panama, Archbishop Tomas Clavel, and he kept encouraging him, and finally my granddaddy said, ‘Okay, I’m ready.’”

As a result of a change in Panamanian leadership, Archbishop Clavel was exiled from his native land in 1968. Three years later, Cardinal Timothy Manning, then the archbishop of Los Angeles, invited Archbishop Clavel to Orange County, where he served as pastoral leader to half of Orange County’s 600,000 Latinos.

By the time of Wayne’s request, however, Archbishop Clavel was too ill to make the journey to the film star’s residence.

“So Archbishop Clavel called Archbishop McGrath,” Father Muñoz said, explaining that Archbishop McGrath was the successor to Archbishop Clavel in the Archdiocese of Panama. 

“My mom and my uncle were there when he came. So there’s no question about whether or not he was baptized. He wanted to become baptized and become Catholic,” Father Muñoz said. “It was wonderful to see him come to the faith and to leave that witness for our whole family.”

Father Muñoz also said that his grandfather’s expressed a degree of regret about not becoming a Catholic earlier in life, explaining “that was one of the sentiments he expressed before he passed on,” blaming “a busy life.”

Prior to his conversion to Catholicism, though, Wayne’s life was far from irreligious.

“From an early age he had a good sense of what was right and what is wrong. He was raised with a lot of Christian principles and kind of a ‘Bible faith’ that, I think, had a strong impact upon him,” said Father Muñoz, recalling that his grandfather often wrote handwritten notes to the Almighty.

“He wrote beautiful love letters to God, and they were prayers. And they were very childlike, and they were very simple but also very profound at the same time,” he said.

“And sometimes that simplicity was looked at as naivety, but I think there was a profound wisdom in his simplicity.”

Father Muñoz summed up the hierarchy of his grandfather’s values as “God coming first, then family, then country.” It’s a triumvirate he sees repeatedly reflected in his grandfather’s films. He believes those values are much needed in Hollywood today, and, if “the Duke” were still here, he’d be leading the charge.

“My grandfather was a fighter. I think there would be a lot of things he’d be disappointed and saddened over. But I don’t think he would lose hope. I think he would look at the current time as a moment of faith. People are in crisis, and they’re looking for something more meaningful, more real,” Father Muñoz said. 

“So, I think he would look at the situation and say, ‘Don’t get discouraged!’ I think he would say, ‘Get involved. Don’t go hiding in a shell and getting on the defensive from Hollywood. Get involved and be an agent for the good.’ I think he would do that. That’s what he did in his time.”

 

Edward Reginald Frampton, “The Voyage of St. Brendan,” 1908, Chazen Museum of Art, Madison, Wisconsin.

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