Life began for Mark Link on April 21, 1924 in Coldwater, Ohio. By his own testimony he said his parents were the greatest parents anyone could ever wish for. As noted by faith developmentalists, the significance of a father image is critical to one’s later image of God, a key component of an individual’s faith. A Jesuit for 66 years and a priest for 56 years, Fr. Mark passed away on January 18, 2017 at the age of 92.
In 1943, two years after the U.S. became engaged in World War ll, Mark joined the U.S. Army Air Force and served for three years in the Pacific Theatre. He trained as a meteorologist at Washington University in St. Louis and at Wright Field in Dayton, Ohio and was subsequently assigned to the 30th Army Air Force Weather Squadron stationed in Guam and in Saipan. He advanced quickly to the rank of corporal. When Mark completed his military service he left with two commendable citations: the American Theatre Ribbon and the Asiatic-Pacific Theatre Ribbon with three bronze stars.
Before becoming a priest, Mark obtained a bachelor’s degree in architecture from the University of Cincinnati in 1950 and ordained a priest as a member of the Society of Jesus in 1960. Throughout his life, Mark was a writer and teacher. He taught English and Algebra at the University of Detroit High School; an author in residence at Loyola Press; taught religion at St. Ignatius College Prep in Chicago and theology at Loyola University of Chicago. He worked at the Catholic Community of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton in Plano, Texas before directing his energies to full-time writing. Fr. Mark did retreat ministry at Bellarmine Jesuit Retreat House in Barrington, Illinois. Mark wrote for the young and the old. He decided to focus his writing efforts on helping people to pray.
Fr. Link has penned seventy-six books, including his last publication in 2016. Some have appeared in twenty-five different languages including Chinese and Russian. In the past eighteen years his books have found a home in 825 prisons. The non-profit, Victory 2000 distributed over 750,000 copies of his books. Motivation was his key to writing. Fr. Link had a message to every Christian educator, “When you really believe something, you have to tell others about it. Writing is something I felt compelled to do. It is one of the greatest ministries. As Christians, we’ve got one heck of a story to tell. That’s what I’m trying to do.”
For a century Catholics have been advised that the Catechesis or religious education of adults should be at the center not at the periphery of the catechetical endeavors. While many persons in the field have struggled to realize that goal, this quiet, very humble Jesuit made it happen in his ministry in a mode that has wide appeal for the present generation. Fr. Link made theology and Ignatian spirituality accessible to millions of people.