Thank you, Jack, for your  tireless commitment to our newspaper            
            (The  following tribute to editor emeritus John F. “Jack” Fink was published in the  June 15, 2018, issue of The Criterion upon his retirement after serving  the Catholic press for 70 years. Fink entered eternal life on July 17, 2024. Click here to see a  full obituary of Fink.  Eternal  rest grant unto Jack, o Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon him. May his  soul and the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest  in peace. Amen.)
               
            
          
By Mike Krokos
             In this  week’s issue of The Criterion, you will read about John F. “Jack”  Fink’s decision  to “retire” from penning his weekly column, “From the Editor  Emeritus,” on our Perspectives page.
In this  week’s issue of The Criterion, you will read about John F. “Jack”  Fink’s decision  to “retire” from penning his weekly column, “From the Editor  Emeritus,” on our Perspectives page.            
            
              We, of  course, have mixed emotions about Jack stepping away from his longtime  commitment to our publication, but we are more than happy to share that he will  continue as a member of our editorial committee who will still pen editorials,  and write other pieces on occasion as well.
              It should  come as no surprise to anyone that I had heard of Jack long before I became  editor of The Criterion in late 2005.
              Not to  embarrass him, but he was—and still is—an icon in the Catholic press. His work  with Our Sunday Visitor (OSV) publishing company, The  Criterion and as a member of the Catholic Press Association (CPA) for decades—not  years—makes him one of its most respected members. And the mention of these  three organizations only offers a brief glimpse into the tremendous work Jack  has done for the universal Church.
              Jack’s hard  work was recognized when he won the St. Francis de Sales award—the CPA’s highest honor—in 1981.
              Though it was  before my time—I was a senior in high school—my “veteran” press colleagues told  me they were delighted to see Jack’s outstanding commitment to the Catholic  press highlighted. In their opinion, there was no one more deserving.
              I still  remember my introduction to Jack’s work at The Criterion: Greg Otolski,  our current director of communications who was then editor of the newspaper,  told me about Jack’s weekly column and his longstanding commitment to our  mission as then-Archbishop Daniel M. Buechlein’s primary tool of  evangelization.
  “Jack writes  a weekly column, editorials and never misses a deadline,” Greg said.
              I took Greg’s  words with a grain of salt: Everyone occasionally misses a deadline, I thought.
              Nearly 13  years later, I must sheepishly say I am again eating those words. Like  Archbishop Buechlein—who never missed a deadline in his 19 years as publisher  of The Criterion—Jack demonstrated the same commitment to our newspaper.
              Beyond his  column and editorials, Jack’s contributions to our annual Christmas issue were  a must read. He wrote Easter columns, too. And when we asked him to contribute  when The Criterion celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2010, Jack stepped  up, went to work, and wrote a well-researched piece on the history of our  publication. (Yes, it easily arrived before the deadline.)
              Though there  are umpteen more stories about Jack’s “history” with the Catholic press worth  sharing, I believe this one best demonstrates his longevity. (I don’t think  I’ve shared this one with Jack.)
              During the  2015 Catholic Media Conference in St. Louis, The Criterion was  recognized with several awards for excellence in journalism.
              After the  awards program, people gathered to congratulate each other and pick up their  awards certificates.
              A gentleman,  probably in his 50s, came up and congratulated me for our publication’s  recognition, including an award won in editorial writing by John F. Fink.
              He said,  “Wow, it’s great to see the Fink family tradition in journalism is continuing.”
              He then  asked, “Is that Jack’s Fink son who won that honor? “No,” I replied.
  “His  grandson?” he asked. “Nope,” I said.
  “That can’t  be the Jack Fink who was editor of The Criterion back in the 1980’s?” he  said.
  “Yes,” I  responded, “it certainly is.”
              From  Archbishop Charles C. Thompson and the staff of The Criterion and our  readers, thank you, Jack, for 70 years of unwavering commitment to the Catholic  press, including 30-plus years to The Criterion.
               
  
          (Mike Krokos is editor of The  Criterion,  newspaper of the Archdiocese of Indianapolis.) †