Kolbe Tour ~ St. Lucie CC (Port St. Lucie, FL)

Kolbe painting_Shrine of St. Anthony2The Pilgrimage of the Relics of St. Maximilian Kolbe
will spend most of April with our pastoral ministries in Florida and Georgia.

The Our Lady of the Angels Province friars who serve at St. Lucie Catholic Church have planned a
Kolbe Relic Day, Friday, April 1st.
After the 8:30 a.m. Mass, the relic will be displayed during
Exposition and Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament.
After Benediction, there will be a 7:00 p.m. Service honoring the life of
St. Maximilian M. Kolbe, OFM Conv.,
a friar of the same Order (Conventual Franciscan) as our friars, including the pastor and parochial vicars of St. Lucie Catholic Church, Fr. Mark Szanyi, OFM Conv.,
Fr. Curt Kreml, OFM Conv., Fr. Paul Gabriel, OFM Conv. & Fr. Daniel Pal, OFM Conv.
The friars, staff and parishioners of St. Lucie Catholic Church look forward to your April visit.
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FLORIDA
St. Lucie Catholic Church, Port St. Lucie ~ April 1-3, 2016
St. Mark Catholic Church, Boynton Beach  ~  April 8-10, 2016

GEORGIA
Holy Cross Catholic Church, Atlanta ~ April 15-17, 2016
St. Philip Benizi Catholic Church, Jonesboro  ~  April 21-24, 2016

Later in the Spring, the tour heads to our Northern ministries in Pennsylvania, Upstate New York, Ontario-Canada, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York City and New Jersey before returning Maryland for the August 14th Closing Ceremonies, at the Shrine of St. Anthony (Ellicott City).

Posted in MI

Kolbe Tour – St. Mark (Boynton Beach, FL)

In commemoration of the 75th Anniversary of the Martyrdom of Conventual Franciscan Friar, St. Maximilian M. Kolbe, OFM Conv., our province is in the midst of a Pilgrimage of the Relics of St. Maximilian Kolbe. From April 8-10, 2016, the relic will be available at our pastoral ministry of St. Mark Catholic Church in Boynton Beach, FL.

Pastor, Fr. Daniel Fink, OFM Conv. and
Parochial Vicars, Fr. Germain Kopaczynski, OFM Conv.,
Fr. Richard Florek, OFM Conv. and
Fr. Samuel Zebron, OFM Conv.
invite you to join them, their staff and the parishioners of St. Mark’s for the weekend veneration.
Kolbe relic finalMass of Welcoming ~ 7:00 p.m., Friday ~ April 8th
Veneration Also Available During:
Reconciliation ~ 8:30-9:00 a.m. and 3:30-4:00 p.m., Saturday ~ April 9th
Vigil Masses ~ 4:00 and 5:45 p.m., Saturday ~ April 9th
Third Sunday of Easter Morning Masses ~ 7:30, 9:15 and 11:00 a.m., Sunday ~ April 9th
Third Sunday of Easter Afternoon Masses ~ 12:30 & 4:00 p.m. (Spanish), Sunday ~ April 9th

Relic Tour Background:
To commemorate the 75th Anniversary of the martyrdom of St. Maximilian Kolbe (a friar of our Order of Friars Minor Conventual who died in the World War II concentration camp in Auschwitz, Poland) our friars of Our Lady of the Angels Province have sponsored a pilgrimage of St. Maximilian’s relics (consisting of fragments of his beard). This is the largest tour of St. Maximilian Kolbe relics in the United States. It began on January 15, 2016 with an Opening Mass celebrated by our Minister Provincial, the Very Reverend Fr. James McCurry, OFM Conv., followed by veneration, held the Shrine of St. Anthony in Ellicott City, Maryland. The tour includes 38 of our friar’s ministry sites along the East Coast of the United States and Canada. The pilgrimage of St. Maximilian’s relics will return to our Ellicott City, MD ministry at the Shrine of St. Anthony for a concluding Closing Ceremony, on St. Maximilian’s Feast Day, August 14th.

Posted in MI

Provincial visit at Syracuse U

IMG_0297Our Lady of the Angels Province Minister Provincial, the Very Reverend Fr. James McCurry, OFM Conv. celebrated the Holy Triduum and Paschal Feast with the Roman Catholic student community at Syracuse University. In all 1000 students (with some visiting family members) celebrated at two Easter Sunday Masses. Our Lady of the Angels Province Friar, Br. Ed Falsey, OFM Conv., who serves as the Guardian of the St. Francis Friary in Syracuse (NY), joined Maggie Byrne – Pastoral Assistant, and Ashley – Student Lector, to complete the ministry team with Fr. James.

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The Christ on the Campus” is the crucifix designed and painted by students that hangs in the St. Thomas More Campus Ministry – John G. Albrandi Catholic Center – Syracuse University Chapel. The shape and corpus are from the San Damiano Cross that St. Francis of Assisi prayed before as he sought direction for his life and career. The cross depicts contemporary scenes from campus life and is meant to remind students that Christ is present in all of life’s activities. The flags that make up the border of the cross point to the salvation Christ won for all people of all nations, by His glorious Passion and Resurrection.

Holy Week Around the Province

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Good Friday at The Franciscan Church of the Assumption: Fr. Brennan-Joseph, OFM Conv. asks us all to reflect on what role we think we would have played in the #Passion. What role are we playing today? Are we being kind to all that we meet?

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Easter Vigil at The Franciscan Church of the Assumption: Fr. Rick Riccioli, OFM Conv. lights the Easter fire for the blessing and lighting of the 2016 Easter Candle

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Good Friday’s Way of the Cross at Blessed Sacrament Catholic Community (Pastor: Fr. Paul Lininger, OFM Conv.)

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Good Friday Passion Play at Holy Cross Catholic Church: (pictured – Parochial Vicar, Fr. Abelardo Huanca Martinez, OFM Conv.)

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Holy Cross (Atlanta) Breakfast with the Easter Bunny and Egg Hunt. Breakfast provided by the Knights of Columbus and many more volunteers helped to make the event a great success. (pictured: Pastor, Fr. Jude Michael Krill, OFM Conv. and Parochial Vicar Fr. Abelardo Huanca Martinez, OFM Conv.

Easter Sunday Reflection by Duke Catholic Center Director of Campus Ministry, Fr. Michael Martin, OFM Conv.

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Easter Vigil at St. Lucie Catholic Church (Pastor – Fr. Mark Szanyi, OFM Conv & Parochial Vicars – Fr. Curt Kreml, OFM Conv., Fr. Paul Gabriel, OFM Conv. and Fr. Daniel Pal, OFM Conv.

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Blessing of the Food, St. Paul Catholic Church (Fr. Raymond Borkowski, OFM Conv.)

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Holy Saturday Easter Egg Hunt at the Shrine of St. Anthony: Young Max (age 2) and his family enjoyed visiting the friars and taking part in the morning egg Hunt fun. He was really excited when he saw the small Shrine of St. Maximilian M. Kolbe, OFM Conv., on the grounds during the hunt. He ran up to his patron saint’s statue and said, “That’s me! That’s Max!”

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Easter Sunday Sunrise Mass at the Shrine of St. Anthony (on the front lawn of Carrollton Hall Historic Site) with Shrine and Hall Director, Fr. Michael Heine, OFM Conv.

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The Easter Fire at San Damiano Mission

CRS Stations of the Cross

by Leonard Porter12th Station

12th Station: “Jesus Dies on the Cross” by Leonard Porter Studio (2010) Commissioned by the Church of Christ the King (New Vernon, NY)

On Friday, March 18, 2016, Catholic Relief Services (CRS) issued a YouTube Stations of the Cross Video Series. Each station was narrated by representatives of CRS, our Bishops and dignitaries from other Catholic organizations. The 12th Station, Jesus Dies on the Cross, was narrated by Our Lady of the Angels Province friar, Fr. Robert Twele, OFM Conv. Esq. who serves CRS as Director of Legal Counsel. Please take a few moments of your Holy Week and watch these beautiful reflections.

Pilgrimage Begins Holy Week

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(Note Friar Nicholas processing just behind Archbishop Lori near the bottom of the picture. You can recognize him by the hood of his habit over his vestments.)

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2016 Palm Sunday Vigil – St. Casimir sanctuary photo taken by a pilgrim from the youth program of our pastoral ministry of St. Clement Mary Hofbauer (Baltimore)

Each year, at the start of Holy Week, our pastoral ministry of St. Casimir Church (Baltimore, MD) is home to the Closing Mass of the Archdiocesan Youth & Young Adult Pilgrimage, a tradition in the Archdiocese of Baltimore since its inception in 1993 by His Eminence Cardinal William H. Keeler (Retired). The pilgrims (which include members of several of our pastoral ministries in the Archdiocese of Baltimore) begin the day with the opportunity to participate in the Sacrament of Reconciliation (clergy from all over the Archdiocese participated, including Our Lady of the Angels Province friar, Fr. Matt Foley, OFM Conv., who serves the students of our high school ministry, Archbishop Curley High School. Check out the link at the bottom of this article for a picture of Friar Matt and a young pilgrim at Confession.) and an encouraging rally led by the Archbishop, who then leads a Eucharistic Procession to the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary for Adoration. The group moves onto Baltimore City’s War Memorial Plaza to eat an outdoor lunch and pray the Rosary together, then onto the Stations of the Cross and some spiritual music before joining their bishops (Archbishop William E. Lori and Bishop Denis J. Madden) for the last hour of the walk through the streets of Baltimore, as an act of prayer, with the hope of encountering God both along the way, as well as at the end of their journey. The bishops and pilgrims share in the burden of bearing a large cross on their shoulders as they process through the streets, going from place to place, learning a little more about your faith at each stop. The final destination is a Palm Sunday Vigil Mass Celebration with the parishioners of St. Casimir Church, concelebrated by the pastor, Our Lady of the Angels Province friar, Fr. Dennis Grumsey.
993892_10207431443418070_1409314808276870163_nThis year, Friar Nicholas Rokitka, OFM Conv. served the Archbishop as Deacon during the Mass. Please keep him in your prayers during these final months of formation. His Ordination to the Priesthood is planned for June 25, 2016, to be held at St. Casimir Church.
Catholic Review Article & More from the Catholic Review

Kolbe Tour Stop ~ Holy Cross (Atlanta, GA)

Click the above image to order copies of St. Maximilian Kolbe: Martyr of Charity

Click the above image to order copies of St. Maximilian Kolbe: Martyr of Charity

April 15 – 17, 2016: Holy Cross Catholic Church host the Pilgrimage of the Relics of St. Maximilian Kolbe, OFM Conv. as the parish is incorporates this event into their ongoing celebrations for the Extraordinary Jubilee Year of Mercy. Other special events at the parish include a Divine Mercy Sunday (April 3) 3:00 p.m. celebration and attendance at the Atlanta Eucharistic Congress (June 3-4), in addition to the ongoing practice of praying the Prayer of His Holiness Pope Francis every Tuesday, after the 9:15 a.m. Mass, and praying the Chaplet of Divine Mercy, every Friday at 3:00 p.m. in their Adoration Chapel.
Please join the Holy Cross Catholic and the Our Lady of the Angels Province friars serving there (Pastor –
Fr. Jude Michael Krill, OFM Conv., Parochial Vicars – Fr. Abelardo Huanca Martinez, OFM Conv. and Fr. Gary Johnson, OFM Conv., as well as Fr. Reto Davatz, OFM Conv. who is in residence at the friary and serves as Chaplain of Blessed Trinity Catholic High School), for these relic veneration opportunities.

  • Friday, April 15, 2016: 7:00 p.m. Welcoming Bilingual Prayer Service (English and Spanish)
  • Saturday, April 16, 2016: 9:15 a.m. Mass in honor of Saint Maximilian M. Kolbe, OFM Conv.

The Relics will be respectfully displayed in the main sanctuary during all the regular Masses, with the opportunity for the veneration after each Mass: Saturday April 16 – 5:00 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. (Spanish) and Sunday April 17 – 7:30 a.m., 9:00 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 1:15 p.m. (Spanish), 5:30 p.m. (Youth)

More Information on the Pilgrimage of the Relics of St. Maximilian Kolbe

Posted in MI

Feast of St. Joseph – March 19th

St. Joseph is the patron saint of husbands, unborn children, fathers, workers, travelers, immigrants, accountants, attorneys, barristers, bursars, cabinetmakers, carpenters, cemetery workers, children, civil engineers, confectioners, craftsmen, the dying – doubtful – hesitant, educators, exiles, families, furniture makers, house hunters & sellers, marriage, orphans, social justice and a happy death. In addition to the Universal Church, there are continents, countries, regions and cities which also hold him as patron, such as the Americas, Philippines, Vatican City, Vietnam, China, Canada, Korea, Mexico, Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Peru, Vietnam, Bavaria, Allahabad, Anchorage, Baton Rouge, Buffalo, Cologne, Carinthia, Styria, Turin, Tyrol, Sicily and many more. The name San José (or San Jose) is the most common city name in the world.
In the United States, Saint Joseph’s Day is especially celebrated in Italian-American communities. This great love of “San Giuseppe” often stems from a legend from the Middle Ages. There was a severe drought, and when the people of Sicily prayed for their patron saint to bring them rain, it came. The people had promised that if through his intercession, their prayers were answered, they would prepare a large feast to honor him. Traditionally the fava bean (the crop which saved the population from starvation) is a traditional part of St. Joseph’s Day altars (a three teared table representing the Holy Trinity) to this day, alongside flowers, limes, candles, wine, cakes, breads, cookies, meatless dishes, and Zeppole / Bignè di San Giuseppe (St. Joseph’s cake). Throughout the USA, there are communities who annually don red clothing and enjoy these dishes that often include bread crumbs in the recipes to represent the saw dust of St. Joseph the carpenter. No meat is included because the Feast Day falls during Lent.

Giving food to the needy is also a St. Joseph’s Day custom.

St. Joseph Day pics from St. Peters 2015For the past 7 years our pastoral ministry of St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church, of Point Pleasant Beach – NJ, has held a feast to celebrate St. Joseph’s Day, with the proceeds benefiting the parish school (St. Peter School). This year, as March 19th falls on a Saturday, the parish will celebrate the Mass for the Solemnity at their regular 8:30 a.m. Morning Mass. Later that day, the 5:00 p.m. Mass will be the Vigil Mass for Palm Sunday and the start of Holy Week; as the Solemnity of Saint Joseph ends – Holy Week begins. Consequently, the annual evening Feast of Saint Joseph at the parish is not possible this year. However, the parish did not cancel all together.
This year is the Extraordinary Jubilee Year of Mercy for the whole Church throughout the world, as promoted by Pope Francis. During this Year of Mercy, we Roman Catholics are to focus more on Corporal and Spiritual Works of Mercy, including “Feeding the Hungry” and “Giving Drink to the Thirsty.” With this in mind, the 8th Annual Feast of St. Joseph is moved from Saint Peter Parish to Joseph’s House (a nonprofit organization dedicated to caring for the homeless). The feast will not be open to the public and used as a fund raiser for the school. The event will instead aid “the least of our brothers and sisters.” Joseph’s House serves 85 or more guests on a daily basis – offering shelter, meals, social services and friendship.

Saint Joseph
Faithful Joseph
Loving Joseph
Protector Joseph
Dreamer Joseph
Gentle Joseph
Parent Joseph
Pray for Us!

Prayer
O God, Who in Thine ineffable Providence has vouchsafed to choose Blessed Joseph to be the spouse of Thy most holy Mother Mary; Grant, we beseech Thee, that we may deserve to have him for our intercessor in heaven whom on earth we venerate as our holy protector.
Amen

Remembering +Fr. Eugene Kole, OFM Conv.

Kole, Eugene 2014+Fr. Eugene Kole, OFM Conv. passed away suddenly on March 3, 2016. Friar Eugene is mourned by his Franciscan family, his sister Monica Kole, cousins, and the many individuals to whom he ministered throughout his life. His assignments included Kolbe High School, Bridgeport-CT, Cardinal O’Hara High School, Tonawanda-NY, Headmaster at Kennedy Christian High School, Hermitage-PA, Pastor to St. Francis of Assisi Parish, Bessemer-AL, Diocese of Bridgeport Director of Young Adult Ministry, Director of Campus Ministry at the University of Bridgeport and Sacred Heart University, Dean of Graduate and Continuing Education at Chestnut Hill College, Philadelphia-PA, President of Quincy University, Quincy- IL, Executive Vice-President of SS. Cyril and Methodius Seminary, Orchard Lake-MI and Parochial Vicar at St. Paul Church, Kensington-CT. He began serving the military community in 2006 as Catholic Pastor at Pope Air Force Base in NC. in 2009, he moved to his last assignment as Pastor of the military community of Queen of Peace Catholic Community at Langley, AFB where he served until his death. A time of gathering was held Friday March 11th, at St. Francis of Assisi, Athol Springs followed by a Mass of the Christian Burial. He was be buried in a family plot in Hillcrest Cemetery. Memorial contributions may be made in lieu of flowers to the Franciscan Education Burse, 12300 Folly Quarter Rd., Ellicott City, MD 21042.

Fr Eugene Kole - UA Air Force Citation for Meritorious Service

US Air Force citation awarded posthumously to Fr. Eugene Kole, OFM Conv. for meritorious civilian service to the United States of America

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The Air Force posthumously awarded this medal to Fr. Eugene Kole, OFM Conv. for Meritorious Civilian Service to the United States of America. It was pinned to his habit for burial.

 

Funeral Homily for + Fr. Eugene Kole, OFM Conv.
Delivered by Fr. James McCurry, OFM Conv.
Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic Community
Langley AFB, Hampton, Virginia
8thMarch 2016

Isaiah 25:6-9 [“Behold God… on this Mountain”]
Rev. 21:1-7 [“Voice from the Throne”]
John 14:1-6 [“I am the Way”]

On behalf of Fr. Eugene’s sister Monica and his Franciscan family, I pay tribute to all of you in the Langley community, and we give thanks, for your overwhelming outpouring of love and respect towards for our beloved brother.
Let me also express deep appreciation to the Most Reverend Richard Higgins, Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of the Military Services, who is present tonight representing Archbishop Timothy Broglio. You were a good personal friend of Fr. Eugene, and we are honored by your presence. Our thanks as well to all of the concelebrating clergy and deacons, to the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia, and to the Wing Commander of Langley Air Force Base, Colonel Miller and to all of the ecumenical representative of the Air Force chaplaincy.
This past week on Sunday night at Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic Community, the youth ministry directors processed with 100 or more parish teens the sudden death of Fr. Eugene and his enormous impact on everyone in the Langley community. Each of the teens wrote a personal letter to Fr. Eugene expressing their feelings. Each one had his or her own treasured Fr. Eugene stories. I’ve read scores of those messages written by the teens, and am positively gobsmacked.
I too have my own “Eugene Story” – I honestly do not know if I would even be a Franciscan Friar today were it not for Friar Eugene. It was 46 years ago we met – when I was a young college lad discerning my vocation. It was some years ago we first met – when I was a young college lad discerning my vocation.  He dropped everything to talk with me about St. Francis of Assisi and our Franciscan way of life. He gave me a copy of the book about Franciscan life which he had written, entitled The Beggar. He took me and a couple of others up into the mountains of Western Massachusetts to our friary in Becket, where he talked about God on the Mountaintop. I said to him “Should we sing ‘Climb Every Mountain?” He frowned [No singer was he!] Instead, he recommended that I read Thomas Merton’s spiritual biography The Seven-Storey Mountain, and of course I did. I dared not ignore Friar Eugene’s advice! Heaven forfend if you did not do as Eugene ordered!
Today’s first reading from Isaiah appropriately speaks of our looking towards God on the Mountaintop – to HIM who provides for all our needs. Fr. Eugene’s eyes were ever fixed upon God at the mountaintop. Two months after Eugene took me to the mountaintop of Becket, I applied to the Order, and six months later I was wearing the same Franciscan habit as Eugene. Through all of the years since then, he never ceased to be my inspiration and mentor.
Eugene’s book The Beggar later was expanded to a new edition with a fuller title: The Beggar on the Road. That title is a fitting epitaph for this good and itinerant Franciscan whom the folks at Langley Air Force Base came to know simply as “Father Eugene.”
Franciscan Friars model their lives after Saint Francis of Assisi, who lived 800 years ago. His was a life of itinerancy – a little Poor Man whose journey imitated the mission of Jesus – Francis the “Beggar on the Road” mirrored the 2nd Person of the Trinity, Jesus Christ, who became a poor itinerant beggarman in this world for your and my salvation.
Fr. Eugene found in the life of Francis of Assisi a roadmap for his own journey of life. At a crucial moment of life, St. Francis had opened the Scriptures three times, in honor of the Holy Trinity, in order to hear God’s voice speaking through three passages: “Go…give to the poor” [da pauperibus] (Mk. 10:21); “Take nothing for your journey” [nihil in via] (Lk. 9:3); Take up your Cross” [Tollet crucem] (Mt. 16:24). These three passages became the kernel of the itinerant Rule of Life that Francis would later write for all of the Friars who would follow him. Eugene professed that Franciscan Rule of Life and never wavered in living it for the past 5 decades.
Embedded in that Franciscan Rule is the holy “roadmap” that Eugene, the “Beggar on the Road” tried to walk for fifty years: 1) Solidarity with the Poor – always the man for others; always available for others; laying down his life for others. Years ago he sponsored a poor uneducated refugee from Kosovo. Now thanks to Eugene, that young man is now a doctor of science working for the US government. 2) Keeping nothing for himself – Every gift his sister Monica would give to him he’d give away faster than she would know. He would constantly forgot about himself and he’d summarily dismiss any questions about his own needs. He and I often reflected together that true humility is not so much thinking low of oneself [not low self-esteem], but thinking seldom of oneself. Eugene exemplified that kind of Franciscan humility; 3) Take up the Cross – No one knew all of the crosses Fr. Eugene carried. He took upon his shoulders not only his own burdens but those of everyone who came to him. The pains of others weighed heavy on his heart. In one of his last emails to me, he sent me an article about Pope Francis’s “Dark Night of the Soul,” and he said to me that he could identify with that dark night. The itinerant journey of a “beggar on the road,” like Eugene, moves back and forth through day and through night, through lights and shadows.
Amidst the lights and shadows, what keeps the true “Beggar” on the “Road”? For a Franciscan and Christian, only one thing keeps feet steadfast to the ground: The Voice of God. You must always keep listening for that Voice. Last week – the day before he died – Eugene went into the office at the Condo complex where he lived, and retrieved a book that he’d newly ordered. With great excitement, he told the condo manager that he could not wait to read this book. It was entitled The Voice of God!
Today’s second reading evokes the Voice of God: “a loud voice from the throne saying… ‘Behold… I am the alpha and omega, the beginning and the end.” Eugene never doubted that a loving God stood beside him at the beginning and end of his own itinerant journey of life – accompanying Eugene each step of the way in between. God’s voice pointed his Way.
In today’s gospel passage, Thomas questioned Jesus about this “Way”: “Master, we do not know where you are going; how can we know the way?” Jesus replied: “I am the Way!…”
Be heartened by these words, dear brothers and sisters! Fr. Eugene was no doubting Thomas. He lived and taught the WAY of Jesus. He walked that Way all the way! Now we can ask where has his pilgrim way led him?
Today we see his remains lying silenced now in a plane wooden coffin. I should mention that Eugene and I several times discussed the amazing symbol of the wooden coffin in which the great Pope Blessed Paul VI lay during his funeral Mass in front of St. Peter’s Basilica in 1978. Eugene and I were both formed in the era of Paul VI, the Pope of Vatican II.   When I sent Eugene a papal blessing for his 40th anniversary of ordination last year, he told me that the only other papal blessing he ever received was from Pope Paul VI forty years earlier (thanks to Fr. Donald Kos). Eugene loved the simplicity of that great and complicated churchman Paul VI. Indeed Eugene was himself, like Paul VI, a similar oxymoron blend of simplicity and complexity.
In his last Sunday homily, which Fr. Eugene preached to Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic Community at Langley on the 28th of February, he himself gave us an even deeper glimpse of where his pilgrim way was leading him: He cited the story of Alfred Nobel, the famous Swedish scientist, looking into a mirror: One day Nobel’s brother died. By accident, a newspaper printed an obituary notice for Alfred instead of the deceased brother. It identified him as the inventor of dynamite who made a fortune by enabling armies to achieve new levels of mass destruction. Nobel had the unique opportunity to read his own obituary in his lifetime and get a glimpse of how he would be remembered: as a merchant of death and destruction.  The newspaper’s mistake forced him to turn around, to turn away from the mirror and look out the window, to see what impact his life was really having.  That’s when he decided to change directions. He took his fortune and used it to establish the awards for accomplishments contributing to life rather than death [the Nobel Peace Prize].”
Eugene the master story-teller taught us all to look into the mirror at ourselves, to think about what our own obituary would read. [I might add that for the past ten years Eugene sent me weekly every one of the Sunday homilies that he would preach; each was a masterpiece! [Of course I dared not skip reading even a single one; he’d quiz me!]
At the end, like Afred Nobel, Fr. Eugene looked into the mirror at himself. In that mirror, he wanted to see no more or less than the image of Francis of Assisi, the itinerant “Beggar on the Road.” Looking at his own Franciscan image in the mirror, Eugene saw a man who was both strong and weak, the Lion and the Lamb mixed as one. [I still cherish the stuffed figures of a Lion & Lamb which Eugene gave to me when I was his guardian years ago.] He strove to combine in himself the strength of Jesus the Lion of Judah with the gentleness of Jesus the Lamb of God.
As all of these images in the mirror conflate, what is it about Jesus that Francis of Assisi taught to Eugene our brother the “Beggar on the Road”? I like to think that Francis taught Eugene the ABCs of the Gospel. Eugene’s character became more and more molded by those ABC’s. They sum up the Gospel that Eugene embraced. Ever the educator and evangelizer, Eugene has bequeathed those same ABCs as a gospel value system for the rest of us to follow:

A – Availability – Put others first. Eugene called it the “gift of presence.” He wrote in a letter, “I try to be totally present to the person God places in my life at any given time. I believe that that person is God’s gift to me for that moment.”
B – Bluntness – Eugene always spoke honestly with frank candor. He minced no words. He taught the truth with integrity [He did not suffer fools gladly; he always called a spade a spade, not an agricultural instrument
C – Charity – There abide faith, hope, and charity, these three, but the greatest of these is love (cf. 1 Cor. 13). For Eugene, love was not a gushy emotion; it was a decision to serve. His charity bespoke a profound compassion, an uncanny ability to enter into the pain of others, a supernatural love-bond with people.

I suppose that one final question remains, dear brothers and sisters, as we process Eugene’s death: What shall each of us see when we each look into the mirror on the day that God’s Voice will call us from this world to Himself? On the morning of Thursday the 3rd of March, Fr. Eugene looked into that mirror one last time. The time had come for him to see the face of Christ! – “Behold our God, to whom we looked to save us! This is the Lord for whom we looked; let us rejoice and be glad that he has saved us! (Rev. 21:7).”  When the Air Force chaplains found him dead in his rooms, they described the scene: “He was sitting in his chair, looking serenely heavenward, and the palms of his hands were open and facing upwards.” The “beggar” came to the end of the road – with open hands!