Catching up with friar Fabian

Fr. Kevin Fausz, CM (pastor of Holy Redeemer Catholic Church), friar Fabian and the rest of the RCIA team with Confirmandi who came into full communion with the Church, this past Holy Saturday.

One of two friars of our province assigned to the San Damiano Friary – Formation House, in San Antonio, TX, friar Fabian Adderley, OFM Conv. is a simply professed friar in formation who has been busy in his continued studies as well as in ministry at a nearby parish (Holy Redeemer Catholic Church), where he assists by serving as a Catechist and with the RCIA program. During this past Holy Week’s celebrations, friar Fabian was afforded the opportunity to narrate the Passion of Christ (left), as well as witness those members of the parish’s RCIA program, to whom he has been serving in ministry, as they came in full communion with the Church during the 8:00 p.m. Easter Vigil at Holy Redeemer (above). 

Note: San Damiano Friary is part of the Our Lady of Consolation Province.
Franciscan Friars Conventual around the world work together as one community.
Two friars from our province,
Fr. Gary Johnson, OFM Conv. (Guardian & Formation Director, and Definitor) and friar Fabian live in community with other province professed friars and students.

Consecration to the Immaculate Schedule

The Militia of the Immaculata (MI) was established on October 16, 1917, by Saint Maximilian Maria Kolbe, OFM Conv., along with six confreres, during a particularly tumultuous time for the Church in the world. Over the last 100+ years, members of MI live out their baptismal consecration in the light of the Blessed Mother (the Immaculata), with the conscious decision to consecrate to the Immaculata as a dynamic commitment to follow Christ, in her example.
{MI – USA} {MI – Canada} {MI – England} {MI – Brazil}

Prayer of Consecration to the Immaculata
…composed by Saint Maximillian M. Kolbe, OFM Conv.
O Immaculata,
Queen of Heaven and earth,
refuge of sinners and our most loving Mother,
God has willed to entrust the entire order of mercy to you.

Although established in 1917, the Militia of the Immaculata was granted the first verbal blessing by Pope Benedict XV, on March 28, 1919. The official recognition of the Church occurred on January 2, 1922, granted by Cardinal Basilio Pompilj, Vicar of the Diocese of Rome: “With fervent desire that devotion to the Blessed Virgin may extend everywhere, with our authority we establish canonically the pious association commonly called ‘the Pious Union of the Militia of Mary Immaculate’ in the chapel of the Seraphic College of the Friars Minor Conventual in Rome and approve what was established.” On the 80th Anniversary of the founding of MI, the Pontifical Council for the Laity recognized the MI as a Public Association of the Faithful, universal and international, in accordance with the Code of Canon Law, and approved, at the same time, its General Statutes.

Militia of the Immaculata & Our Lady of the Angels Province
With a view to promoting consecration to the Immaculate among the faithful served through the ministries of our friars of Our Lady of the Angels Province, Fr. Jobe Abbass, OFM Conv., who serves as our Province MI Assistant, plans to visit all of our pastoral ministries, over the next few years. In working with our Director of Mission Advancement, new prayer cards and MI enrollment forms are being created. Friar Jobe will be preaching at the Masses in the parishes to encourage the faithful to consecrate themselves to the Immaculate and to enroll in the M.I. At those Masses, the congregation will be given an envelope with the consecratory prayers card and a miraculous medal. On the envelope those who wish to enroll will have to opportunity to fill out the information and apply to enroll in the M.I. Enrollment Certificates will be issued from our offices in Rensselaer, NY.
Consistent with our Franciscan charism and tradition of devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary, our Order’s Constitutions remind our friars that in St. Maximilian’s unconditional consecration to the Immaculate, we have found “a concrete form of openness to the new challenges of mission.” Our province plans to more fully tap into this devotion from our Kolbean heritage. Friar Jobe and our friars serving as pastors have mapped out a schedule through February 2022, to preach at the Masses to promote the consecration and enrollment in the Militia of the Immaculata.

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M.I. INITIATIVE SCHEDULE THROUGH February 2022
Personal Consecration to the Immaculate

Stop #1: May 11-12, 2019
Ottawa, ON (St. Ignatius the Martyr Parish)

Stop #2: July 6-7, 2019
Point Pleasant, NJ (St. Peter Roman Catholic Church)

Stops #3 &#4: July 13-14, 2019
Seaside Park/Seaside Heights, NJ (St. Junipero Serra Parish)

Stop #5: August 17-18, 2019
Elmhurst, NY (St. Adalbert Roman Catholic Church)

Stop #6: August 24-25, 2019
Brooklyn, NY (Most Holy Trinity – St. Mary’s Parish)

Stop #7: September 7-8, 2019
Toronto, ON (The Franciscan Church of St. Bonaventure)

Stop #8: September 14-15, 2019
Hamburg, NY (St. Francis of Assisi Roman Catholic Church)

Stop #9 (Part I) September 21-22, 2019
Stop #9 (Part II) September 28-29, 2019
Baltimore, MD (St. Clement Mary Hofbauer Church,
St. Michael the Archangel Church & Church of the Annunciation)

Stop #10: October 12-13, 2019
Kingston, ON (Parish Community of St. John the Apostle)

Stop #11: October 19-20, 2019
Kingston, ON (Holy Family Parish)

Stop #12: November 9-10, 2019
Syracuse, NY (The Franciscan Church of the Assumption)

Stop #13: November 16-17, 2019
Chicopee, MA (The Basilica of St. Stanislaus, Bishop & Martyr)

Stop #14: November 23-24, 2019
Holyoke, MA (Our Lady of the Cross Parish)

Stop #15: November 30 – December 1, 2019
Jonesboro, GA (St. Philip Benizi Catholic Church)

Stop #16: December 7-8, 2019
Atlanta, GA (Holy Cross Catholic Church)

Stop #17: December 14-15, 2019
Vanier/Ottawa, ON (Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish Church)

Stop #18: January 18-19, 2020
Boynton Beach, FL (St. Mark Catholic Church)

Stop #19: January 25-26, 2020
Port St. Lucie, FL (St. Lucie Catholic Church)

Stop #20: March 14-15, 2020
Columbus, GA (St. Anne Catholic Church)

Stop #21 & #22: March 20-22, 2020
Columbus, GA (St. Benedict the Moor Parish)
and Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church)

_____________________

Stop #23: August 14-15, 2021
Fonda, NY (Saint Kateri Tekakwitha National Shrine and Historic Site)

Stop #24: September 11-12, 2021
New Bedford, MA (Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church)

Stop #25: September 18-19, 2021
Chicopee, MA (St. Anthony of Padua Parish)

Stop #26: September 25-16, 2021
Johnstown, PA (St. Francis of Assisi Parish)

Stop #27: October 2-3, 2021
Davidsville, PA (St. Anne Church)

Stop #28: October 9-10, 2021
Kensington, CT (St. Paul Catholic Church)

Stop #29: October 23-24, 2021
Cromwell, CT (St. John Catholic Church)

Stop #30: October 30-31, 2021
Baltimore, MD (Pastorate of St. Casimir at Canton and Patterson Park)

Stop #31: November 9, 2021
Chapel Hill, NC (Newman Catholic Student Center Parish)

Stop #32: November 13-14. 2021
Siler City, NC (St. Julia Catholic Community)

Stop #33: November 20-21, 2021
Shamokin, PA (Mother Cabrini Catholic Church)

Stop #34: January 22-23, 2022
Burlington, NC (Blessed Sacrament Catholic Community)

Stops #35 & #36: February 19-20, 2022
Trevorton & Coal Township, PA (St. Patrick Parish & Our Lady of Hope Parish)

Final Stop: February 27, 2022
Ellicott City, MD (The Shrine of St. Anthony)

Note: Follow the parish links for Mass time.

_____________________

Be sure to mark your calendars
and check back as more information will follow about the
First Annual Franciscan Pilgrimage to the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception,
in Washington D.C.,
on Saturday, April 30, 2022
.

Posted in MI

Franciscan Young Adult Ministry

In the Fall of 2018, our Shrine of St. Anthony (Ellicott City, MD) added a Young Adults Community program. Throughout the year, this community of friars & pilgrims host spiritual and social events, as well as bring awareness of the shrine and its facilities to the greater area Young Adult Ministry programs of the Archdiocese of Baltimore, the Archdiocese of Washington DC and their neighboring diocese.

Recently, our young adult friars and our friars in formation, led by the shrine’s Young Adult Community Animator – friar Franck Sokpolie, OFM Conv., along with the Director of the Shrine – Fr. Eric de la Pena, OFM Conv.,  hosted a social night with night prayers. The group gathered in the Shrine’s Glass Room for games, snack and socializing and then ended the night with night prayers in the Shrine’s Chapel.

The Next upcoming event is an Ecumenical Taizé prayer service April 17, 2019, the Wednesday of Holy Week. Open to everyone, come share an evening service of prayer, song, and contemplation by candlelight, from 7:30 to 8:45 p.m.

Helping to Turn Strangers into Neighbors

Franciscan Friars Conventual Responding to Real Needs –
Helping to Turn Strangers into Neighbors

On February 21, 2017, Pope Francis in an address to the VI International Forum: Migration and Peace, felt compelled to address the nature of contemporary migratory movements, which increases challenges presented to the political community, civil society and to the Church, and which amplifies the urgency for a coordinated and effective response to these challenges. Our shared response, according to our Holy Father Francis, “may be articulated by four verbs: to welcome, to protect, to promote and to integrate.”
Have you ever wondered what it is like living in a world, city, or local neighborhood, where your very presence arouses contempt, suspicion, prejudice or common indecency? Where judgements are made of you based on the tone of your skin, the first language you speak or the accent present in your words? Where you as the stranger are literally untrusted, despised or rejected? Where your description begins with a negative – illegal? Where the term friend, neighbor, brother or sister are unspoken?
Sometimes we forget that the words we choose to identify another person do make a difference in whether they meet with our approval, are treated with respect and dignity or vilified and turned away.
Ever given a second thought, to what is to be in hand to enter your child’s school, pick-up a pharmacy prescription, enter a hospital, sit in a library or present when you use a credit card?
Ever question, why we do what we do to others who like ourselves are merely looking for opportunity and means to provide for themselves and those they love and care for?
Most of us perhaps fail to ponder and take for granted that when a person, be they an officer of the law, pharmacist, teacher, sports coach or cashier, ask for a picture identification we readily show a driver’s license, passport or BJ’s / Costco ID which has a picture, address and baseline information stating who we are and where we live. It is not so easy for everyone. Essentially, it is the reality of tens of thousands reaching into the millions now living within our country’s borders, cities, villages, towns and rural areas. They are the souls we greet in the market, on the streets, in our churches, work places and gatherings. They are the anawim of God, loved and cherished by Jesus, and named by him as our brothers and sisters.
As part of small but growing effort, the Blessed Sacrament Faith Community and the Franciscan Friars Conventual together with the local Burlington Police Chief, law enforcement officers, and a dedicated group of volunteers representing various religious traditions and families came together two years ago – May 2015 – hoping to make a meaningful dent into a lived problem. Namely, “How to help turn strangers into neighbors”. The result of our coming together was the formation of the Faith ID Card Task Force of Alamance County.

With financial and moral support from the Conventual Friars of Our Lady of Angels and Our Lady of Consolation Provinces and the approval of Bishop Burbidge, then Bishop of the Diocese of Raleigh, we setup a specialized FAITH ID CARD PROGRAM linked to an expanding program here in North Carolina known as the FaithAction Network.

So What Is A Faith ID Card Program?
An ID card is just a piece of plastic until a person gives it a face and story, and our community gives the card value. We believe each person in our community, regardless of race, culture, nationality, sexual orientation, gender identity, immigration or socio-economic status has inherent dignity and worth, and is deserving of a valid form of identification.  At this particularly divisive time in state and national politics on issues of immigration and diversity, community ID programs bring greater dignity, access and hope to our newest neighbors, while building safer, more inclusive and united communities for all.
The Faith ID Card Program is a connected group of faith communities, nonprofits, and grassroots movements that recognize the urgency of valid ID cards for members of our community who may have limited access to government issued forms of identification, and the importance of creating a unified model and vetting process that community partners (law enforcement, health centers, schools, businesses, and other city agencies) can trust and use to better identify, serve, and protect all residents in cities across North Carolina and the United States.

The Blessed Sacrament Faith ID Card Program is part of the FaithAction ID Network. We are proud to say we are the first franchise so to speak. We call ourselves In the past two years the network has experienced tremendous growth and community ID programs now exist in Guilford, Alamance, Forsyth, Randolph, Orange, and Mecklenburg counties, and may soon be expanding to Wake, Moore, Montgomery, and other counties throughout North Carolina and there is a satellite sponsored by Catholic Charities in Cincinnati, Ohio.  Network members agree to utilize the same community ID model to ensure the integrity and further the growth of new and existing programs.  Shared hallmarks of FaithAction ID network programs include:

  • Ensuring each program has a strong home base that can effectively communicate and coordinate a community ID drive with staff and volunteers
  • Utilizing the same policies, procedures, and vetting process to receive an ID card
  • Ensuring partnership with local law enforcement and other community partners who formally agree to support the program and attend ID drives
  • Utilizing the 4 stage ID drive model in a large, safe space (welcome, orientation, document check, photo/computer intake)
  • Facilitating dialogue throughout the ID drive between ID participants and law enforcement and other community partners with the goal of building greater understanding, trust and cooperation
  • Providing the same or similar look as other network programs on the front of the card, and signifying you are a part of the FaithAction ID network on the back
  • Printing and distributing hundreds of ID cards within two weeks of each drive, and securing the personal information of all participants
  • Participating in monthly calls to share experiences and best practices with other network programs

*There may be some flexibility and unique characteristics of each program, depending on the needs of each community. *All participants must attend a mandatory orientation at an ID drive, and provide proof of photo identification (passport, foreign national ID card, driver’s license, matricula consular) and proof of address (utility bill, bank statement, current rental agreement, medical record) in order to receive an ID card from a FaithAction ID Network member.
Finally, network members believe it is crucial we continue to work for a driver’s license for all residents at the state level, as well as lasting immigration reform at the federal level.  In the meantime, we believe community ID programs represent a very important step forward in creating safer, more inclusive, and united communities for all – a much needed example of positive collaboration at this divided time in our nation’s history.

In closing let me say, Thank You, to our Conventual Franciscan Provinces’ leadership and members for helping make this program possible. To date, the Faith ID Card Program here in Burlington, NC, has distributed over 5000 Faith ID Cards. Without your financial and fraternal support, the effort might never have gotten off the ground. The challenge now is to keep moving forward towards the realization of its mission and vision, a place where strangers become neighbors.

Respectfully submitted by,
Fr. Paul Lininger, OFM Conv.
Blessed Sacrament Church, Pastor

 

An article entitled, “Community ID Program Builds trust between migrants and police,” by Maria Benevento, appeared in the April 5, 2019 online edition of the National Catholic Reporter. To read the full article, click on the following link: ID Card Program

Congratulations Friar “Duffy!”

Congratulations to our own Friar Michael Duffy, OFM Conv.!
  March 29, 2019: Our Lady of the Angels Province friar,
Br. Michael Duffy, OFM Conv. (DNP, APRN, ANP-BC)
received the 2019 “Community Service Award”
from the American Nurses Association (ANA) Massachusetts,
during a banquet ceremony, in Boston.
The ANA Massachusetts “Community Service Award” is for a registered nurse whose community service has a positive impact on the citizens of Massachusetts. We  friars are proud of Friar Duffy’s ministries at The College of Our Lady of the Elms, Lorraine’s Soup Kitchen, the Elms’ caRe vaN, and serving our own Senior Friars as a consultant and guide to many.
Bravo Friar Michael Duffy! “Quis ut Deus?”

Virtual Stations of the Cross

The Stations of the Cross are of Franciscan origin and are attributed to St. Leonard of Port Maurice, a saintly Franciscan Friar who preached on the sufferings of Christ. For those who cannot get to a church location but want to pray the Stations of the Cross, our pastoral ministry at the Basilica of St. Stanislaus, Bishop & Martyr’s website shares an online version featuring the finely sculpted and painted figures in each of the Stations of the Cross which are attractively set in large niches around the Basilica. These begin in the front of the church with the first through seventh stations on the right and the eighth through the fourteenth on the left side.

Lenten Mission – St. Philip Benizi Catholic Church

In English with Fr. Michael Lasky, OFM Conv. – Our Lady of the Angels Province JPIC Chairman

St. Philip Benizi Catholic Church (under the pastoral leadership of Our Lady of the Angels Province friars, Fr. John Zoziol, OFM Conv. – Pastor, Fr. Vincent Gluc, OFM Conv. – Parochial Vicar, Fr. Luis Palacios Rodriguez, OFM Conv. – Parochial Vicar and Fr. Martin Breski, OFM Conv. – in Residence) celebrated a Lenten Parish Mission on March 23-27, 2019 with the theme: “Racism: Moving through Resistance to Reconciliation.
The Parish Mission was presented in English by Friar Michael Lasky, OFM Conv. (Our Province Chairman of JPIC – Justice, Peace, and Integrity of Creation) and in Spanish by Fray (Friar) Fabián Esteban Arrieta Botero, OFM Conv. (Vocation Director for the Franciscanos Conventuales Friars – Columbia – and Parochial Vicar for Immaculate Conception Parish in Filandia, Colombia). Friar Michael and Friar Fabián began the Mission by preaching during all of the weekend Masses, then preached during the Morning Masses, Monday-Wednesday, followed by Mission talks after each Mass. The 7:00 p.m. evening presentations were followed by a reception.

In Spanish by Fr. Fabián Esteban, OFM Conv. – Franciscan Friars Conventual of Columbia Vocation Director

Day 1: Refining Our Images of Jesus –
Turning the Other Cheek and Non-Violent Resistance with Friar Michael
~ In Spanish with Friar Fabián ~

Day 2: Images of Reconciliation: The Cross and Mary  –
Two Difficult Stories to Hear: The Lynching Tree, and Our Lady of Guadalupe with Friar Michael

~ In Spanish with Friar Fabián ~

Day 3: Seeing through Tears of Faith and  Responding with Broken Hearts of Love –
MLK on Racism: An Examination of Conscience with Friar Michael

~ In Spanish with Friar Fabián ~

Photo and Video Credit:
Our Lady of the Angels Province friar, Fr. Martin Breski, OFM Conv.
who is currently in residence at the friary, assisting at the parish.

Pastorate Lenten Mission

Friar Michael presents the 1st Night of a four night Pastorate Lenten Mission – Church of the Annunciation

This week, (Monday, March 25th until Wednesday, March 27th) a Lenten Mission entitled “Go To Your Inner Room,” was hosted by the Archdiocese of Baltimore’s Pastorate which includes the three parishes of  Church of the Annunciation, St. Michael the Archangel Church and St. Clement Mary Hofbauer Church, and led by Fr. Michael E. Heine, OFM Conv ~ Vicar Provincial of the Our Lady of the Angels ProvinceThe faithful gathered for 7:00 p.m. Mass each of the three days of preaching and on the fourth day of the Lenten Mission (Thursday evening, March 28th) they will gather to celebrate a “Pastorate Penance Service,” all with the hope of renewing faith in Jesus on a journey together through the Lenten Season.

Friar Michael presents the 2nd Night – St. Michael the Archangel Church

After the Wednesday evening Mass, Friar Michael stopped for a photo with former Conventual friar-seminarian and current permanent deacon candidate John Micciche!  On March 27th, Friar Michael preached the third night of the Pastorate’s Lenten Mission at St. Clement Mary Hofbauer Church.  John Micciche is a devoted parishioner of St. Clement, who ministered as an Acolyte for the Mass.  John will be ordained to the Permanent Diaconate by Baltimore’s Archbishop Lori at the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen, on Saturday, May 25, 2019.  This will be a great moment for John and his family, for the Parish of St. Clement, Mary Hofbauer, for our “Franciscan Pastorate,” and for the Province of Our Lady of the Angels!  Let’s pray in gratitude for John’s and his wife’s marital vocation, for their children, for his deaconal vocation, and for his continued friendship and fraternal love for the friars of our province!