Our own Br. Nick Romeo, OFM Conv. created intercessions for Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer based on Laudato Si’.

Category Archives: Uncategorized![]() Earth Day 2022Our own Br. Nick Romeo, OFM Conv. created intercessions for Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer based on Laudato Si’. ![]() Congratulations Friar Gerry!
An invitation to the friars with whom Friar Gerry lives in community in the St. Francis Friary, included this announcement:
In addition, the Most Reverend Douglas J. Lucia, Bishop of Syracuse, was on site at SU to celebrate the two Divine Mercy Masses, on Sunday April 24th, for the campus community (Pictured above during the 10:30 a.m. Mass in the SU Catholic Center, with the video of the 1:00 p.m. Mass in University’s Hendricks Chapel, below). Friar Gerry lives in community with eight other friars, in our Syracuse, NY ~ St. Francis Friary. His confreres were invited to the April 22, 2022 One University Awards at SU, to support Friar Gerry as he received a “Chancellor’s Forever Orange Award.” The friars of St. Francis Friary serve in diverse ministries, including Assumption Church, Franciscan Place Chapel & Gift Shop (located in the Destiny USA mall), and FrancisCorp chaplaincy. One even serves as a Psychotherapist for a local Counseling Center.
![]() Provincial Visit ~ Immaculate Conception Custody (Brazil)
![]() New FranciscanVoice.org PageCheck out the new FranciscanVoice.org page – Then & Now! ![]() Franciscan Pilgrimage Opportunity ~ August 13-25, 2022SOME SPOTS STILL AVAILABLE![]() On Monday, August 15th, start the day with Mass at the Church of Our Lady Victorious, where the miraculous statue of the Infant of Prague is venerated. After a long pandemic pause, Our Lady of the Angels Province is once again sponsoring a Franciscan Pilgrimage to a number of Marian Shrines in Europe, from August 13-25, 2022. The highlight this coming year will be to attend the Passion Play at Oberammergau, Germany. The pilgrimage will include five countries: Czech Republic, Germany, Austria, Slovakia and Hungary. As is the past, Friar James McCurry, OFM Conv. will be the Spiritual Guide. The brochure containing all the information and details is linked: Franciscan European Marian Shrines Pilgrimage (August 13-25, 2022). The brochure is to be used to register. The reservation deadline has been extended and a few spots are still available.
![]() Franciscan Sisters of St. Joseph ~ 125th Anniversary
There are more photos of the celebration available on the FSSJ website.![]() Franciscan Soy Candles
![]() Holy Week & Easter 2022Easter Greeting from Fr. Richard-Jacob Forcier, OFM Conv., the Rector and Director of The Shrine of St. Anthony, in Ellicott City, MD:
![]() Easter Sunday at Holy Cross Catholic Church (Español Ministry), in Atlanta, GA ![]() Holy Saturday Egg Hunt at The Shrine of St. Anthony, in Ellicott City, MD ![]() Matriz São Pedro e São Paulo, in Paraíba do Sul – RJ (Baptism during the Easter Vigil, celebrated by Frei Michel da Cruz Alves dos Santos, OFM Conv., a friar of our Province’s Immaculate Conception Custody, in Brazil) ![]() Postulants of the North American Provinces after Easter Vespers in the St. Bonaventure Friary (Conventual Franciscan Postulancy USA) Chapel, in Chicago ![]() Easter Sunday at St. Philip Benizi Catholic Church, in Jonesboro, GA ![]() Easter Vigil at St. Lucie Catholic Church, in Port St. Lucie, FL ![]() Blessing of the Easter Food at Our Lady of the Cross Parish, in Holyoke, MA. ![]() Egg Hunt at St. Casimir Church, in Baltimore. Easter Sunday Mass at St. Paul Catholic Church, in Kensington, CT:
![]() Reflection by Fr. Ed Ondrako, OFM Conv.
In October 2021, Pope Francis launched a “synodal” process in every diocese and parish throughout the Universal Church, one of collective and mutual listening, one that would culminate in Rome in October 2023. Communion, participation, and mission are three foci. Fr. James McCurry, Conventual Provincial, responds: the Franciscan charism breathes “synodality” i.e. “interlacing fraternal diversity of viewpoint with communal solidarity of vision, grounded in truth, exercised in justice, and sanctified in charity.”[2] Franciscans contribute with knowledge, investigation, imagination and conviction to align with Pope Francis’ directives about synodality. Our new Saint John Henry Newman left a diagnosis and critique of “Liberalism” in religion which is not simply one of the features of his work, but the defining feature.[3] His diagnosis of liberalism in religion as it was unbridled in nineteenth century Christian thought was embedded in the practices and forms of life as well as increasing in religious institutions. Newman’s experience aligns with the context of Pope Francis’ call for synodality. In the twenty-first century, the knowledge of investigation elucidates faith, the fracture in the Reformation, and decomposition of faith into secular modernity. “Faith seeking understanding” counters liberalism in religion, the unraveling of historical Christianity. One of the reasons for Newman’s going over to the Roman Church in October 1845 was his experience of the Anglican Church as infiltrated by rationalism and fear that it would be more dominant even as it was on the rise. He had many convictions which some Anglicans do not hold (the divinity of Christ, belief in the Trinity, Christ’s presence in the sacrament). On a deeper level his principles did not change. Some of his explicit beliefs as an Anglican changed, such as belief in authority. Newman realized that he had a wrong view of papal authority but the right search. Faith always held primacy over reason, but that was not a license to be stupid. The pattern for Newman was to etch and to sketch the limits of reason and how it functions. Newman was an arguer. Religion was worth arguing about. A person cannot be Christian and relativistic at the same time. To be Christian is to have charity, absent of violence and fanaticism by remembering what charity is. The Franciscan intellectual tradition is in step with Newman the arguer. When Newman became Catholic, he knew very little about the medieval tradition which includes Anselm, Thomas Aquinas, Bonaventure, and Duns Scotus. Studying the medieval tradition had been vacuumed out by the English trajectory of the Reformation. The Anglican Divines (Andrewes, Hooker, Bull, J. Taylor) in the 1600’s gave him the genealogy that he needed for evidence and continuity with his patristic convictions. “Newman as a Volcanic Eruption”[4] emphasizes wisdom and courage. His Letter to Norfolk (1874) answers the Prime Minister W. E. Gladstone’s criticism that the Catholic Church uses “rusty tools.” Different historical circumstances interlock with Pope Francis’ portal on synodality. A lifelong arguer, an interpreter of modernity, Newman is a Christian sniper. Newman seems to have interpreted Gladstone’s “rusty tools” as more of a service than a disservice to the Roman Church. Little known is Gladstone’s meeting with Pope Pius IX on 22 October 1866 to discuss political crises of mutual interest which I think confirms Newman’s intuitions. Synodality would hardly have gained traction, but, since Vatican II, Newman’s Council, synodality has new energy. McCurry reminds us that synodality recognizes that all the baptized participate collegially in the life and evangelizing mission of the Church. Newman was fairly confident that “liberalism” would not prevail over the Catholic Church. His measure of historical Christianity provides a more developed picture of liberalism’s basic tenets, and its underlying principles. As an Anglican, in 1835 he denounced liberalism in sermons on the Antichrist, a decade before his interpretive historiographic “edged tools” in The Development of Christian Doctrine. Antichrist is figured in the mode of the lie, not the mode of persecution, and soon after is in Tract 83. Newman moved from the Anglican communion to Rome as he reflected on details that needed change, not essentials. Liberal Christianity was nothing less than a disaster and had already happened even if it was not fully recognized. Disaster applies to a world completely unhinged, left without a sense of transcendence. Our post-Christian culture is assailed from without and hollowed out from within. Newman does not use the term but it aligns with “Liberalism” as the defining feature of his work. From Francis of Assisi who envisioned brothers journeying together as pilgrims, to Vatican II, Lumen Gentium, the pilgrim Church unites with and will attain its full perfection only in the glory of heaven when the human race and entire world will be perfectly reestablished in Christ. In a sermon shortly after going over to Rome, Newman refers to the world in a Pauline sense as a theater where all are on a stage on an equality with each other as they assume difference of character. “Now we are all but actors in this world; we are one and all equal, we will be judged as equals as soon as life is over; yet, equal and similar in ourselves, each has his special part at present, each has his work, each has his mission, …to do what God puts on him (and her) to do.”[5] The theater, stage, equality of actors…. What an image for synodality! Fr. Edward J. Ondrako, OFM Conv. Univ. of Notre Dame, Easter Reflections ___________________________________________ [1] J. H. Newman, Letter to the Duke of Norfolk, 1874-1875 (London: (uniform edition), 346.
Fr. Edward J. Ondrako, OFM Conventual ![]() Ministry Outreach – Blessed Sacrament ChurchShared by Friar Paul Lininger, OFM Conv., pastor of Blessed Sacrament Catholic Community, in Burlington, NC: ______________________________________ Thanks to the Fantastic Volunteers and Supporters of the Little Portion Food Pantry sponsored by Blessed Sacrament Church, we want to share with you a brief video of the Monday, April 4, 2022 Food Distribution. With the community’s help – They served 973 families Thank You! to all who help make this ministry of service possible: “for whatever we do for our sisters & brothers in need, we do for Christ Jesus”. Pax et bonum… |