Tag Archives: Franciscan Brothers of Peace

Building Bridges Without a Blueprint with Br. Dominic Michael, fbp

Initially, I started walking to keep my fitness up. While exercising, I would pray, but eventually I began to have unique encounters. The neighborhood is very diverse, and many of these neighbors have expressed negative feelings towards the Catholic Church. You never know how you’re going to react to situations that eventually have become a ministry, being a brother to all.

Here are three experiences in line with our charisms as Franciscan Brothers of Peace:

1. Cultivate Prayer Among the People

The first story is about meeting a young man. We basically started talking right away, and he asked some basic questions about what our brothers were about. He asked about the habit and what we do day to day. I explained the first thing is we have prayer four times a day and that our prayer is from the Old Testament Psalms and New Testament Scripture, The Liturgy of the Hours. He replied, “Well, I’m Jewish, but I used to love to pray with the psalms. It has been such a long time since then. I really feel I should get back to it. You kind of gave me an idea.” I asked him if he had a copy of the psalms and he told me he didn’t, so I ran home and found the copy that I had and brought it back to him. He was very happy with that.

Another encounter that I had was with a woman and her husband. The woman had no religious background, and her husband grew up as a Roman Catholic. One time, he noticed the Franciscan Crown Rosary hanging from the left side of my habit. He told me that it reminded him of his childhood and that his mom was very religious. After dinner, the family always prayed the Rosary, and he said that from the time he was a kid until the time he went to college, that was a custom in his family. He had been away from the Church and any kind of prayer so he said something like, “Oh, maybe I kinda miss it.” I responded, “Well, would you like a rosary?” “Yeah, but I’m gonna need to know how to say it.” “Don’t worry—Brother D has your back,” I assured him.

2. Be Ambassadors and Missionaries of Christ’s Peace and Mercy

I’ve found a good way to break the ice with people. A lot of our neighbors have dogs. Either I run into them while I’m doing my walking or if I’m sitting in front of our friary. The best way to make encounters with their owners is to fuss over the dogs (and I really do love dogs!). I give them doggy treats and come to find too that a lot of the owners I encounter have no religion.They don’t know anything about the Catholic Church but the thing that I find funny is that they say, “Oh we know who Saint Francis is,” and they share a little bit about what they know. Most of the time it’s that he’s a patron saint of animals and that their relatives have a birdbath with Saint Francis on it. So now, besides doggy treats, I give out Saint Francis medals for the dogs’ collars—something that has been taken very well. After all, what is dog spelled backwards? God is definitely working through that relationship with the simple act of admiring their dog.

3. Be a Prophetic Witness Whether it is Popular or Not

The best story I can think of is of an older couple, the wife being very sick with Parkinson’s disease. It took a long time for them to start talking with me. When we did start talking, the questions they asked were, “What are you all about? What do you do?” I told them about our Food Shelf Ministry that we’ve been doing for several years out of the friary, helping out mothers with diapers and various other distributions; Pro-Life advocacy while working with immigrants, and the list goes on and on. The first thing he said to me was, “I never realized all that was going on.” So, a few months go by and not too long ago he saw me and he said, “Wait. I have something to give you.”This is not a well-to-do couple. Their home is very simple and needs a lot of work. The man came out, and his wife came to the stairs and said, “We want to give you this.” It was a check for $200. He said, “We want this to go towards helping people.” The seeds have been planted, and now the growth is taking place.

There are countless stories, especially about people bringing fresh vegetables and/or canned goods with the pandemic going on. I have found that people are so generous. It’s all about knowing what we actually are doing. Listening to people sharing their problems is also one of the most fruitful adventures of my walking. I recite several rosaries, and when I pray those rosaries, I pray for the neighborhood; I pray for the people I will encounter, I pray for the Holy Spirit to speak through me should a discussion get heated or if somebody brings something up with a question, so that I may be able to answer them appropriately.

I also carry a little pocket catechism, holy water, and my constant sacramental that I’ve been using for years. I call it my calling card—which is either a crucifix, or a rosary, or whatever I happen to have in my pocket. Each encounter is a reminder that God may use me and each of us as a moment by moment instrument of God’s loving peace and reconciliation.

Brother Dominic Michael is with the Franciscan Brothers of Peace in Saint Paul, Minnesota.  This article originally appeared in their newsletter – Volume 34, 3rd Edition

Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal Comes to the People of Japan

Recently, on a recent IRL Facebook Live interview, Br. Didacus Gottsacker, fbp, of the Franciscan Brothers of Peace, mentioned an apostolate that he is involved in—the Maria Kannon Mission of Japan.  Brother speaks Japanese and also studied there before becoming a Franciscan friar. (You can read vocation story and love for the Japanese people here)

Following the zealous example of St. Maximilian Kolbe and St. Francis Xavier, who brought the Catholic Faith to Japan, the Maria Kannon Mission seeks to evangelize the Japanese people by first introducing them to Our Lady, the first missionary of Christ and the Mediatrix of All Graces through her Miraculous Medal, to win souls for Jesus Christ.

On a pilgrimage to Japan, the initiators of Maria Kannon began handing out Miraculous Medals to the Japanese people, whom, they realized, were eager to accept them. When they got home, they had the medals struck in Japanese and created printed materials to go along with them, so that the recipients would know the graces they could receive when the prayers were recited in faith.

The name Maria Kannon is derived from the time of the Great Persecution of Christians in Japan. Christians created statues of the Blessed Virgin Mary with child, disguised as the Buddhist deity Kannon (Goddess of Mercy).  Many statues had a Christian icon hidden inside the body or camouflaged in the artwork.

The fields are ripe for the harvest in Japan. Here is what it says on the Maria Kannon website:

Just as with the United States and the rest of the world, the Japanese people suffer from a great spiritual poverty, the greatest of all forms of poverty. While the Word of God suffers in developed countries in the West, it has virtually been stamped out in Japan, despite being a land that was once fertile and receptive to becoming overwhelmingly Catholic. With the decline of religions like Shintoism and Buddhism in Japan, people are searching for answers to the meaning of their lives…

Interestingly, one of the Miraculous Medal miraculous stories on the website involved Servant of God, Father John A. Hardon, SJ, founder of the IRL. At the time of the story, he had no particular devotion to the Medal when called to the bedside of a boy in a coma, incurred from a sledding accident. Father placed the Medal around the boy’s neck and initiated him into the Confraternity of the Miraculous Medal. All concerned were amazed and joy-filled to see the boy open his eyes and ask for ice cream!

“At times I have failed to place an image of Our Savior’s Mother beside His cross. At such times, I have always found the people rebellious to the Gospel.”                                       — St. Francis Xavier

The website has a beautiful description of the origins of the Miraculous Medal, including the most famous conversion story— that of Rev. Alphonse Ratisbonne,  a nominal Jew who scoffed at religion and subsequently became a Catholic priest.

If you would like to support Our Lady’s mission to Japan, please visit the Maria Kannon website.

Brother Paul O’Donnell, fbp – RIP

fbpBr. Paul Joseph O’Donnell

December 15th 1959 – February 20th 2015

Beloved long time superior of the Franciscan Brothers of Peace of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. Br. Paul Joseph O’Donnell, fbp, age 55, of St. Paul, formerly of Omaha, died February 20, 2015.

Br. Paul was a dedicated, nationally recognized leader within the right-to-life movement, advocating for the human rights and dignity of the unborn, handicapped, elderly, and a heart for serving the spiritually and bodily poor. He was a co-founder and president of Pro-Life Action Ministries, founding board member of Human Life Alliance and chairman of the Terri Schiavo Life & Hope Network. Deeply loved and survived by his religious community: Brothers, Joseph Katzmarek, Pio King, John Mary Kaspari, Conrad Richardson, James Voeller, Seraphim Wirth, Maximilian Connelly, Juniper Barlett, Benedict Gerard Kelley, Dominic Michael Hart, and Postulants Nicholas Listi and Ricardo Pagba, all of St. Paul.

Brother Paul and his fellow Franciscans were and are a familiar presence at our annual National Meetings, uplifting all by their gentle good humor and  kindliness. Brother Paul’s whole life was an offering of self for those on the fringes of society and suffering from profound neglect or in peril of death . He will be greatly missed. May his Franciscan brothers be inspired by his example to carry on this work of the Lord with the same courage and dedication.

Our Lady of the Angel’s Brothers

Today is the foundation anniversary of the Franciscan Brothers of Peace who were founded in 1982 in Saint Paul, Minnesota, the first community of brothers to come into existence in the archdiocese. Their founder, Brother Michael Gaworski, fbp, was very active in the pro-life movement, and with Brother Paul O’Donnell, fbp, founded Pro-Life Action Ministries.

It was while attending the 1982 Notre Dame Charismatic Renewal Conference that a “prophetic word,” as their website says, was given as thus: “I am calling many of you to embrace a life of celibacy for My Kingdom. But you say you have looked and there are no places for you to go. I tell you that I am raising up new convents, monasteries and communities for you to enter. Go home and ponder these words.”

Just in his early twenties, Brother Michael took the initial steps which in 1986 led to the community of brothers being recognized as a Private Association of the Faithful and in 1994, as a Public Association of the Faithful. In 1991, Brother Michael contracted bacterial pneumonia which left him a quadriplegic with severe brain damage. A suffering servant for the brother’s many ministries to the poor, he died on August 28, 2003.

On May 10 of this year, their long-awaited desire to establish a Spiritual Center, a place of prayer and retreat for the brothers as a respite from their urban ministries, came into fruition. In Finland, Minnesota, Bishop Paul Sirba of Duluth consecrated the oratory of the Chapel of Our Lady of the Angels. They hope one day to have several brothers permanently residing living a semi-eremitical life surrounded by the beauty of Superior National Forest.

The brothers are growing and hope one day to have the 40 members necessary to become a religious institute. As it is, their current friary housing 14 brothers is running out of room. If you can support them, please go to their website to find out how you can help with their expanding (a good problem to have!) apostolate to the poor.

Brother Paul advises young men who are interested in their way of life to Pray about a vocation to the religious life and seek spiritual direction. Vocations mostly come from real people with real families, not everyone is a perfect saint. Disregard thoughts of unworthiness. We are all unworthy, the Holy Spirit is the guiding force. Do not be afraid to make a commitment and put your trust in the Lord.

 

Franciscan Brothers of Peace

Was there anyone in the Church more vilified during the Terri Schiavo tragedy than than Brother Paul O’Donnell, f.b.p.? Brother Paul is the Guardian of the Franciscan Brothers of Peace and he was a courageous spokesman for the utterly defenseless as Terri’s life and death were laid bare for all the world to see.

I am happy to see that their community is growing!

Brother Paul asks that we please pray to God for more vocations to his community and Franciscan way of life. Visit his Facebook page or go to their website for more information.

Peter, the new postulant
Bro. Dominic, FBP, the newest Brother
Bro. Juniper, FBP, the newest novice