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The XXIII News The XXIII News St. John XXIII, OFS fraternity Secular Franciscan Order ~USA August 2019 OUR MISSION STATEMENT We are Secular Franciscans living in the world and sharing our Franciscan Charism by “going from gospel to life, and life to the gospel”, by following Jesus Christ in the footsteps of St. Francis and St. Clare; and by following our apostolic Rule we strive to build up the Kingdom of God in our lifetimes by our prayers, works and fraternal community. August Gatherings September Gatherings August 11– Fraternity Meeting, St. Bonaventure’s September 8 – Fraternity Meeting, St. Ambrose Hall, Room #4, 1:00-3:30 pm Bonaventure’s Ambrose Hall, Room #4, 1:00-3:30 Franciscan Gospel Sharing – Tim Taormina Franciscan Gospel Sharing – Mitzi Speranzella Formation – Holy Half-Hours, Article 1 Formation – Holy Half-Hours, Article 2 Read, meditate and answer the questions. Read, meditate and answer the questions. Snacks – Kathie Sirek Snacks – Norma Noonan (may need to switch) Fruit – Joan Marcantelli Fruit – need volunteer August III Order Feasts September III Order Feasts 1. St. Alphonse de Liguori 3. St. Pius X, Pope 2. Our Lady of the Angels of the Portiuncula 4. St. Rose of Viterbo 3. St. Pierre-Julien Eymard 8. Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary 5. B. Marie-Francoise de Jesus 10. Bl. Martyrs of Japan 8. St. Jean-Marie Vianney 12. Feast of the Most Holy Name of Mary 11. Bl. Innocent XI, Pope 14. Exaltation of the Holy Cross 11. St. Clare of Assisi 15. Feast of Our Lady of the Sorrows 13. Bl. Novellon de Faenza 16. Bl. Roland de Medicis 15. Feast of the Assumption of Our Lady 17. Feast of the Stigmatization of St. Francis of 16. Bl. Francois de Pesaro Assisi 17. St. Roch de Montpellier 19. Bl. Louis Alleman 17. Fr. Steve’s Ordination Anniversary, 2002 21. Bl. Elizabeth Amerina 19. St. Jean Eudes 25. St. Nicholas de Flue 20. Gloria Barry’s birthday 27. St. Elzear de Sabran 21. St. Jeanne-Francoise de Chantal 29. Feast of the Archangels 24. Kay Pelletier’s Profession, 1967 30. Bl. Charles de Blois 25. St. Louis IX, Patron of OFS 25. Kathie Sirek’s Profession, 2012 30. Bl. Juvenal Ancina Fraternity Prayer List We pray for: Gloria’s continued healing; Upcoming Events Bonita’s continuing medical issues and no surgery, September 14 – MN FALL GATHERING and that she gets a wheelchair and for help St. Bonaventure Church, hosted by the Fraternity of to get along at home; Mary, Queen of Peace. 8:30 am – 4:00 pm. Lori’s father-in-law Ribbie to respond to chemo; October 3 – TRANSITUS OF ST. FRANCIS Janet’s continued healing, and continued prayers St. Bonaventure Church, 7:00 pm. for her son Scotty; Joan’s friends Caroline, Cathy and Mark who are in Turkey Drive was also discussed. We are need of a healing; concerned that our Common Fund donations are Tom Meagher and his continued recovery from a down because of no meeting in February or March. hip replacement and a heart attack; Fall Gathering is at St. Bonaventure on September Kay’s continued health and happiness; 14 in Ambrose Hall. Gratitude, gratitude!!! Joe’s complicated health issues due to his meds; Tim Taormina thanked the fraternity for the gift Mitzi’s family spiritual needs; card. Kathy & Tim’s family and all their needs; Tim’s friend Kaden Brown healing of his heart; Norma Noonan will have foot surgery on July 29. Fr. Steve, and the STU Theology Dept.; Norma’s foot surgery on July 29 and her healing; Meeting was closed with the Liturgy of the Hours. And all the prayers in the depths of our hearts! Respectfully submitted by Kathy Taormina, OFS Pope’s Prayers for August Evangelization – Families Fraternity Treasury Report That families, through their life of prayer and love, $1,427.53 Balance as of June 30, 2019 become ever more clearly “schools of true human $ 40.00 + June Common Fund collection growth”. $ 235.00 + July Common Fund collection $1,702.53 Balance as of July 31, 2019 Fraternity Meeting Minutes $ 880.00 2020 Fair Share for 16 OFS $ 385.00 2020 Fair Share SJS 7 OFS July 14, 2019 $1,265.00 Total due January 1, 2020 Attendance: Present: Kathie Sirek, Norma Noonan, Joan Marcantelli, Trudy Phillips, Mary Ann Bucklin, Fraternity Infirmarian Report Bonita Hartmann, Kathy Taormina, Tim Taormina, This month, on behalf of our Fraternity, and along and a special appearance by Tom Meagher! with our continued prayers for their health and well- Active Excused: Fr. Steve, Lori Hinker, Mitzi being, I have sent "Thinking of You" cards to Tom Speranzella, Colette Schunk, Joe Speranzella, Meagher and Bonita Hartmann, and a card of Gloria Barry, Kay Pelletier and Janet Holmes. "Encouragement" to Lori and Justin Hinker and family. Let us remember them, and all our sisters Gospel Sharing: and brothers in prayer. May we all find strength, Luke 10:25-37 “The Good Samaritan” led by Joan hope, comfort and peace in Jesus, and may He Marcantelli. walk beside us on every path we take. Respectfully submitted by Janet Holmes, OFS On-Going Formation: Holy Half-Hours, Prologue Chapter 2 led by Kathy Taormina. WORDS of WISDOM: Business meeting was opened by Kathie Sirek with “Look, look on Jesus, poor and the prayer from the brown Ritual. crucified, look on this Holy One, who Minutes: Norma Noonan made the motion to for your love has died, and remember approve and Joan Marcantelli seconded, approved as you contemplate the sacred unanimously. Treasury: Tim Taormina made a motion to approve mysteries, this Jesus whom you gaze and Jim Terry seconded, approved unanimously. upon, loves you most tenderly.” Common Fund Collection was taken and prayed St. Clare of Assisi over. Old Business: Apostolates: we discussed our Thanksgiving/Christmas apostolates and came up with Joseph’s Coat in St. Paul as an individual collection possibility. The Brothers of Peace T August 11 Gospel Luke 12:35-40 Jesus said to his disciples: “Gird your loins and light your lamps and be like servants who await their master’s return September 8, 2019 – from a wedding, ready to open immediately when he comes and knocks. On-Going Formation Blessed are those servants whom the master finds vigilant on his arrival. Amen, I say to you, he will gird himself, have the Holy Half-Hours servants recline at table, and proceed to wait on them. 1. Read OFS RULE, Article 2. And should he come in the second or third watch and find them prepared in this way, blessed are 2. Read any commentaries, such as Hidden Power those servants. III: From Gospel to Life. Be sure of this: if the master of the house had known the hour Read OFS General Constitutions, Article 1.3. when the thief was coming, he would not have let his house be broken into. OFS Rule, Article 2: You also must be prepared, for at an hour you do “The Secular Franciscan Order holds a special not expect, the Son of Man will come.” place in this family circle. It is an organic union of all Catholic fraternities scattered throughout the world and open to every group of the faithful. In August 11 - Feast of St. Clare these fraternities the brothers and sisters, led by the Spirit, strive for perfect charity in their own secular state. By their profession they pledge themselves to live the gospel in the manner of Saint Francis by means of this rule approved by the Church.” OFS General Constitutions, Article 1.3: “Rule 2 From the beginning, the Secular Franciscan Order2 has had its own proper place in the Franciscan Family. It is formed by the organic union of all the Catholic fraternities whose members, moved by the Holy Spirit, commit themselves through profession to live the Gospel in the manner of St. Francis, in their secular state, following the Rule approved by the Church.” 3. Questions: Week 1: What do I understand is the meaning of “an organic union”? Week 2: Am I “open to every group of the faithful”? How? Is my fraternity? If not, what can I do to help us be more open? Week 3: How do I “strive for perfect charity in [my] own secular state”? Week 4: How do I “pledge [myself] to live the gospel in the manner of St. Francis”? annual meetings of the friars (Chapters) there and it is where he desired to spend his final earthly moments; dying in his nearby cell October 3, 1226. St. Francis felt that the Portiuncula was a place filled with God’s grace. In 1216, at the request of St. Francis, the Pope granted special privilege (plenary indulgence – a remission before God of the temporal punishment due to sins) to all those who would visit the little chapel. Although limited to noon on August 1st to midnight on August 2nd, the privilege continues to be granted to this day; not only to those who visit the Portiuncula, but to anyone who visits any church where the friars live and minister. To receive this privilege (for yourself or for someone else – living or deceased), in addition to the visit, one must receive the Sacrament of Reconciliation within several weeks of the feast, go to Mass and receive the Eucharist, recite the Our Father and Apostles Creed, and pray for the intentions of the Holy Father. The beautiful Basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli that now surrounds the Portiuncula chapel was begun in 1569 (completed in 1684) by decree of Pius V. It was meant to accommodate the huge Feast of Our Lady of the Angels crowds of pilgrims who came on August 2nd for Il (Portiuncula) Perdono (Portiuncula Indulgence).
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  • Franciscans for Justice.” Each Class with Additional Materials Sent by Email After Each Class …
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  • Studying the Life of Saint Clare of Assisi
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  • Women's Rights Women in the Church
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  • St. Clare of Assisi Parish
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  • Clare of Assisi: Foot-Washing Leadership Sister Madge Karecki (Ssj-Tosf) [email protected]
    Clare of Assisi: Foot-Washing Leadership Sister Madge Karecki (ssj-tosf) [email protected] Introduction In recent years, there has been a proliferation of books published about leadership styles. We have seen the meteoric rise in popularity of Stephen Covey‟s The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People and now his Principle-Centered Leadership is fast becoming a best-seller. John C. Maxwell offers readers basic insights into various issues surrounding leadership in his Leadership 101: What Every Leader Needs to Know; while Rudolph W. Giuliani utilized his experience of being mayor of New York and produced his memoir-like volume, Leadership. These publications and many others on the development of leadership styles are indicative of a search for more collaborative and participative models of leadership. I think intuitively we know something is just not right. The model of the ruthless, capitalist CEO, the lone ranger at the top of the heap is a model that is being called into question by more than a few thinking people. Yet even the best of these volumes focus on skills and techniques without giving attention to the transformation of the one who is in leadership. Are leadership abilities inborn? Is leadership just a matter of learning a few techniques? Is the bottom line of every leadership style simply getting a job done? From a Christian perspective, good leadership requires more than techniques or skills. Christian leadership calls for something much deeper and much more challenging. It is for this deeper perspective that we turn to the medieval woman, Clare of Assisi.
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  • Hospitality Fr
    Hospitality Fr. Hugh Feiss, OSB Rudeness to a stranger is not decency, poor though he may be, poorer than you. All wanderers and beggars come from Zeus. What we can give is slight but the recompense great. The city which forgets how to care for the stranger has forgotten how to care for itself. --The Odyssey Introduction There have been several books on Christian hospitality in the last couple of years. Christine Pohl, Making Room: Recovering Hospitality as a Christian Tradition (Eerdmans, 1999) studied the topic from many angles, concentrating especially on communities which specialize in hospitality. Lucien Richard, Living the Hospitality of God (Paulist, 2000) covered some of the same ground, with a special emphasis on welcoming refugees. Brendan Byrne, The Hospitality of God: A Reading of Luke's Gospel (Liturgical Press, 2000) interpreted the Gospel of Luke from the standpoint of hospitality. Hospitality looms large in the Rule and history of Benedictines. Someone trying to convince a person to join the third order of another religious congregation emphasized to a friend of mine the nobility of that order's charism, saying that Benedictines' charism was homely hospitality. This recruiter underestimated how important hosptiality is. One of the big challenges we face is how to adapt the Christian tradition of hospitality to the realities of contemporary life, where we have a "hospitality industry," and "hospitality" is usually thought of as something one offers to friends or at least friends of friends--people very much like ourselves. Francis and Clare of Assisi and the Benedictines When St. Francis came on the scene in the early 13th century, Benedictine monasticism had been around for seven centuries.
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