October 23, 2015
In This Issue
From the Provincial Minister
Provincial Minister Primo Piscitello OFM
NEW YORK - You have already received by now the Fall newsletter from the ESC which gave the highlights of the meeting which we had the privilege of hosting here on Thompson Street last week.

I won't go into the details that you have already seen, but I do want to take a moment to say what a great experience it was to have so many Provincial Ministers, Custodes and others from around the world have an experience of the life and especially the hospitality of our Province.

I'm especially grateful to all of the friars here "on the block" who went out of their way to be welcoming, friendly and gracious. The friars were hosted here at the Provincial Curia, at 147 Thompson Street and at Padua Friary. I could - and probably should - name specific friars, but in truth, I would end up naming every friar in the neighborhood because each one did their part.

Those present for the ESC meeting truly experienced the best of our Province and it was a week that truly made me proud to be your Provincial Minister. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. 

Fraternally,

Year of Consecrated Life | Pope Francis 

"The sensus fidei prevents a rigid separation between Ecclesia docens and Ecclesia discens, since even the Flock has a certain 'nose' for discerning the new ways the Lord makes known to the Church...A synodal Church is a listening Church, aware that listening 'is more than hearing'. It means listening to each other where both have something to learn. Faithful People, the College of Bishops, the Bishop of Rome: each one listening to the others; and all listening to the Holy Spirit, the 'Spirit of Truth', in order to know what He is 'saying to the Churches'."




- Pope Francis marking 50 years of the Synod of Bishops
October 18, 2015
God meets you where you are | Synod on the Family


One of the big surprises in the Vatican's Synod on the Family, where Catholic bishops have gathered to discuss an immense variety of issues related to the family, is how often a particular phrase keeps cropping up. It's a saying we heard often in my Jesuit novitiate, because it was beloved by the assistant novice director. "God meets you where you are," David Donovan, a marvelous Jesuit who died several years ago, used to say. Father Donovan used that expression over and over again, in both conversations and homilies.

In a nutshell, the popular saying means two things.

First, God doesn't expect us to be perfect before we can approach God or before God approaches us. Your spiritual house doesn't have to be perfectly in order for God to enter.
Second, God meets you in ways that you can understand and appreciate. If you are scholarly or more introverted, for example, you may meet God by being inspired by a book you read. If you're a more social person, you may meet God in a group setting. If you're someone who loves nature, you may meet God by the seashore. God meets you as you are, where you are, and in ways that you can understand.

It may sound obvious. But it can also be threatening. Because for some people that phrase implies a dangerous laxity. If God meets us where we are, is there any need for change?Doesn't it mean anything goes?

This question lies at the heart of many of the debates at the Synod on the Family, which was convened by Pope Francis last year and is entering its home stretch this week. Nearly all the participants at the synod have been careful to state that there are many issues on the table. After all, the topic of "the family" raises a constellation of concerns, and family issues will differ from country to country.

Still, much of the discussion has focused on two neuralgic topics: the reception of Communion by divorced and remarried Catholics, and the pastoral care of LGBT Catholics. The first is a flash point more in the Catholic Church; the second in both the Church and the wider world.

If God "meets us where we are," then we can see a possible dilemma: there may be less of a need to follow traditional rules that have held the community together. And many of these rules come from Jesus himself - who, for example, spoke against divorce. So many sincere believers feel great concern about a possible setting aside of rules.

On the other hand, if the church focuses too heavily on the rules, it will prevent people from feeling that God can meet them where they are, because they're not where they should be. And the last thing the church should be doing is preventing people from feeling that they can approach God, and God can approach them.

As a result, many of the discussions have been animated by this simple idea of God meeting a person where he or she is.

Cardinal Wilfred Napier, archbishop of Durban, for example, responding tocomments made by a Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Thomas Rosica, tweeted, "'Meet people where they are' sounds nice, but is that what Jesus did? Didn't he rather call them away from where they were?" Later, Napier allowed that Father Rosica's comments were more nuanced. "Look," Father Rosica had written, "God loves you as and where you are, but God doesn't want you to stay there. He wants you to go further."

By way of comparison, Cardinal Donald Wuerl, archbishop of Washington D.C., explicitly said the church needed to "meet people where they are" in aninterview a few days ago.
So there is always a tension. God calls us where we are, and then God invites us to a new place. There is a healthy spiritual tension between who we are now (the person whom God created) and whom God calls us to be (the person God intends for us to become).

There may be no better example of this than the story of the call of St. Peter in Luke 5:1-11.

Peter has been fishing all night, unsuccessfully, when Jesus turns up on the shore of the Sea of Galilee, and asks him to take out his boat "into the deep." Despite the fact that they've caught nothing all night, Peter agrees. Once in the middle of the sea, Peter lets down his net, which is filled to bursting point.

Seeing the immense catch of fish, Peter falls to his knees and says, "Go away from me, Lord, for I am a sinful man." In the face of the divine, Peter, like all of us, is made painfully aware of his own limitations. Then Jesus says, "Do not be afraid, from now on you will be catching people." 

Jesus is well aware of Peter's limitations and sinfulness (Plus, Peter just told him). But notice that Jesus doesn't say, "Since you're sinful, you don't get to follow me." Rather, Jesus calls Peter as a sinful person. There's an implicit call to conversion, but first Jesus accepts the man as he is.

And before Jesus could call Peter, he had to journey from Nazareth to Capernaum, the town where Peter lived and worked, a distance of 40 miles. Quite literally, Jesus came to meet him where he was: by the shore of the Sea of Galilee.

Jesus's miracle that day was also in Peter's own "language," as it were. The miracle wasn't bringing someone back to life or even changing water into wine, miracles he would perform elsewhere. Instead, Jesus focused on fish. And if there's one thing Peter was an expert in it was fish. Jesus was, again, meeting him where he was.

Conversion - a change of heart and life - is essential. Peter would leave everything behind to follow Jesus. But first Jesus needed to take the first step and meet him where he was, both physically and spiritually. It's up to us, as a church, to go and do likewise.

James Martin, SJ, is a Jesuit priest and editor at large of America. His new novel is "The Abbey: A Story of Discovery."

NOTE: This article originally appeared in the October 21, 2015 issue of The Washington Post.
Remembrance of our Beloved Deceased in November
NEW YORK - November is our traditional month to remember our beloved deceased, and as always, moments of prayer and fraternity to remember our brothers, family, friends and benefactors who have died are being scheduled throughout the Province.

Each year we remember and pray for all of our dearly departed, but we also recall in a special way those who have passed in the course of the last year. This year we remember in a special way:

Deceased Friars:
  • Fr. Frank Genevive, OFM (November 27, 2014)
  • Fr. Ottaviano Battolini, OFM (February 7, 2015)
  • Fr. Benedict Joseph D'Alessandro, OFM (February 8, 2015)
  • Fr. Berard Tufo, OFM (February 11, 2015)
Deceased Family:
  • Maria Carlotta Aguirre, mother of Fr. Nery Aguirre, OFM (November 1, 2014)
  • Ralph DeAmato, brother of Fr. Norbert DeAmato (December 4, 2014)
  • Rose Julian, mother of Fr. Mario Julian (December 7, 2014)
  • Gilda Pasto, sister of Fr. Claude Scrima (December 13, 2014) 
  • Robert L. Caprio, nephew of Fr. Robert Caprio, OFM (January 1, 2015)
  • Marianna Camilleri, mother of Bishop Roberto Camilleri, OFM (April 8, 2015)
  • Rose Daly, sister of Fr. Edmund Ansaloni, OFM (May 5, 2015)
  • Josephine Vizzari, sister of Madeline Bonnici, OFM (June 2, 2015)
  • Albert Gauci, father of Fr. Albert Gauci, OFM (July 20, 2015)
The following commemorations have been scheduled:

Downstate New York Region:
Calvary Cemetery Chapel
Thursday, November 5, 10:30 a.m.
Luncheon to follow at Our Lady of Peace Friary, Brooklyn

New England Region:
Province Cemetery
St. Francis Friary, Andover
Saturday, November 28, 11:00 a.m.

As additional regions schedule their celebrations, they will be published here.

May the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace.


Dedication & Blessing of IC Province Franciscan Library November 7
NEW YORK - Provincial Minister Primo Piscitello, OFM, extends a cordial invitation to all friars of the Province to attend the dedication and blessing of the Immaculate Conception Province Franciscan Library on Saturday, November 7, 2015 at 2:00 p.m.
 
The library is the result of Province attempts to safeguard and preserve various collections of Francescana around the Province and make them more widely accessible for research and education. To date, all of the Francescana of the Province has been brought to the new library space in the Provincial Curia. 

Siobhan O'Dwyer, OFS, who has a master's degree from the Franciscan Institute at St. Bonaventure University, works with Fr. Paul Rotondi, OFM, for the organization and classification of our collection. And to sustain and support the work that has been accomplished thus far, the Provincial has set up  a committee, appointing André Cirino, OFM coordinator of this project. The members of the committee are: Paul Rotondi, OFM, Richard Martignetti, OFM, Michael Della Penna, OFM, and Siobhan.
 
This collection will serve as a resource for research and education:
  • for the friars of our Province, especially our students and friars working in formation;
  • for Franciscan men and women of the greater New York City area;
  • for anyone [cleric, religious, lay person] involved in an academic Franciscan project;
  • for commissions of the Order to facilitate their work and service;
  • for the 22 schools of the Association of Franciscan Colleges and Universities [AFCU] in the USA.
The ICP Franciscan Library will also sponsor special events, the first of which will be a poetry reading presented by Fr. Murray Bodo, OFM, on June 14, 2015. More information on this and other planned events will be made available.

The November 7th dedication and blessing will also include a featured speaker. Fr. Michael Della Penna, OFM, will offer a presentation on "The Crucified Knight: The Spiritual Odyssey of St. Francis of Assisi according to Henry of Avranches." In June, the library hosted a very well attended presentation by Fr. Murray Bodo, OFM.

Those interested in attending the dedication and presentation by Fr. Michael should RSVP to smdfranciscanlibrary@hotmail.com.
"Come and See" weekends announced by Vocation Team
NEW YORK - The Vocation Team has announced the "Come and See" discernment retreats for the year ahead and are asking each parish or ministry site to promote them in their bulletins and other materials.

"Come and See" Vocation Retreat Schedule
  • November 13-15, 2015 
  • February 5-7, 2016 
  • March 18-20, 2016 
  • April 15-17, 2016
Each retreat will take place at Immaculate Conception Friary in Boston.

Vocation Preaching around the Province

A member of the Vocation Team would also like to come to your parish or place of ministry to preach about vocations. Please email vocations@icprovince.org to schedule their visit.

We are all Animators of Vocations

Finally, the Vocation Team recognizes that we are all called to be vocation animators. Please share with us the name and contact information of any young man in your parish or ministry or that you know who you think may have a vocation to our way of life. Again, please let us know at vocations@icprovince.org.

BULLETIN ANNOUNCEMENT

Please run the following announcement in your bulletin for the next several weeks:

"Come and See" Vocation Reatreat (Nov. 13-15, 2015)
The Franciscan Vocation Office is holding a "Come and See" vocation discernment retreat for young men (ages 18-38) who are considering a calling to our Franciscan way of life. The retreat will take place Nov. 13-15 at Immaculate Conception Friary in Boston. To register for the retreat contact the Vocation Office at vocations@icprovince.org or (800) 521-5442.