Where are the Catholic pro-life men?


As we look out at the world of men (males) who struggle with paternity, we often wonder why or what is happening in society.  We should wonder is why not?  Why are we surprised, when there is such a shortage of good Catholic men to guide their brothers?  Therefore, why should some men not be lost in the culture of death and at a complete loss as they face the daunting task of parenting?

This is not to say that those who have walked themselves into situations where they face unexpected fatherhood bare no responsibility for their actions and for their choices before or after.  It is easy to point the finger and wag our tongues at so many men who do not step up to the plate and become good Christian fathers who embody the very presence of the Fatherhood of God.  Yet, other men, who claim to have found the loving Fatherhood of God and claim to live in the Spirit of the Father, do not reach out and share the Gospel with their brothers.

It is very easy to condemn a culture of death and to sentence those facing life-threatening choices such as abortion and contraception from the comfort of our homes.   Such a person is like the judge who sits in judgment on his bench and condemns the guilty man for his delinquencies; but when his day in court is over, he retires to his quiet and serene suburban home.  On the way home, he deliberately bypasses the riotous and noisy neighborhoods where the delinquents that eventually will find their way into his courtroom are being bred and formed.  Such a judge may feel that he is doing something for society by passing judgment.  The truth of the matter is that while he has time that is not on the bench, he does nothing for the community that passes through his courts on a daily basis.  In other words, he does nothing to put himself out of a job.

The same is true about Catholic men who sit in judgment of their brothers who are considering abortion or even worse, who have participated in an abortion by providing the dastardly service, taking the life of an unborn child or pushing the mothers of the children whom they conceived to submit to such a horrid crime.  We go to pregnancy centers, prolife workshops, provide education to men who are struggling with the challenges of poverty, addictions, violence, displacement and a lack of sexual integrity.  It is a challenge to bring these men into the centers, the churches, and the community of believers.  Evangelization and service to them can seem an insurmountable task, because there are not enough workers in the vineyard.  In other words, there is a critical shortage of Catholic men who serve their brothers and evangelize them.

The prolife movement has become feminized, as if abortion, euthanasia, the destruction of human embryos, the unscrupulous use of the death penalty and the killing of infants who were not killed by abortifacients were a women’s issue.  Middle-age women and teens are at the forefront of the prolife movement, especially among Catholics.  Catholic men attend workshops and lectures and then go home.  However, one third of the people affected by crimes against human life, ultimately against God, are men.  Another third are women and the last third are the unborn children.

We need to challenge men to step up to the plate and be good fathers.  We need to evangelize young men instead of handing them condoms.  It is our duty to bring all men back to Jesus.  However, we need men to evangelize their brothers.  These can be married men or single.  They can be secular or consecrated religious.  Teams of consecrated celibate men and married men are the ideal missionary team.  Together, we can present the big picture of what men can be.

If you’re male and are reading this, ask yourself if God is calling you to serve your brothers in the prolife ministry by walking the journey with them.  Don’t worry about not having anything to contribute or not knowing what to do.  Those of us who are in the ministry will walk with you and together we can walk with our brothers.  Just bring the gift of your masculinity before the Lord and put it at the service of your brothers.

Where are the prolife men?

For more information contact Brother Jay here .

Published in: on November 19, 2010 at 9:17 AM  Comments (1)  

Jesus Wants to Go to the Poor


It’s been a slow day for this old brother.  There is a head bug going around and we have become good friends.  The problem is that when you get one of these colds, you can’t go to the pregnancy centers, because you don’t want to spread it to the parents and children, especially the moms that are expecting.  God forbid that they get sick.  It’s not only cruel, because pregnant women can take very few medications, but they often lack medical insurance.  The largest sector of people are immigrants who are struggling to make it.   Because of the restrictions on Medicaid and Food Stamps, they need our help.

We desperately need funds and people to open a house for pregnant women who live in abusive situations.  They have no place to go.  The existing community resources are over extended.  More homes are needed, esepcially a home where pregnant mothers can go with their children.  Many homes and shelters have limits on the ages of the children that they can bring with them.

A few weeks ago I received a call from a woman.  She was pregnant and had a 12-year old.  She had to get away from an difficult situation.  No shelter in the metropolitan area would take her, because she had a 12-year old.  They don’t take mothers with pre-teens.  Br. Peter and I found ourselves trying to find a place for Jesus.  He was homeless, just like he was when Mary and Joseph arrived in Bethlehem 2000 years ago.  After six hours of calling, begging and praying, a home became available.  St. Joseph, the protector of families came through for us.

The unemployment rate is on the rise.  This really concerns me.  I want to do something about it, but without more brothers and volunteers, we are very limited.  I want to give these people something of Jesus and sometimes, I don’t know where to begin.  So . . . as the song from the Sound of Music says, “Let’s go to the very beginning.  A very good place to start.”  Do you remember that song?  It’s the one where Maria teaches the children to sin the Do Re Mi.

We always go to the beginning.  We sit and we listen and try to help them find services.  We provide clothing, food, counseling and education.  We now have a father’s program that is increasing, thanks to the intercessory prayers of St. Joseph.  We have put our men’s services in his hands.  Since we have done so, the number of men coming to our classes has quadrupled.  There are couples who were living together that have now married and are forming families.  Some couples have separated, realizing that sex and having children is not the best foundation for a marriage.  At the same time, they have committed to working together for the good of their children.  A married couple that seemed to be on the verge of divorce is now enjoying days walking through the park, visiting the local mall and spending time talking.  These are all signs of St. Joseph working overtime.

I want to invite you to come visit us and spend some time with our families.  They are truly wonderful.  We do not have a big friary and probably never will have one.  We live very simply, according to the spirit of St. Francis who wanted his brothers to live the monastic experience of prayer, obedience and brotherhood among God’s people as itinerant preachers and brothers to all.   Therefore, we own nothing, not even a house.  We cannot offer the comforts of a traditional monastery or priory.   However, like the early Franciscans, we offer you a home with brothers who care about each other, the Church and the poor.  We take Jesus to them and find him among them.

Obedience to the Church, the Rule, and the superior, the Eucharist, common prayer and individual prayer is the foundation of the work.  Without this, the work ceases to be Jesus’ work.  It becomes social work.  Think about it and let us know.  I look forward to hearing from you.

Fraternally,

Brother Jay

Published in: on October 10, 2010 at 12:53 AM  Leave a Comment  

SOLEMNITY OF ST. FRANCIS


Life around the here is moving rather quickly this week.  Several things are converging at the same time.  The big thing is the upcoming Solemnity of Saint Francis on October 3rd and 4th.  The plan is to get together with other Franciscans around the area on Sunday, October 3.  The Secular Franciscans are having a profession that day.  Therefore, we’ll be there to welcome a new sister into the Franciscan family, along with one of the Friars Minor of the Holy Name Province.  Later that evening we will gather to celebrate the Transitus of our Holy Father St. Francis.

The Transitus is a beautiful celebration.  It takes place within the Liturgy of the Hours.  During the celebration, we recall Francis’ passing from this world into eternity.  If you have ever been to a Jewish Seder, the Transitus follows that format.  One person asks the story and then it is narrated through prayers, songs and scripture readings.   It is flanked on both sides with the parts of Vespers, the Psalter at the beginning and the Gospel canticle and prayers of intercession on the concluding side.  There is always a relic and lots of candles and incense too.  On the morning of the 4th we celebrate the solemn mass for the Solemnity of St. Francis.   Since the different Franciscan communities down here are small, several communities gather for this great feast.  It’s a wonderful tribute to our Holy Father, because it’s one of the few times a year when the communities gather as one family acknowledging their common Franciscan heritage.

But the Solemnity of St. Francis is more than just a memory.  If it were that alone, it would be like any other national holiday in which we remember a national hero.  It’s a time to thank God for the gift of our call to serve him following it the footsteps of St. Francis.  God will never be outdone in generosity.  He not only calls Francis to the perfection of the Gospel, but he shared that call with millions of men and women around the world from 1209 to this day.  It’s incredible to think that no matter how small one Franciscan community is, that we belong to a much larger family that finds itself around the world and that spans eight-centuries.

To better prepare for this celebration, the Brothers of Life have taken this week to spend more time in prayer, reading and studying.  We are out less.  But we have doubled our time before the Blessed Sacrament.   We’re very fortunate, because there is a parish about five-minutes from our house that has daily adoration from early in the morning to the evening.  It’s a wonderful experience to be there with Jesus.  I can’t explain it.  You just have to experience it for yourself.  But you just can’t leave once you realize how wonderful God is and how present he truly is in the Blessed Sacrament.  It’s incredible to look at the host and realize that this is the same man who walked through all those cities and towns in Palestine healing the sick, preaching, making people feel loved and wanted by God, feeding the hungry and forgiving sin.  I’m in awe at the thought that this was the same man with whom the Apostles spoke, ate and slept for three-years.

St. Francis of Assisi wrote a wonderful prayer that he recited before the Blessed Sacrament, before every crucifix and every time that he remembered the Blessed Sacrament but was unable to get to a Church.  “We adore you O Christ and we bless you, here and in all of your churches throughout the whole world, because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world.”  It’s beautiful to think that one can remember the most Blessed Sacrament, when one cannot get there and still be closes to the Lord.    Being there, with another brother kneeling next to you just adds to your love of neighbor and experience of God’s love.

Published in: on September 29, 2010 at 6:07 PM  Leave a Comment  

Called to intimacy with Mary and the Angels


On August 2 the Franciscan family celebrates the Feast of Our Lady of the Angels.  It is no coincidence that the second chapel and the cradle of the Franciscan Family should be named after Our Lady and under such an auspicious title.  This was really an act of Divine Providence.

The Lord saw fit to gather the sons of St. Francis around his mother, just as the angels gather around her.  Mary’s connection with angels goes back to her life at Nazareth.  Let us remember that it was through the message that Gabriel delivered that she becomes the Mother of God in the Second Person of the Most Holy Trinity.  From scripture, we see the intimacy between Mary and God’s angels, in this case Gabriel the Archangel.  From the earliest days of the Franciscan Family, there is a clear call to the brothers to live in the same intimacy as Mary, the angels and man lived in Sacred Scripture.  Let’s not get too far ahead of the story.  It’s always better to begin a book at the first chapter.

In Genesis 3:15 God tells Satan, “And I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers; he will crush your head, and you will strike his heel.”  From the moment of creation, we see Mary’s role in the salvation of her people.  She will bear a son who will crush the serpent’s head.  There are two important details here.  First, this is a clear prophecy about the birth and mission of Christ and the Church.  Second, it is very clear that Mary will bring Life into the world.  Notice the upper case “L”.  Life is not only a biological phenomenon, but he is also a person, Jesus Christ.  If we are Brothers of Life, then we are brothers of Christ.  Like Mary, the Brothers of Life cooperate with grace so that Jesus can enter into the world and all will come to know him and love him.  Without Mary’s example and her prayers, this becomes a daunting task.  We would not know how to live as brothers to Christ or how to bring his life to others.  We look to Mary to teach us how to be brothers to her son.

Many Protestants would say that this is unnecessary, “We can go directly to Christ.”  The glitch here is that God has given Mary to the world to point to the Son.  “His mother said to the servants, ‘Do whatever he tells you’,” (Jn 24:5).  Like Mary, the Brother calls the world to do whatever He tells us.  While it may be true that one can bypass Mary and deal directly with Christ, it plays out very differently in Scripture, the early Church and the Christian tradition.  Mary approaches Life on behalf of her friends who were hosting the wedding.  Then she directs them back to Life.

In Luke’s Gospel, the angel approaches Mary and then she leaves to serve her cousin Elizabeth.   We see Mary intimately involved in the lives of the faithful and the not so faithful, from Genesis to the Book of Revelation.

“A great sign appeared in the sky, a woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars,” (Rv 12:1).

We all know that there was a woman who came from one of the Abrahamic tribes, which happened to be twelve.  In addition, we know that there was a woman with the apostles who were twelve, reduced by one after Judas’ betrayal and back to twelve after the selection of Matthias.  That woman was Mary of Nazareth, the Mother of the Lord.  There is no doubt as to the intimate relationship between Mary, heaven and man.  As Brothers of Life, we aspire to this same intimacy with heaven and man.

Let’s look at one more passage in Rv. 12:6-7a.  “The woman herself fled into the desert where she had a place prepared by God, that there she might be taken care of for twelve hundred and sixty days.  Then a war broke out in heaven; Michael and his angels battled against the dragon.”  Again, the writer of Revelation establishes a link between Mary and the angels, this time with Michael.  This is not extrapolation.  The two verses were written together.  The author intended to place Mary, Michael and the other angels into the same frame.  In addition, stop and ask, “Who took care of the woman for twelve hundred and sixty days?”  Just before this passage, Revelation tells us that the woman gave birth to a son who was threatened by the dragon and rescued by the angels, (Rv 12:5).  We have two images at work here.  There is the threat to the life of the unborn by the dragon that stood before the woman about to give birth.  We have a clear reference to infanticide.  The dragon wanted the life of the child born to the woman.  However, the woman and the angels do not yield to the dragon.  Instead, the child is “caught up to God and his throne,” (Rev. 12:5).  Mary not only brings Life into the world, with the angels she also protects Life.  The man who is to be a brother must be like Mary.  He must protect Life and like Mary, he depends on Divine Assistance to do so.

Finally, we conclude with the passage from Gn 27:29  “May peoples serve you, and nations bow down to you; be master of your brothers, and may your mother’s sons bow down to you. Cursed be those who curse you, and blessed be those who bless you.”  To whom do the Franciscan Brothers of Life bow? Is it not to Jesus Christ?  Who is his mother?  Is it not Mary of Nazareth?

Published in: on July 31, 2010 at 7:16 PM  Leave a Comment  

Imagine Yourself . . .


Have you thought of serving God as a brother, committed to living the Gospel in total obedience to Christ, without any property of your own and in chastity?  God may be calling you to walk in the sandals of St. Francis of Assisi as a Franciscan Brother of Life.  Think about it.  Pray over it.  The Lord is looking for men to stand in his place serving the unborn and their parents.  Can you see yourself waking up early to spend time in prayer, then moving along the rest of your day to a pregnancy center.  There you’ll meet men like you.  But unlike you, they are in a state of despair.  They have discovered that they are going to be fathers and they’re afraid.  Their fear is driving them to want to destroy their unborn child in the womb.  No one is there to help them sort it all out.  Won’t you be Christ’s mouth and hands?  Won’t you speak for the unborn child?  He too is our brother.  Won’t you be a brother to these fathers who are about to murder their unborn children?  Maybe you see yourself praying in front of an abortuary or praying by the bedside of someone who is sick and dying.

As a Brother of Life you will walk in the footsteps of Christ, as St. Francis did.  But you will do so among the most vulnerable:  the unborn, the sick and the elderly.  We all want them to be protected from the Culture of Death, but few men are stepping up to the plate.  If we truly believe in the Gospel of Life, then we should be willing to do as St. Francis did, to leave everything behind to follow Christ and to serve those whose lives are threatened by abortion, euthanasia, capital punishment, war, infanticide and other horrors against human dignity and human life.

The Brothers of Life will not happen unless men like you step up to the plate and like Samuel say, “Here I am Lord.  I’ve come to do your will.”  You will have to sacrifice much.  This is true.  This is not an easy path to follow.  You will be asked to give up the most prized gift that a man has received from God, the right to marriage and a family.  But like Maximilian Kolbe, the patron of the Brothers, you will be laying down your life so that a father and his child will have life.  Remember, there is no greater honor and no greater love than to lay down your life for your brother.

The Brothers of Life are just emerging and we’re looking for men just like you who are interested in building something beautiful for God from the bottom up.  St. Francis began as a builder.

While praying in front of an icon of the crucified Christ in the Chapel of San Damiano in Assisi, he heard the voice of Christ say to him, “Francis, go repair my house.  Can’t you see that it has fallen into ruins?”  Christ is calling again.  His house is falling into ruins.  This time its greatest threat is the threat against human life.  The life of the unborn, the vulnerable, the sinner and the elderly are threatened every day as a matter of convenience for those who don’t see that God has a plan for all of us.  As Franciscans, we proclaim to the world that God can be trusted, that he has a plan and that plan is to give us life in abundance, here and in eternity.

If you’re interested in becoming a builder, won’t you come to the Franciscan Brothers of Life and help build this young community for Love of God, your brothers and sisters and of his entire Church?  Go to www.franciscansoflife.org and check it out.

Brother Jay, FFV

Published in: on July 19, 2010 at 7:36 AM  Leave a Comment  

Fathers, Sons and Brothers to All


God is to be found in many places and in many ways.  However, some of us are fortunate enough to be found by God.  This was the story of our Holy Father, Francis of Assisi.  Francis looked for God in the world around him, but could not see him.  It was when he allowed God to find him that he saw him everywhere.

Today, God calls men to open ourselves and allow Christ to find us.  He wants to find us, but we have to want to be found.  God will not violate our wishes.  He is a gentle God, a loving God, a respectful God.  When we place ourselves in his path, we find ourselves in Christ Jesus.  Christ becomes our Lord and our all, as our Holy Father Francis said.  Again, there are many ways to find God and many places where God can find us, for nothing is impossible for God.   God, who from all eternity has loved us, today calls men from every race and every land to meet him in the most vulnerable members of society, the unborn, the sick and elderly whose lives are reaching their sunset in this world to enter the eternal sunrise of the next.

Our call is not one to be social workers or political activists.  That is the proper role of the secular world.  God calls us to be totally his, totally immersed in him through a life of prayer, penance, and brotherhood with all people.  This is the image of Christ and the Church that we find in Francis of Assisi.  Brother Francis was not a peace activist, an environmentalist, a social worker for the poor and the sick.  In his poverty, he was richer than that.  Brother was just that, everyone’s brother.  He knew and understood that Christ our brother was to be found in relationship with all men as sons and daughters of God.  Therefore, peace is not an option, but a vocation.  When we discover our brotherhood with all people, we discover that we cannot live in any other relationship with them than in a relationship of peace and grace.

As Mother Teresa once said, “Abortion is the greatest threat to peace.”   God calls brothers, through the child in the womb, to live in peace with the world.  We must be like John the Baptist, who hears the cry of the Lord even in the womb of his mother, Elizabeth.  And like John, we must respond to Christ in the womb, not with anger and hostility, but with great love and joy.  As brothers we embrace Mary.  We desire to become like her.  Mary took Christ to John the Baptist, while both children were still in the womb.  The Brother of Life takes Christ to the unborn, by serving his mother and father, as Mary served Elizabeth and Zachariah.

God is placing a challenge on the table for today’s man.  He is challenging us to remember him and not forget Love.  When we, who are men, forget the most precious gift that God has given us, the capacity to be husbands and fathers, brothers and sons, something that no woman can ever become, we forfeit part of who we are.  We cease to be true.  No man can follow Christ and forget Truth.  Francis understood this.  One day, while struggling with temptation, he ran out into the snow and built three figures of snow.  He then turned to himself and said, “This is my family, my spouse, my son and my daughter.”  In his celibate state, our Holy Father Francis acknowledged that he was given a gift to give back to the Lord, his manhood.  Only a real man can live and love as a man.  Only a real man can hear the voice of Christ in the preborn child who today’s Pilate has sentenced to die.  The unborn child whose life is threatened needs a father.  The elderly person who believes that he has become a burden to his family needs a son.  The sick individual who has lost all hope needs a brother.  Only Christ can be father, son and brother.  That is why we follow Francis.  Francis takes on the image of Christ in his life.  He responds to Christ’s call to be perfect as he is perfect.  Francis begins the journey toward perfection.  Along that journey, he strives to be a holy father to all men, a gracious brother, and a faithful son.

Published in: on July 12, 2010 at 3:23 AM  Comments (1)  

GOD IS HIRING!


First of all, I have to apologize to all of you kind souls who take the time to read this post.  You see, this is the first time that I have ever blogged, in my entire life.  This blog was created for us as a gift from a very good friend and admirer of the Brothers of Life, which leads me into the topic of this first post.  Who are these brothers?

If I were to describe us I would say that we are couple of ragamuffins who have embraced the spirituality of St. Francis and made it our own.  Actually, I have a long history with the Franciscan family, having entered the Capuchins when I was 16 years old, back in 1969.  If you can do math, you can figure out my age.

But the Brothers of Life are not part of the Capuchins.  Here’s what happened.  One day, many years ago, I went to visit a good friend of mine who was a youth minister at a Catholic Center in Washington, DC.  Before I knew it, she had me involved with a 16-year old girl who was pregnant and frightened.  I’ll never forget that.  You look into someone’s face and you can see fear.  It’s not the fear of any kind of visible threat.  This is another kind of fear.  It’s the fear of the unknown.  It’s the kind of fear that both paralyzes you and revs up your engines so that you can run away.  To make a very long story a little shorter, this is exactly what this girl wanted to do.  She wanted to run.  She wanted an abortion.

I remember spending a very long time with her and then she suddenly took off.  I went after her, crossing dangerous railroad tracks in pursuit.  OK, I would not have chosen to cross the subway tracks in a big metropolitan area, but that’s the route that she took and I followed.  When I finally caught up with her, she was more terrified and exhausted.  My friend, who is a Carmelite Sister of Charity, and I promised to be there for her and to help her deal with her situation.  The boy, who was the father of the baby, was also a very good boy.  He too was very frightened.  These were kids who were going to be parents.  Guess what?  That baby was born in 1980.  It was a little boy and he became the King of the Castle in both homes, mom’s and dad’s.

Sometime afterward, I was the last one up at the friary when there was phone call.  It was the hospital.  They had a newborn baby who was dying.   The nurse who was on duty was a very devout Catholic and she wanted to have this child baptized.  I asked her if she knew how to baptize, but she was very nervous about it.  I lived in a house of 12 friars, four of whom were priests.  But they were asleep, so I went down to the hospital and baptized this little boy.  There was no need to wake up my brothers, even though I’m not a priest, not for an emergency baptism.

After I baptized the baby I asked the nurse about his condition.  She proceeded to tell me that the baby was going to die because they did not have the proper technology or medicines at this hospital and the nearest hospital was in the big city about three hours away.  I asked to speak with the doctor who came very quickly and he told me exactly what the baby needed.  It was some kind of machine that they did not have in this rural hospital.  They were doing the best they could with the simple technology that they had.  But it was not going to be enough.  The little boy would be dead by sunrise.

When I turned to the parents I couldn’t help but feel their pain.  It just crushed me.  I wanted to do something about this, but I couldn’t.  There was no way of getting this baby to a big city hospital.  You see, in those days small rural hospitals did not keep high-tech ambulances on standby for these things.  I’m not sure if they do so today.  The parents did not have a car either.

It was a very weird night.  I remember getting this bright idea.  I knew who had a vehicle that was large enough to transport this little family and the machine that was keeping the baby alive.  After assuring the parents that I would be back shortly I step out into the night.  I ran down the street and knocked on the door of the town’s funeral director.  I had to wake him up.  The funeral home owned a hurst.  It could accommodate the little guy, his machine and his parents.   I really don’t recall what I said to this man.  I just remember that it was the middle of the night.

About a month later, while I was walking outside the church, the couple from the hospital approached me.  They were beaming.  I had not seen them since the night that we helped them pack their baby and his equipment into the hurst and sent him on his way to the big city hospital.  They had their little boy with them.  He was beautiful.  He had made it.   Life moved on and I went back to teaching.  That’s what I’ve always done.  I’ve taught theology and when not teaching theology I’ve taught mathematics.   The years passed and many things happened in my life.

It was the summer of 2008.  I was praying before the Blessed Sacrament and something suddenly hit me as if someone had thrown a stone at my head.  Millions of children are killed every year by abortion, children just like the two little boys whom I had tried to help save.  I remembered how much I wanted to see those little boys live.   I couldn’t stop crying.  I went to my spiritual director and told him about the pain in my gut.  It was like a knot that did not go away.  My eyes felt as if the scales had just fallen off them.  Abortion has been around a long time.  I’ve always been convinced that it is morally grave.  As I said, I did everything that I could to support a teenage mother way back when. . . .  I didn’t know where this came from, but I had to do something about it.  The crying babies had to stop.  There could be no more crying and dying.  No human being, baby or otherwise could be allowed to simply die because someone decided that this life is expendable, but how to get this message across to others, especially to Catholics?

After writing Cardinal Sean, OFM Cap, the Capuchin Franciscan Archbishop of Boston, I met Bishop Felipe Estevez, one of the auxiliary bishops of Miami.  I had shared with the Cardinal what I had heard in my heart.  “My Son wants to bring life into the word, both to the body and to the soul.”  Bishop Estevez and I discussed the great truths found in the Gospel of Life written by Pope John Paul II.  The more that we spoke the more strongly I felt that God wanted something from me.  Several times Bishop Estevez asked me if I was sure that God did not want me to be a priest.  Every time I responded the same way.  “God wants me to be the image of his Son, the firstborn among many brothers.”  But God wanted me to be a different kind of brother.

The more that I prayed, the more that I heard the same voice encouraging me not to lose sight of St Francis and to look at Mother Teresa too.   It hit me one day.  It was a call within a call.  Now don’t get me wrong.  I’m on Mother Teresa.  First of all, there is a big age difference between us and there is an even greater difference between her holiness and mine.   I’m tiny and insignificant compared to her.

But I believed that God wanted me to start a new community of Franciscan men.  I did not know anything about starting a new religious community.  The one that I had joined in 1969 came fully established and user friendly.  The Capuchin reform has been part of the Franciscan family since the 16th century.  The Franciscan family has been around since 1209.  So I began to write.  As I wrote the words just came to my finger tips.  The Lord was asking for a group of Franciscan Brothers of Life.

We had to be Franciscan.  We had to follow the Gospel with the same passion and simplicity as our Holy Father Francis.  Nothing should be changed.  Our poverty, obedience and chaste brotherhood was to be exactly as that of St. Francis.  But our target population would be Catholics who struggle with life issues:  abortion, end of life decisions about their loved ones, infanticide, embryonic stem cell research, capital punishment, and euthanasia. The Brothers of Life are to go to those who have not fully embraced the revealed truths about the dignity of life and to tell them about the incarnation of Christ.  The Brothers must tell them that Mary conceived a child who was human and divine, by the power of the Holy Spirit, and that the Father loved the Son so much that he gave him the best thing that he had created, humanity.

Here is the most interesting part of this journey.  This awakening happened in 2008.  I had been in touch with the Cardinal, who had been my confrere when we were younger.  We were stationed at the same fraternity from 1980 to 1983.  He had said how my awakening to the horrors of abortion couldn’t be timelier.  Bishop Estevez continued to read my writings and point out some things that he felt were truths that the Holy Spirit was sharing with us.  Then came July 2009 and I became very ill.  I was in and out of hospitals six times between July and January.  Doctors could find no cure for my condition.  My teaching contract was not renewed, because of my health.  I must have dried up the local priest’s supply of oils, because I was anointed six times.

I finally looked at the Immaculate Heart one day and said, “OK.  I give up.  Whatever you want, I’ll do.”  From that day forward my health improved.  I had no money, since I was no longer teaching.  The Secular Franciscans and other people began to bring food, clothing, money and even dishes.  Someone on catholic.com read my story and read about the Brothers of Life and volunteered to create a website.  Someone else volunteered to create this blog.  I wrote down what the Lord had been telling me and sent it to the auxiliary bishop.  In brief, it was a proposal for a new Franciscan brotherhood that would follow the primitive rule of the Friars Minor, in the same spirit as the Capuchins, but with a fourth vow:  Total commitment to the proclamation and promotion of life, preached with the same charity and passion as St. Francis preached.

Most of the time, you send these things in to an Archbishop and it takes a lot of time to hear from them.  These are busy guys.  I sat down to wait for a response.  But I prayed to the Immaculate Heart that God’s Will be done.  About three days later I received a call from the Auxiliary Bishop.  He was calling to let me know that the Archbishop had said we needed to discern this.  I was unsure if I could or could not accept brothers.  But then he added that the Archbishop had put in a call to a priest in the Archdiocese who is a religious and has many years of experience with the formation of religious.  He asked the priest to serve as the spiritual guide and advisor for this process.  The priest had accepted.  When I met with Father, he told me about the call and he said that there was a green light to begin to discern if it is really the Will of God that there be a Franciscan brotherhood dedicated to the Gospel of Life.  He encouraged me to go forward and find the men.

I didn’t have to look long.  In less than one year, there have been 42 inquiries by men of all ages and all walks of life.  No, we don’t have 42 brothers.  Everyone is discerning.  But we are starting to gather together in community.  I call it my community of ragamuffin Franciscans.  We lead an intense life of prayer, with the Eucharist as the center of our day and the Liturgy of the Hours as the crown around the mass.  We have Lectio Divina every day, Grand Silence at night, daily rosary and time before the Blessed Sacrament.  We also go out to serve in the pregnancy centers of the Archdiocese of Miami.  We work with the Office of Respect Life on retreats, volunteer training, working in baby rooms where we gather and distribute baby articles to mothers and fathers who have decided to keep their babies, but are too poor to afford the necessary things for them.  We give talks around parishes and meet with pastors, offering to help their Respect Life programs in their parishes.  We also teach religious education and work with youth.  There is a lot to do and not enough workers.  We are now creating a spiritual formation programs for expectant fathers.

I’m not sure where the Lord is leading us, but I certainly believe that God will not allow his children to be destroyed by abortion, euthanasia and other heinous attacks on life without raising up different religious families in the Church to lead in the battle against the enemy.

That’s an awful lot to read in one sitting.  If you have read this far, thank you for staying with me.  I look forward to hearing from all of you and hearing what you have to offer on Franciscan spirituality and the Gospel of Life.

Remember, GOD IS HIRING A FEW GOOD MEN!

Br. Jay, FFV

Published in: on June 25, 2010 at 9:39 PM  Comments (2)