Latest news with #Franciscans


Irish Independent
24-07-2025
- General
- Irish Independent
Future of historic Tipperary friary remains uncertain
In December last year, the Franciscan Order announced that the Friary Church in Clonmel would close due to lack of priests to sustain a weekly mass at the 13th century building. At the July meeting of the Clonmel Borough District, independent councillor Niall Dennehy sought an update on the future of the historic building in the town. Cllr Dennehy told the meeting that he had gotten requests from members of the community that whatever the plans for the building are, the building not be deconsecrated. In response to Cllr Dennehy's call, the district administrator said that she was unaware of the plans for the former friary, but that she could write to the Franciscans to find out what they plan on doing with it. Earlier this year, a local prayer group, who had been using the Friary, staged a sit-in protesting its planned closure. The Abbey House of Prayer Group had signed a temporary agreement to be allowed to use the building in May 2023, and were supposed to hand the keys of the building back to the Franciscans on December 31, 2024, after the final mass in the church took place. However, the group staged a months-long sit-in protesting the closure of the church by the Franciscan Order. The group's protest was brought to an end by High Court action in February this year after the judge in the case struck out the action if the group vacated the church. In 2023, the Franciscan Order pulled out of Clonmel after centuries in the town due to dwindling numbers and aging friars.


Irish Independent
23-06-2025
- General
- Irish Independent
Message of unity and peace as thousands take part in Cork city's Eucharistic procession
Amid the brightly coloured sparkling umbrellas of the Indian Syro-Malabar community and Ukrainians in traditional vyshyvanka or embroidered shirts were the Dominican friars in their black and white habits. They were joined by Franciscans in brown habits, members of the Legion of Mary and young Catholics from Youth 2000, as the procession made its way across the River Lee via the Christy Ring Bridge. Once again, the Butter Exchange Band led the event with fittingly solemn religious hymns, as it has since the procession started almost a century ago. Cork city's traffic ground to a halt to allow the religious parade pass. In his address at the concluding outdoor benediction on Grand Parade, Bishop Fintan Gavin said the procession was 'not simply a tradition or a spectacle' but a 'proclamation' and 'a living testimony'. He prayed for 'a war-torn world that needs peace and healing now more than ever' and for families striving to stay together amid pressure and pain, young people searching for meaning and purpose in a chaotic world, for the elderly who feel forgotten and migrants who feel alone. Cork's Lord Mayor, Fergal Dennehy, recalled how the procession had been established in the first years of the new State as a way of bringing people together in the aftermath of the Civil War. 'Given the state of our world today I think it is very important that the message today was one of unity and peace,' he told the Irish Independent. 'Today we can see the expanding community in Cork here. It is a very different community to what it was 99 years ago when this procession began. There is a great sense of togetherness here today.' Trish Harrington has been a member of the Butter Exchange Band for 46 years and has played in the procession for every one of those years. 'It was only men in the band up until 1978, I was the first uniformed female in the band.' ADVERTISEMENT Learn more Wife and husband, Noreen and Liam Willis from Cork, take part in the procession every year with their fellow parishioners in Mayfield. They recalled how as recently as 40 years ago the procession was a male-only affair. The men walked while women and children stood along the route looking on. 'In later years, it became more family-orientated so everyone is walking,' Noreen explained. Another Cork local, Frank O'Neill, was one of those who watched the procession yesterday as mobility issues prevented the 66-year-old from taking part, which he has done annually since he was an altar boy. 'The streets were packed,' he recalled. 'The mothers and the children would be looking on as the men walked in the procession. It is nice to see the different nations adding colour and swelling the numbers now.' Husband and wife, Taras and Anna Kushnir from Ukraine revealed that they met in Cork in 2003 under the Shandon bells and their three boys were all born in Ireland. Participating was not just about faith but expressing gratitude to Ireland.


Hamilton Spectator
16-05-2025
- General
- Hamilton Spectator
Pope Leo's fellow Augustinian brothers look forward to papacy marked by unity and focus on Jesus
GENAZZANO, Italy (AP) — A new photo of Leo XIV stands by frescoes representing past papal visits to a Virgin Mary icon in the Sanctuary of Our Mother of Good Counsel, commemorating where he prayed two days after being elected pope. But the new pontiff is still 'Father Bob' to the handful of Augustinian friars who serve in the basilica in a hilltop medieval village — and the tight-knit community of Augustinians worldwide. They knew Leo when he was their global leader, seminary teacher or simply fellow brother in black habits with thick belts and large hooded capes. 'With Father Robert, then Very Rev. Prior General, we have had to change the names, but Father Bob … we realize the person hasn't changed at all, it's still him,' said the Rev. Alberto Giovannetti, 78. He was born in Genazzano in the wooded hills outside Rome and entered the seminary at age 11. He remembers a day in 2001 when he was struggling with the responsibility of a new position and then-Prior General Prevost comforted him. 'He gave me courage, 'Stay calm, the less adequate you feel, the more you're fit for it,' that was the meaning,' Giovannetti said. 'I think it's what's guiding him now as well, that real humbleness that doesn't make you feel weak, but rather makes you feel not alone.' St. Augustine and brotherly leadership It's a style of brotherly leadership that was crucial to St. Augustine, who inspired the order that's found itself in an unusual spotlight ever since Leo's first public blessing from St. Peter's Basilica . 'He resolutely affirmed, 'I'm a son of Augustine, I'm Augustinian,' and this filled us all with pride. We're feeling like the pope's friars,' said the Rev. Pasquale Cormio, rector of Rome's Basilica of St. Augustine. Leo's predecessor, Pope Francis , was a Jesuit who took the name of the founder of the Franciscans . The Jesuit order is widely known for its scholarly star-power, while the Franciscans appeal to many because of the order's down-to-earth charity. The Augustinian order is a bit of a paradox — it remains as unassuming as when it was first organized in the mid-13th century as a union of mendicant orders, yet traces its origins to one of the most influential thinkers in Christian and Western culture. And now the friars are expecting that 'Father Bob' will bring some of St. Augustine's spiritual trademarks to the wider church. Augustinian spirituality 'Augustinian spirituality is founded on these words of St. Augustine — a single heart, a single soul oriented toward God, that is to say, toward unity,' said the Rev. Lizardo Estrada, who was a student of Leo's in seminary. 'That's why you can sum it up in four words, I'd say — community, interiority, charity and obedience.' For Augustinians, the foundation of a godly life is seeking truth with the help of Scriptures and sacraments, finding it as God's presence inside one's heart — the 'interiority' — and then taking that knowledge outward to help others. 'You can't adore the Lord every day, pray every day, and not find God in the vulnerable, in the humble, in those working the fields, in the Amazonian peoples,' said Estrada, who is secretary general of the Latin American and Caribbean Episcopal Conference. 'You can't know God inside you, have that knowledge, and stay put.' The order has certainly been on a journey — part of St. Augustine's enduring appeal is that he was a 'seeker' who introduced the concept of introspection as a way to happiness. Born in what today is Algeria in the 4th century, he embraced his mother's Christian faith during travels in Italy and went on to write some of history's pivotal spiritual and philosophical treatises. His answers to perennial questions such as free will versus predestination, true faith versus heresy, even issues addressing leadership, gender and sexuality continue to inform Western culture today, said Colleen Mitchell, a scholar with Villanova University's Augustinian Institute. The Augustinians since the Middle Ages As both male and female monastic communities started following him, St. Augustine wrote the basics of a 'rule' or the charter for an order, which was eventually assigned some eight centuries later by the pope to medieval hermits in Tuscany to form a single union. Today, the order of some 3,000 friars is active in 50 countries, with universities like Villanova in Pennsylvania and some 150,000 children enrolled in Augustinian schools. They operate missions across Africa, are growing in Asia, and run historic and artwork-filled churches across Europe, including Santo Spirito in Florence — for which a young Michelangelo sculpted a crucifix as a thank-you gift since the friars had allowed him access to their hospital to learn anatomy, said the prior general, the Rev. Alejandro Moral. 'The search for truth is very important because as St. Augustine put it, truth is not yours or mine, it's ours. And we have to engage in dialogue to find that truth and, once we have found it, walk together, because we both want to follow truth,' Moral told The Associated Press from the Augustinians' headquarters in Rome. A brother pope The large, unpretentious complex is next to the spectacular colonnade that encircles St. Peter's Square. Jubilant friars huddled at the windows cheering when Leo was announced as pope. A few days later, the pope joined them for a surprise lunch and the birthday celebration of a brother, showing the attention to fraternity that is an Augustinian point of pride. 'He puts you at ease, he has this way of being near that … always struck me even when he was prior general, and he's kept up that style as cardinal and now as pope,' said the Rev. Gabriele Pedicino, the provincial for Italy. He added that finding unity in diversity is another pillar of Augustinian thought that he expects Leo will promote. 'The diversity among brothers — I think that the pope will labor so that increasingly inside and outside the church, we can recognize the other, the different, not as a danger, not as an enemy, but as someone to love, someone who makes our life richer and more beautiful,' Pedicino said. Various friars found inspiration in the pope's motto, 'in illo uno unum' — Latin for 'in the one Christ, we are one' and derived from St. Augustine's sermons about Christian unity. He lived through times of division. A millennium later a former Augustinian, Martin Luther, broke with Catholicism and launched the Protestant Reformation. As today's Catholic Church also struggles with polarization , reestablishing a core unity centered in Jesus is a message that resonates widely. 'It's not like we're better than anybody else, we're all the same, and when we engage in dialogue, we need to realize that we need to greatly respect the other,' Moral said. 'I believe that this is fundamental to our mission — to listen, to respect, and to love. Pope Leo has this straightforward simplicity.' ___ Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
Yahoo
16-05-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Pope Leo's fellow Augustinian brothers look forward to papacy marked by unity and focus on Jesus
GENAZZANO, Italy (AP) — A new photo of Leo XIV stands by frescoes representing past papal visits to a Virgin Mary icon in the Sanctuary of Our Mother of Good Counsel, commemorating where he prayed two days after being elected pope. But the new pontiff is still 'Father Bob' to the handful of Augustinian friars who serve in the basilica in a hilltop medieval village — and the tight-knit community of Augustinians worldwide. They knew Leo when he was their global leader, seminary teacher or simply fellow brother in black habits with thick belts and large hooded capes. 'With Father Robert, then Very Rev. Prior General, we have had to change the names, but Father Bob … we realize the person hasn't changed at all, it's still him,' said the Rev. Alberto Giovannetti, 78. He was born in Genazzano in the wooded hills outside Rome and entered the seminary at age 11. He remembers a day in 2001 when he was struggling with the responsibility of a new position and then-Prior General Prevost comforted him. 'He gave me courage, 'Stay calm, the less adequate you feel, the more you're fit for it,' that was the meaning,' Giovannetti said. 'I think it's what's guiding him now as well, that real humbleness that doesn't make you feel weak, but rather makes you feel not alone.' St. Augustine and brotherly leadership It's a style of brotherly leadership that was crucial to St. Augustine, who inspired the order that's found itself in an unusual spotlight ever since Leo's first public blessing from St. Peter's Basilica. 'He resolutely affirmed, 'I'm a son of Augustine, I'm Augustinian,' and this filled us all with pride. We're feeling like the pope's friars,' said the Rev. Pasquale Cormio, rector of Rome's Basilica of St. Augustine. Leo's predecessor, Pope Francis, was a Jesuit who took the name of the founder of the Franciscans. The Jesuit order is widely known for its scholarly star-power, while the Franciscans appeal to many because of the order's down-to-earth charity. The Augustinian order is a bit of a paradox — it remains as unassuming as when it was first organized in the mid-13th century as a union of mendicant orders, yet traces its origins to one of the most influential thinkers in Christian and Western culture. And now the friars are expecting that 'Father Bob' will bring some of St. Augustine's spiritual trademarks to the wider church. Augustinian spirituality 'Augustinian spirituality is founded on these words of St. Augustine — a single heart, a single soul oriented toward God, that is to say, toward unity,' said the Rev. Lizardo Estrada, who was a student of Leo's in seminary. 'That's why you can sum it up in four words, I'd say — community, interiority, charity and obedience.' For Augustinians, the foundation of a godly life is seeking truth with the help of Scriptures and sacraments, finding it as God's presence inside one's heart — the 'interiority' — and then taking that knowledge outward to help others. 'You can't adore the Lord every day, pray every day, and not find God in the vulnerable, in the humble, in those working the fields, in the Amazonian peoples,' said Estrada, who is secretary general of the Latin American and Caribbean Episcopal Conference. 'You can't know God inside you, have that knowledge, and stay put.' The order has certainly been on a journey — part of St. Augustine's enduring appeal is that he was a 'seeker' who introduced the concept of introspection as a way to happiness. Born in what today is Algeria in the 4th century, he embraced his mother's Christian faith during travels in Italy and went on to write some of history's pivotal spiritual and philosophical treatises. His answers to perennial questions such as free will versus predestination, true faith versus heresy, even issues addressing leadership, gender and sexuality continue to inform Western culture today, said Colleen Mitchell, a scholar with Villanova University's Augustinian Institute. The Augustinians since the Middle Ages As both male and female monastic communities started following him, St. Augustine wrote the basics of a 'rule' or the charter for an order, which was eventually assigned some eight centuries later by the pope to medieval hermits in Tuscany to form a single union. Today, the order of some 3,000 friars is active in 50 countries, with universities like Villanova in Pennsylvania and some 150,000 children enrolled in Augustinian schools. They operate missions across Africa, are growing in Asia, and run historic and artwork-filled churches across Europe, including Santo Spirito in Florence — for which a young Michelangelo sculpted a crucifix as a thank-you gift since the friars had allowed him access to their hospital to learn anatomy, said the prior general, the Rev. Alejandro Moral. 'The search for truth is very important because as St. Augustine put it, truth is not yours or mine, it's ours. And we have to engage in dialogue to find that truth and, once we have found it, walk together, because we both want to follow truth,' Moral told The Associated Press from the Augustinians' headquarters in Rome. A brother pope The large, unpretentious complex is next to the spectacular colonnade that encircles St. Peter's Square. Jubilant friars huddled at the windows cheering when Leo was announced as pope. A few days later, the pope joined them for a surprise lunch and the birthday celebration of a brother, showing the attention to fraternity that is an Augustinian point of pride. 'He puts you at ease, he has this way of being near that … always struck me even when he was prior general, and he's kept up that style as cardinal and now as pope,' said the Rev. Gabriele Pedicino, the provincial for Italy. He added that finding unity in diversity is another pillar of Augustinian thought that he expects Leo will promote. 'The diversity among brothers — I think that the pope will labor so that increasingly inside and outside the church, we can recognize the other, the different, not as a danger, not as an enemy, but as someone to love, someone who makes our life richer and more beautiful,' Pedicino said. Various friars found inspiration in the pope's motto, 'in illo uno unum' — Latin for 'in the one Christ, we are one' and derived from St. Augustine's sermons about Christian unity. He lived through times of division. A millennium later a former Augustinian, Martin Luther, broke with Catholicism and launched the Protestant Reformation. As today's Catholic Church also struggles with polarization, reestablishing a core unity centered in Jesus is a message that resonates widely. 'It's not like we're better than anybody else, we're all the same, and when we engage in dialogue, we need to realize that we need to greatly respect the other,' Moral said. 'I believe that this is fundamental to our mission — to listen, to respect, and to love. Pope Leo has this straightforward simplicity.' ___ Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.


Winnipeg Free Press
16-05-2025
- General
- Winnipeg Free Press
Pope Leo's fellow Augustinian brothers look forward to papacy marked by unity and focus on Jesus
GENAZZANO, Italy (AP) — A new photo of Leo XIV stands by frescoes representing past papal visits to a Virgin Mary icon in the Sanctuary of Our Mother of Good Counsel, commemorating where he prayed two days after being elected pope. But the new pontiff is still 'Father Bob' to the handful of Augustinian friars who serve in the basilica in a hilltop medieval village — and the tight-knit community of Augustinians worldwide. They knew Leo when he was their global leader, seminary teacher or simply fellow brother in black habits with thick belts and large hooded capes. 'With Father Robert, then Very Rev. Prior General, we have had to change the names, but Father Bob … we realize the person hasn't changed at all, it's still him,' said the Rev. Alberto Giovannetti, 78. He was born in Genazzano in the wooded hills outside Rome and entered the seminary at age 11. He remembers a day in 2001 when he was struggling with the responsibility of a new position and then-Prior General Prevost comforted him. 'He gave me courage, 'Stay calm, the less adequate you feel, the more you're fit for it,' that was the meaning,' Giovannetti said. 'I think it's what's guiding him now as well, that real humbleness that doesn't make you feel weak, but rather makes you feel not alone.' St. Augustine and brotherly leadership It's a style of brotherly leadership that was crucial to St. Augustine, who inspired the order that's found itself in an unusual spotlight ever since Leo's first public blessing from St. Peter's Basilica. 'He resolutely affirmed, 'I'm a son of Augustine, I'm Augustinian,' and this filled us all with pride. We're feeling like the pope's friars,' said the Rev. Pasquale Cormio, rector of Rome's Basilica of St. Augustine. Leo's predecessor, Pope Francis, was a Jesuit who took the name of the founder of the Franciscans. The Jesuit order is widely known for its scholarly star-power, while the Franciscans appeal to many because of the order's down-to-earth charity. The Augustinian order is a bit of a paradox — it remains as unassuming as when it was first organized in the mid-13th century as a union of mendicant orders, yet traces its origins to one of the most influential thinkers in Christian and Western culture. And now the friars are expecting that 'Father Bob' will bring some of St. Augustine's spiritual trademarks to the wider church. Augustinian spirituality 'Augustinian spirituality is founded on these words of St. Augustine — a single heart, a single soul oriented toward God, that is to say, toward unity,' said the Rev. Lizardo Estrada, who was a student of Leo's in seminary. 'That's why you can sum it up in four words, I'd say — community, interiority, charity and obedience.' For Augustinians, the foundation of a godly life is seeking truth with the help of Scriptures and sacraments, finding it as God's presence inside one's heart — the 'interiority' — and then taking that knowledge outward to help others. 'You can't adore the Lord every day, pray every day, and not find God in the vulnerable, in the humble, in those working the fields, in the Amazonian peoples,' said Estrada, who is secretary general of the Latin American and Caribbean Episcopal Conference. 'You can't know God inside you, have that knowledge, and stay put.' The order has certainly been on a journey — part of St. Augustine's enduring appeal is that he was a 'seeker' who introduced the concept of introspection as a way to happiness. Born in what today is Algeria in the 4th century, he embraced his mother's Christian faith during travels in Italy and went on to write some of history's pivotal spiritual and philosophical treatises. His answers to perennial questions such as free will versus predestination, true faith versus heresy, even issues addressing leadership, gender and sexuality continue to inform Western culture today, said Colleen Mitchell, a scholar with Villanova University's Augustinian Institute. The Augustinians since the Middle Ages As both male and female monastic communities started following him, St. Augustine wrote the basics of a 'rule' or the charter for an order, which was eventually assigned some eight centuries later by the pope to medieval hermits in Tuscany to form a single union. Today, the order of some 3,000 friars is active in 50 countries, with universities like Villanova in Pennsylvania and some 150,000 children enrolled in Augustinian schools. They operate missions across Africa, are growing in Asia, and run historic and artwork-filled churches across Europe, including Santo Spirito in Florence — for which a young Michelangelo sculpted a crucifix as a thank-you gift since the friars had allowed him access to their hospital to learn anatomy, said the prior general, the Rev. Alejandro Moral. 'The search for truth is very important because as St. Augustine put it, truth is not yours or mine, it's ours. And we have to engage in dialogue to find that truth and, once we have found it, walk together, because we both want to follow truth,' Moral told The Associated Press from the Augustinians' headquarters in Rome. A brother pope The large, unpretentious complex is next to the spectacular colonnade that encircles St. Peter's Square. Jubilant friars huddled at the windows cheering when Leo was announced as pope. A few days later, the pope joined them for a surprise lunch and the birthday celebration of a brother, showing the attention to fraternity that is an Augustinian point of pride. 'He puts you at ease, he has this way of being near that … always struck me even when he was prior general, and he's kept up that style as cardinal and now as pope,' said the Rev. Gabriele Pedicino, the provincial for Italy. He added that finding unity in diversity is another pillar of Augustinian thought that he expects Leo will promote. 'The diversity among brothers — I think that the pope will labor so that increasingly inside and outside the church, we can recognize the other, the different, not as a danger, not as an enemy, but as someone to love, someone who makes our life richer and more beautiful,' Pedicino said. Various friars found inspiration in the pope's motto, 'in illo uno unum' — Latin for 'in the one Christ, we are one' and derived from St. Augustine's sermons about Christian unity. Winnipeg Jets Game Days On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop. He lived through times of division. A millennium later a former Augustinian, Martin Luther, broke with Catholicism and launched the Protestant Reformation. As today's Catholic Church also struggles with polarization, reestablishing a core unity centered in Jesus is a message that resonates widely. 'It's not like we're better than anybody else, we're all the same, and when we engage in dialogue, we need to realize that we need to greatly respect the other,' Moral said. 'I believe that this is fundamental to our mission — to listen, to respect, and to love. Pope Leo has this straightforward simplicity.' ___ Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.