Fr. Brian Smail is moving on to a new ministry
Fr. Brian Smail, OFM will be ending his full time service at the Church of St. Francis of Assisi at the end of this month. Fr. Brian has been asked to minister in the Provincial Office. He will continue to live in the friary on 31st street with the friars and he plans to continue to help out in the church as he is able.
We are very grateful for his many years of ministry with us at the Church of St. Francis of Assisi. In addition to presiding at the Eucharist and hearing Confession, Fr. Brian also served our community by providing spiritual direction and by leading our bereavement ministry.
We have been blessed by his presence and ministry and we wish him luck with his new responsibilities serving the whole province.
Helping Hands for the Disabled – Volunteer Opportunity
Helping Hands for the Disabled
Helping Hands for the Disabled is an agency that helps people who are blind. They are looking for volunteers who will:
- Read mail for the client
- Go shopping with the client
- Run errands
- Go for a walk
- Assist with small tasks
If you are interested in helping out and can make a 2-3 hour commitment per week, please contact Edward Trochimczuk ( [email protected] ). The agency will also offer a $20/per visit stipend.
Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Mother
Happy Feast of the Assumption!
August 15th the Church around the world, both Catholic and Orthodox celebrate Mary’s entrance into eternal life in heaven.
Join us for Mass at 7:30 AM, 12:00 PM and 5:30 PM.
Mary had said yes to the Father’s call. She enjoyed all of the joys and blessings that came with the mission God gave her and she endured all of the hardships and sadness that it also brought her.
When her life’s journey was complete, like all of the saints, she was granted a share in the fullness of her son Jesus’ victory over death.
Mary is the Mother of God. She is also a devoted disciple. She is a prophet and a faithful servant of God. Her prophetic words still echo through history and inspire believers in each generation:
My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord,
my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour
for he has looked with favour on his lowly servant.
From this day all generations will call me blessed:
the Almighty has done great things for me,
and holy is his Name.
He has mercy on those who fear him in every generation.
He has shown the strength of his arm,
he has scattered the proud in their conceit.
He has cast down the mighty from their thrones,
and has lifted up the lowly.
He has filled the hungry with good things,
and the rich he has sent away empty.
He has come to the help of his servant Israel
for he has remembered his promise of mercy,
the promise he made to our fathers,
to Abraham and his children for ever.
Pray for us Mary, Mother of God!
(Photo: mosaic of the Assumption in the Church of St. Francis of Assisi)
Feast of Sts. Anne and Joachim, parents of the Blessed Mother
Tuesday, July 26th, is the Feast of saints Anne and Joachim, parents of the Blessed Mother and Jesus’ grandparents.
It is a wonderful day to remember our own parents and grandparents in addition to remembering these members of Jesus’ family.
Please join us on the feast at the 7:30 AM, 12:00 PM, and 5:30 PM Masses.
Why do people convert to Catholicism?
I have been helping people enter the Catholic Church for 15 years at St. Francis of Assisi and from time-to-time people ask me, “Why do people convert?”
It’s a good question and it’s not so easy to answer. People’s journeys to coming to know Jesus and deciding to become a disciple are as diverse and unique as people are themselves.
But in my experience, there are some common denominators that cut across the varied ways people come to Christ and to the Church. Some people are moved by a book they read, or a movie they watch, or YouTube videos they see, and they start to know about Jesus through those media. Other people grow up around and among Catholics and they have a familiarity with the Church even if they are not members. Some people are not baptized but they have parents or grandparents who are faithful members of the Church, and sometimes they feel like becoming Catholic is a homecoming to a family tradition. Other people fall in love with someone who is Catholic, and they are introduced to the Church by their significant other. Some people are simply seekers by nature, who are looking for meaning in life. The journey starts in all different kinds of ways.
The of points of entry can be wildly diverse but at some point, these journeys find common elements:
All seekers (which the Church calls “inquirers” because they start to ask questions about Jesus and the Church) at some point come in contact with disciples who impress them or even inspire them. People become attached to someone who is already Catholic: a significant other, a friend, a relative, a colleague – and they are attracted to something about that person that they like. Converts often point to sense of joy, or an inner of peace, or wisdom, or compassion, as qualities that they like, and they see in Catholics they know.
In other words, people lead people to Christ. The journey may start with a book, or a curiosity, or a speech or whatever, but people who actual convert always speak of a “someone” who then brings them to Christ.
This personal witness is a primary and crucial part of the spiritual journey into the Church.
The second part of the journey is just as important: the prospective convert encounters a community of disciples who embody Jesus’ message. By the time a potential convert meets the flesh and blood people of the Church they usually already know at least a little bit about Jesus’ message of love, compassion, inclusion, welcome, healing, and mercy. If they experience these qualities being lived in the community, the journey usually continues. If they meet a community that is lukewarm in living Jesus’ message – or worse – a community that embodies judgment, bigotry, injustice or – God forbid – even hatred, then their journey usually stalls. The witness of the local community is crucial to new people coming to know Jesus. We must be what we are called to be: Christ’s very body in the world.
All of this is to say, people convert because they experience the love of God flowing through the people who are already anointed with God’s Spirit. In my experience when people encounter Jesus himself, authentically embodied in His’ disciples, they fall in love with God, and they realize the truth that God loves them – and all of us – first and always.
The Church calls the journey of conversation the “Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults” (RCIA) and I have had the privilege of directing this ministry at St. Francis for 15 years. I do not do this ministry alone. I work with a team of committed volunteers who, I believe, are called and gifted for this ministry. But I am acutely aware that the RCIA ministry team, which works very hard all year, does not introduce our inquires to Christ by ourselves. It takes the whole Church, living, breathing, with flesh and blood and gathering in the local community – to bring someone to Christ. Our ministry team can do nothing, unless everyone in the pews at St. Francis is doing their job to live as faithful disciples of Jesus. The ministry of evangelization ministry belongs to all of us.
So why do people convert?
Fundamentally, people convert because we are doing our best to be Christ’s disciples – individually and as a parish community – and people come to know, through us, that God loves them.
Yet, people still need to be invited. People come closer to the Church because a member of the church takes the risk and invites someone they know, who they believe may be interested in exploring further, to come and take a look. If we find love and life in Christ, we have to be willing to invite others to share the abundant life we have been invited into. The invitation should always be gentle, and without any coercion, but we should be ready to invite because sometimes people are waiting for an invitation. If they are interested, that’s great. If they are not… that’s fine too. At the end of the day, the call comes from God and God has his eye on all of us. We don’t have to worry about where anyone’s journey goes. We just need to embody the love of God whether people stay or go.
“The harvest is plenty” says the Lord, “but the laborers are few.” Well folks… if you are reading this… you are one of the laborers. Let’s rejoice in the abundance of the harvest and do our part.
-Joseph Nuzzi
Director of Evangelization
Church of St. Francis of Assisi
So here is an invitation from me:
Are you interested in exploring Catholicism for yourself?
Do you know someone who might be interested in finding out more about our faith?
Were you baptized in another Christian church and are thinking about joining the Catholic Church?
Are you Catholic but never received Confirmation or First Communion?
Our RCIA will begin on Tuesday, September 12, 2022 but I’d be happy to talk to you about questions at any time.
Our RCIA meets every Tuesday from 6:30 PM to 8:00 PM beginning September 13th. These classes are designed for people who may or may not be sure that they want to join the Catholic church. We present a comprehensive overview of Catholic faith and traditions designed for adults. Anyone inquiring into the Catholic faith may attend these sessions with no obligations.
The RCIA is free for anyone exploring Catholicism.
If you would like to find out more about our Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults, please contact me:
Joseph Nuzzi
Director of Evangelization
212-736-8500 x365
[email protected]
Happy Feast of Saint Kateri Tekakwitha
Today, July 14,is the Feast of Saint Kateri Tekakwitha, the first Native American canonized to sainthood. She is the patron saint to Indigenous Americans and ecology.
She lived by the motto “Who will teach me what is most pleasing to God, that I may do it?”
Like her, let us live our lives with a God focus and concern for others.
Saint Kateri Tekakwitha, pray for us!
Saint Kateri Tekakwitha by Br. Robert Lentz, OFM
It’s Sundae Sunday!
This Sunday, July 17th, is Sundae Sunday again!
We invite you to stop by the Clare Room in St. Francis House next door to the church after the 5:00 PM Mass on Sunday to enjoy a delicious cold treat before heading out!
We are very grateful to those who sponsored this months’ Sundae Sunday.
Thank You!
Recent News & Events
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In Remembrance - Pope Francis (1936-2025) April 21,2025
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Sunday Bulletin - April 13, 2025 April 7,2025
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Holy Week and Easter 2025 April 5,2025
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Please Support our Church at Lent and Easter April 5,2025
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Easter Flowers Intentions April 5,2025
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