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The
Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate are a Franciscan reform begun at
Frigento, Italy, in
1970 with permission of the Minister General of the Order of Friars Minor
Conventual.
Fathers Stefano Maria of the Angels and Gabriele Maria of the Annunciation named this
reform Casa Mariana, that is A Marian Home, for it was to be nothing other
than a return to the ideals and life of St. Maximilian Mary Kolbe at Niepokalanow (polish
for the Immaculates). There St. Maximilian began the renewal of the
Franciscan Order by returning to the Marian spirit of St. Francis.
The Marian Spirit of St. Francis of Assisi
St. Francis of Assisi (1182-1226 A. D.),
the poverello and troubadour of Christ Crucified, was and is one of the greatest devotees
of the Mother of God in the history of the Church. Indeed his entire life was encompassed
in this endeavor: To live the life and poverty of Our Most High Lord Jesus Christ
and His Holy Mother, and to persevere in this to the end. It was with St. Francis
that devotion to the Immaculate Virgin began to grow with new vigor in the Church. He sung
Her praises in his Salutation to the Blessed Virgin Mary: Hail O Lady, Holy Queen,
Holy Mother of God, Virgin made church... He extolled Her incomparable union with
the Most Holy Trinity in his antiphon for the Office of the Passion: Holy Virgin
Mary, among women there is no one like You born into the world. You are the Daughter and
the Handmaid of the Most High King and Father of Heaven, You are the Mother of Our Most
Holy Lord Jesus Christ, Your are the Spouse of the Holy Spirit, ... Not only did St.
Francis sing Her praises and invoke Her Maternal intercession every day, but he went so
far as to confess his sins and failings to Her, so as to obtain more assuredly the
forgiveness and pardon of Her Divine Son. St. Francis exhorted his friars to have always a
fond and living devotion to the Mother of Christ. Indeed it was the example of St.
Francis love and devotion to Her that began two great movements in the church that
have characterized Marian devotion among Roman Catholics ever since. These were an
unshakable faith in the Immaculate Conception and the ardent and devoted service of Her
known as total consecration.
Spurred on by the example of their Seraphic Father, the Franciscans promoted and
popularized devotion to the Mother of God throughout the Church and world during the last
800 years. Their work along these lines has already born fruit: Venerable Pope Pius IX,
declared the fact of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, a dogma of the
faith in 1854. Likewise, Venerable Pope Pius XII declared the Assumption of the Blessed
Virgin Mary to be held unshakably by all Catholics as a dogma of the faith in 1950.
St. Maximilian Mary Kolbe: A most faithful
follower of St. Francis
St. Maximilian Mary Kolbe (1894-1941 A. D.), a member of the
Order of Friars Minor
Conventual, is one of the newest saints in the Roman Catholic Church.
He was beatified in 1973 by Venerable Pope Paul VI and canonized in 1982. Pope John Paul
II took that occasion to explain why he had chose to canonize St. Maximilian as a martyr:
for in sacrificing his life at Auschwitz to save the life of a father of a family from
certain death in the starvation bunker, St. Maximilian Maria Kolbe attained to a
particular and exceedingly close conformity to Jesus Christ, who while we were yet
sinners, laid down His own life to redeem us from the everlasting damnation of Hell.
St. Maximilian was born in Poland and studied for the priesthood as a Conventual
Franciscan in Rome, Italy. While in Rome, he was inspired to found the Militia of the
Immaculate, a public association of the faithful for the conversion and sanctification of
all souls by means of devotion to and service of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Upon returning
to Poland after WWI, St. Maximilian promoted this movement among the friars of his own
religious institute as well as among the diocesan clergy and laity. In 1923, with the
financial assistance of an American priest, he began a monthly magazine for the members of
the Militia known as the Knight of the Immaculate.
St.
Maximilian's own devotion to the Blessed Virgin, as Mediatrix of All Grace,
overflowed upon all he met. By 1928 He obtained permission of his superiors to
found a new friary, entirely devoted to Her service. This was and is known as Niepokalanow. It lies about 60 miles outside of Warsaw, Poland. In this friary St. Maximilian anticipated by
divine grace the authentic reforms of the Second Council of the Vatican as they regard
religious life. There the marian spirit of St. Francis of Assisi was lived once again by
all the friars. They bound themselves to Her by vows of poverty, chastity, obedience, and
total consecration. They prayed, worked, and lived together for the conversion and
sanctification of all souls throughout the world, in the quickest, surest, easiest manner,
that is, by introducing them to the Blessed Virgin Mary according to the authentic
teachings of the Roman Catholic Church.
By 1939 Niepokalanow had almost 1,000 friars, and published several million copies of
newspapers and magazines, books, periodicals, pamphlets to promote the knowledge and love
of the Blessed Virgin. The Militia of the Immaculate had grown to over 1,000,000 members
in nearly all the nations of the glob. During the Second World War, St. Maximilian was
imprisoned by the Nazis and sent to Auschwitz Concentration Camp, where he died the
death of a martyr of charity.
The Life and Mission of St. Maximilian Kolbe Reborn
The religious community begun at Casa Mariana
(Frigento, Italy), along the lines and in accordance with the counsels of St. Maximilian,
was erected by His Holiness Pope John Paul II as a religious institute of diocesan rite in
1990. On that occasion the Holy Father explained that this was for the preservation and
propagation of the life and mission of St. Maximilian Kolbe in the Roman Catholic Church.
This new religious institute is known as the
Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate. (There is also an institute of women, living the same
charism, known as the Franciscan Sisters of the Immaculate) The Franciscan Friars of the
Immaculate began with about 30 friars and one house in 1990 have already grown to over 200
friars in 14 houses on 5 continents. Three of these friars came to America in the winter
of 1991. Today the community in the USA has grown to 29. Fourteen of these new vocations
are presently studying for the priesthood. Their studies are conducted faithfully
according to the mind of the Sacred Magisterium of the Church so that they may be holy and
god-fearing sons of Holy Mother Church.
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