Capuchin franciscan friars province of st augustine

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Much has been written about and many homilies have lamented the vocation crisis in the Catholic Church in the United States.  Religious Orders which used to have large classes of  novices each year now go for years without a new entrant. Dioceses which used to ordain many young men as priests each year now go for years without even one new priest. The Church needs the service of men and women who will dedicate themselves full time to the work of the Church. Even more, the world needs the example of men and women who dedicate themselves without reservation to God in prayer and service to the poor.

Highlights

There is good news. The Capuchin Province of Saint Augustine has vocations!  Each year a new class of generous young men appears at Borromeo Seminary and Padre Pio Friary to begin formation for Capuchin life.  These young men represent hope for the Church.  They will be ambassadors of Christ to the people of the 21stcentury.

Forty men are currently in various formation programs preparing for service as Capuchin brothers and priests:
            Borromeo college seminary 6
            Postulancy 5
            Novitiate 5
            Temporary vows 16
            Final vows/Formation for Ministry 8

The men who are in Capuchin formation represent the diversity that is a source of life for the Catholic Church in the United States.
   
Of our 40 men in formation, 24 are from ethnic minorities:

            10 are Hispanic (2 US born, 8 foreign born)
            2 are African American
            3 are African immigrants
            1 was born in Indonesia
            1 was born in Korea
            1 was born in Sri Lanka
            1 was born in Brazil
            1 was born in China
            2 are of Filipino ancestry (US born)
            1 is of Indian ancestry (US born)
            1 has a mother born in Thailand

The Province of Saint Augustine gives thanks to God for the gift of vocations and hopes that these men will serve the Church soon as missionaries and preachers, pastors and teachers, social workers and counselors.  Already these men serve God and His Church as Capuchin brothers, living in prayer, fraternity and service.

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The newly elected Provincial Council for the Capuchin Province of St. Augustine (L to R): Br. Richard Owens, OFM Cap., Br. Jim Mungovan, OFM Cap., Br. Robert Marva, OFM Cap. (Provincial Minister), Br. Brian Stacy, OFM Cap., and Br. Emilio Biosca, OFM Cap. Photo courtesy of the Capuchin Friars Province of St. Augustine.

Brother Rigo Azanwi calls himself an “air friar.”

“I’m daring,” he says. “Helicopter tours, skydiving, skiing, golfing; I like anything adventurous.”

But when he’s not performing daredevil stunts, the 30-year-old Capuchin Franciscan Friar dons a brown habit and strolls through Lawrenceville, where the religious order has been stationed since 1873.

Photo courtesy of the Capuchin Friars Province of St. Augustine.

The Province of St. Augustine, named after the 37th Street church it has served since its formation, is made up of 120 men who serve in Pittsburgh, the District of Columbia, Ohio, Maryland, West Virginia, Puerto Rico and Papua New Guinea. Unlike monks who live a solitary life of prayer in one place, friars are well-traveled and active in their communities.

Following the teachings of St. Francis of Assisi, an Italian friar who lived from 1181 to 1226, members of the province spread the gospel as priests, hospital and prison chaplains, and professors. (If you want an overview of the local Capuchins’ history, there’s a large, three-panel bronze plaque on 37th Street that tells the tale).

It may not be a trend, but men in their 20s and 30s are still taking an interest in a religious life that requires vows of poverty, chastity and obedience.

In 2020, the Lawrenceville location underwent a major renovation, including the establishment of The Port, an evangelization ministry with a storefront at 3620 Butler St. It is a safe haven where young adults with faith inclinations can socialize, explore service opportunities, create art, listen to live music and confess their sins.

Brother Ross Henley, director of The Port, says the ministry is primarily event-based, including Thursday morning runs, Catholic trivia nights and portrait drawing classes.

Restless and jaded by the rat race, Henley wanted to simplify his existence. He connected with the Capuchin friars while working in Washington, D.C. He’s been a brother for a decade and came to Pittsburgh two years ago to help other like-minded men find their way to God. The process of becoming a friar can take up to eight years; many potential members don’t make it past the first 12 months.

The Port on Butler Street in Lawrenceville. Photo courtesy of the Capuchin Friars Province of St. Augustine.

Brother Alex Hostoffer, 35, was an investment banker in Cleveland. Raised in a Catholic household, he strayed from the church during his college days as a Division I swimmer. Discovering the Capuchins online in 2013 brought him back to the fold and gave him a new purpose.

“It was the right balance of prayer and ministry,” says Hostoffer, who now serves as the Province’s postulancy directory, guiding men at the beginning of their spiritual journey.

An average day includes communal prayer and meals, Mass, ministering to the community and recreation time. You’ll often see brothers enjoying a meal or even a beer together at a Lawrenceville restaurant, including The Abbey on Butler Street. Their public behavior must reflect the values and vows of the Capuchins.

“We have three square meals a day and a roof over our heads,” says Father John Pfannenstiel, who became a friar in 1974. “It can be a very lovely life. As humans, the natural inclination is to determine your future yourself. As a friar, this is determined for you. You are moved to where you’re needed. Our obligation is to the world population.”

Brother David Domanski, 46, also a Cleveland native, was Hostoffer’s postulancy classmate. He had been happy with life traveling around the world as an industrial product designer for Moen, a plumbing fixture manufacturer, but something was missing.

Photo courtesy of the Capuchin Friars Province of St. Augustine.

He started volunteering at soup kitchens in Cleveland and found that serving the poor enriched his spirit.

“I wanted to go deeper with my relationship with God,” Domanski says.

Unlike many of his fellow friars, Azanwi dedicated himself to religious life as a child in Cameroon. His family was Protestant, but he had what he calls a “mystical experience” at age 6 and converted to Catholicism at age 8. As a teenager, he felt torn between entering the priesthood and becoming a neurosurgeon. When he moved to the U.S. to attend college, Azanwi began questioning his beliefs. He stopped attending daily Mass and barely made it to church on Sundays.

“I had been pious my whole life, so I decided to give myself a break and just be ‘normal,’’ he says with a laugh. “Still, something was missing. I still felt that initial call to become a priest.”

Azanwi contacted the campus minister, canceled his spring break trip to Jamaica and accompanied a few Capuchin brothers on a retreat to Philadelphia. He joined the friars in 2014 and is currently a bioethics graduate student at Harvard Medical School.

He says his brothers of the cloth are as much a part of his family as his blood relatives.

Domanski agrees. After the death of his sister last year, friars not only comforted him but looked after his family in Cleveland when he was away.

As in all domestic situations, there are disagreements, but the brothers only have to look to their patron saint for guidance.

“The increase in my faith that’s resulted from being in this life cultivates a deep sense of peace within me,” Domanski says. “Perfect joy is something that Saint Francis talked about. There was a day when he was out traveling in the cold. He went to a friary, but they didn’t recognize him and turned him away. But Francis knew that God’s love was still there, and he was able to embrace his brothers who wouldn’t let him in. I’m a perfectionist. I like to have things my way, but there’s always that joyfulness that helps me let go.”


Why do Capuchin Franciscans go to seminary?

Our Province of Capuchin Franciscans staffed a High School and College Seminary for 103 years from 1877-1980. Many of our brothers were educated there and came to appreciate the lives of the wonderful (and well-trained!) men who nurtured their knowledge and gave such great examples of faith and goodness.

Who is the oldest living Capuchin friar in the province?

At 96, he was the oldest living member of our Province at the time of his passing, a Capuchin friar for 76 years and a priest for 71 years.

Where did Capuchin priests go to high school?

An early interest in high school seminary led him to apply to our Capuchin St. Fidelis Seminary in 1980, but the seminary was to close its doors that very year. So, instead, he attended St. Mark Seminary High School in Erie, PA (1980-1984) before studying for the Cleveland Diocese at Borromeo College Seminary of Ohio (1984-1988).

Who are the Capuchins who professed their perpetual vows?

The Lord has blessed us with three brothers who made their Perpetual Vows as Capuchins in the Custody of St. Michael the Archangel on Tuesday, January 25. Our brothers Clement Tarmat, Joseph Umba and Lucas Tamshong professed their vows in Mendi, PNG. Provincial Tom Betz, OFM Cap., was there to witness their commitments.

What do Capuchin friars do?

Their main external work was preaching and spiritual ministrations among the poor. In theology the Capuchins abandoned the later Franciscan School of Scotus and returned to the earlier school of St. Bonaventure.

Is a Capuchin a Franciscan?

Capuchin, member of the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin (O.F.M.Cap.), an autonomous branch of the first Franciscan order of religious men, begun as a reform movement in 1525 by Matteo da Bascio.

How do you become a Capuchin friar?

You must live the vows and renew for a minimum of three years, not exceeding nine years, to be eligible for consideration to perpetual profession. This period of temporary profession gives you and the Order time to fully discern your vocation as a Capuchin before making a lifelong commitment.

Was St Padre Pio a Capuchin?

Francesco Forgione, OFM Cap., better known as Padre Pio and also Saint Pius of Pietrelcina (Italian: Pio da Pietrelcina; 25 May 1887 – 23 September 1968), was an Italian Franciscan Capuchin friar, priest, stigmatist, and mystic. He is venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church.

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