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The Love that Compels

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About Articles

St. Vincent Strambi

Born in 1745 in Civitavecchia, the port city of Rome, Italy, Vincent Strambi was an only child who lived a devout life as a youth thanks to the example of the Franciscans.  His religious fervor led to his entering the seminary at age 15.  The Dominicans shared in his seminary formation, helping foster his interest in preaching and spirituality.  He met the great preacher, St. Paul of the Cross, and after Vincent’s priestly ordination, he felt God’s call to join the Passionists, who were known for their preaching and contemplative spirit.

Vincent Mary blossomed in his Passionist life and became a great preacher and a promoter of community life as both a local and provincial Superior and as a seminary formation director.  He was an outstanding spiritual director for both laity and religious, and wrote many devotional books including a noted biography of St. Paul of the Cross, Founder of the Passionists.

His many gifts were recognized by the Church, and Vincent Mary was appointed bishop of Macerata and Tolentino.  He was a true shepherd of the Church, helping reform the clergy of his day and advocating for the Church against the political upheavals of the day.  As bishop, he brought the spirituality of his Passionist vocation to his ministry, especially the spirit of prayer and pastoral dedication.

Vincent Strambi died on January 1, 1824, leaving a legacy of tireless love of God and the Church, in and through the Passion of Jesus.  His preaching, his writings and his zeal for souls speak to us today as we respond to the needs of God’s people who are searching for meaning and direction in life – especially those marginalized by poverty and suffering.  His life speaks today to both vowed and lay Passionists:  to those who preach missions and retreats, to those involved in seminary formation, to those seeking growth in spiritual direction, those called to leadership positions in the Passionist Congregation and the Church and to all of us as we seek to grow in God’s love in the Passion of Jesus.

We thank God for the life of St. Vincent Mary Strambi, CP, and pray that God will graciously send other men and women to proclaim the Good News of Jesus Crucified today.

A Spirit of Holiness

st-vincent-strambi-largeIn 1773 Father Paul put the former seminary prefect and rector in charge of the training of the young students for future missionary preaching at the newly acquired monastery of Sts. John and Paul in Rome. Eventually Father Vincent would write a manual on Sacred Eloquence.

In this way Father Vincent was able to be with St. Paul during the final years of his life. Paul saw in this young man the apostolic spirit of holiness he was bequeathing to his congregation. We are told that as he was dying St. Paul one day turned to Father Vincent Mary and told him he was entrusting the congregation to his care.

Vincent, like the others, missed the founder very much as he continued to prepare young Passionists for the missionary apostolate. He also went forth to preach missions as often as possible.

In 1780 he became rector of the Community of Sts. John and Paul. In 1781 he was elected provincial. He also served as provincial and general consultor. During this time that he published a biography of the founder. Father Vincent used the testimonies of eye-witnesses as given in the canonization processes. It is said that he wrote the life of St. Paul on his knees, out of reverence for the founder. His "Life" of Father Paul became a classic and was greeted with enthusiasm by many.

As the Vatican Council has reminded us, God calls Christians from both the lay and clerical states to the religious life. Father Vincent Strambi came to the Passionists as a priest who had been formed and educated in a small Tridentine seminary of that period, but who had also experienced university life in Rome and Viterbo. But even more he had shown the talent for teaching and training other young men for the priesthood. These talents and experiences he brought to the congregation at the critical period following the death of the founder and throughout the Napoleonic revolutionary suppressions and during the restoration.

Eventually appointed to bishop, Strambi was loyal to the pope and Holy See. He was a true pastor of souls, and not involved in political matters unless forced by circumstances of the times. He brought to the episcopacy a spirituality of prayer, prudence, and pastoral dedication.

(Text adapted from The Story of the Passionists by Roger Mercurio, C.P. All rights reserved by the Passionist Community)

US Passionist Martyrs

  • Father Carl Schmitz, C.P., Holy Cross Province (1917- 1988)
  • http://passionistindia.com/saints.html  (other details found)
  • Bishop Cuthbert O’Gara, C.P., (1886-1968) Called a “dry martyr “by Bishop Fulton Sheen
    www.cpprovince.org/archives/bios/5/5-13c.php
  • Fathers Walter Coveyou, Clement Seybold, and Godfrey Holbein

Fr. John Schork C.P.

Fr. John Schork C.P.

Provincial Secretary
Assistant Superior, St. Vincent Strambi Community,
Chicago, Illinois

A vowed Passionist for almost 50 years, Fr. John Schork came to know the Passionists while in grade school in Louisville, Kentucky, as part of the St. John Bosco Vocation Club.  He went on to the local Passionist high school seminary, Mother of Good Counsel in Warrenton, Missouri, where his relationship with the Passionists was “cemented.”  That relationship has animated his life ever since those early days of coming to know the mission of St. Paul of the Cross.

A graduate of Bellarmine University, Fr. John went on to the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago and was ordained to the priesthood in 1976.  He currently serves as the assistant local superior of the community in Chicago’s Hyde Park neighborhood.  He also serves as the Secretary for the Provincial Council.

Throughout his vocation as a Passionist, Fr. John has shared in a variety of duties throughout Holy Cross Province including retreat ministry and parish missions.  Fr. John also sits on the board of the Holy Cross Province Health and Aging Advisory Board and the Intercommunity Retirement Network for Clergy and Religious.

No doubt, to ponder and live the Passion of Jesus Christ has added true meaning to his everyday life.   Fr. John is a living witness to the love of Christ by preaching, performing Sacramental ministries and serving others with true feeling and enthusiasm for his mission.

St. Paul of the Cross, Military Chaplain

St Paul paintingThe first Passionist Military Chaplain 

Paul Daneo was born on January 3, 1694, in Ovada, Italy. Even as a young person, Paul felt strongly connected to God and moved by the passion of Christ.  At the age of 19, Paul’s father wanted him to become a merchant like himself. Marriage was a possibility looming in the future. At times Paul dreamed of becoming a soldier, and even enlisted in the Venetian army when volunteers were requested by the Pope.

But he soon realized that neither the adventure of a military career, the financial promise of the business world, nor the joys and sorrows of marriage were to be his life’s journey. He heard the voice of God calling him to a life of the spirit and a path of spiritual rigor.

Father Paul Francis Daneo, St. Paul of the Cross, as he is known today, was a unique chaplain in the armed services in that he served both sides.  He started a great and honorable tradition for his followers.  Since his time, Passionists have served as military chaplains and ministered in the camps and on the battlefields of the world’s never-ending wars.

While times have changed and wars have grown increasingly brutal, the work of the armed services chaplain has remained basically the same. Men and women removed from civilian life, away from their families, fighting and hoping to make it another day are especially in need of spiritual nourishment.  It is the chaplain’s duty to counsel and give encouragement to the soldiers; to preach the Word of God, administer the Sacraments and celebrate the Eucharist.

Passionist Wartime Chaplains

HCP-SPC Chaplains-caption sized

Passionists of Holy Cross Province who have served as Chaplains in the Armed Services

St. Paul of the Cross

World War I

Fr. Raphael Grashoff, CP
Fr. Alexander Kilgour, CP
Fr. Edwin Ronan, CP

World War II

Fr. Bartholomew Adler, CP
Fr. Leonard Barthelemy, CP
Fr. Fidelis Benedik, CP
Fr. Julius Busse, CP
Fr. Thomas Carter, CP
Fr. Damien Cragen, CP
Fr. Vincent Ehinger, CP
Fr. Cyril Jablonovski, CP
Fr. Denis M. Keating, CP
Fr. Kenny Lynch, CP
Fr. Brian Mahedy, CP
Fr. Owen Monaghan, CP
Fr. Noel Pechulis, CP
Fr. Xavier Praino

Korea 

Fr. Kenny Lynch, CP
Gail Robinson

Viet Nam

Gail Robinson

Commander Brian Mahedy, CP, USNR

Brian MahedyMany Passionists of Holy Cross Province have served as chaplains in the armed forces.  One of these courageous men who served during World War II is Commander Brian Mahedy, CP, United States Navy Reserve.

Fr. Brian Mahedy, CP, was a native of Des Moines, Iowa.  After completing his seminary training, he was ordained a Passionist priest in 1933.  With a profound desire to serve his country and with permission of his superiors, Fr. Brian entered the Navy in June 1943.

He received his basic training in Chaplain School at William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Virginia.  His first assignment was to the U.S. Naval Hospital in Corona, California.  In 1944, while assigned on the hospital ship, the USS Hope, then Lt. Mahedy had his baptism of fire during the battles of Leyte, Luzon, Okinawa and in the Borneo invasion.  He entered Japan with the United States forces and helped establish the Army Hospital in Kyoto.

For his work in evacuating the wounded from the Philippines and Okinawa, Fr. Brian received the Letter of Commendation. He was also awarded the Bronze Star for “meritorious service in connection with military
operations against an enemy of the United States in the Southwest Pacific and Central Pacific areas.”

After World War II, Fr. Brian served at naval air stations in San Diego and Jacksonville, and the naval station in Guam.  When the Korean War started, Fr. Brian still serving active duty, was based at naval stations on Adak and Kodiak Islands in Alaska.  He completed his active duty in 1953.

Upon being separated from active duty service, Fr. Brian immediately entered the Active Reserve.  He was promoted to the rank of Commander in 1956 and continued serving as a reserve officer until 1969.  From 1969 to 1991, Father Brian was a chaplain for hospitals in San Francisco, San Pedro and Long Beach, California.

Fr. Brian Mahedy, CP, passed away at the age of 93 on January 5, 2002 in Chicago.  Fr. Donald Webber, CP, said of Fr. Brian “He was just a very positive, encouraging-type person.”

Captain Julius Busse, USA

Julius BusseCaptain Julius Busse, CP, an Army Chaplain was born Sebastian Busse on March 12, 1907 in Seneca, Kansas, he was the son of Charles Busse and Fredericka Nolte. He grew up in St. Paul, Kansas and in August 1921, after completing the seventh grade, he enrolled in the Passionist Seminary in Normandy, Missouri. In 1925, he entered the novitiate at Louisville, Kentucky and professed his vows on August 3, 1926. Sebastian chose the religious name of Julius. He was ordained December 30, 1931 in Chicago, Illinois. Fr. Julius’s ministries included serving at Holy Family Parish, Ensley, Alabama and preaching parish missions in Des Moines, Iowa.

In 1941 he requested permission to serve as a military chaplain and was accepted on April 8, 1942. As a military chaplain he was assigned to the 17th Infantry of the 7th Infantry Division of the United States Army. He saw action in the Pacific. Prior to deployment the division was located at Ford Ord, California and trained in the Mohave Desert. Their first battle assignment however was the Aleutian Islands at the Attu Island where he received the Silver Star. In 1943 the division was sent to Hawaii and participated in action on the Marshall Islands. He was transferred to Headquarters of the 7th Infantry Division. Next was the campaign in the Philippines where he was wounded in the wrist during the 110 day campaign. He received the Purple Heart and Bronze Star for action of Leyte Island. Later the division was sent to Korea and he participated in the occupation of Okinawa. He left that ministry as a Major on April 11, 1946.

Upon his return to the Holy Cross Province, Fr. Julius was assigned to St. Joseph Retreat, Birmingham, Alabama where he aided in the construction to the residence and was engaged as a preacher of missions. In 1947 he was elected Rector of Louisville, Kentucky.  In 1951 he was elected Rector of Detroit, Michigan until September 1952 when he resigned to participate in the overseas mission to Japan where he was appointed superior of the mission.  Fr. Julius was en route to San Francisco when he fell ill and was diagnosed with cancer, unable to proceed with the Passionists to Japan.  He underwent surgery, and his health improved for a time.  However, the cancer returned and he passed away on July 13, 1954, in Parsons, Kansas.

Prayer for Our Fallen Military

The Honor Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldiers at Arlington National Cemetery.
The Honor Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldiers at Arlington National Cemetery.

The Passionists join with our fellow Americans in celebrating all those in the armed services who have fallen in the line of duty. Many of our Passionists throughout the years have served as chaplains and know from their own first-hand experience the great responsibility these men and women have shouldered.  We owe them an incalculable gift of gratitude. Please join us in remembering these fallen heroes.

Prayer for Those Who Have Fallen in Battle

All Powerful God,
We honor today those men and women—
Our sons and daughters,
Husbands and wives,
Fathers, brothers, sisters, mothers—
Who have laid down their life for their country.

Whether weary or emboldened, quiet or defiant,
Vulnerable or ready when You called them home,
Their sacrifice is too humbling for words
except these uttered in prayer.

Loving Lord, bless them forever in Your eternal peace.
Let the sounds of strife, the cries of battle, the wounds of war
be calmed for all eternity in Your loving and endless grace.
Let these great warriors find rest at last,
Ever reminded that we who are left behind
Cherish their spirit, honor their commitment,
send them our love,
and will never forget the service that they gave.

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