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Rev. St.
Mychal Judge, OFM
The Patron and Name Sake of our
Church Community

Holy Relic
of Rev. St. Mychal Judge
The above wooden box contains the
cincture, or belt, from the Franciscan
habit (vestment) of St. Mychal

Shrine to the Victims of 9-11 and All
Victims of
Terrorism
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St.
Mychal Judge
Fr.
Mychal Judge, O.F.M
Was Declared a Saint
of the Orthodox Catholic Church of America
on July 27, 2002
As
Muslim extremists flew high-jacked commercial airplanes into the
towers of the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, they
screamed, "God is Great!" to complete their act of
self-chosen "martyrdom". Thousands of innocent people were
killed, of many nationalities and different walks of life. The first
official casualty was an elderly Franciscan priest who had just
administered the last rites to a fireman who had been struck by the
body of a woman who had jumped from the towers. His name was Mychal
Judge and he was chaplain of the fire department.
The
Koran begins with the words, "In the name of God most
beneficent, most merciful." Most world religions proclaim God's
mercy and compassion. The word martyr comes from the Greek word for
witness. Mychal Judge was a true martyr who died bearing witness to
God's mercy and beneficence, after a long life spent in the same
way.
Fr.
Mychal Judge was a devout, gay, recovering-alcoholic priest, who
wore his Franciscan habit almost everywhere and rejoiced in his vow
of poverty. The holy foolishness of the first Franciscans weaves in
and out of the story of his life. As a priest he often sought out
and confronted people who had been rebuffed by the harshness of
other priests.
His chief ministries were to the firemen of New York City, to
recovering alcoholics in AA, to people suffering from AIDS, and to
Franciscans preparing to make their solemn vows. When church
authorities urged a boycott of the first gay-inclusive St. Patrick's
Day parade in Queens, Mychal showed up in his habit and went out of
his way to be interviewed by reporters. He once told an angry
monsignor in the chancery who frequently called to admonish him,
"If I've ever done anything to embarrass or hurt the church I
love so much, you can burn me at the stake in front of St.
Patrick's."
The
word "martyr" has been twisted out of shape in the 21st
century as religious extremists throughout the world try to impose
their version of God's will. This joyful Franciscan friar from New
York can remind us of the stuff of which martyrs are really made and
challenge us to witness to God's compassion, however mad our world
may seem.
*Reprinted from the Orthodox Catholic Church of America
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