Patrick Kelly installed as new Supreme Knight of Knights of Columbus

Joe Bukuras By Joe Bukuras for CNA

Patrick E. Kelly, Supreme Knight of the Knights of Columbus. / Knights of Columbus.

New Haven, Conn., Jun 11, 2021 / 18:08 pm (CNA).

For the first time in 20 years, the Knights of Columbus on Friday installed a new Supreme Knight, Patrick E. Kelly.

“I consider it a special honor to accept the office of Supreme Knight during this Year of St. Joseph,” Kelly said in his inaugural address at the Knights’ meeting of state deputies on Friday. The meeting was attended by leaders in the Knights from every U.S. state and from around the world, in New Haven, Connecticut, where the organization was founded.

Elected to the position of Supreme Knight in March, Kelly and other elected Knight officials were formally delegated their positions on June 11 at at St. Mary’s Parish in New Haven.

The ceremony began with Mass, celebrated by Archbishop William Lori of Baltimore, the Supreme Chaplain of the Knights.

“These historic installations take place on the solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, in the parish church where Blessed Father Michael McGivney labored so faithfully, wherein 1882 he founded the Knights of Columbus,” Archbishop Lori said in his homily.

Lori drew connections between the significance of the installation Mass occurring both in the year of St. Joseph on the solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

In Kelly’s address, which took place at the conclusion of the Mass, he began by honoring the work of previous Supreme Knight Carl Anderson, who “consecrated his administration and the entire Order to Our Lady of Guadalupe.”

In similar fashion, Kelly consecrated his new administration and the entire order to St. Joseph.

Keeping with the theme of Saint Joseph, Kelly focused on two of the saint’s roles, first as “guardian of the family” and also as the “guardian of the truth.”

The dual roles “both align with the vision of our founder and provide a model for how we as Knights must witness to the world,” he said.

Kelly highlighted St. Joseph’s humility and obedience in his fatherly sacrifice and service to his family. Quoting Pope Francis’ apostolic letter on the year of St. Joseph, Patris Corde, he noted the Saint’s “creative courage,” referencing the “unexpected challenges” he faced in his life.

Kelly connected St. Joseph’s challenges to those faced in modern times.

“Catholic families are struggling to live out their faith and raise their children amid a culture that is increasingly hostile to our beliefs,” he said. “Catholic husbands and fathers, especially fathers of young children, need the encouragement and support of the Knights of Columbus.”

Kelly assured that the Knights can inspire fathers with the courage to nourish their families in the faith.

“They need our witness and example to guide them in embracing their vocation to heroic generosity and self-sacrifice, for the good of their wives and children,” he said. “So let us, like St. Joseph, embrace our role as guardians of the family.”

Speaking about St. Joseph as the “guardian of truth,” Kelly acknowledged “the truth that Joseph protected had a name: Jesus Christ, who is the truth incarnate.”

Kelly proclaimed that the Knights must also serve Jesus as the truth. Noting the difficulty of serving the truth in the modern era, Kelly called the present a “time of bigotry and intolerance.”

“Key truths — truths about marriage, about life in the womb, about the nature of the family and the meaning of freedom — are often denied and even vilified,” he said. “Yet, this makes our commitment to truth all the more important.”

Kelly said the Knights will continue to be a sign of unity by standing for the truth. Referencing the Second Vatican Council, Kelly said that the truth is grounded in the Eucharist.

“We know that Jesus Christ is really, truly present — body, blood, soul and divinity — in the Blessed Sacrament. Committed to our principle of unity, let us strive to serve Christ in the Eucharist,” Kelly said.

He said the Knights were called to have a special reverence for the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist. “The more we dedicate ourselves to Christ in the Eucharist,” he said, “the more we will be a sign of unity in an age of division and disbelief.”

Kelly concluded by asking for the intercession of Blessed Michael McGivney, the founder of the Knights who was beatified last fall and whose tomb was in the back of the church. He also asked for the intercession of St. Joseph so that the Knights may have the courage to lead in these “challenging times.”

Following Kelly’s address, Archbishop Lori blessed the medals of the new supreme officers. The other new supreme officers being installed were Deputy Supreme Knight Paul G. O’Sullivan, Supreme Secretary Patrick T. Mason, Supreme Treasurer Ronald F. Schwarz, Supreme Advocate John A. Marrella, Supreme Warden Michael A. Benson, and Past Supreme Knight Carl A. Anderson.

17 supreme directors and 56 state deputies were also installed at the celebrations. Following the installations, the Archbishop led the new officers to McGivney’s tomb in the back of the church and prayed for his canonization.


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