Brother
Ken Apuzzo is the general superior
of the Brotherhood of Hope, a new
community of men who share the
Catholic faith with students on
secular college campuses. He
ministers at the University of
Minnesota.
Brother Ken is from the Bronx in New
York City. While attending Rutgers
University in New Jersey, he met the
brothers, who had just begun doing
campus ministry. He went on retreat
with them, and his life was changed.
He said, “I had been Catholic, but
never had a personal encounter with
the Lord. I had faith that God
existed, but He was not part of my
life.”
He was also impressed with the
quality of men who were joining the
Brotherhood of Hope. The community’s
founder, Fr. Philip Merdinger, he
continued, “had clear conviction and
insight into collapse of celibacy in
the Church … in our sex-crazed age,
lifelong religious celibacy had
become an absurdity to many people.”
Brother Ken calls the vocation to
become a brother a “disappearing
vocation,” and believes that “the
Lord is using the Brotherhood of
Hope to bring about a religious
renewal.”
Brother Ken and his fellow brothers
follow a “daily rhythm of prayer,”
which includes an hour of adoration.
They then head out to their assigned
college campuses, meeting and
working with students. Many have
been receptive to the brothers’
message, he said, “discovering God’s
love, with many moving on to become
leaders in the Church.”
This
reflection was written by Jim
Graves for the National
Catholic Register Blog,
dated September 1, 2018