CHARLOTTE — October is Franciscan Month, and it provides an engaging opportunity for Catholics to emulate the spirit and works of St. Francis of Assisi – the popular saint who rejected his ancestral wealth to serve the poor, founded the Franciscan order, and is revered for his love of God’s creation.
“The month is designed to celebrate the charism of the Franciscan way of life,” explains Father Paul Lininger, OFM Conv., Justice, Peace and Integtrity of Creation director for Our Lady of the Angels Province, to which Charlotte Bishop Michael Martin also belongs.
At the core of the Franciscan tradition is a simple question, Father Lininger says: “How do we make the Gospel real in our own time?”
The 2025 theme of Franciscan Month is building a world of kinship while recognizing our connectedness within our common home – Earth – in the spirit of Sts. Francis and Clare, a spiritual confidant of St. Francis who founded the Poor Clares.
“The month is designed to raise awareness of all the different things the various types of Franciscan groups – priests, brothers, sisters and lay members of the secular Franciscans –are doing,” says Father Lininger. Those actions range from taking part in a march to support immigrants and refugees Sept. 28 in Washington, D.C., to assisting the poor and marginalized, to advocating for environmental awareness.
“It’s recognizing the impact that Sts. Francis and Clare have had and honoring both of them, but it’s also understanding how we look at the Gospel and how we bring it into our own lives in our own time,” he says.
Across the Diocese of Charlotte, secular Franciscans and friends are gathering to commemorate the memorial of St. Francis' death on Oct. 3 (called the Transitus) and his feast day on Oct. 4, and conduct pet blessings in churches and schools throughout the week.
A website dedicated to Franciscan Month lists practical steps people can take each day – such as cleaning up a park, volunteering at a food bank, or buying a product made using fair trade practices – to walk in the spiritual footsteps of the saint.
That ties into a question that Father Linger says is at the core of Franciscan teaching for all people: “I have these blessings in my life. How do I use them effectively to help support my brothers and sisters? How do I uphold human dignity at every step?”
“It’s not supposed to just be intellectualized,” he emphasizes. “It is a challenge – just as Christ challenged His disciples to come learn from Him and then take what you have learned and be able to bring it out into the world.”
A prayer for Franciscan Month
Most high and merciful God who bonded us as a family – brothers and sisters to all creation – enlighten us in living the Holy Gospel by walking in Francis’ footsteps to Christ in our daily lives.
Amen.
— www.franciscanmonth.org
What you can do
Here a few suggestions on how to live more like St. Francis:
More online
• At www.franciscanmonth.org: Learn more and get daily steps to follow to live out the month devoted to St. Francis of Assisi.
• At www.franciscanaction.org: Learn more about public advocacy programs aligned with the Franciscan charism.
“Migrants and refugees remind the Church of her pilgrim dimension, perpetually journeying towards her final homeland, sustained by a hope that is a theological virtue.”
— Pope Leo XIV, July 26, 2025

CHARLOTTE — The 2025 World Day of Migrants and Refugees will be celebrated Oct. 4-5, coinciding with the Jubilee of Migrants. The Holy See’s Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development announced the theme, “Migrants, missionaries of hope,” chosen by Pope Francis to highlight the courage of migrants and refugees who carry hope for the future despite their hardships. This is the 111th celebration.
While typically falling every year on the last Sunday of September, in 2025 the World Day of Migrants and Refugees celebration date has been moved to align with the Jubilee of Migrants.
The 2025 U.S. bishops’ celebration of National Migration Week will take place Sept. 22-28, preceding the Vatican’s celebration.
For more than 40 years, the U.S. Catholic Church has celebrated National Migration Week. Consider taking a moment to recite a Prayer for Migrants and Refugees found on the USCCB website at www.usccb.org/prayers/prayer-migrants-and-refugees.
Read the 2025 World Day of Migrants and Refugees message from Pope Leo XIV, and learn more about National Migration Week and the Jubilee of Migrants by visiting the U.S. bishops’ special webpage at www.usccb.org/nmw.
— Joseph T. Purello, Catholic Charities Diocese of Charlotte