Office
Hours
8:30-4:30
Monday
Tuesday
Thursday
Friday
Closed on
Wednesday
Mass
Schedule
Saturday
4:30 PM Eng
Sunday
9:00Am Eng
11:00 AM Pol
Holy Days
7:00 AM Eng
12:00 PM Eng
7:00 PM Pol
Weekdays
7:00 AM Eng
Friday 6:30
PM Pol
Novena to
St. Anthony
Tuesday
after Mass
Chaplet to
Divine Marcy
Friday after
AM Mass
Confession
Schedule
Saturday
4:00 PM
Sunday 8:30
AM
10:30 AM
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Parish
Patron

St. Stanislaus Kostka was born at Rostkovo near
Przasnysz, Poland, about 28 October, 1550; died at Rome during the night of
14-15 August, 1568. He entered the Society of Jesus at Rome, 28 October,
1567, and is said to have foretold his death a few days before it occurred.
His father, John Kostka, was a senator of the Kingdom of Poland and Lord of
Zakroczym; his mother was Margaret de Drobniy Kryska, the sister and niece
of the Dukes Palatine of Masovia and the aunt of the celebrated Chancellor
of Poland, Felix Kryski. The marriage was blessed with seven children, of
whom Stanislaus was the second. His older brother Paul survived him long
enough to be present at the celebration of the beatification of Stanislaus
in 1605. The two brothers were first taught at home, the main feature of
this early education being the firmness, even severity, of their training;
its results were the excellent habits of piety, modesty, temperance, and
submission. After this they were sent to Vienna with their tutor to attend
the Jesuit college that had been opened four years before, reaching Vienna,
25 July, 1564. Among the students of the college Stanislaus was soon
conspicuous not only for his amiability and cheerfulness of expression, but
also for his religious fervor and angelic piety. This spirit of devotion
continued to grow during the three years he remained in Vienna. His brother
Paul said of him during the process of beatification: "He devoted himself so
completely to spiritual thing that he frequently became unconscious,
especially in the church of the Jesuit Fathers at Vienna. It is true," added
the witness, "that this had happened at home to my brother at Easter when he
was seated at table with our parents and other persons."
Among other practices of devotion he joined while at Vienna the Congregation
of St. Barbara, to which many students of the Jesuit college belonged. If
the confidences he then made to his tutor and later to a fellow-member of
the Society at Rome are to be believed, it was Saint Barbara who brought two
angels to him during the course of a serious illness, in order to give him
the Eucharist. So much piety, however, did not please the older brother
Paul; his exasperation led him to treat with violence the innocent
Stanislaus. The latter finally lost patience, and one night after Stanislaus
had again suffered the harsh comments and blows of his brother he turned on
Paul with the words: "Your rough treatment will end in my going away never
to return, and you will have to explain my leaving to our father and
mother." Paul's sole reply was to swear violently at him. Meantime the
thought of joining the Society of Jesus had already entered the mind of the
saintly young man. It was six months, however, before he ventured to speak
of this to the superiors of the Society. At Vienna they hesitated to receive
him, fearing the tempest that would probably be raised by his father against
the Society, which had just quieted a storm that had broken out on account
of other admissions to the Company. Stanislaus quickly grasped the situation
and formed the plan of applying to the general of the Society at Rome. The
distance was five hundred leagues, which had to be made on foot, without
equipment, or guide, or any other resources but the precarious charity that
might be received on the road. The prospective dangers and humiliations of
such a journey, however, did not alarm his courage. On the morning of the
day on which he was to carry out his project he called his servant to him
early and told him to notify his brother Paul and his tutor in the course of
the morning that he would not be back that day to dinner. Then he started,
taking the first opportunity to exchange the dress of gentleman for that of
a mendicant, which was the only way to escape the curiosity of those he
might meet. By nightfall Paul and the tutor comprehended that Stanislaus had
turned from them as he had threatened. They were seized with a fierce anger,
and as the day was ended the fugitive had gained twenty-four hours over
them. They started to follow him, but were not able to overtake him; either
their exhausted horses refused to go farther, or a wheel of their carriage
would break, or, as the tutor frankly declared, they had mistaken the route,
having left the city by a different road from the one which Stanislaus had
taken. It is noticeable that in his testimony Paul gives no explanation of
his ill-luck. Stanislaus stayed for a month at Dillingen, where the
provincial of that time, the Blessed Peter Canisius, put the young
aspirant's vocation to the test by employing him in the boarding-school.
Subsequently he went on to Rome, where he arrived 25 October, 1567. As he
was greatly exhausted by the journey, the general of the order, St. Francis
Borgia, would not permit him to enter the novitiate of Saint Andrew until
several days later. During the ten remaining months of his life, according
the testimony of the master of novices, Father Giulio Fazio, he was a model
and mirror of religious perfection. Notwithstanding his very delicate
constitution he did not spare himself the slightest penance ("Monument hist.
Societatis Jesus, Sanctus Franciscus Borgia", IV, 635). He had such a
burning fever his chest that he was often obliged to apply cold compresses.
On the eve of the feast of St. Lawrence, Stanislaus felt a mortal weakness
made worse by a high fever, and clearly saw that his last hour had come. He
wrote a letter to the Blessed Virgin begging her to call him to the skies
there to celebrate with her the glorious anniversary of her Assumption
(ibid., 636). His confidence in the Blessed Virgin, which had already
brought him many signal favors, was this time again rewarded; on 15 August,
towards four in the morning, while he was wrap in pious utterances to God,
to the saints, and to the Virgin Mary, his beautiful soul passed to its
Creator. His face shone with the most serene light. The entire city
proclaimed him a saint and people hastened from all parts to venerate his
remains and to obtain, if possible, some relics (ibid., 637). The Holy See
ratified the popular verdict by his beatification in 1605; he was canonized
on 31 December, 1726. St. Stanislaus is one of the popular saints of Poland
and many religious institutions have chosen him as the protector of their
novitiates. The representations of him in art are very varied; he is
sometimes depicted receiving Holy Communion from the hands of angels;
sometimes receiving the Infant Jesus from the hands of the Virgin; or he is
shown in the midst of a battle putting to flight the enemies of his country.
At times he is depicted near a fountain putting a wet linen cloth on his
breast. He is invoked for palpitations of the heart and for dangerous cases
of illness (Cahier, "Caractéristiques des Saints").
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