Knights of Columbus - Council 17027

Knights of Columbus - Council 17027 St Stanislaus Latin Mass K of C Council A page dedicated to informing members and followers of Knights of Columbus Latin Mass Council 17027 and St.

Stanislaus Catholic Church in Nashua, NH. We welcome friends and supporters of the Knights of Columbus, the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter (FSSP), and the traditional Roman Rite of the Catholic Church. Rules of the Page

1) No obscene language, negative comments, or bullying of any kind.

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3) Be respectful.

4) No spreading of misinformation, heresy, anti-Catholic, anti-Knights of Columbus comments.

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03/24/2026

President Trump placed a new statue of Christopher Columbus on the White House grounds, replacing the one destroyed during the 2020 Black Lives Matter riots in Baltimore. Columbus, historically, is also credited with bringing the first Catholic Mass to what is now the United States.

02/20/2026

Blessed Memorial of Saints Francisco & Jacinta Marto!

St. Francisco Marto (1908-1919) and St. Jacinta Marto (1910-1920)

Francisco and Jacinta Marto, brother and sister, were born in the small town of Aljustrel, Portugal, in a family of ten siblings. With their older cousin, Lucia dos Santos, they pastured their families’ sheep.

In 1916 their calm, rural life was changed forever by the apparition of an angel in a field near Aljustrel. The angel, calling himself “The Angel of Portugal”, prepared them spiritually for a series of apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

On May 13, 1917 the Mother of God appeared to the three children atop of a holm oak near the village of Fatima. The Virgin asked the children to return another five times and promised to work a miracle at the last apparition so that all would believe, which she did by making the sun “dance” before 70,000 in October of 1917.

At that time she also called herself, “Lady of the Rosary.”

Throughout the apparitions, the Mother of God made prophecies about the advent of Communism and its spread throughout the world, about the coming of World War II, spoke of the sinfulness of the humanity, and asked for prayer (specially the daily recitation of the Rosary), penance and conversion of life as a means of obtaining peace for the world. (Source: America Needs Fatima)

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01/29/2026
01/20/2026

We need great fathers. Take up the Cross of fatherhood valiantly.

01/17/2026

Pray for the soul of seminarian Charles Outtier.

With deep sorrow, we commend to your prayers Charles Outtier, a French seminarian and deacon of the Institute of Christ the King in Gricigliano, who died on January 15 in a tragic tractor accident while serving on the seminary grounds. Preparing for priestly ordination this July, he was known for his joy, devotion, and deep Catholic faith.

He was anointed and received the Apostolic Blessing before his passing. Please pray for the repose of his soul, for his family, and for his brothers and superiors in the Institute as they mourn this great loss. 🙏✝️

01/16/2026
01/14/2026

JANUARY 14 ~ THE INFANT OF PRAGUE

“The more you honor me, the more will I bless you”

Prague is one of the major pilgrimage centres in Central Europe, with the Prague church housing the Infant. The Feast of the Infant Jesus of Prague celebrates the mystery of the Incarnation, and is observed on January 14.

Each year on the first Sunday of May, a coronation feast and 45-minute public procession with a copy of the statue takes place amid a sea of devotees and tourists. The first procession, initiated by the Earls of Martinice, took place in 1651; the statue of the Infant Jesus travelled from one Prague church to another. The newest crown was donated by Pope Benedict XVI during his visit to Prague in 2009.

As novice mistress, Therese of the Child Jesus placed the statue in the novitiate at Lisieux, because she knew the many blessings the Divine Child brought to the Carmelite novices in Prague when it was placed in their midst.

Statuettes of the Infant Jesus are placed inside many Catholic churches, sometimes with the quotation, "The more you honour me, the more I will bless you."

⚜️ NOVENA PRAYER TO THE INFANT OF PRAGUE

O Jesus, Who has said, "Ask and you shall receive, seek and you shall find, knock and it shall be opened," through the intercession of Mary, Your Most Holy Mother, I knock, I seek, I ask that my prayer be granted.
(Make your request)

O Jesus, Who has said, "All that you ask of the Father in My Name, He will grant you," through the intercession of Mary Your Most Holy Mother, I humbly and urgently ask your Father in your name that my prayer will be granted.
(Make your request)

O Jesus, Who has said, "Heaven and earth shall pass away but My word shall not pass away," through the intercession of Mary Your Most Holy Mother, I feel confident that my prayer will be granted.
(Make your request)

01/13/2026
01/13/2026

The Vatican is expected to announce the beatification of Archbishop Fulton Sheen.

01/13/2026

Thank you to the NH Knights of Columbus for being some of the biggest supporters of life in the Granite State! 🙏🏽

01/12/2026

JANUARY 12 + Today is the Feast Day of Spiritual Warrior Saint Marguerite Bourgeoys + Pray for us

Marguerite Bourgeoys was born in France on Good Friday in 1620 during a period of both colonial expansion and religious strife for Europe. She was the seventh of thirteen children born into the middle-class household of Abraham Bourgeoys, a candle-maker, and Guillemette Gamier, in the northeastern province of Champagne in France.

By her own account, Marguerite had been “very light-hearted and well-liked by the other girls” while growing up. Her turn toward God's calling began at age 20, not long after her mother's death. On Oct. 7 of that year, during a procession honoring Our Lady of the Rosary, Marguerite had a mystical experience involving a statue of the Virgin Mary at Notre-Dame Abbey. That experience changed the course of her life.

From 1640 to 1652, she belonged to the non-cloistered "external" branch of the Congregation of Notre-Dame at Troyes, consisting of women trained as teachers in association with the order. She sought admission to several religious orders, including the Carmelites and the Poor Clares, but was rejected. Being turned down, Marguerite was free to volunteer for a voyage to the Canadian colony of Quebec.

Life in the colony was physically very difficult. When Marguerite arrived, she found that children were not likely to survive to an age suitable for attending school. Nevertheless, she began to work with the nurse in charge of Montreal’s hospital, and eventually established her first school in a stable in 1658.

She traveled back to France that year, and returned to Montreal with three more teachers and an assistant. Because of their association with the original French Congregation of Notre-Dame, these women were called the the "Daughters of the Congregation."

They would eventually become a religious order in their own right: the Congregation of Notre-Dame de Montreal, whose sisters sacrificed comfort and security to teach religion and other subjects to the children of the territory then known as “New France.” They would live in poverty and travel wherever they were needed, offering education and performing the works of charity.

The founding of the order involved two further trips to France in 1670 and 1680. During the first, Marguerite's project received approval under civil law from King Louis XIV. The Church hierarchy, however, showed reluctance toward a women's order with no cloistered nuns. Their rule of life would not receive final approval until 1698, though the Bishop of Quebec had authorized their work in 1676.

Meanwhile, Marguerite and her companions persisted in their mission of teaching and charity. This work proved so integral to life in Quebec, that Marguerite became known as the "Mother of the Colony."

Though the teaching sisters often lived in huts and suffered other hardships, the order grew. They did not dedicate themselves solely to teaching children, but also set up schools where they taught new immigrants how to survive in their surroundings. As the order expanded, Marguerite passed leadership on to one of the sisters.

During the last two years of her life, the foundress – known by then as Sister Marguerite of the Blessed Sacrament – retired to pray in solitude. On the last day of 1699, after a young member of the community became sick, Sister Marguerite prayed to God to suffer in her place. The young woman recovered, while the aged foundress suffered for twelve days and died January 12, 1700.

Pope John Paul II canonized Marguerite Bourgeoys in 1982, as the first woman saint of the Catholic Church in Canada.

01/11/2026

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43 Franklin Street
Nashua, NH
03064

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