March 2, 2018

Can axe-throwing Man Tour hit target of leading young men to Church?

Conventual Franciscan Brother Andrew Hennessy puffs from a cigar while promoting The Man Tour, an evening in the New Albany Deanery on March 10 that will combine smoking cigars, throwing axes and participating in eucharistic adoration. (Submitted photo)

Conventual Franciscan Brother Andrew Hennessy puffs from a cigar while promoting The Man Tour, an evening in the New Albany Deanery on March 10 that will combine smoking cigars, throwing axes and participating in eucharistic adoration. (Submitted photo)

By John Shaughnessy

While talking about The Man Tour, Conventual Franciscan Brother Andrew Hennessy shares his purpose for creating an evening that combines throwing axes, drinking beer, eating pizza, smoking cigars and participating in eucharistic adoration.

The 28-year-old friar, who’s involved in young adult ministry in the New Albany Deanery, wants The Man Tour to deepen the bonds of young men who already share the Catholic faith while also connecting with young men who don’t have a home in the Church.

“My main hope is to strengthen the community for guys who are in the core group and to reach out to guys who are on the periphery of the Church—to feel some spiritual solidarity together, to make connections across parishes, to build up the Church,” Brother Andrew says.

“Hopefully, it will be a lot of fun, a lot of good energy, and a chance to come together before the Lord.”

The Man Tour, which costs $30, is open to 30 young men.

The “night of recreation and holiness” is scheduled to begin at 4 p.m. on March 10 when participants meet at the Mount St. Francis Center of Spirituality in Mt. St. Francis, where Brother Andrew lives with his fellow Conventual Franciscans.

From there, the group will be chauffeured in two deanery vans to the Flying Axes establishment in Louisville, where they will have the opportunity to throw axes, eat pizza and drink a beer.

Brother Andrew explains that Flying Axes is set up like a bowling alley, “but you’re throwing axes at plywood. It’s a really cool concept, a macho thing to do.”

The second part of The Man Tour involves a return to Mount St. Francis for eucharistic adoration at 7 p.m. And the evening concludes with “cigar smoking and conversation” starting at 7:45 p.m.

Brother Andrew says that his inspiration for The Man Tour partly came from “my imagination running away from me.

“I work with a lot of young adults here. Being guys, we were just throwing out ideas of hanging out as guys, doing guy things. We figured we’d get guys from across the deanery, have some fun together, pray together and build the community of the Church together.”

That element of building community is at the heart of The Man Tour, Brother Andrew insists.

“Someone told me that the two things that bring guys together are work and play. As Catholics, I think we also add ‘pray’ to it—even though it’s not easy to get people to pray together.

“It’s natural to come together to have fun, and it’s natural to come together to worship. The thing in my head is the Christian community. It’s a community centered around Christ. We’re having fun, but we’re centering it all around Christ.”

Combining faith and fun is a way of trying to connect with young adults who aren’t closely tied to the Church, says Philip Wiese, the director of youth ministries for the New Albany Deanery who has helped coordinate The Man Tour with Brother Andrew.

It’s an age group—from 18 to 35—that’s searching for something deeper, that’s at a defining time in their lives, says Wiese, who is 29, married and the father of four children, with another child arriving soon.

“It’s such an important time. When you become young adults, the questions in life become more clear: Am I going to be married or single? Is the Lord calling me to be a priest or a religious sister? Where am I working, and is the place good for me spiritually or bringing me down? What kind of community am I in, and is it building me up?

“We’re made for community as human beings. That’s why it’s so important for young adults to have authentic community—to be built up as a man and as a son of God, to be built up as a woman and as a daughter of God.”

When Brother Andrew shared his idea for The Man Tour, Wiese embraced it, seeing its potential to draw people into thoughts of the Catholic faith in a social way. He also wants to explore ways to draw young women closer to God and the Church through some combination of faith and fun.

“Pope Francis talks about going to the peripheries,” Wiese says. “We need opportunities for people to come into the Church and to grow in their relationship with Christ and the Church without being overwhelmed—to involve them in something that strikes them as interesting.”

The Man Tour is one step in that process, he notes.

“We want to bring men together to see where they are in their walk in life, and where they are in their relationship with Christ and the Church so we can better prescribe a men’s ministry.”

Wiese views the evening of pizza, beer, cigars, axe-throwing and eucharistic adoration as an extension of Theology on Tap, an approach which reaches out to young adults through presentations of the Catholic faith in bars and restaurants.

He also connects The Man Tour to a quote from G. K. Chesterton, the famed writer and defender of the Catholic faith who said, “In Catholicism, the pint, the pipe and the cross can all fit together.”

“It’s very fun and very sociable, but it’s also rooted in the Church and rooted in the Eucharist,” Wiese says about The Man Tour.

“I’m interested to see where this will go, where the Lord will lead us. Prayer and adoration will always be involved.”
 

(For more information, call 812-923-8355, visit nadyouth.org. or e-mail Conventual Franciscan Brother Andrew Hennessy at andruhennec@gmail.com.)

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