Council: # 9638



Fr. Joseph J. Comyns
Council: # 9638
Knights of Columbus
6025 Claire Dr.
Elkridge, Maryland 21075
Meeting at

Our Lady of Perpetual Help Parish
Hall
4795 Ilchester Road
Meeting dates are the 2nd and 4th Monday of every month. The meeting on the second Monday business meeting and the meeting on the fourth Monday is a lecture.
The Knights of Columbus was founded in New Haven,
Connecticut, in 1882 in the basement ofSt. Mary's Catholic Church by Father
Michael J. McGivney and a handful of Catholic laymen. The aim of the
founder and those first members was to set up a parish-based lay organization
that offered insurance benefits. In an era when parish and fraternal societies
were popular, Father McGivney felt there should be some way to strengthen the
religious faith of his flock and provide financial support for families overwhelmed
by illness or
the death of the breadwinner
.
Father Michael J. McGivney
Today we have grown from that one local unit, or
council, to nearly 11,000 councils in the United
States, Canada, Mexico, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Cuba, the Dominican
Republic, Panama, the
Bahamas, the Virgin Islands, Guatemala, Guam and Saipan.
Membership is nearly 1.6 million dues-paying members plus their families -
approximately 4.5 million
people total - many of whom are actively involved in volunteer service programs
for the Catholic
Church, their communities, their families, young people and one another.
In 1996, members reported 48,966,132 hours of
volunteer service and $105,976,102 raised and
donated to charitable and fraternal projects, including $19,014,276 from the
Supreme Council and
Knights of Columbus Charities Inc., and $86,961,826 from state and local
councils. The monies
raised at the state and local levels are expended exclusively for state and
local programs.
The early system of fraternal benefits has grown
into a top-quality life insurance society, offering a
variety of policy plans to members and their families. Both A. M. Best Co. and
Standard & Poor's
rate K of C insurance "Superior" - A++ and AAA, respectively - their
highest designations.
The Knights of Columbus, the world's largest
organization of Catholic men and their families, has
been called "the strong right arm of the Church," and has been cited
by popes, presidents and other
world leaders for support of the Church, for programs of evangelization and
Catholic education, for
civic involvement and aid to those in need.
"Protecting Families for Generations" is
a motto that captures the Knights' adherence to the legacy of
its founder and fidelity to his vision.
Membership in the Knights of Columbus is open to practical Catholic men in union with the Holy See, who shall not be less than 18 years of age on their last birthday. A practical Catholic is one who lives up to the Commandments of God and the precepts of the Church. Application blanks are available from any member of the Knights of Columbus Every knight is happy to propose eligible Catholic men for consideration as members.
Acceptance of the applicant depends upon a vote of the members of the subordinate council in which he is making application.
All priests and religious brothers having duly made application for membership and participated in the ceremonials become honorary life members of the Order and are exempt from payment of dues.
Application for membership must be made through the council in the community nearest the applicant's place of residence. Interested prospects without a permanent domicile, such as men temporarily away from home through duty in the armed forces, may make application through their hometown council or at the nearest council on a military base.
If favorably voted upon, the applicant becomes a member by initiation known as the First Degree. He subsequently is advanced through the Second Degree and the Third Degree.
There are modest initiation fees and dues set by subordinate councils under regulations established by the Supreme Council. The insurance privileges are available to all members who can qualify, which represents an important advantage of membership. For men in every walk of life the name Knights of Columbus engenders the image of a united organization, efficiently going about it tasks of charity, unity, fraternity, patriotism and defense of the priesthood. It is composed of men who are giving unselfishly of their time and talents in service of God and their country.
Membership in the Knights of Columbus provides opportunity for wholesome association with congenial companions who are, first of all, practical Catholic gentlemen. It offers the opportunity for fellowship with those who are of the same belief, who recognize the same duty to God, to family and to neighbor and who stand side by side in defense of those beliefs. Programs are so organized as to appeal to the individual interest of the members. Through many constructive activities of Christian fraternity, members are enabled to render service to their Church, their country and their fellowman. Through membership they develop a consciousness of their ability to lead and to assist.
Organized Columbianism, united behind the individual Knight of Columbus, provides the power of an intelligent, alert body of Catholic men--a strength which the individual by himself cannot achieve.
Knights of Columbus has a proud heritage. The qualified Catholic man can share in that heritage and build an even greater future by affiliating himself with this forceful, effective body.
Another degree open to members of the Knights of Columbus is that of the Fourth (or Patriotic) Degree. On February 22, 1900, the first exemplification of that degree was held in New York City. The ritual added patriotism to the three original principles of the Order: charity, unity and fraternity. Any Third Degree member in good standing, one year after the anniversary of his First Degree, is eligible for membership in the Fourth Degree.
The primary purpose of the Fourth Degree is to foster the spirit of partiotism by promoting responsible citizenship and a love of and loyalty to the Knights' respective countries through active membership in local Fourth Degree groups called assemblies. Fourth Degree members must retain their membership as Third Degree members in the local council to remain in good standing.
Certain members of the Fourth Degree serve as honor guards at civic and religious functions, an activity which has brought worldwide recognition to the Knights of Columbus organization.
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