Father Robert Stewart KofC Council 13908

Father Robert Stewart KofC Council 13908 A Knights of Columbus council page representing St. Margaret’s Church in Lee’s Summit, MO.

06/10/2026

Dear Brother Knights,

Our Knights Of Columbus council meeting is scheduled for tomorrow, Thursday, June 11 at 7:00 PM, which will take place at St. Margaret Of Scotland Church. Following the meeting, a social gathering will be held, contingent upon favorable weather, around a campfire or alternatively at Johnny's Tavern.

Viva Jesus!

05/15/2026

Dear Brother Knights,

On Monday, May 18th, at Saint Margaret Of Scotland church, our council has been requested to provide culinary services for the Family Of Families group's last soccer game of the season. The group will supply the food, and we will handle the preparation. If available, please report to the church by 4:30pm to assist with cooking.

Thank you!

Vivat Jesus!

05/13/2026

Greetings, Brother Knights.

Our council meeting is scheduled for tomorrow, Thursday, May 14, at 7:00 PM, in the VFW Building located on Douglas Street in downtown Lee's Summit. During the meeting, we will be discussing council business and upcoming events.

Additionally, please note that this Friday, May 15, is the final day to purchase tickets for the Knights at the Royals event on May 23, which includes a tailgate. Food will be provided; however, you are kindly requested to bring your preferred beverages. Further details can be found in the email correspondence.

Vivat Jesus!

04/28/2026

St. Margaret of Scotland Parish dedicates its newly renovated space By Allison Vrooman | Photos by Christy Gruenbaum The newly renovated St. Margaret of Scotland Catholic Church in Lee’s Summit was blessed and dedicated by Bishop James Johnston on January 24, 2026. Parishioners faced the winter st...

Good afternoon, Brother Knights. You and your family and friends are invited to join other Knights, and their families, ...
04/17/2026

Good afternoon, Brother Knights.

You and your family and friends are invited to join other Knights, and their families, as the Missouri Knights Of Columbus attend the Royals game scheduled for May 23rd. Tickets are priced at $42 per person. Tailgating commences at 1:00 pm in Lot N, with the first pitch at 3:10 pm. Complimentary food will be provided; attendees are kindly requested to bring their own beverages. Proceeds generated will benefit the Special Olympics of Missouri. Tickets can be purchased via the following link: https://mokofc.org/Event-Registration/key/kafXF78dS.

Vivat Jesus!

04/05/2026
Were you there?
04/03/2026

Were you there?

03/12/2026

Good evening , Brother Knights.

Our council meeting is scheduled for tomorrow, March 12, at the VFW building located in downtown Lee's Summit, near the intersection of Douglas Street and Fourth Street. The meeting will commence at 7:00 PM, during which we will discuss pertinent council business and upcoming events. Your attendance is greatly appreciated.

Vivat Jesus!

The Missouri Knights Of Columbus attended the Kansas City Mavericks hockey game this past Saturday.  Members, along with...
03/09/2026

The Missouri Knights Of Columbus attended the Kansas City Mavericks hockey game this past Saturday. Members, along with their families and friends, enjoyed a tailgate before the game, and then watched as the Mavericks beat the Knight Monsters with the score of 5 to 3. Proceeds from the event were donated to the Special Olympics Of Missouri.

02/19/2026

The funeral was over. Another one.

Father Michael McGivney stood in the cemetery dirt, watching another widow try to figure out how she'd feed her children tomorrow. Her husband had died in a factory accident. No insurance. No savings. No help coming.

This was the third funeral this month. Always the same story.

The woman looked at him with desperate eyes. "What do I do now, Father?"

He had no answer. Not a real one anyway.

Michael had grown up watching this happen. His own father worked brutal hours in a brass mill, breaking his body for pennies. When Irish families like his came to America fleeing starvation, they found a different kind of hell waiting.

"No Irish Need Apply." The signs were everywhere.

Catholics couldn't get decent jobs. Couldn't get insurance. Couldn't get help when tragedy struck. And tragedy struck constantly in those dangerous factories and rail yards.

Every week, Michael buried someone. A father crushed by machinery. A mother dead from disease. Children who never had a chance.

After each funeral came the same heartbreak. Families destroyed overnight. Widows sent to poorhouses that were basically prisons. Children scattered to orphanages or left on the streets.

Michael couldn't sleep anymore. He'd walk the dark streets of New Haven, seeing families huddle in cold tenements, knowing that one accident, one illness, one bad day would destroy everything they had.

The other priests told him this was just how things were. The rich took care of the rich. The poor suffered alone.

But Michael refused to accept that.

Late one night in 1882, he had an idea that seemed almost too simple. What if Catholic men banded together? What if they pooled their money? When one of them died, his family would get help from everyone else.

It wasn't charity. It was brotherhood.

He started gathering men in St. Mary's basement. Factory workers with calloused hands. Shop clerks earning barely enough to survive. Immigrants who spoke broken English but understood perfectly what it meant to struggle.

"We take care of each other," he told them. "When your family needs help, we'll be there. When mine needs help, you'll be there."

They called it the Knights of Columbus. The name meant something. Columbus was Catholic. Catholics belonged in America just as much as anyone else.

The first meetings were small. Maybe a dozen men sitting on wooden crates, planning how to save each other's families.

But word spread through the immigrant neighborhoods. Here was something different. Here was hope.

Michael threw himself into the work like a man possessed. He already worked eighteen-hour days as a priest. Celebrating Mass at dawn. Visiting the sick all day. Hearing confessions until midnight.

Now he added this. Recruiting members. Organizing meetings. Handling paperwork. Traveling to other cities to start new groups.

Friends begged him to slow down. He looked skeletal. His hands shook from exhaustion.

"There's no time," he'd say. "Another family is suffering right now."

The Knights grew. Slowly, then faster. When a member died, his widow received money that let her keep her home. His children stayed fed. The system worked.

Michael never stopped pushing himself. Never took a break. Never said no when someone needed help.

By 1890, his body was failing. He could barely stand through Mass. His cough wouldn't go away.

Then pneumonia hit New Haven. As always, Michael went out to the sick. Gave them last rites. Comforted dying families. Breathed their infected air.

He caught it himself.

His friends carried him to bed. For the first time in years, Father Michael McGivney had to stop working.

On August 14, 1890, two days after his 38th birthday, he died. Worn out. Used up. Gone.

He never got to see what he'd built.

When Michael died, the Knights had maybe three thousand members. Small. Hopeful. Nothing more.

He died thinking he'd helped a few families. Made a small difference. Maybe.

He had no idea.

Today, the Knights of Columbus has two million members worldwide. They've given billions to charity. They provide life insurance to millions of Catholic families. They run programs in dozens of countries.

Every dollar donated traces back to that exhausted priest who wouldn't stop working.

In 2020, the Catholic Church declared him Blessed Michael McGivney, one step from sainthood.

But here's what gets me about his story. He never got his victory moment. Never saw the crowds. Never received the applause. Never knew his work mattered on this scale.

He just kept going until his body gave out. Trusting that somehow, helping one family at a time would add up to something bigger than he could imagine.

Most of us want to see our impact. We want results we can measure. Recognition we can feel.

Michael McGivney got none of that. He just worked himself to death for people he'd never meet, creating something he'd never see.

And maybe that's the most powerful kind of service there is. The kind that asks for nothing back except the faith that somewhere, somehow, it matters.



~Forgotten Stories

Address

777 NE Blackwell Road
Lees Summit, MO
64086

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