Brummer said McGivney's own life offers lessons for students.
"When we offer the life of Fr. McGivney as an example of Christian discipleship, they can see that the life that he lived, as a Catholic, a child of immigrants, a priest, and a son of a deceased father, had plenty of points of connection," he told CNA. "One year, I presented a lesson that asked students to choose someone in their life who reminded them of Fr. McGivney. Of course, the people themselves were a wide variety, but even the reasons why they reminded them of McGivney were just as varied."
The school closes each day with a final prayer for McGivney's canonization, Brummer said. This daily prayer calls him "an apostle of Christian family life" and invokes his work caring for "the needy and the outcast."
"If the people who pray the prayer listen to the words, it would be hard to not be edified by the life of the man for whose intercession we are praying."
Elizabeth Moody, the high school's development and marketing director, said the school will celebrate McGivney's beatification during "an intimate, socially distanced event," live streamed to the internet.
"Father McGivney spent his entire priesthood in parish ministry and died of pneumonia on August 14, after falling ill amid a pandemic," Moody said. "Our students can relate to Fr. McGivney on so many levels: he was young, he was rooted in service, he lived during a pandemic, and he followed the path the Lord set for him. What a wonderful reminder to our students that they too should work towards becoming saints."
The high school will host a virtual beatification celebration Oct. 31 via Facebook Live at 7 p.m. Central Time. A video presentation will begin the event, following exposition of the Blessed Sacrament and evening prayer. Bishop Thomas J. Paprocki of Springfield, Ill. will deliver a homily, and the event will close with benediction at 8 p.m.
The high school in a statement said its founders chose McGivney as a namesake because they "wanted to honor a person who was committed to the same values they hoped to instill in its future graduates."
"Fr. McGivney was an idealist whose youthful vision and commitment to families led to the creation of his legacy – the Knights of Columbus," said the school.
The high school works closely with the Knights of Columbus.
"[The Knights'] pillars of Unity, Charity, Fraternity, and Patriotism are the foundation of Father McGivney Catholic High School's mission," said the high school's principal Joe Lombardi. "We are very proud of what our school has accomplished and we know that Fr. McGivney's intercession helped get us here."
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Brummer, the faith formation director, joined the Knights of Columbus not long after his 18th birthday. After he became a high school theology teacher he took part in its second- and third-degree ceremonies, a membership initiation now merged into a single public ceremony for new members.
"At the time, I didn't know much of Fr. McGivney other than his general biography," said Brummer. "In the past few years, now working at a school named after him, I have felt an obligation to teach about him more so our school community understands his patronage better."
Kevin J. Jones is a senior staff writer with Catholic News Agency. He was a recipient of a 2014 Catholic Relief Services' Egan Journalism Fellowship.