Brainerd Catholic

Jubilee Year 2025

Q & A

Msgr. Buh Jubilee Pilgrimage 

We will be celebrating the 2025 Jubilee Year as Pilgrims of Hope by designating six locations within our diocese as pilgrimage holy sites to visit and receive Jubilee indulgences.  All six locations have a historic connection to Monsignor Joseph Buh, thus affording the opportunity for the faithful to learn more about him and to pray for his intercession.  Pilgrimage booklets will be sent to each parish in January for distribution to parishioners (a printable version is available on this page below).

Enshrinement of Msgr. Buh 

During the 2025 Jubilee Year, we will celebrate the historic enshrinement of Msgr. Buh in the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Rosary. This will allow Pilgrims of Hope a public veneration of this holy one of God as we initiate his cause for sainthood. 

 In the Catholic Church, the concept of Jubilee or “Holy Year” is used to declare a special year of forgiveness and reconciliation. As Pilgrims of Hope, we embrace this Jubilee Year as a moment of coming home to the healing, hope and joy we can only find in Jesus.

2025 Pilgrimage site

St. Francis Church

Fr. Joseph Buh had arrived in St. Paul in 1864 from Slovenia and was serving and assisting Fr. Francis Pierz in much of the central and northern Minnesota Catholic mission territory. So it makes sense that he came north from Old Crow Wing to the new railroad community in October 1871 to offer the first Mass in what is now the city of Brainerd. Buh found quite a settlement of Catholics here, so in 1872 he built the first church on South Fifth Street, calling it St. Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of peace and brotherly love; it was fittingly named because of the purported peace between the Native American population and immigrant population in the area. He continued to serve the Brainerd mission as pastor until 1880, celebrating many occasions and sacraments throughout those early years of establishment.

“No small credit must be given to Fr. Buh, and to those pioneer missionaries who spread the doctrines of Catholicity in Brainerd under the most adverse conditions embodied in the old wooden church on South Fifth Street.” (The History of St. Francis 1871-1947)