Fathers Casey Cole, center, and Roberto “Tito” Serrano talk with Isaac Huss, a member of Our Lady of Lourdes Parish in Minneapolis, during their visit to Target Field June 24. The two Franciscan friars are in the midst of an evangelization tour, attending games at all 30 Major League Baseball stadiums around the country.

Fathers Casey Cole, center, and Roberto “Tito” Serrano talk with Isaac Huss, a member of Our Lady of Lourdes Parish in Minneapolis, during their visit to Target Field June 24. The two Franciscan friars are in the midst of an evangelization tour, attending games at all 30 Major League Baseball stadiums around the country. DIANNE TOWALSKI | THE CENTRAL MINNESOTA CATHOLIC

Fathers Casey Cole and Roberto “Tito” Serrano, both Franciscan friars, met in their second year of formation and bonded over their love of baseball and their Franciscan vocations.

As kids, they both dreamed of visiting Major League Baseball stadiums around the country. Now the dream becomes a reality as the “Bleacher Brothers” hit the road.

After eight years of planning, they set out on an 11-week pilgrimage May 19 to visit all 30 Major League Baseball ballparks, traveling more than 17,000 miles to meet people where they are and preach the good news of Jesus Christ.

The two made their first trip to Minnesota to see the Twins play the Colorado Rockies at Target Field in Minneapolis June 24. The following day they celebrated Mass at Immaculate Conception in Columbia Heights, and then made their way to St. Paul, Minnesota, for a town-hall-style talk at the Cathedral of St. Paul. They also gave a presentation to lay Franciscans June 25 in the parish’s fellowship hall.

“We’ll go to the stadiums, but then invite them home,” Father Cole said. “So, we’ll have Masses and we’ll have talks. I think we have about 30 talks planned and then a handful of Masses. We don’t want to just have all the fun, but offer some fruit as well.”

The first stop on their stadium itinerary was Miami to see the Marlins play the Atlanta Braves May 20. The tour wraps up in Colorado with the Rockies vs. the Los Angeles Dodgers July 30. At each stop, they offer a traditional talk or a town-hall format. It’s up to the hosts to choose, but the priests prefer the town hall, Father Serrano said.

“In formation we learned about the history and tradition of the Franciscans,” Father Cole told The Central Minnesota Catholic, St. Cloud’s diocesan magazine. “We heard stories about St. Francis preaching and evangelizing, and how he didn’t necessarily go to churches. He went to the city streets to preach where people were, and he preached a language they could understand.”

Father Cole, a chaplain at Mount de Sales High School in Macon, Georgia, and Father Serrano, who is assigned to Siena College in Loudonville, New York, knew they wanted to do something similar, but not actually go out into the streets. They wanted to go where people gather.

“So being baseball fans, Tito and I thought, let’s go to the other cathedral,” Father Cole said. “We’ve got the cathedral, the church, but the secular cathedrals really are stadiums. The idea was planted that once we became priests, once we had the ability to travel a little bit, we’d do it.”

They will be in the stands for games in each city, connecting with others who share their love of baseball. They also will celebrate Masses and visit Catholic schools, parishes and dioceses for talks along the way.

“St. Francis didn’t just preach in churches,” Father Cole said. “He had a gift of finding God in even the ordinary. For 800 years the Franciscans have continued this legacy. This trip is our way of carrying on what St. Francis started.”

“We’re at our best when we’re just talking and when we’re able to banter and argue and debate and just engage in normal conversation the way everyone else does,” he said. “I think that’s what allows us to kind of lessen the distance between us.”

“Just because someone’s religious or ordained a priest doesn’t necessarily mean that there’s now this chasm between us,” he said. “We’re all children of God, and we’re all called to be in relationship with each other and that means intimacy and that means arguing sometimes.”

Baseball also is a good bridge between the secular and the sacred, Father Serrano said.

“I think that this allows us to No. 1, find places where a large number of people are gathered, but also at the same time broach the subject of why we are creating this sort of false distance between what is considered secular and sacred,” he said. “Really, God is in all.”

Aside from the evangelization mission, the “Bleacher Brothers” are excited to see their favorite teams and players and visit different parts of the country on this trip.

Father Serrano is originally from Florida, so he started out as a Marlins fan. When the family moved to Arizona, his father, who was a die-hard baseball fan, announced that they would then be Diamondbacks fans. “My father spoke, and it was so,” he said.

Father Serrano also is hoping to meet one of his favorite players, Javier Báez, shortstop for the Detroit Tigers. He and Father Cole have field passes for their game in Detroit, so it may happen

Father Cole said he was a Yankees fan growing up, but lost interest in the team after shortstop Derek Jeter retired.

“I decided after a number of years of being a Yankees fan, to go the other direction, go National League with the lovable losers. So, I’m a Cubs fan and wouldn’t you believe it within a year and a half, they won the World Series (in 2016).”

“By sheer luck, we’re going to see the Cubs five times and we’re going to see the Diamondbacks four times,” Father Cole said.

Father Cole said exploring each city also is something they are looking forward to. Going to the big churches and seeing the cities and eating the food and just getting to know the faith and culture of people is important too, he said.

“I want to see how Catholicism has been shaped (in each city we visit) by the culture, by the different immigrant groups that have come,” Father Serrano said. “How does the church play into these different cultures and how is it expressed now? I’m literally looking forward to that experience as well.”

Father Cole hopes that being out in public in their habits will encourage people to ask questions, he said

“I really just want people to know that if they see us, come up and talk to us,” Father Serrano said. “That’s why we’re there. We’re going to be in our habits the whole time so that we can be visible. Let’s chat and let’s have an encounter with one another.”