Archive for Stories

The Legend of the Locket

from The Legend of the Locket by Father Francis J. Finn, S.J.

I was in my first sleep when the sound of the doorbell awakened me, whereupon I sprang from my bed, and, after a few hurried preparations, hastened to throw open the door.

It was a bitter cold night in January, and the moon without threw its pale light over the wan spectral snow-covered landscape. The sharp gust that swept into the hall as I opened the door made me pity the delicate-looking child who stood at the threshold.

Her hair gleamed with a strange and rare effect in the moonlight, long golden hair that fell in graceful ripples about her shoulders. She was lightly dressed, this little child, as she stood gazing straight and frankly into my eyes with an expression at once so beautiful and calm and earnest that I shall never forget it.

Her face was very pale, her complexion of the fairest. The radiancy about her hair seemed to glow in some weird yet indescribable fashion upon her every feature. These details I had not fairly taken in when she addressed me.

“Father, can you come with me at once? My mother is dying, and she is in trouble.”

“Come inside, my little girl,” I said, “and warm yourself. You must be half frozen.”

“Indeed, Father, I am not in the least cold.” I had thrown on my coat and hat as she made answer.

“Your mother’s name, my child?”

“Catherine Morgan, Father; she’s a widow, and has lived like a saint. And now that she’s dying, she is in awful trouble. She was taken sick about a few hours ago.”

“Where does she live?”

“Two miles from here, Father, on the border of the Great Swamp; she is a stranger in these parts, and alone. I know the way perfectly; you need not be afraid of getting lost.”

A few minutes later we were tramping through the snow, or rather I was tramping, for the child beside me moved with so light and tender a step, that had there been flowers instead of snowflakes beneath our feet I do not think a single petal would have been crushed under the airy fall of her fairy feet.

Her hand was in mine with the confiding clasp of childhood. Her face, for all the trouble that was at home, wore a gravely serene air, such as is seldom seen in years of sprightly, youthful innocence.

How beautiful she looked!

More like a creature fresh from the perfect handiwork of God than one who walked in the valley of sin, sorrow, trouble and death.

Upon her bosom I observed a golden locket fashioned in an oval shape.

She noticed my glance, and with a quick movement of her fingers released the locket and handed it to me.

“It’s a heart,” I said.

“Read what’s on it, Father.”

“I can’t, my little friend; my eyes are very good, but are not equal to making out reading on gold lockets by moonlight.”

“Just let me hold it for you, Father. Now look.”

How this child contrived, I cannot say; but certain it is, that at once, as she held the locket at a certain angle, there stood out clearly, embossed upon its surface, the legend:

“Cease! the Heart of Jesus is with me.”

“Mamma placed that upon my bosom one year ago, when I was very sick, Father.” And kissing the locket, the child restored it to its place.

We went on for a time in silence. I carried the Blessed Sacrament with me; and, young as she was, the girl seemed to appreciate the fact. Whenever I glanced at her, I observed her lips moving as in prayer, and her eyes seemed, in very truth, fixed upon the place where rested in His sacramental veil the Master of Life and of Death.

Suddenly the girl’s hand touched my sleeve-oh, so gently!

“This is the place, Father,” she said in soft tones that thrilled me as they broke upon the stillness; and she pointed to a little hut standing back in the dim shadows of three pine trees.

I pushed open the door, which hung loosely upon its hinges, and turned to wait her entrance. She was gone. Somewhat startled, I was peering out into the pallid night, when a groan called me to the bedside of the dying woman.

A glance told me there was no time to lose. The woman lying in that room had hardly reached middle life, but the hand of Death had touched her brow, upon which stood the drops of sweat, and in her face I read a great trouble.

I was at her side in an instant; and, God be thanked for it, soon calmed and quieted the poor creature. She made her confession, and in sentiments of faith and love such as I have rarely seen, received the Last Sacraments of the Church.

Standing beside her, I suggested those little prayers and devices so sweet and consoling at the dread hour. I noticed, as the time passed on, that her eyes frequently turned toward a little box at the farther end of the room.

“Shall I bring you that box?” I asked.

She nodded assent.

On placing it beside her, she opened it with trembling hands and took out the dress of a child.

“Your little daughter’s dress?” I said.

She whispered, and there was love in her tones: “My darling Edith’s.”

“I know her,” I continued. “She brought me here, you know.”

I stopped short and caught my breath. The woman half rose in her bed; she looked at me in wonder that cannot be expressed. I, no less amazed, was staring at a golden, oval locket fastened to the bosom of the child’s dress which the woman was holding in her hands.

“Madam,” I cried, “in the name of God, tell me, where is your daughter? Whose is that locket?”

"Cease! the Heart of Jesus is with me!"

“The locket is Edith’s. I placed it here on the bosom of her dress when my little girl lay dying a year ago. The last thing my darling did was to hold this locket to her lips, and say:

‘Cease! the Heart of Jesus is with me.’

“She died a year ago.”

Then the mother’s face grew very sweet and very radiant.

Still holding the locket in her hands, she fixed her eyes straight before her.

“Edith, my dear Edith, we are at last to be united in the Sacred Heart. I see you, my darling: ‘Cease! the Heart of Jesus is with me.”‘

Her voice faded with the last syllable into silence.

She and Edith were again united.

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Our Lady of Perpetual Help

Our Lady of Perpetual Succour

Our Lady of Perpetual Succour

In 1498, the picture of Our Lady of Perpetual Help was in a church on the island of Crete, in Greece. The picture had been there for some time and was known to be miraculous. One day a merchant from Crete stole the picture of Our Lady. He hid the picture among his things, boarded a ship and set out to sea. When a great storm arose the terrified sailors begged God and Our Lady to save them. Their prayers were heard and they were saved from shipwreck.

Our Lady of Perpetual Help A year later, the merchant went to Rome with the picture. There he got a disease and became terribly sick. He asked his Roman friend to take care of him. The merchant grew worse and realized that he would soon die. He called on his friend and with tears in his eyes, begged his friend to do him one last favour. When the Roman promised to do so, the weeping merchant continued, “Some time ago I stole a beautiful, miraculous picture of Our Lady from a church in Crete! You will find it with my belongings. I beg you, please place it in some church where the people will give it much honour.” In time the merchant died. The Roman found the picture and showed it to his wife. She wanted to keep the picture, so she put it in her bedroom.

One day, the Blessed Virgin appeared to the Roman saying, “Do not keep this picture, but put it in some more honourable place.” But the Roman did not do as Our Lady asked him and kept the picture. Some time later Our Lady begged him a second time not to keep the picture, but to place it in a more honourable place. Again, he did not do as Our Lady asked him to do.

Then the Blessed Virgin appeared to the Roman’s six year old daughter, and told her to warn her mother and her grandfather saying, “Our Lady of Perpetual Help commands you to take her out of the house!”

Finally, after many delays, the Virgin Mary appeared to the little girl a second time, “Our Lady of Perpetual Help commands you to tell your mother, to place my picture between St. Mary Major and St. John Lateran, in the church dedicated to St. Matthew the Apostle!” The mother did as she was told and sent for the Augustinian Fathers who were in charge of that church. Then on that very day, March 27, 1499, the picture was taken to the church of St. Matthew the Apostle on the Esquiline Hill, one of the seven hills in Rome. It was placed between two beautifully carved columns of black Carra marble above a splendid white-marble altar.

For three centuries from 1499 until 1798, the church of St. Matthew in Rome was one of the most popular pilgrimage sites in Rome, because of the miraculous picture. Many pilgrims who came to the shrine: saints and sinners, Cardinals, Bishops and priests, kings and princes, rich and poor. They came to see the miraculous picture of Our Lady and pray before it.

But this was not to last. The French armies led by Napoleon Bonaparte, invaded the Papal States in 1796. Rome was in danger of being attacked and taken over by the enemies. By February 17, 1797, the Pope was forced to sign the Peace Treaty of Tolintino. The Holy Father did not want to do this but he had to, in order to protect the Papal States from the enemy.

A year after signing the Treaty, the French General Berthier marched into Rome and proclaimed the “Free Roman Republic.” He lied, there was no freedom. Then shortly after, Berthier was replaced by the French General Massena. On June 3, 1798, General Massena commanded that thirty churches be destroyed! One of them was St. Matthew’s! He cried out, “There are too many churches in Rome. The church land can be used for better things!” He wanted to make the people realize that worse things would happen if they did not obey his every command. The terrified Romans prayed to Our Lady and she helped them in all their troubles.

Because the Augustinian Monastery was destroyed, the monks were allowed to return to Ireland, their homeland. A few returned but most of them stayed in Rome. Some went to St. Augustine’s, the main church and monastery of the Augustinian Fathers. The rest of the monks took the miraculous picture of Mary and moved to St. Eusebio’s, a poor old church with a huge monastery. St. Eusebio’s was in terrible condition and needed much cleaning and repairing.

The picture of Our Lady of Perpetual Help stayed at St. Eusebio’s for twenty years. Since the place was too large for the few monks who lived there, in 1819, the Pope asked the Jesuits to take over St. Eusebio’s. The Holy Father gave the Augustinian’s the small church and monastery of Santa Maria, in Posterula, on the other side of the city. The monks took the miraculous picture of Mary with them, and gave it a place of honour in the monastery chapel.

In 1788, Augustine Orsetti joined the Augustinian Order at St. Matthew’s and became Br. Augustine. As a young religious, he used to spend much of his free time praying before the miraculous picture of Our Lady of Perpetual Help. He studied and memorized the history of the picture.

When St. Matthew’s was destroyed, Br. Augustine was transferred to St. Augustine’s. Then in 1840, he was transferred to the Monastery of Santa Maria in Posterula. When he arrived at Santa Maria he went to the community chapel. There he saw the beautiful miraculous picture of Our Lady of Perpetual Help. It was just as he remembered it, when he had been at St. Matthew’s.

Br. Augustine looked after the sacristy at Santa Maria. He cleaned the chapel and its holy images. He also trained altar boys and taught them how to serve Mass. Michael Marchi, one of the Altar boys, became a good friend of Br. Augustine. The Brother often spoke to him about the picture of Our Lady of Perpetual Help saying, “Do you see that picture Michael? It is a very old picture. Know Michael, the Madonna from St. Matthew’s is the one that hangs here in the chapel. I am not trying to deceive you. It certainly is. Have you understood, Michael? It was miraculously saved from destruction. Many people used to come and pray before this miraculous picture. Always remember what I am telling you.”

In 1854, the Redemptorists, founded by St Alphonsus Liguori, bought a piece of land in Rome, called the Villa Caserta, on the Esquiline Hill. Also included with their property, was the old site of the church of St. Matthew, where the picture of Our Lady of Perpetual Help had been given great honour.

In 1855, Michael Marchi joined the Redemptorist Monastery. On March 25, 1857, he made the vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience. He continued his studies and was ordained on October 2, 1859.

One day when the community was at recreation, one priest mentioned that he had read some ancient books about a miraculous image of Our Lady and that it had been venerated in the old church of St. Matthew. Fr. Michael Marchi spoke up, “I know about the miraculous picture of Our Lady of Perpetual Help. Its name is Our Mother of Perpetual Help and it can be found in the chapel of the Augustinian Fathers, at their monastery of Santa Maria in Posterula. I saw it often during the years of 1850 and 1851 when I was a young college student and served Mass in their chapel.

On February 7, 1863, Fr. Francis Blosi, a Jesuit priest gave a sermon about the famous picture of Our Lady of Perpetual Help. He described the picture of Our Lady, and said, “I hope that someone in this crowd of faithful listening to me today, knows where this picture is! If so, please tell that person who has kept the picture hidden for seventy years, that the Mother of God has commanded that this picture be placed between the Basilicas of St. Mary Major and St. John Lateran. Hopefully the person will repent of his thoughtless act and will have the picture placed on the Esquiline Hill once again, so that all the faithful may honour it.”

Soon the Redemptorists at St. Alphonsus heard about Fr. Blosi’s sermon. Knowing that their church was located close to the site of the old St. Matthew’s Church they hurried to bring the news to Fr. Mauron, Superior General of the Redemptorists. Fr. Mauron was in no hurry. He prayed for almost three years to know the Holy Will of God, in this important matter.

Then on December 11, 1865, Fr. Mauron and Fr. Michael Marchi, obtained an audience with Blessed Pope Pius IX. Eagerly, the two priests gave the Pope a detailed story of the picture of Our Mother of Perpetual Help. They pointed out that Our Lady had asked that the picture be placed in a church between the Basilicas of St. Mary Major and St. John Lateran. After listening to the story, the Pope asked if they had put this into writing. Fr. Mauron at once produced a document, which Fr. Marchi had written and signed under oath.

The Holy Father had a great love for the Virgin Mary. He immediately took the piece of paper on which Fr. Marchi had written his account. With his own hand, Pope Pius IX wrote a statement on the backside of the document:

December 11, 1865

The Cardinal prefect will call the Superior of the little community of Santa Maria in Posterula and will tell him it is Our will that the Image of the most holy Mary, of which this petition treats, be returned between St. John’s and St. Mary Major’s. However, the Superior of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer is obliged to substitute another suitable picture.

Pope Pius IX

The Pope had spoken and the case was closed. The Mother of Perpetual Help would soon be home after nearly seventy-five years in exile. In the early morning of January 19, 1866 Fr Michael Marchi and Ernest Bresciani, hurried across the city of Rome to Santa Maria in Posterula, to get the holy picture.

The Augustinians were sad to see their beloved Madonna go but they rejoiced that Our Lady would once again be honoured at the place where she desired. The Augustinian monks wanted an exact copy made from the original. This was given to them shortly afterward.

The Redemptorists at St. Alphonsus waited for Our Lady of Perpetual Help to arrive. They were so happy when the picture arrived. But they found that although the colours were still bright, there were many big nail holes in the picture. These were made when the picture was hung and for other reasons.

A talented Polish artist, who lived in Rome, was asked to restore the picture. The picture was finished toward the close of April. Plans were made for a solemn procession. The people of the neighbourhood decorated their houses for the feast. Loads of flowers and vines hung from windows. Banners and flags draped the walls and the roofs of the houses.

On April 26, 1866, the Feast of Our Lady of Good Counsel, a great procession set out from the monastery of St. Alphonsus. During the procession many miraculous events were reported. A poor mother sat by the bed of her four-year-old boy, who was at the point of death from a brain illness. He had suffered from a constant fever for the last three weeks.

The mother heard the procession coming closer. Suddenly she took the boy in her arms and held him at the open window. When the picture of Our Mother of Perpetual Help passed by she cried out, “O good Mother, either cure my child or take him with you to Paradise!” Within a few days the boy was totally cured. He went with his mother to the church of St. Alphonsus to light a candle of thanksgiving at the shrine of Our Mother of Perpetual Help.

Our Lady of Perpetual Help In another house a little eight year old girl, lay crippled and helpless. She had been this way since the age of four. As the procession passed and the miraculous picture of Our Lady came near, the child’s mother offered her little daughter to the Blessed Virgin. Suddenly the child felt a great change coming over her. She partly recovered the use of her arms and legs. On seeing this, the mother became very confident that Our Lady was helping her little girl. The next day she took the child to the Church of St. Alphonsus and placed her in front of the miraculous picture of Our Mother of Perpetual Help. Looking up at the picture she prayed, “Now, O Mary, finish the work which you have begun.” She had just finished the words and suddenly the little girl stood up on her feet. She was perfectly cured!

When the picture at last reached the Church of St. Alphonsus, it was placed on the high altar. The church was decorated and the altar was loaded with candles and huge amounts of flowers. A solemn prayer of thanksgiving was then sung and the Bishop had Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament.

Pilgrims come from all over the world to venerate Our Lady of Perpetual Succour.

Pilgrims come from all over the world to venerate the Icon of Our Lady of Perpetual Succour.

Then Mary’s homecoming was celebrated for three days. Each morning Mass was celebrated before the picture of Our Mother of Perpetual Help by a Cardinal. After the praying the Litany of Our Lady, a beautiful sermon, and Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament was given by a Bishop. Similar services were held each evening. The Holy Father granted many special indulgences to all who attended these devotions.

Father Bernard Bernie, one of the greatest Redemptorist preachers in Italy, preached the sermons for three days. His words of wisdom pierced the hearts of his listeners. At least twelve hundred persons received Communion during this time, at the shrine of Our Lady.

Our Lady of Perpetual Help On May 5, 1866, the Pope made a personal visit to the shrine to see the picture of Our Mother of Perpetual Help with his own eyes. After he had prayed for a time before the Blessed Sacrament and at the shrine of Our Lady, he entered the sanctuary and climbed the steps of the high altar to study the picture more closely. Later, Blessed Pope Pius IX questioned Fr. Mauron about the history and devotion given to this picture.

Blessed Pope Pius IX questioned the Redemptorists about the Icon.

Blessed Pope Pius IX questioned the Redemptorists about the Icon of Our Lady of Perpetual Succour.

Soon afterward, a new gothic styled, marble altar was set up at St. Alphonsus. A space in the upper center of the altar was decorated with brilliant, golden trim. When all was completed, Mary’s picture was lovingly put in place. The first Mass was celebrated at the new shrine altar on March 19, 1871, the Feast of St. Joseph. The picture has remained there until this day.

Devotion to Our Lady of Perpetual Help spread rapidly. Hardly a year had passed when on May 12, 1867; the Vatican gave the order for the picture to be crowned. The coronation date was fixed. On Sunday, June 23, 1867, the Church of St. Alphonsus was filled up for the solemn Mass and coronation ceremony. After the Mass, while hymns were being sung, the Archbishop blessed two golden crowns with precious jewels. He placed one crown upon Mary’s head, the other upon the head of the Child Jesus and the picture was put back in its place and everyone sang a joyful hymn of praise.

The next day, the picture was carried through the streets in procession. Each evening fireworks and thunderous cannons were set off to echo the praises of Mary. At the close of the week’s celebration the name of Mary was spelled in brilliant light against the blue background of the sky. The people who had taken part in the ceremonies prayed with one voice, “Long live Mary. Long live devotion to Our Mother of Perpetual Help.”

Our Lady of Perpetual Help, pray for us!

Collect of the Feast of Our Lady of Perpetual Succour

Almighty and merciful God, Who hast given us a picture of Thy most blessed Mother to venerate under the special title of Perpetual Succour, mercifully grant us to be so fortified, among all the vicissitudes of this wayfaring life, by the protection of the same immaculate, ever Virgin Mary, that we may deserve to attain the rewards of Thine everlasting redemption. Who livest and reignest world without end. Amen.

Bulletin for Fifth Sunday After Pentecost, 27 June 2010

(The story is a re-print of the Bulletin of the Third and Fourth Sunday After Pentecost, 2009)

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Another Leper and Another Christ

by Rev. Fr Hugh F. X. Sharkey

Reverend Fr Hugh Sharkey, S.F.M., a native of St John, New Brunswick, is both missionary and poet. As a member of the Scarboro Foreign Mission Society, he spent several years in China.

The world in which I grew up as a boy had much to do with my priestly aspirations and the years that saw the formation of my character were the simple, wonderful years that preceded the outbreak of the First World War.

The automobile was still an oddity, and it had not yet, become more death-dealing than war itself; the Wright brothers had but awakened America to the age of man’s conquest of the air; the movies were still the flickers, slap-stick comedy and cowboys and Indians. It was the age of lamplight and homemade valentines, the week-end family excursion to the seaside, the songs of Stephen Foster, and the tempo of the times was the graceful dignified tempo of the waltz. Women were modest and feminine, atheism had not become a phase of intellectual snobbery, communism had not been born. It was a God-fearing, wholesome age.

It was in such a world that I grew up as a boy – grew up in a wonderful, Irish-Catholic home. Nobody could enter or leave our home and not be conscious of its Catholic character. There was a “God bless you” when you said hello and a “God bless you” when you said good-bye. I never heard my mother plan anything for the morrow but she would say, “If the good God spares us and it is His holy will.”

All about me as a child was a deep, religious influence. We were taught the catechism every evening and became conversant with the lives of the saints. No room in the house was without the crucifix and holy pictures. The only literature entering our home was Catholic. And ever without fail we knelt together each night and recited the family Rosary.

My dear mother loved to take us to the parish church as often as possible – for Benediction, visits to the Christmas crib, the blessing of the throats, the May and October devotions, the Stations of the Cross. She would explain to us, in her own simple way, the Sacraments and sacramentals, all the wealth of the Roman liturgy, all the lovable Catholic customs of Erin, and above all else she instilled into our hearts a deep love and respect for our devoted priests, the Redemptorist Fathers.

Without any doubt, I owe to this sweet mother of mine the grace of my sacerdotal vocation. Her love of God and His Blessed Mother, her devotion to her family and her home, her sublime faith in the Holy Eucharist and the eternal priesthood, have obtained from God for me all that I am of priest or poet.

I went to the parish school, St Peter’s, and there I received not only a liberal education but a truly Catholic one. What a deep depth of gratitude I owe to those devoted teachers, for every subject they taught was permeated with the golden leaven of the Faith and the ever-recurring thought of God.

And then, into my young, impressionable life, came a tall, young Redemptorist missionary – Fr Holland. How well I remember his frequent visits to our little home. I can see him now, standing there with the white stole about his neck, raising his hand in priestly blessing over all of us. He never left the hosue without imparting that final benediction.

So impressed was I by this saintly man that I would put an improvised stole about my neck and go about the house blessing everyone. I loved also to set up a little altar, decorated with holy cards and lighted candles, and pretend to offer up the Mass. Everything about that little altar had to be immaculately clean and carefully arranged, and Fr Holland himself at the Holy Table was not more serious than I.

My youth was indeed a particularly sheltered one, for back in those days we had not the freedom that now constitutes for so many boys and girls the greatest danger. Our pleasures were simple and we found them within the family circle. We were not allowed to roam the streets at all hours of the night, to read whatever we pleased or to go wherever we desired.

During the summer holidays, which become for so many a time of spiritual relaxation and grave moral danger, my younger brother and I worked on a farm in the backlands of New Brunswick. Those were happy, healthy and carefree summers, far removed from the manifold temptations to be found in a maritime city during the laxity of the school holidays.

How well I remember the day I set out for college, on the first step of my education for the holy priesthood. My home meant everything to me, and the prospect of going hundreds of miles away and not seeing my dear ones for ten long months was a great sacrifice for a young boy of fourteen.

But the years of college went by swiftly – years that saw my desire to be a priest grow more intensely evident. The companionship of good boys, the wonderful example of the priests who formed the faculty, daily Mass and Holy Communion, frequent visits to the little college chapel – all were so many graces from the good God.

In writing on the subject “Why I Became a Priest”, I cannot fail to mention a missionary magazine that had profound influence on my final choice of a vocation. It was called China and was edited by a Father John M. Fraser, missionary apostolic to the Chinese Empire. One could not read Fr Fraser’s editorials and articles without the deepest emotions. His priestly zeal for souls and love of God became for me a blessed contagion. I longed to become a missionary priest, to go to the far-of land of the Dragon, bearing with me the Light of the World Himself in order that those who still sat in darkness and in the shadow of death might know the One True God and Jesus Christ Whom He had sent. I made up my mind that for me nothing short of a vocation to the foreign missions could ever satisfy.

Mgsr John Mary Fraser, the Founder of the Scarboro Foreign Mission Society, in Ningpo, China.

It had been my mother’s fondest wish (so often expressed to me) that when she came to die, I, her priestly son, would be by her bedside, strengthening and consoling her in her last agony. How difficult I found it to tell her of my decision, to tell her that my priesthood was to take me far away from her, my country and my lobed ones. And yet I need not have feared to tell her, for no woman’s life was ever so fully submitted to the holy will of God than was my saintly mother’s. With tears in her eyes she gave her consent and her blessing, and I knew that the sacrifice she was making was far, far greater than my own. I wrote immediately to Fr Fraser and he arranged for my entry into Holy Heart Seminary at Halifax, since his own building was just in the process of being constructed at Scarboro Bluffs. Only one’s years in the seminary bring the full realisation of what the priesthood really means. There, in one’s studies, in the discipline and in the daily lectures, the spiritual values are stressed and the spotlight shifts from earth to heaven, from time to eternity. Dawns the day of days, so long desired and so earnestly prepared for – the day of ordination. As one receives the power to consecrate at the Holy Sacrifice, the power to absolve from sin, to bless, to sanctify and to intercede, how clearly upon that day comes the meaning of the priesthood in all its magnitude and wonder! Within a few months after my ordination to the priesthood, as a member of the Scarboro Foreign Mission Society, I was posted to Lishui in far-off China. With my companions, I was about to start out on the Great Adventure. Oh, the blessed enthusiasm of youth! We accepted our missionary crucifixes from the Archbishop and we set out to win the world for Christ. How well I remember my last goodbye to my brothers and sisters! How I took my dear widowed mother in my arms and kissed her tenderly and then rushed to the door, never daring to look back, and heard the finality of its closing! And yet, if I had to do it all over again, I would not falter.

Mgsr Fraser in China (1940s)

The happiest years of my life were those in far-off China. Not in all the world is there aa more sublime and soul-satisfying vocation than mine. Why does God choose one man to be a priest rather than another? The question must have an answer. In the inscrutable designs of Divine Providence everything has its purpose and its meaning. This is particularly true of a vocation to the priesthood. I suppose that only in eternity can the question be completely answered. And yet every priest likes to guess at the answer in time. I am inclined to believe that the reason why God chose me to be a priest may be found in the story of Wong Li. At least, I am going to relate this striking incident from my missionary experience as a possible explanation why God called to His priesthood one so unworthy as I. It lies between the winding river and the hills of Chekiang, this city of my story, and the Chinese call it Tsingtien – Greenfields. Tsingtien, like most of China’s rural cities, is walled round on every side as a protection against two old and deadly enemies – one, the river, which, during the rainy season, swells and inundates the entire valley; the other, the bandits, who periodically swoop down from the hill country to pillage and destroy.

Now, “once upon a time” (for so indeed I should begin this fairy tale which really happened), there lived a leper. This leper was so terribly disfigured and so eaten away by the most horrible of all diseases that he was commonly called “the most frightful leper in all China”. He sat at the gate of the Temple of Lanterns on the main street of the city of Tsingtien. Never in all my life have I seen a sight that filled me with more pity and disgust than did that almost nightmarish figure, that mass of corruption and decay, that seeming embodiment of all the ills of mankind, spilled as it were from a worm-crawling grave – the living dead.

The Chinese mother would hurriedly cover the face of her baby as she passed the spot. The dirtiest beggar on the street would keep a goodly distance from that loathsome figure. There he would sit, through the inclemencies of the weather, under the blistering, tropical summer sun, and in the raw, damp cold of the far-eastern winter. It was his only home, that spot beside the temple gate. He lived there through the dreary days, the long months and the longer years. He lived there – if one could call it life – and one day he died there.

Half his face had been eaten away; the fetid lice-ridden rags mercifully covered the cadaver of his body, while the stump of a hand tried to clutch the dirty rice-bowl that was held beseechingly before you.

I had just been appointed to Tsingtien, and it was my custom to take a daily walk down the main thoroughfare of the city and out into the country beyond. So every day I passed the Temple of Lanterns and stopped to drop a mite into the rice-bowl of the leper, Wong Li. The stench about him was unbearable; the very sight of him struck terror and horror into one’s very soul. But that terrible disgust that I felt at the nearness of him was drowned out in the wave of pity and sorrow that engulfed me. I was determined that if Wong Li had nothing to live for, I would give him something to die for.

Our Lord Jesus Christ heals the Leper

The leering pagan gods; the musty, sombre temples; the ridiculous conglomeration of Buddhistic and Taoistic superstitions – what had they to offer this loathsome, rotting leper but despair and darkness and abysmal loneliness? What could the intellectual lights and the great ones of this world offer? What could anyone offer? Even the mythical Superman, holding the runaway express with its precious human cargo upon the track; even the redoubtable Tarzan, hero of boyhood tales, saving the hero from the jaws of the lion and tearing the king of beasts to pieces with his naked hand – what could even these fantastic creatures do for this epitome of human hopelessness before me?

In that moment there came to me the full, marvelous, almost paralyzing realisation of what it meant to be a priest, a missionary priest. Where baffled science stopped and human endeavor turned helplessly away, I stood my ground, sublimely conscious of that tremendous power that was within me; for out of the fetid mess of corruption and decay and deep despair that grovelled there before me, I could in my priestly hands mould a thing of eternal and unutterable beauty.

At first, I simply said hello to Wong Li and gave him my alms with a smile. Gradually, smothering my disgust and horror, I stayed to talk with the leper. He was for a long time wary and suspicious of me. Why, he was asking himself, did the foreign gentleman take such a keen interest in him whom the people called “the most horrible leper in all China”? What did this white man with the long black dress want of him? What could he possibly want?

I found him taciturn and at times almost unfriendly. One day I would bring him a few cigarettes, the next day a few rice cakes. Ever so slowly but ever so surely, I dissipated the fears and won the heart of the leper of Tsingtien. And when I had won his heart, I bent all my energies to the task of winning his immortal soul.

I began to tell him of God and of Jesus and Mary and of paradise. It took me back in memory to the long-lost yesterdays, when in the twilight time I had sat at my sister’s feet and listened in rapt silence and starry-eyed wonder to those fairy tales that always began “once upon a time” and always ended “and they lived happily ever after”.

Day after day, I unfolded to Wong Li the leper a tale that made those fairy tales of childhood seem shabby in comparison – a tale of real people who rose fromrags and poverty and wretchedness to become princes and princesses in a land whose gates were of amethyst and jasmine and whose streets were of silver and gold, land of unutterable wonders,ever-lasting happiness and eternal glory, that lay beyond the farthest star. I can still see that awful face fastened unalterably on mine as I told my story. I can still hear the expressions of amazement that fell from those lips festered and broken by the cancerous death that was upon him. It was so beautiful the tale I told him, incredibly beautiful. To this caricature of a man, forgotten, despised, unloved by anyone; to this creature who watched from day to day that slow decay, and whose pagan beliefs offered naught but a nether world of continued suffering, darkness and torture – my words must have sounded like the rantings of a madman and the heaven I described but a fantastic, impossible mirage of an unbalanced brain.

But, by God’s grace, in time he did believe; and so, one bright, glorious summer day, I baptized Wong Li the leper, there at the very gate of the temple. Crowded around me were the curious villagers, perplexed and astounded at my words and actions. As I poured the baptismal waters over the leper’s head, I remember so well the remark of one of the pagan bystanders. “Too little water,” he said. “You need plenty water wash Wong Li – him velly dirty.” I could not help smiling, as I thought to myself of the immaculate purity and the transcendent loveliness of the soul of the leper, regenerated in the waters of baptism. If my pagan friend could only have seen the guardian angel of Wong Li fold his golden wings and shade his eyes from the splendor and dazzling brightness he could not dare to look upon! Wong Li made his First Holy Communion a few days later. Once again, Jesus of Nazareth walked the city streets and had compassion on the leper, for it was there at the gate of the pagan temple that the Lord of Glory wrapped poor, dirty, disease-ridden Wong Li in His sacramental arms.

And then came the day when a boy ran up to me in the mission compound and told me that my leper was dying and was calling for his friend, the Seng Fu. I hurried to the gate of the Temple of Lanterns. Poor Wong Li lay there in his last agony, and, unmindful of the curious bystanders, I dropped on my knees beside him and began the prayers for the dying. Gripped tightly in the half-rotten hand was the crucifix I had given him on the day of his baptism. It was his passport to eternal life, his key to everlasting happiness. Wong Li had been greatly impressed with the story of Christ’s terrible sufferings and he always reverently referred to Jesus as “the Man on the Cross”.

The end came very suddenly. He tried to rise to a sitting posture and I heard him whisper the name of Jesus and saw him press his bleeding lips to the lips of the figure on the Cross. Thus he died.

"I am the Man on the Cross."

I stood up and almost unconsciously lifted my eyes to the cloudless blue of the summer sky. I knew that as suddenly as a blinding flash of lightning, the soul of the leper of Tsingtien had winged its way to the very portals of paradise. I tried to visualize that tremendous moment when the gates of heaven were thrown open and Wong Li walked awkwardly up the gold-paved street of paradise, awed by the sweetness of the angelic choirs, amazed by the beauty that “no eye hast seen or mind conceived.” I could almost hear the voice out of the Beatific Vision say, “What is your name?” And I fancied I heard poor, humble Wong Li answer in his childlike simplicity, “I am the most horrible leper in all China.” And then the light became too bright, the music too sweet, the glory too unspeakable. I seemed to see a nail-pierced hand take the hand of the leper and draw him into that nebula of unutterable splendor, and I seemed to hear a voice say, “I too was accounted as a leper and as one struck by God, for I am the Man on the Cross.”

And so I end my story of Wong Li, the most horrible leper in all China, who “once upon a time” sat at the gate of the Temple of Lanterns in Tsingtien and now sits upon the throne of an angel in the palace in the King of Kings, in the city whose gates are of amethyst and sapphire and whose streets are of silver and of gold, where everyone “lives happily ever after”.

Bulletin for Third Sunday after Pentecost, 13 June 2010, and Fourth Sunday after Pentecost, 20 June 2010

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Our Mother of Good Counsel


The miraculous image appeared after the clouds parted.

In the Alban Hills, not far from the city of Rome, lies the little town of Genazzano, where the miraculous image of Our Lady of Good Counsel is venerated. The story of the picture dates back to 1467. Pilgrims assembled on the feast of St. Mark were startled by a mysterious rustling sound and strains of sweet music. Then, while they silently gazed at the sky for the source of the singing, they saw, in an otherwise clear sky, a mysterious cloud that descended until it obliterated an unfinished wall of the church dedicated to the Mother of God under the title of Good Counsel. Before the thousands of awe-struck revelers, the cloud parted and dissipated, revealing a portrait of Our Lady and the Christ Child. This was resting on the top of the unfinished wall that was only a few feet high. It is said that the church bells of the city rang of their own accord, attracting people from outlying areas who hurried to investigate the untimely ringing.

The picture rests suspended in the air, touching the wall only at the upper edge and not supported by other means. The picture was considered miraculous, not only because of its arrival at Genazzano, but because it is for the most part suspended in the air  without any visible means of support to maintain its stable condition, and this for five centuries! Although painted on a piece of plaster no thicker than an ordinary visiting card, the image has withstood the ravages of time. The artist of the painting is unknown.

Veneration of the Miraculous Image

It is said that the figures themselves represent Mother and Child after they had returned from the temple where Mary heard the sad prophesies of Simeon. Mary’s eyes are half-veiled as though she were lost in contemplation, taking counsel with her God. The little Child does not return the gaze of the beholder, as happens in so many pictures, rather He draws our eyes upward to Mary as if to tell us to look for Counsel there, in the very Seat of Wisdom. It is a picture to be loved, a plain and common picture, a pious image to be copied and hung in the homes of the poor. That is all the sweet Mother of Good Counsel asks for her picture: a home in our midst, by our firesides, a family to guard and watch over, hearts that will love and venerate her.

Overshadowed by the Holy Ghost, Mary became the Mother of God. His gifts of Wisdom, Understanding, and Counsel belong to her. She is Our Mother of Good Counsel because she is the Spouse of God the Holy Ghost. If to her was granted the wisdom to counsel her Son, surely she has the wisdom to counsel poor humanity. In her there is the wisdom of ages. For 2 000 years, she has been watching the children of men upon this earth. Our Lady of Good Counsel knows how to help us. She can help us. She wants to aid and counsel us! Once she sees upon a soul the sign of the Cross of her Son, that soul may count upon all her assistance. She loves with an undying love all those for whom her Son died.

God trusted her with His own Son,
Who clung to her till life was done.
Through sorrow none can comprehend
She mothered Jesus to the end.
And if you think her love may fail,
You thrust within her heart a nail!

Our Mother of Good Counsel has been called the Madonna of the Popes. Pope Leo XIII deserves to be ranked among the great lovers of this devotion. He established the white scapular worn by her servants, and his motto is like a watchword to the clients of Mary: “Children,” he told the faithful, “follow her counsels!” To all she gives what is most needed to help us in this vale of tears; she gives us her Good Counsel.

Bulletin for the Third Sunday after Easter, 25 April 2010.

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Saint Blaise

Here followeth the life of Saint Blaise, and first of his name.

St Blaise

Blaise comes from blandus, sweet; or it comes from bela, robe, and sior, small. For he was sweet in his speech, clothed with the robe of virtue, and small through the humility of his actions.

Blaise had won such fame by his gentleness and holiness that the Christians of Cappadocia elected him their bishop: and when the persecutions of Diocletian compelled him to quit his bishopric, he took refuge in a cave, and there led the life of a hermit. The birds brought his food to him, and came to him in flocks, not flying away until he had blessed them. And when any of them was ailing, it came to him, and was restored to health.

One day the governor’s men had hunted over the countryside without finding any game; and coming to the place where Saint Blaise had set up his dwelling, they saw a great gathering of birds and other animals crowding about the hermit as if to seek his protection. And as it turned out, the huntsmen could not lay a hand on any of them. Overcome with surprise, they made this known to their master, who ordered the hermit to be brought to him. That very night, Saint Blaise thrice saw Christ in a dream, saying to him: “Arise, and offer sacrifice to Me!” Whereupon the soldiers came up and said: “Come, the governor summons thee!” And Saint Blaise answered: “Welcome, my children! I see now that God has not forgotten me!”

Throughout the journey he preached incessantly and performed many miracles in the sight of his warders.

A woman brought to him her son, who had a fishbone caught in his throat; and setting him down at the hermit’s feet, tearfully besought him to heal the child. And Saint Blaise, extending his hands over him, prayed God to cure him; and instantly the child was made well.

St Blaise blesses and cures the boy who had a fishbone stuck to his throat.

Another woman, who was very poor, came and asked the saint to obtain the return of her only pig, which had been carried off by a wolf. And the saint, smiling, said to her: “Good woman, be not troubled! Thy pig will be returned to thee!” And at that very moment the wolf was seen running toward them, bringing back to the widow the pig which he had stolen.

As soon as he was come to the city, Saint Blaise was thrown into prison. On the morrow the governor arraigned him, and sought at first to beguile him with soft words, saying: “Greetings, Blaise, friend of the gods!” and Blaise returned: “Greetings to thee likewise, excellent governor! But give not the name of gods to the demons who are burning in Hell with those who honour them!” Infuriated, the governor had him beaten with rods and led back to prison. And Blaise said to him: “Fool! Thinkest thou that thy punishments will rob me of the love of a God Who is within me, and Who gives me the strength to bear any pain whatsoever?” And when the widow to whom he had restored the pig learned that he was in prison, she killed the pig and sent the head and feet to the saint, together with a loaf and a tallow candle. And Saint Blaise, after he had appeased his hunger, sent word to the widow: “Offer a candle every year in the church which shall bear my name, and it will be well with thee, and with all who shall do in like manner! This the widow did each year, and lived prosperously thenceforth.

Meanwhile the governor, seeing that he could not force the saint to worship the idols, had him bound to a stake, and commanded that his flesh be torn with iron spikes; after which he was again led back to gaol. Seven women, however, followed the saint, and gathered up the drops of his blood. The governor ordered them to be seized, and tried to force them to sacrifice to the gods. But they said: “If it be thy wish that we adore thy gods, have them brought to the bank of the pond; and when they have been washed, we shall adore them!” To this the governor gladly consented. And the seven women laid hands on the idols, and threw them into the middle of the pond, saying: “Now we shall see if these be gods. And when the governor, angered beyond measure, laboured his officers with reproaches for allowing such a sacrilege, the seven women said to him: “If these idols had been gods, they would surely have foreseen what we had in mind to do to them!” Then the prefect made ready molten lead, iron rakes, and seven iron helmets reddened in the fire, and, beside these, seven linen robes. And he told the women to choose between the robes and the most frightful torments. Then one of the women, who was the mother of two small children, laid hold of the robes and threw them into the fire. And her babes said to her: “Dearest mother, do not leave us behind, but as thou hast plenished us with the sweetness of thy milk, so now fill us with the sweetness of the Kingdom of Heaven!” Then the governor had them lashed to the stake, and the executioners laid open their flesh with iron points. But their flesh remained as white as snow, and from it milk spurted forth instead of blood. And while they were undergoing these tortures, an angel appeared to them, and comforted them with the words: “Be without fear, for the good workman, who has well commenced his task and finishes it as well, shall have his reward!” Then the governor had them thrown into a burning furnace; but the fire was quenched forthwith, and they emerged unharmed. And the governor said to them: “Have done now with your sorceries, and adore our gods! But they answered: “Finish what thou hast begun, for already the gates of Heaven stand open for us!” The governor therefore commanded that their heads be cut off. And when the headsman drew near, they fell to their knees and prayed as follows: “O God, Who hast delivered us from the powers of darkness and hast led us toward the light, receive our souls into eternal life!” Whereupon their heads were severed, and they departed to Heaven.

Next the governor summoned Saint Blaise anew, and said to him: “For the last time, wilt thou or wilt thou not adore the gods?” And Blaise responded: “Blasphemer, I fear not thy threats! Here is my body, do with it as thou seest fit!” The governor gave the order to cast him into the pond. But Saint Blaise made the sign of the cross over the waters of the pond, and at once they became as firm as the dry earth. And the saint said: “If your gods are true gods, give proof of their power by walking upon this water!” And sixty-five men walked into the water and were drowned. An angel then came down to Saint Blaise and said to him: “Blaise, come out of the pond, and go to receive the crown which God has prepared for thee!” And when he came out of the water, the governor said to him: Dost thou still refuse to adore the gods?” To which Blaise answered: “Know, wretch, that I am a servant of Christ, and cannot adore demons!” The governor sentenced him to be beheaded. And the saint, before offering his neck to the headsman, prayed to God that all who should be suffering from a malady of the throat, and should implore his aid, might be heard and healed. And a voice from Heaven said to him that his prayer was granted. Then the saint was beheaded, and the two children with him. This martyrdom took place about the year of the Lord 287.

(translated from The Golden Legend by Jacobus de Voragine)

Bulletin for the Septuagesima Sunday, 31 January 2010.

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Brief History of the Miraculous Medal

Zoe Laboure was born at Fain-lès-Moutiers, Burgundy, France to the farmer Pierre Labouré and Louise Laboure as the ninth of eleven children on May 2, 1806. From an early age felt a call to the religious life. When Catherine was nine years old, her saintly mother died on October 9, 1815. After the burial service, little Catherine retired to her room, stood on a chair, took our Lady’s statue from the wall, kissed it, and said: “Now, dear Lady, you are to be my mother.” On January 25, 1818, Catherine made her First Communion. One day she had a dream in which a priest said to her: “My daughter, you may flee me now, but one day you will to come to me. Do not forget that God has plans for you.” Sometime later, while visiting a hospital of the Daughters of Charity at Chatillon-sur-Seine, she noticed a priest’s picture on the wall. She asked a sister who he might be, and was told: “Our Holy Founder Saint Vincent de Paul.” This was the same priest Catherine had seen in the dream. Catherine knew she was in the right place.

Later, on January 1830, Catherine began her postulancy at Chatillon. On Wednesday, April 21, 1830, Catherine Labouré entered the novitiate of the Daughters of Charity, located at their motherhouse, Rue du Bac 140, Paris. taking the name Catherine. On the eve of the Feast of Saint Vincent de Paul, July 19, the Sister Superior spoke to the novices about the virtues of their Holy Founder and gave each of the novices a piece of cloth from the holy founder’s surplice. Because of her extreme love, Catherine split her piece down the middle, swallowing half and placing the rest in her prayer book. She earnestly prayed to Saint Vincent that she might, with her own eyes, see the Mother of God.

St Catherine Labouré

First Apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary on 19 July 1830

It is 11.30 pm; Sister Catherine Laboure (24 years old) wakes up as she hears her name called three times. She opens the curtains of her cell and sees her Guardian Angel in de form of a 5 year old child. He says: “follow me to the chapel, where the Virgin Mary awaits you”. Catherine Laboure hastily dresses herself and follows him to the chapel. The chapel is lit as for midnight-Mass, but she can’t see the Blessed Virgin. She then kneels and prays. After half an hour her guardian angel says: “there is the Blessed Virgin Mary”. Catherine Laboure hears a rustle like that of silk and to the left of St. Joseph she sees the Blessed Virgin Mary descend and sit herself on the chair of the Priest. Within a moment she is on her knees in front of the Blessed Virgin, with her hands confidently folded on Mary’s knees. This is the beginning of a two hour long conversation. The Blessed Virgin Mary tells her that God will charge her with a mission. In the process she will experience many difficulties. The Blessed Virgin already speaks of bad times ahead. The whole world will be plunged into confusion through all sorts of incidents. The Cross will be treated with contempt; it will be cast to earth. The side of our Lord will be pierced again. The Blessed Virgin says this with a very sorrowful look on her face. Encouragingly though, she adds:

“… but come to the foot of this altar and here graces will be bestowed upon all, who ask with confidence and fervour. they will be given to the rich and to the poor.”

Second Apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary on 27 November 1830

It is 5.30pm, and the Sisters are in the chapel for the hour of Meditation. Suddenly Catherine Laboure hears, to her right, the same rustle as before; it is the Blessed Virgin Mary. She stops to the left near the painting of St. Joseph. This whole apparition is conducted in scenes and sign-language. The Blessed Virgin “standing in space”. She was dressed in white, standing on a globe and holding a golden ball, with rings on her fingers flashing with light. An inner voice told her that the ball represented the whole world and that the rays coming from Mary’s fingers represented graces for individuals. Then, a second phase: The golden ball then vanished as this apparition changed to represent Mary with her arms outstretched, inside an oval frame with golden lettering:

O Mary conceived without Sin, pray for us who have recourse to Thee.

Mary gave her this instruction: “have a medal struck on this model. All those who carry this will receive Grace in abundance, especially if they wear the medal around their neck and say this prayer confidently, they will receive special protection from the Mother of God and abundant graces”. Then it is although the whole scene turns around and Catherine Laboure can see the back of the medal: in the centre is the letter M, from where a Cross ascends with at its base a cross-beam which passes through the letter M and below this the two hearts of Jesus and Mary, one crowned with thorns the other pierced by the sword of sorrow. The whole is surrounded with a crown of 12 stars recalling the vision of St. John in the twelfth chapter of the Apocalypse or Book of Revelations. Catherine Laboure hears, “the M with the Cross and the two hearts say enough”.

During the next year this apparition occurred five times and each time with the same instructions: “have a medal struck on this model, and all those who wear it will receive great graces, especially when worn around the neck”. Sister Catherine endured many humiliations, but she persevered. It took two years before her confessor, Father Aladel, a Vincentian priest, had the medal struck. The original name of the medal is that of holy Mary’s Immaculate Conception; only after 7 years was the name changed to the “Miraculous Medal”. Because of the many answered prayers, the conversions and the cures, some 10 million medals were sold during the first 5 years. The short prayer: “O Mary conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to Thee”, has since been prayed innumerable times by believers, so that the entire Christianity became familiar with Mary’s “Immaculate Conception”. It was Pope Pius IX who made it a rule of faith. This was received with great joy by the entire Church. Four years later, Mary came as though to confirm this, when She said to Bernadette at Lourdes:

“I am the Immaculate Conception.”

Catherine Labouré died on 31st December 1876. When her body was exhumed, after fifty-seven years of burial, it was found to be completely incorrupt and supple. Her eyes were as blue as the day she died. On 28th May, 1933 she was beatified by Pope Pius XI. This occasion was witnessed by 50,000 people, of which there were 8,000 children of Mary, veiled in white, all wearing the Miraculous Medal. On 27th July, 1947 Catherine Laboure was canonized by Pope Pius XII. Here again many believers were present, including more than 10,000 children of Mary, veiled in white.

Incorrupt

The incorrupt body of St Catherine Labouré

Many healings, including those of people for whom there was totally no hope, were attributed to the “Miraculous Medal”. Just in the American city of Philadelphia alone, between 1930 and 1950, more than 750.000 favours were granted and registered. Catherine Labouré is still lying in state at the right of the altar in the chapel Rue du Bac 140, in Paris and she still looks as though she only died yesterday!

Chapelle de Notre Dame de la Medaille Miraculeuse

Bulletin for the Last Sunday after Pentecost, 22 November 2009

Chapelle de Notre Dame de la Medaille Miraculeuse in Rue du Bac

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St Maria Goretti

It was a hot, humid day in early July.  After the meal everyone but Maria went back to their threshing.  Maria sat sewing.  She was only eleven years old but her father, Luigi Goretti, had died and her mother and brothers had to work in the fields, so the little girl was in charge of the household duties.  They lived near Anzio, Italy, in a house they shared with Giovanni Serenelli, a widower, and his son, Alessandro, nineteen.  This day Giovanni sat down to rest, saying he was sick, at the bottom of the stairs leading up to where they lived.  On the landing at the top of the stairs Maria’s little sister, Teresa, and a neighbor’s baby girl were asleep on a blanket.

Alessandro was taken with Maria’s beauty and had for some time tried to seduce her.  He spoke obscenely to her, made lewd suggestions and threatened to kill Maria and her mother if she told anyone.

Now Alessandro, in an ox-cart in the field going among the stacks of beans, suddenly gave the reins to another and said he had to go back to the house to get something.

Alessandro jumped down from the cart.  He spoke to his father dozing at the foot of the stairs and went up into the house.  He said nothing to Maria and went to his room.  He came out and called to her but she did not answer, going on with her sewing.  This infuriated the hot-passioned youth and he grabbed the girl and dragged her into the kitchen and kicked the door shut.  She fought him when he told her his intention.  She cried, “No. It’s a sin.  God does not want it.  You’ll go to hell!”

No! Its a sin! You will go to hell!

"No. It's a sin. God does not want it. You'll go to hell!"

Alessandro grew even more angry at her resistance, raised a knife and threatened her.  She said, “No, no!”  In a craze he struck her again and again with the knife.  She shouted for help but the closed door was heavy and the noise of the threshing was loud.  No one heard her.  She fell to the floor, then dragged herself to the door.  She opened it as Alessandro ran for his room.  She screamed and this made him turn back.  In a frenzy, he stabbed the girl six more times.  Dropping the knife he rushed to his room and locked the door.

Alessandro’s father, asleep, did not hear Maria’s shriek, but he woke up to the loud crying of the babies.  He jumped up, found Maria in a pool of blood, and yelled wildly to the threshers.

Maria’s body was horribly mangled.  It was a miracle that she was still alive.  She could hardly breathe.  Her mother fainted.  They asked who did this terrible thing; she whispered, “It was Alessandro.  He tried to make me do something that was a sin.  But he couldn’t make me do it.  He couldn’t.  I wouldn’t let him.”  She was taken to the hospital in a nearby town.

The police came to get the defiant Alessandro.  A crowd of angry farmers surrounded the house.  The police sent for more guards to take him away.  The mob wanted to lynch him on the spot.

The doctors were astonished that the girl was still alive.  Her pain-racked body was covered with blood.  They said it was hopeless.  They called for the priest.  Someone said, “She is an angel.”

Maria was burning with fever and suffering but she said, “I’m all right.”  Her mother, in tears, gave her the crucifix to kiss and that comforted her.  The chaplain enrolled her in the Children of Mary and the blessed medal was hung around her neck on a green ribbon. She kissed the medal often.  She forgave Alessandro, as she fervently received Holy communion for the last time.  She said, “It is Jesus, whom I shall soon seen in heaven.”

The pain grew worse.  When her dear mother asked her to pray for all of them, she could no longer speak but her eyes said that she would gladly do so.  And then Maria Goretti died.  At the funeral, praying for her, almost all asked her to pray for them.

This young girl, beautiful in body and beautiful in soul, was canonized by Pope Pius XII on June 24, 1950.  Her mother was present.  Her feast day is July 6.

The Holy Father, speaking of Maria, saw her as “the perfect fruit of the kind of Catholic home where the family prays.”  This, he said, was the perfect “old way of education” which cannot be replaced.  He said that this little unlearned farm girl, “a humble daughter of the people has been supremely exalted.”  He stressed the wholeness of her life.  She, above all, stands for purity, but also for love of the spiritual over the material, docility to parents, harsh daily labor and sacrifice in poverty, and a great love of Jesus in the Eucharist and devotion to his holy Mother.

Since her death, Maria has been the instrument of numerous cures and miracles, including the conversion of her murderer.

A repentant Alessandro Serenelli prays before the image of St Maria Goretti

A repentant Alessandro Serenelli prays before the image of St Maria Goretti.

The Holy Father observed during her canonization that Maria longed “to ascend to heaven by the only road that leads there, which is religion, the love of Christ and the heroic observance of his commandments.”

Ceremonies at the Canonisation of St Maria Goretti
Canonisation of St Maria Goretti

Maria Goretti is an excellent model and intercessor for today’s Catholic youth, confronted by a sea of immorality poured out on the world by the modern media.  She offers children and young people a refuge, protection, a serene spirit and the deep joy of the pure of heart.

Pray for Purity

St Maria Goretti

St Maria Goretti

O Saint Maria Goretti, who, strengthened by God’s grace, did not hesitate, even at the age of eleven, to shed your blood and sacrifice life itself to defend your virginal purity, deign to look graciously on the unhappy human race which has strayed far from the path of eternal salvation.  Teach us all, and especially our youth, the courage and promptness to flee for love of Jesus, anything that could offend Him or stain our souls with sin.  Obtain for us from Our Lord and Our Lady Immaculate, victory in temptation, comfort in the sorrows of life, and the grace which we earnestly beg of thee, purity in soul and body, so that we may one day enjoy with thee the imperishable glory of heaven.  Amen.

Short Prayers to Repeat in Times of Temptation

O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee.

My Jesus, Mercy!

Jesus, Mary, Joseph, I love You, save souls.

My Jesus, pardon and mercy, by the merits of Thy Holy Wounds.

Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, I trust in Thee!

(by Reverend Rawley Myers)

Bulletin for the Fifth Sunday after Pentecost, 5 July 2009

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Miracles of Lourdes

Introduction to Lourdes

Que soy era Immaculada Concepciou.

"Que soy era Immaculada Councepciou."

In 1858 in the grotto of Massabielle, near Lourdes, France, the Blessed Virgin Mary appeared 18 times to Bernadette Soubirous, a 14 year old peasant girl. She identified herself as The Immaculate Conception. She gave Bernadette a message for all: “Pray and do penance for the conversion of the world.” The Church investigated Bernadette’s claims for four years before approving devotion to Our Lady of Lourdes. Lourdes has since become one of the most famous shrines, attracting more than a million pilgrims each year. There have been thousands of miraculous cures at this shrine.

A Medical Bureau was established in 1882 to test the authenticity of the cures. The doctors include unbelievers as well as believers and any doctor is welcome to take part in the examination of the alleged cures. As many as 500 medical men of all faiths or no faith have taken advantage of the invitation each year. Many books and movies tell the story of Lourdes. Even Hollywood made a movie of this remarkable event in the 1940′s entitled “The Song of Bernadette” which won six academy awards.

No one leaves Lourdes without a gain in faith. Moral and spiritual cures are more marvelous than physical cures. Some go to Lourdes with lifetime prejudices, yet their minds are cleared in a sudden manner. Frequently skepticism gives way to faith; coldness and antagonism become whole hearted love of God. Again and again those who are not cured of bodily pain receive an increase of faith and resignation – true peace of soul. The story of two outstanding miracles that occurred at Lourdes are told below.

The Story of Gabriel Gargam

The case of Gabriel Gargam is probably one of the best known of all the thousands of cures at Lourdes, partly because he was so well known at the Shrine for half a century, partly because it was a twofold healing, spiritual and physical. Born in 1870 of good Catholic parents, he gave early promise of being a clever student and a fervent Catholic. The promise was not fulfilled in the most important respect for, at 15 years of age, he had already lost his faith. He obtained a position in the postal service and was carrying out his duties as a sorter in December of 1899, when the train on which he was traveling from Bordeaux to Paris collided with another train, running at 50 miles per hour. Gargam was thrown fifty two feet from the train. He lay in the snow, badly injured and unconscious for seven hours. He was paralyzed from the waist down. He was barely alive when lifted onto a stretcher. Taken to a hospital, his existence for some time was a living death. After eight months he had wasted away to a mere skeleton, weighing but seventy-eight pounds, although normally a big man. His feet became gangrenous. He could take no solid food and was obliged to take nourishment by a tube. Only once in twenty-four hours could he be fed even that way. He brought suit for damages against the railroad. The Appellate Court confirmed the verdict of the former courts and granted him 6,000 francs annually, and besides, an indemnity of 60,000 francs.

Gargam’s condition was pitiable in the extreme. He could not help himself even in the most trifling needs. Two trained nurses were needed day and night to assist him. That was Gabriel Gargam as he was after the accident, and as he would continue to be until death relieved him. About his desperate condition there could be no doubt. The railroad fought the case on every point. There was no room for deception or hearsay. Two courts attested to his condition, and the final payment of the railroad left the case a matter of record. Doctors testified that the man was a hopeless cripple for life, and their testimony was not disputed.

Previous to the accident Gargam had not been to Church for fifteen years. His aunt, who was a nun of the Order of the Sacred Heart, begged him to go to Lourdes. He refused. She continued her appeals to him to place himself in the hands of Our Lady of Lourdes. He was deaf to all her prayers. After continuous pleading of his mother he consented to go to Lourdes. It was now two years since the accident, and not for a moment had he left his bed all that time. He was carried on a stretcher to the train. The exertion caused him to faint, and for a full hour he was unconscious. They were on the point of abandoning the pilgrimage, as it looked as if he would die on the way, but the mother insisted, and the journey was made.

Arrived at Lourdes, he went to confession and received Holy Communion. There was no change in his condition. Later he was carried to the miraculous pool and tenderly placed in its waters – no effect. Rather a bad effect resulted, for the exertion threw him into a swoon and he lay apparently dead. After a time, as he did not revive, they thought him dead. Sorrowfully they wheeled the carriage back to the hotel. On the way back they saw the procession of the Blessed Sacrament approaching. They stood aside to let it pass, having placed a cloth over the face of the man whom they supposed to be dead.

Blessing of the sick with the Blessed Sacrament

Blessing of the sick with the Blessed Sacrament

As the priest passed carrying the Sacred Host, he pronounced Benediction over the sorrowful group around the covered body. Soon there was a movement from under the covering. To the amazement of the bystanders, the body raised itself to a sitting posture. While the family were looking on dumbfounded and the spectators gazed in amazement, Gargam said in a full, strong voice that he wanted to get up. They thought that it was a delirium before death, and tried to soothe him, but he was not to be restrained. He got up and stood erect, walked a few paces and said that he was cured. The multitude looked in wonder, and than fell on their knees and thanked God for this new sign of His power at the Shrine of His Blessed Mother. As Gargam had on him only invalid’s clothes, he returned to the carriage and was wheeled back to the hotel. There he was soon dressed, and proceeded to walk about as if nothing had ever ailed him. For two years hardly any food had passed his lips but now he sat down to the table and ate a hearty meal.

On August 20th, 1901, sixty prominent doctors examined Gargam. Without stating the nature of the cure, they pronounced him entirely cured. Gargam, out of gratitude to God in the Holy Eucharist and His Blessed Mother, consecrated himself to the service of the invalids at Lourdes.

He sat up a small business and married a pious lady who aided him in his apostolate for the greater knowledge of Mary Immaculate. For over fifty years he returned annually to Lourdes and worked as a brancardier. The Golden Jubilee of his cure was the occasion of a remarkable celebration during the French National Pilgrimage in 1951. M. Gargam sat in a chair in the Rosary Square, surrounded by 1,500 sick and 50,000 other pilgrims while a description of his twofold healing was given by the celebrated apologist, Canon Belleney. His last visit to the Shrine was in August 1952: he died the following March, at the age of eighty-three years.

The Story of John Traynor

In some respects the story of John Traynor is similar to that of Gabriel Gargam. Yet in many ways it is different. After their cures, the two men were brancardiers at Lourdes at the same time and may have discussed their cases with each other.

John Traynor was a native of Liverpool, England. His Irish mother died when he was quite young, but the faith which she instilled in her son remained with him the rest of his life. His injuries dated from World War I, when he was a soldier in the Naval Brigade of the Royal British Marines. He took part in the unsuccessful Antwerp expedition of October, 1914, and was hit in the head by shrapnel. He remained unconscious for five weeks. Later, in Egypt, he received a bullet wound in the leg. In the Dardanelles, he distinguished himself in battle but was finally brought down when he was sprayed with machine gun bullets while taking part in a bayonet charge. He was wounded in the head and chest, and one bullet went through his upper right arm and lodged under his collarbone.

As a result of these wounds, Traynor’s right arm was paralyzed and the muscles atrophied. His legs were partially paralyzed, and he was epileptic. Sometimes he had as many as three fits a day. By 1916, Traynor had undergone four operations in an attempt to connect the severed muscles of this right arm. All four operations ended in failure. By this time he had been discharged from the service. He was given a one hundred percent pension because he was completely and permanently disabled. He spent much time in various hospitals as an epileptic patient. In April, 1920, his skull was operated on in an attempt to remove some of the shrapnel. This operation did not help his epilepsy, and it left a hole about an inch wide in his skull. The pulsating of his brain could be seen through this hole. A silver plate was inserted in order to shield the brain.

He lived on Grafton Street in Liverpool with his wife and children. He was utterly helpless. He had to be lifted from his bed to his wheelchair in the morning and back into bed at night. Arrangements had been made to have him admitted to the Mosley Hill Hospital for Incurables.

In July, 1923, Traynor heard that the Liverpool diocese was organizing a pilgrimage to Lourdes. He had always had a great devotion to the Blessed Virgin and determined to join the pilgrimage. He took a gold sovereign which he had been saving for an emergency and used it as the first payment on a ticket. At first his wife was very much disturbed by the idea of her husband making such a difficult trip. His friends tried to talk him out of it. His doctor told him the trip would be suicide. The government ministry of pensions protested against the idea. One of the priests in charge of the pilgrimage begged him to cancel his booking. All of this was to no avail. Traynor had made up his mind, and there was no changing it. When his wife saw how much he wanted to make the trip, she decided to help him. In order to raise the money for the pilgrimage, the Traynors sold some of their furniture; Mrs. Traynor pawned some of her jewelry.

There was much excitement at the railroad station the day the pilgrimage was to leave. In addition to the noise and confusion that accompanies the departure of every large pilgrimage, there was the additional hubbub caused by the curious who had come to see Traynor. His trip had aroused much interest, and at the station a great number of people crowded about his wheel chair. Newspaper reporters and photographers were on hand to cover the event. As a result of all this, Traynor reached the station platform too late to get on the first train. The second train was crowded, and once more an attempt was made to talk him out of taking the trip. Traynor, however, said that he was determined to go if he had to ride in the coal tender.

The Sanctuary of Lourdes

The Sanctuary of Lourdes

The trip was extremely trying, and Traynor was very sick. Three times, during the journey across France, the directors of the pilgrimage wished to take him off the train and put him in a hospital. Each time there was no hospital where they stopped, and so they had to keep him on board. He was more dead than alive when he reached Lourdes on July 22 and was taken to the Asile. Two Protestant girls from Liverpool, who were serving as volunteer nurses in the Asile, recognized Traynor and offered to take care of him. He gladly accepted the offer. He had several hemorrhages during his six days there and a number of epileptic fits. So bad was his condition that one woman took it upon herself to write to his wife and tell her that there was no hope for him and that he would be buried in Lourdes.

Traynor managed to bathe in the water from the grotto nine times, and he attended all the ceremonies to which the sick are taken. It was only by sheer force of will that he was able to do this. Not only were his own infirmities a serious obstacle but the brancardiers and others in attendance were reluctant to take him out for fear he would die on the way. Once he had an epileptic fit as he was going to the piscines. When he recovered, the brancardiers turned his chair to take him back to the Asile. He protested, but they insisted. They were forced to give in when he seized the wheel with his good hand and would not let the chair budge until it went in the direction of the baths.

On the afternoon of July 25 when he was in the bath, his paralyzed legs became suddenly agitated. He tried to get to his feet, but the brancardiers prevented him. They dressed him, put him back in his wheel chair, and hurried him to Rosary Square for the Blessing of the Sick. Most of the other sick were already lined up. He was the third last on the outside as one faces the church.

Let us hear in Traynor’s own words what happened after that. This is the story as he told it to Father Patrick O’Connor.

“The procession came winding its way back, as usual, to the church and at the end walked the Archbishop of Rheims, carrying the Blessed Sacrament. He blessed the two ahead of me, came to me, made the Sign of the Cross with the monstrance and moved on to the next. He had just passed by, when I realized that a great change had taken place in me. My right arm, which had been dead since 1915, was violently agitated. I burst its bandages and blessed myself – for the first time in years.

I had no sudden pain that I can recall and certainly had no vision. I simply realized that something momentous had happened. I attempted to rise from my stretcher, but the brancardiers were watching me. I suppose I had a bad name for my obstinacy. They held me down, and a doctor or a nurse gave me a hypo. Apparently they thought that I was hysterical and about to create a scene. Immediately after the final Benediction, they rushed me back to the Asile. I told them that I could walk and proved it by taking seven steps. I was very tired and in pain. They put me back in bed and gave me another hypo after a while.

They had me in a small ward on the ground floor. As I was such a troublesome case, they stationed brancardiers in relays to watch me and keep me from doing anything foolish. Late that night, they placed a brancardier on guard outside the door of the ward. There were two other sick men in the room, including one who was blind.

The effect of the hypos began to wear off during the night, but I had no full realization that I was cured. I was awake for most of the night. No lights were on.

The chimes of the big Basilica rang the hours and half hours as usual through the night, playing the air of the Lourdes Ave Maria. Early in the morning, I heard them ringing, and it seemed to me that I fell asleep at the beginning of the Ave. It could have been a matter of only a few seconds, but at the last stroke I opened my eyes and jumped out of bed. First, I knelt on the floor to finish the rosary I had been saying. Then I dashed for the door, pushed aside the two brancardiers and ran out into the passage and the open air. Previously, I had been watching the brancardiers and planning to evade them. I may say here that I had not walked since 1915, and my weight was down to 112 pounds.

Dr. Marley was outside the door. When he saw the man over whom he had been watching during the pilgrimage, and whose death he had expected, push two brancardiers aside and run out of the ward, he fell back in amazement. Out in the open now, I ran toward the Grotto, which is about two or three hundred yards from the Asile. This stretch of ground was graveled then, not paved, and I was barefoot. I ran the whole way to the grotto without getting the least mark or cut on my bare feet. The brancardiers were running after me, but they could not catch up with me. When they reached the grotto, there I was on my knees, still in my night clothes, praying to our Lady and thanking her. All I knew was that I should thank her and the grotto was the place to do it. The brancardiers stood back, afraid to touch me.”

A strange feature of Traynor’s case was that he did not completely realize what had happened to him. He knew that a great favor had been bestowed upon him and that he should be thankful, but he had no idea of the magnitude of the favor. He was completely dazed. It did not seem strange to him that he was walking, and he could not figure out why everyone was staring at him. He did not remember how gravely ill he had been for many years.

A crowd of people gathered about Traynor while he was praying at the grotto. After about twenty minutes, he arose from his knees, surprised and rather annoyed by the audience he had attracted. The people fell back to allow him to pass. At the crowned statute of our Lady, he stopped and knelt again. His mother had taught him that he should always make some sacrifice when he wished to venerate the Virgin. He had no money to give. The few shillings he had left after buying a railroad ticket, he had spent to buy rosaries and medals for his wife and children. He therefore made the only sacrifice he could think of: he promised our Lady that he would give up cigarettes.

The news of his cure had spread rapidly, and a great crowd was waiting at the Asile. Traynor could not understand what they were doing there. He went in and got dressed. Then he went into the washroom. A number of men were there ahead of him.

“Good morning, gentlemen!” said Traynor cheerily.

But there was no answer. The men just looked at him; they were too overcome to speak.

Traynor was puzzled. Why was everyone acting so strangely this morning?

When he got back to his ward, a priest who was visiting at Lourdes came in and said, “Is there anyone who can serve Mass?”

“Yes, I can,” Traynor volunteered.

The priest who knew nothing yet about the cure accepted the offer, and Traynor served Mass in the chapel of the Asile. It did not seem a bit out of the ordinary to be doing so.

In the dining room of the Asile where Traynor went to eat his breakfast, the other patients stared at him in amazement. Later when he strolled outdoors, the crowd that had gathered there made a rush at him. Surprised and disconcerted he made a quick retreat into the enclosure.

A Mr. Cunningham, who was also on the pilgrimage, came to talk to him. The visitor spoke casually, but it was evident that he was making a great effort to control his excitement.

“Good morning, John. Are you feeling all right?”

“Yes, Mr. Cunningham, quite all right. Are you feeling all right?” Then he came to the matter that was puzzling him. “What are all those people doing outside?”

“They’re there, Jack, because they are glad to see you.

“Well, it’s nice of them, and I’m glad to see them, but I wish they’d leave me alone.”

Mr. Cunningham told him that one of the priests of the pilgrimage – the one who had opposed his coming – wished to see him. There was much difficulty getting through the crowd, but they finally got to the hotel where the priest was waiting. The priest asked him if he was all right. All this solicitude was most bewildering.

“Yes, I’m quite well,” Traynor answered, “and I hope you feel well, too.”

The priest broke down and began to cry.

Traynor traveled home in a first-class compartment despite all his protests. As they were going across France, Archbishop Keating of Liverpool came into his compartment. Traynor knelt to receive his blessing. The Archbishop bade him rise.

“John, I think I should be getting your blessing,” he said.

Traynor did not know what the Archbishop meant.

The Archbishop led him over to the bed, and they both sat down. Looking at Traynor closely, His Excellency said, “John, do you realize how ill you have been and that you have been miraculously cured by the Blessed Virgin?”

“Suddenly,” Traynor later told Father O’Connor, “everything came back to me, the memory of my years of illness and the sufferings of the journey to Lourdes and how ill I had been in Lourdes itself. I began to cry, and the Archbishop began to cry, and we both sat there, crying like two children. After a little talk with him, I felt composed. Now I realized fully what had happened.”

Someone suggested to Traynor that he telegraph his wife. Instead of telling her that he had been completely cured. he merely said. “Am better – Jack.” His wife was very much pleased to receive this message. She had been very much upset when the woman in the pilgrimage had told her that he was dying. But she was not prepared for the glorious news that was to come! She was the only one who was not, for the story had been in the Liverpool papers. Since she had not happened to see the story, those about her decided not to tell her. They thought it would be nicer to surprise her.

It seemed that all Liverpool was at the station to greet the cured man upon his return. When Mrs. Traynor reached the platform, she told who she was and asked to be allowed through the crowd.

“Well,” said the official in charge, “all I can say is that Mr. Traynor must be a Mohammedan, because there are seventy or eighty Mrs. Traynors on the platform now.”

In an attempt to save Traynor from being crushed by the crowd which was growing every minute, the railway company stopped the train before it got to the station. The Archbishop walked toward the crowd. He asked the people to restrain their enthusiasm when they saw Traynor and to disperse peacefully after they had had a look at him. They promised that they would do so.

Despite this promise there was a stampede when Traynor appeared on the platform. The police had to clear a passage for him to pass through.

The joy of Traynor’s family upon his return and their deep gratitude to Our Lady of Lourdes could never be put into words. The cured man went into the coal and hauling business and had no trouble lifting 200-pound sacks of coal. He went back to Lourdes every summer to act as a brancardier. He died on the eve of the Feast of the Immaculate Conception in 1943. The cause of his death was in no way related to the wounds which had been cured at Lourdes.

The two non-Catholic girls who looked after Traynor at Lourdes came into the Church as a result of the cure. Their family followed their example, and so did the Anglican minister of the church they had been attending. A great number of conversions in Liverpool resulted from the miracle.

Although the cure took place in 1923, the Medical Bureau waited till 1926 to issue its report. Traynor was examined again, and it was found that his cure was permanent. “His right arm which was like a skeleton has recovered all its muscles. The hole near his temple has completely disappeared. He had a certificate from Dr. McConnell of Liverpool attesting that he had not had an epileptic attack since 1923. . . .

“It is known that when the important nerves have been severed, if their regeneration has not been effected (after the most successful operations this would take at least a year) they contract rapidly and become dried up as it were, and certain parts mortify and disappear. In Mr. Traynor’s case, for the cure of his paralyzed arm, new parts had to be created and seamed together. All these things were done simultaneously and instantaneously. At the same time occurred the instant repair of the brain injuries as is proved by the sudden and definite disappearance of the paralysis of both legs and of the epileptic attacks. Finally, a third work was effected which closed the orifice in the brain box. It is a real resurrection which the beneficiary attributes to the power of God and the merciful intercession of Our Lady of Lourdes. The mode of production of this prodigious cure is absolutely outside and beyond the forces of nature.”

As is usual in such cures, John Traynor retained souvenirs of his former afflictions. The right hand did not hang quite normally, and the right forearm was a little less thick than the left. A slight depression was the only trace that was left of the hole in the skull.

If John Traynor and Gabriel Gargam ever discussed their cases and compared notes while both were serving as brancardiers, they must have been amused by one point. Gargam succeeded in having his pension from the railway company discontinued. The British War Pension Ministry, however, insisted upon paying Traynor’s pension till the end of his life. They had examined him thoroughly and found him incurable. They did not care what the Lourdes Medical Bureau said or what any of the doctors who examined Traynor after his return from Lourdes reported. It did not matter that he was engaged in the most strenuous kind of work. They had pronounced him incurable, and incurable he was. This decision was never revoked.

The gift of miracles has never ceased to show its presence in the Catholic Church. “If you would not believe Me” said Our Lord to the Jews, “believe the works I do.”

“The Catholic Faith alone produces miracles, which are never seen among heretics. Plants of this sort cannot grow in a soil cursed by God; they can take root only in that Church where the True Faith is professed… God cannot sanction the performance of a miracle except in favor of the true religion; were He to permit it in support of error, He would deceive us.”

- St. Alphonsus Marie de Liguori, Bishop & Doctor of the Church

(from the website of St Thomas Aquinas Seminary)

Bulletin of Septuagesima Sunday, 7 February 2009

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