2002-06-16 This Sunday, June 16, Padre Pio (1887-1968) is being canonized as St. Pio of Pietrelcina
June 16, 2002
This Sunday, June 16, Padre Pio (1887-1968) is being canonized
as St. Pio of Pietrelcina. One of the largest crowds ever to gather in
Rome will attend the solemn rites, for he was one of the Church's most
astonishing miracle workers. The miracles are indications of his
sanctity, but his holiness consisted of something even more impressive.
In 1971, Pope Paul VI said: "Look what fame he has had, what
world clientele has gathered around him! But why? Was it because he was
a philosopher? Was it because he was wise? Was it because he was a man
of means? It was because he said the Mass humbly, he heard confessions
from morning to night, and he was, difficult to say, a stamped
representative of the stigmata of Our Lord. He was a man of prayer and
suffering."
As a priest and consecrated religious, St. Pio was "Padre."
Civilization has been built by good fathers, and the Liturgy invokes
"Abraham our Father in Faith" and all the patriarchs as witnesses.
Washington is the Father of our Country and Lincoln was Father Abraham
to an afflicted people. Father's Day is a civil tribute to the
fatherhood which begins with God our Father from whom all earthly
fathers take their name. Bad fathers betray their families and their
civilization. That is true of fathers of children and of our spiritual
fathers who are bishops and priests. The Church is suffering today
because many fathers have failed to obey the model of our Holy Father
the Pope.
These months will see the canonization of some great men,
each a model of some expression of fatherhood. I want to have a little
temporary shrine to Padre Pio in the church, and to do this for some of
the others too. Our Church and our culture need a good sweeping out by
good fathers who will lead their children in the ways of righteousness.
The way to keep a right focus in these days is to focus on the saints.
The media have a way of ignoring the miracles of the saints, because
they are inexplicable unless you admit the truth of Catholicism.
Fatherhood is a masterwork of virtue. The decree of Padre
Pio's beatification in 1997 said: "It is certain that the Servant of
God, Pio of Pietrelcina, to the world Francesco Forgione, professed
Priest of the Order of Friar Minor Capuchin, has practiced to an heroic
degree the theological virtues of faith, hope and charity, both towards
God and towards neighbor, as well as the Cardinal virtues of prudence,
justice, fortitude, temperance and the attached virtues"
It is sad for the moment that there are problems in the
Church caused by irreverence and immorality. It is wonderful that the
Church's other problem is that we are getting more saints than we can
find room for on the calendar and our altars.
Fr. George W. Rutler
