Wednesday, March 25, 2026

LIKE THE ANGEL GABRIEL

 


Today, the the solemnity of the Annunciation, it is announced that the beatification of VENERABLE FULTON SHEEN will take place Sept. 24 in St. Louis. This day was chosen for the announcement  as the Archbishop  spent his life continuing the work of the Archangel Gabriel.

Due to the great number of people wanting to participate, St. Louis was chosen due to the close proximity to the Diocese of Peoria, where Archbishop Sheen was born, ordained, and first served as a priest. This city has an arena  (The Dome at America’s Center), large enough to hold the many who will come for  the celebration.

On March 6, 2014, the board of medical experts who advise the Congregation for the Causes of Saints unanimously approved a miracle of  Archbishop Sheen’s, in which a stillborn baby survived due to his intercession.

A MODEL FOR SUFFERING

As we continue through the stations of the Cross depicting the last days of Jesus' life and death, we consider the life of another man who offered his sufferings for the life of others.

VENEABLE FAUSTO GEI was born on March 24, 1927, in Brescia to Angelo and Maria Della Biasia. He earned his high school diploma from the Calini Scientific High School and enrolled in the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery at the University of Pavia. Becoming a doctor was his dream.

At the age of twenty, while completing his second year of university, he was struck by a mysterious illness. He diagnosed it himself, which was later confirmed as multiple sclerosis. He told his family, “It's a fatal disease. I don't know how long I'll last."

Abandoned by medical science, he clung to the hope of a miracle, going to Lourdes but was not cured.
Returning from the pilgrimage, he told someone: "I prayed for those who suffered more than me. I want to speak to those who suffer. I have not been able to help them as a doctor, I will do so as a sick person."

While his body gave way under the progression of his illness and his suffering increased day by day,, he portrayed serenity, and peace.


In 1955 he joined the Center for Volunteers of Suffering and gave one of the most profound definitions of the Association: "There are two attitudes that a soul can have when struck by suffering: that of the forced or that of the volunteer. Those forced to suffer are those who, in pain, curse, rebel, despair, without improving, but rather worsen their situation, which thus becomes more difficult and desolate, while in rebellion and sin every possibility of merit and comfort is extinguished, with the risk of transforming one's earthly unhappiness into eternal unhappiness. 

Volunteers to suffer, on the other hand, are those who, without making useless and vain comparisons with those who are "apparently" well and without getting lost in sterile regrets, accept the command of Jesus: "Whoever would come after me, let him deny himself, take up his cross daily and follow me." Souls who have learned from Faith the providential nature of pain, who believe in the love of God and trust in Him even when He puts them to the test, the Volunteers of Suffering agree to continue the Passion of Jesus within themselves, to give glory to the Lord, to sanctify themselves and to extend the fruits of Redemption to all their brothers, especially those most in need of divine mercy. In their submission to the Will of God and in the offering of their own pain, they experience joys and comforts that no earthly happiness can even remotely equal”.

Fausto wrote on 31 July 1956: “I believe I have found the secret of happiness. Despite the physical limitation that afflicts me, I am always serene because I am always happy with everything. The lack of normal activity (normal for men) does not deprive me of serenity. I cannot see my illness as an unjust punishment, but only as a means to reach the goal and to carry out God's plans”.  

He wrote in his spiritual testament: "We must help our brothers and sisters find the path that leads to God. This involves offering suffering and sacrifice, but remember that the key word is: Love, suffer, offer. The salvation of a soul is priceless, and our greatest consolation must be that of having brought it back to the Father's fold... Don't be afraid of some failure: in life you don't always have to win, the important thing is to fight. To do all this, you must ask Our Lady for help, abandoning yourself into her hands. Always remember her favorite prayer, the rosary. For me, it has been the weapon that has given me the best results, especially on days when the devil was most threatening me."

He wrote to Monsignor  Luigil Novarese* (Co-founder of the Apostolate of the Suffering): “I don’t want to be defeated and I want my spirit to always triumph. I am always serene because I am always happy with everything.” 

The monsignor replied: “Live your day, the hours of your day, next to the Most Holy Madonna. She, who has perfectly understood the mystery of suffering, will not fail to support you, guide you, and make you ever more active in your offering.”

Fausto died on March 27, 1968, at the age of 41. Pope Leo declared him Venerable on February 21, 2026.

* Monsignor Novarese was beatuified May 11,  2013.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

STRIPPED



 


“Before He is nailed to the cross, Jesus gives us yet another overwhelming showing of His love, yet another proof of His identification with men in their bitterest humiliation: Jesus is stripped of His garments.

It is hard to bring oneself to reflect on this, yet it is necessary because of what every detail of this dreadful incident can mean to men today.  With all the wounds on His body, the wounds of the scourging, of the falls on the way to Calvary, of the heaviness and the roughness of the cross on His shoulder, Christ’s garments must have been stiff with blood and adhering to His body.  The soldiers would not have treated Him tenderly, although there is no reason to suppose they were fundamentally cruel.  They would undoubtedly have torn His clothes from Him as quickly as they could and as roughly as they must.  It would have been almost as if His skin was being torn off Him.

There, exposed in His nakedness, He stood in front of the whole mob – and, which must have been far harder to bear, in front of those whom He loved, His mother; John, His chosen friend; Mary Magdalen, who washed His feet with her tears.  He stood naked.

He was stripped there on the summit of Calvary not to reveal His sacred body in its perfection.  He was the fairest of the sons of men; no other men had ever had, or ever would have, a body approaching His in perfection; but it was exposed to the world only when it was disfigured by wounds and bruises, only when it was exhausted and almost falling to the ground with weariness.

Again Christ identified Himself with those whom He would indwell through all time.

He stood there naked in front of the world and in front of His Heavenly Father, identified with all those sinners who are found out, whose shame is made public, or, perhaps more terrible for them, shown to those whom they love and from whom, above all others, they would wish to keep it secret...

He stood there identified with everyone who loves, because everyone who loves must be known sooner or later as he is, without pretense, his soul stripped bare.  



Art: Glass, Albert Chavaz (d. 1990), Parish Church, Vercorin, Swiss Alps


Friday, March 20, 2026

THE NUN WITH THE SMILE

 

 

 

 

We continue with young people who died young, uniting their suffering with the suffering of Christ- our theme for this Lent.

SERVANT OF GOD SISTER CECILIA MARIA of the HOLY FACE was born in 1973 in San Martín de los Andes, Argentina as one of ten siblings in a military family. Despite the challenges of frequent relocations, she was deeply inspired by the faith she encountered through her family and education. Her calling to the Carmelite order began to take shape during her university years, when the writings of St. Teresa of Ávila awakened in her a desire for intimacy with Christ.

 A nurse by profession and a violinist, she stood out for her joy and ever-present smile. After a winding journey of discernment, including time in two other Carmelite communities, Cecilia María finally found her home in the Carmelite convent of Santa Fe. There, she embraced the contemplative life with a warmth and humanity that would become her hallmark.

 In her time living at the monastery, she played the violin and was known for her sweetness. In late 2015, during the Advent season and the Jubilee Year of Mercy, Sister Cecilia María received a devastating diagnosis: cancer of the tongue, with metastasis to a lymph node. Despite the pain and grueling treatments, she exuded a sense of peace that astonished those around her. During this difficult time, she continued to pray and offer up her sufferings, convinced that she was close to her encounter with God.

  A poignant image of her, lying in a hospital bed with a serene smile on her face, went viral shortly before her death in June 2016. The photo encapsulated her ability to radiate hope and beauty even in the face of profound suffering. In one of her final letters to her family, she wrote, “I feel the pain growing, but I am not alone. Together, we will follow the Lamb.”

Those who knew Sister Cecilia María describe her as a beacon of joy and empathy. Her smile, often visible even in her final days of suffering, became a symbol of her profound spiritual peace. “She had the gift of connecting with people,” recalls Sister Fabiana Guadalupe Retamal, a fellow Carmelite. “Even in her hardest moments, her smile came from the depths of her heart. It wasn’t forced—it was a reflection of her trust in God.”

In the final weeks of her illness, her condition worsened, and she had to be hospitalized. From her bed, she never stopped praying and offering up her sufferings, with the certainty that her encounter with God was near.

 She wrote her last wish on a piece of paper: “I was thinking about how I would like my funeral to be. First, some intense prayer, and then a great celebration for everyone. Don't forget to pray, but don't forget to celebrate either!”

 She passed to the Lord in Buenos Aires in the early hours of June 23, 2016. Sister Cecilia Maria’s death, her life, and her smile were a testimony to happiness. Our Lord assured us that the world would know we are Christians by our love.

In January 2025, the archbishop of Santa Fe de la Vera Cruz in Argentina, Sergio Fenoy, decreed the beginning of the cause for beatification and canonization.

 In 2024, when signing the edict to begin the process prior to the cause, the prelate highlighted the witness of the nun’s “love and trust in Jesus Christ, even in the midst of the most difficult trials,” assuring that “she has awakened in many hearts the desire for a greater commitment to Christian life.”


 We continue with young people who died young, uniting their suffering with the suffering of Christ- our theme for this Lent.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

LAST FALL

"This is the worst fall of all.  It comes at the worst moment of all.  It tears open all the wounds in his body; the shock dispels the last ounce of strength that he had mustered to go on.  It shatters the last hope, the last remnant of faith, in nearly everyone in the crowd.  It is triumph for his enemies, heartbreak for his friends. 

The effect on the crowd is terrible.  From having been an object of compassion, of admiration, he has become an object of contempt.  Hope has given way to despair, struggling faith to bitterness and derision: “He has saved others, himself he cannot save!”

Now Christ gets up, he does not turn his head, he does not heed the disappointment of the crowd.  He gets up, weaker than he has ever been, almost too exhausted to go on, all the old wounds open and bleeding; more abject than he has ever been, a greater disappointment to his followers than he has ever been, in their eyes a complete failure.  He gets up and goes on; lays his beautiful hands, those hands of a carpenter, on the wood of the cross for the last time, and without looking round begins the ascent to the summit of Calvary.

The last fall is the worst fall.  In it Christ identified himself with those who fall again and again, and who get up again and again and go on – those who even after the struggle of a lifetime fall when the end is in sight; those who in this last fall lose the respect of many of their fellow men, but who overcome their humiliation and shame; who, ridiculous in the eyes of men, are beautiful in the eyes of God, because in Christ, with Christ’s courage, in his heroism, they get up and go on, climbing the hill of Calvary.

In the third fall, the showing of Christ’s love is this: He does not indwell only the virtuous, only those who are successful in overcoming temptation, only those who are strong and in whom his power is made manifest to the world; he chooses to indwell those who seem to fail, those who fall again and again, those who seem to be overcome even when the end is in sight.  In them, if they will it, he abides; in them he overcomes weakness and failure, in them he triumphs; and in his power they can persevere to the end, abject before men but glorious with Christ’s glory before God." (Caryll Houselander) 


Art: Jan Toroop (d. 1928)  Dutch




Sunday, March 15, 2026

THE WEEPING WOMEN

 


"Now Christ is followed by a great multitude of people, among them women who mourn over him, who weep loud for him.  A strange thing happens.  He turns to them and says, “It is not for me that you should weep, daughters of Jerusalem; you should weep for yourselves and for your children”: strange because at first sight it seems that he, who accepts every straw of compassion with pathetic gratitude, refuses the brave, open compassion of these women!  It is, or seems to be, a contradiction; it is not like him to refuse anything from anyone.   

 We have seen how until now, and indeed all through his passion, he has accepted the compassion of anyone at all who would give it to him, accepting even the forced helped of Simon.  But this accepting on Christ’s part began long before the hour of his passion struck; it was part of his plan of love from all eternity, his plan to depend on his creatures, to need them, to need all that they could and would give to him to fulfill that unimaginable plan of his love!

What, then, is the meaning of this curious refusal of the compassion, of the tears, of the women of Jerusalem?  “It is not for me that you should weep, daughters of Jerusalem; you should weep for yourselves and for your children.”  Is this a refusal, a rebuke, or a warning?

In a sense it is none of these, but a showing, a pointing to something which, if these women miss, and if we miss today, they and we will have missed the meaning of Christ’s passion.   Which if we miss, all our devotion to the person of Jesus Christ in His historical Passion, all our meditations and prayers, will be sterile and will fall short of their object to reach and comfort the heart of Christ.  He is pointing to His passion in the souls of each of those women, in the souls of each of their children and their children’s children all through time.  He is pointing to all those lives to come through all the ages in which His suffering will go on.

For Himself the consummation of His love for the world is close: He is very near to Calvary now, in a few hours it will be over; He will be at peace and He will have entered into his glory.  But in the souls of men His suffering will begin again, and it will go on all through the years to come.  Evil will go on gathering strength all through the centuries to come; the Christ in man will be assaulted and threatened by it.

There will be many who will follow literally in Christ’s footsteps, who will enter into His glory with Him through His sacrifice – martyrs who give their lives for their faith, young men who willingly give their lives for their country, children who die Christ’s own redeeming death because they die in the full power and splendor of innocence.  It is not for these that we must weep, though we may weep for ourselves in our seeming loss of them.  They are the privileged ones whose love is immediately consummated in Christ’s love.  We must weep for ourselves, and for our fellows in whom Christ suffers on, still laboring, stumbling, falling on the Via Crucis, still mocked and goaded and assaulted on the way, still in the midst of the struggle.

There are those in every age in whom the suffering of Christ is manifest, almost visible, the beauty of His love shining through the ugliness of their circumstances.  It is not for Christ in them that we must weep.  It is for Christ whose beauty is hidden, Christ in the outcast, in the man who is wrestling with temptation, who is unrecognized, uncomforted; Christ in those whom we pass by without seeing, without knowing, whom we allow to stagger on, on His way, loaded with His too heavy cross, unhelped, unwept, uncomforted.

It is in order that we should seek Him and give our compassion to Him, weep for Him in these, that Christ showed His need for sympathy in His Earthly life and on the way of the cross.  We must weep for Him in these and in our own souls, in these days, the days of the dry wood: “It is not for me that you should weep; you should weep for yourselves and your children.  Behold, a time is coming when men will say, It is well for the barren, for the wombs that never bore children, and the breasts that never suckled them.  It is then that they will begin to say to the mountains, “Fall on us,” and to the hills, “Cover us.”  If it goes so hard with the tree that is still green, what will become of the tree that is already dried up?”  (Caryll Houselander) 


Art: Virgil Cantini- Pope Paul  Cultural Center, Washington, D.C.

 

Friday, March 13, 2026

ANOTHER FALL

 


"Christ is down in the dust.  This second fall is harder than the first; He is nearer the end of His tether now, more dependent than before on others to help Him to get up and go on.  It may have been something trifling, almost absurd, that threw Him down.  Perhaps something as small as a pebble on the road; yes, that would have been enough to send Him hurtling down, with that terrible burden on His back, and His own exhaustion as He nears the end of His bitter journey.

It is the same today, the same for those “other Christs” who have gone a long way on the road and who fall, not for the first time now, under the heavy cross of circumstance – those who have carried this cross for a long time, who have become exhausted by the unequal struggle and fall, who with him are down in the dust.  It is for them that Christ falls for the second time and lies under the crushing weight of his cross, waiting for those who will come forward to lend their hands to lift it from his back and enable him to go on to the end of his way of suffering and love.

The crushing weight of circumstances today makes the Christian life a cross which, even though it is a redeeming cross, is hard to carry: the economic conditions; the weight of public opinion – the contempt for those who choose the hard way because it is Christ’s way; the weight of material hardship – the weight that grows heavier and heavier as those who must carry it come nearer and nearer to the end of the journey: the weight of the cross – the sheer material weight that was heavy enough to throw Christ down, to throw God face down in the dust.  If something as trifling as a pebble in the road or a false step could throw Christ down on the road, so may a tiny provocation, a sudden temptation, a mocking word – a fragment that adds to the struggle – bring the man staggering under the cross down: the servant is not greater than his master.

It is not only soldiers and warders under orders who can lift the cross from Christ’s back today, not only they who can help Christ to his feet again.  Everyone who labors to lift the burden of material misery from the backs of the poor gives his hands to free Christ from the crushing burden.  Everyone who concerns himself to change public opinion and to make the Christ-life honored in the world helps Christ to his feet again.  Everyone who forces his way against the indifferent mob, against the unthinking multitude who see nothing but folly in Christ and his cross, helps to drag back the great burden from his exhausted body.  Everyone who approaches Christ fallen under the cross, coming to him in friendship and love, to relieve him of the burden of the Christian life lived in isolation and loneliness in opposition to the whole modern environment, helps Christ to his feet in the world again and sets him on his way.

Everyone who recognizes who it is that has fallen there, who it is for whom the burden of circumstances, of materialism, of temptation has proved too persistent and too heavy, lends his hands to lift the cross from the prostrate Christ and to set Christ on His way to the consummation of His love once more." (Caryll Houselander)

Art: Tea Sciano- New Mexico