
PADRE PIO: PRIEST AND VICTIM
-Monsignor Arthur Burton Calkins
I. The Crisis of Identity in the Priesthood
Almost immediately after the Second Vatican Council, a
terrible identity crisis of enormous proportions began to overtake the
Catholic priesthood and thousands of priests left the active ministry with
or without the requisite permission. Still others became genuinely confused
about the nature of their priesthood. Unfortunately, the disorientation
still remains in many ways. Its causes, no doubt, are quite complex and
ultimately we must confess that "An enemy has done this" (Mt. 13:28).
But recognizing a Satanic onslaught against the Lord's anointed ones does
not prevent us from also seeking to discover some of the immediate
contributing causes of this tragic state of affairs. In this regard Father
André Feuillet makes what I believe to be some very astute observations:
Some writers claim that Vatican II is itself partly
responsible. As they see it, Vatican II, in its desire to act against Roman
centralization and an overemphasis on papal primacy, glossed over the
problem of priesthood. In any case, it certainly intended to highlight the
role of the college of bishops as successors of the Apostles. Moreover, on
the basis of Scripture, it proclaimed a truth that had hitherto been too
often overlooked: the sharing of all the baptized in the priesthood of
Christ. By these two emphases, the Council seems to have spoken as if the
bishop and the people of God were the only necessary elements of a priestly
Church. In so doing, it somewhat neglected the place of the simple priest
(or presbyter).1
He continues by quoting from a book from D. Olivier,
Les deux visages du prêtre: Les chances d'une crise:
The Council indeed maintains the special character of
presbyteral priesthood as differing in essence from that of the baptized.
But whereas it refers to a half dozen Scriptural texts to confirm the
reality of the common priesthood, it cannot adduce a single text in favor of
the famous essential difference. The contrast between the two successive
passages of the Constitution on the Church is striking: the first, and very
welcome one, on the priesthood of the faithful, is based on Scripture, the
second is nothing but a theological development based on some texts of Pius
XI and Pius XII. The bishop, who continues the mission of the Apostles,
easily finds in Scripture the justification for his existence. But the
priest can base his own special character only on papal statements.2
Father Patrick J. Dunn, writing almost twenty years
after Feuillet, comments in a remarkably similar vein:
Although the Second Vatican Council emphasizes that
the common priesthood and the ministerial priesthood "differ from one
another in essence and not only in degree" (Lumen Gentium 10), the nature of
this distinction has not always been clearly perceived.3
It may well be argued that subsequent documents of the
magisterium have continued to make the necessary clarifications. The new
Catechism of the Catholic Church, for instance, presents an appropriate
elucidation with the following statement:
The ministerial or hierarchical priesthood of bishops
and priests, and the common priesthood of all the faithful participate,
'each in its own proper way, in the one priesthood of Christ'. While being
'ordered one to another', they differ essentially. In what sense? While the
common priesthood of the faithful is exercised by the unfolding of baptismal
grace -- a life of faith, hope and charity, a life according to the Spirit,
the ministerial priesthood is at the service of the common priesthood. It is
directed at the unfolding of the baptismal grace of all Christians. The
ministerial priesthood is a means by which Christ unceasingly builds up and
leads his Church. For this reason it is transmitted by its own sacrament,
the sacrament of Holy Orders.4
While fully accepting the explanation proffered by the
Catechism that "the ministerial priesthood is at the service of the common
priesthood", that "it is directed at the unfolding of the baptismal grace of
all Christians" and that it "is a means by which Christ unceasingly builds
up and leads his Church", I am inclined to believe, with Fulton Sheen and
Father Feuillet, that the concept that we have already begun to explore of
the ordained minister as called to be "priest and victim" provides an
insight and challenge far richer and deeper which has yet to be assimilated
in the postconciliar Church's teaching and praxis.
II. Padre Pio: A Model Priest and
Victim
What I would like to propose further is that God has set his own seal on
this explanation in the person of Padre Pio of Pietrelcina. Is it not
significant that even before the great disruption of priestly life in the
twentieth century was underway the Lord had already chosen Francesco
Forgione to illustrate in a dramatic and extraordinary way the call to
embrace victimhood in order to realize fully his vocation to the priesthood?
While it is true that no one should aspire to imitate the extraordinary ways
of Padre Pio without an explicit call from the Lord confirmed through wise
spiritual direction and the appropriate permission when necessary, I believe
that the Padre's life nonetheless constitutes a model of what it means to
live as "priest and victim", a model that all Christians, but priests in
particular, should strive to emulate.
Interestingly, the Trappist Father Augustine McGregor already pointed to
Padre Pio as a model of priestly life over twenty years ago. In his book,
The Spirituality of Padre Pio, he declared:
We shall refer constantly to the priesthood of Padre
Pio discovering in his life a rare model of the priestly ideal, an exemplar
who revealed in a unique and simple way all the essential features of the
priesthood. In short, in an age undergoing transformation in social,
cultural and religious spheres we shall look for and find in Padre Pio's
priesthood characteristics of permanent value, unmarked by many of today's
changing values. 5
Even more striking, however, and totally supportive of
my thesis is the testimony of Father Vincenzo Frezza with regard to the
paradigmatic value of Padre Pio's priesthood. Considering how Padre Pio
continually spent himself unflinchingly for souls propels him to state:
Now all of this brings us still another time to the
conclusion that his vocation to the priesthood, that the fulfillment of his
priestly ministry was in relation to his mission to "co-redeem." I mean that
if Padre Pio had not been a priest, he could not have fulfilled his mission:
priesthood and mission are identified with each other in Padre Pio.
According to a poor interpretation of mine, God did not only want a new
victim, but he wanted this victim to be a priest and as such placed in a
priestly state like the Incarnate Word.6
Here I would simply add that the last one hundred
fifty years have seen the Church benefiting from what seems an unparalleled
profusion of victim souls, no doubt a gift that God has given in view of the
crisis which the Church is now passing through. By far almost all of these
have been women and here the Lord shows us how complementary their vocation
to be "co-redeemers" is to the priesthood. But, without in any way wishing
to take anything away from their greatness, I would underscore with Father
Frezza that in Padre Pio the Lord has done a new thing. Let us listen to him
again:
Padre Pio, carrying in himself the unification of the priesthood and the
mission to co-redeem, thus demonstrated that the exercise of the priestly
ministry goes beyond the sacramental signs. That is, it tends to make a man
"like Christ the priest" in every moment and every attitude of his
existence. In simple words this means that he must become a victim, an
unceasing offering. ...
Therefore, it is this state of priest-victim that colors Padre Pio's
priesthood, that makes him exceptional -- I will go even further -- that
makes him unique in the Church up to now. Because we meet many victim-souls
in Christian spiritual history. We also know many holy priests, holy priests
who took more time to say Mass and shed more tears in doing so than Padre
Pio did (e.g. St. Laurence of Brindisi). We know holy priests who have made
the confessional their chief ministry. We know holy priests gifted with
privileged charisms. We know saints who had marked in their bodies, both in
their internal and external organs, the signs of the Passion of Christ. We
are astonished when faced with mystical souls who have reached the highest
degree of union with God, that which we call the "mystical marriage."
However, a man that summed up, that both lived and suffered all these
charisms, a man that could call himself another Jesus Christ with stronger
reason than that for which St. Francis was called such, up to now, only
Padre Pio is such a man.7
I would supplement this testimony by simply referring
to the fact that Padre Pio is the first priest in the history of the Church
to bear the stigmata, which, it seems, constitutes a kind of divine seal on
his vocation to be a "priest-victim". Father Gerardo Di Flumeri is of the
same conviction. He argues that if Padre Pio hadn't been a priest, he would
never have become a victim; priesthood and victimization in him were
identical. God did not want just another victim; He wanted, instead, a new
victim who was a priest, who was established in the priestly state like the
Word Incarnate. 8
Hence I am in full accord with Father Frezza's final conclusion in this
regard: "From today on, therefore, we cannot reasonably think of imagining
what a priest should be if we do not compare and contrast him with Padre Pio
as the model."9
III. Padre Pio's Vocation to
Priest-Victimhood
Within the limits of this presentation we can only touch briefly on some of
the most obvious testimony which highlights Padre Pio's vocation to
priest-victimhood. Already as a young Capuchin he was beset with a host of
physical afflictions which defied diagnosis.10 Later these would be coupled
with demonic assaults.11 In the midst of all this it is to be noted that the
young Pio was conscious of his calling to be a victim. There is clear
evidence that he had fully embraced this vocation from at least the time of
his priestly ordination on 10 August 1910 in Benevento.12 A remarkable
confirmation of this is the fact that he had written for his own personal
use the following souvenir of his priestly ordination on the day of his
first solemn Mass, 14 August 1910:
O rex, dona mihi animam meam pro qua rogo et populum
meum pro quo obsecro [O King, let my life be given me at my petition and my
people at my request] (Esther 7:3). Souvenir of my first Mass. Jesus, my
heart's desire and my life, today as I raise you up in trembling hands, in a
mystery of love, may I be, with you, for the world, Way, Truth and Life, and
for you a holy priest, a perfect victim. P. Pio, Capuchin.13
The next evidence that we shall take into
consideration is that of his letter of 29 November 1910 to his spiritual
director, Padre Benedetto of San Marco in Lamis:
Now, my dear Father, I want to ask your permission for
something. For some time past I have felt the need to offer myself to the
Lord as a victim for poor sinners and for the souls in Purgatory.
This desire has been growing continually in my heart so that it has now
become what I would call a strong passion. I have in fact made this offering
to the Lord several times, beseeching him to pour out upon me the
punishments prepared for sinners and for the souls in a state of purgation,
even increasing them a hundredfold for me, as long as he converts and saves
sinners and quickly admits to paradise the souls in Purgatory, but I should
now like to make this offering to the Lord in obedience to you. It seems to
me that Jesus really wants this. I am sure that you will have no difficulty
in granting me this permission.14
The permission was duly communicated by Padre
Benedetto in a letter of 1 December 1910.15 It was also evidently prior to
this time that Padre Pio first experienced the marks of the stigmata. He
does not give us the exact date, but confesses in his letter to Padre
Benedetto of 8 September 1911 that "this phenomenon has been repeated
several times for almost a year, but for some time past it had not
occurred."16 C. Bernard Ruffin indicates that already on 7 September 1910
the young Padre, ordained less than a month, went to see his parish priest
in Pietrelcina and "showed him what appeared to be puncture wounds in the
middle of his hands."17
In his old age Padre Pio had all but entirely forgotten about what Ruffin
calls the "proto-stigmata" and then was eventually able to recall these
first manifestations of the Lord's passion in his flesh.18 What I wish to
underscore here is that almost immediately upon his priestly ordination
Padre Pio had his first experience of the stigmata, eight years before the
stigmatization of 20 September 1918 which would remain permanently imprinted
upon him for fifty years. Obviously, the Lord who inspired the prayer of the
young Capuchin on the day of his first solemn Mass found the petition an
extremely pleasing one to which he would not delay in responding. This is
also the conclusion of Father Gerardo Di Flumeri who comments on the
petition which the newly ordained Padre Pio had written on the holy card on
the day of his first solemn Mass:
We believe that the juxtaposition of the two words
"priest" and "victim" clearly indicates that Padre Pio's offering of himself
as a victim originates with his ordination to the priesthood. We believe,
too, that his having received the gift of the "invisible" stigmata only a
month later (Sept. 1910), indicates God's acceptance (Letters I:264f).19
Hence we can say that Padre Pio's priesthood is sealed
from the very beginning with the sign of victimhood. And, indeed, it is not
only a sign that he willingly accepted, but even had asked for.
A. For Love of Jesus and for Souls
From this point onwards Padre Pio renews his self-offering as victim
frequently and with great generosity. This offering simultaneously serves a
twofold purpose; it is a fulfillment of Saint Paul's words "Now I rejoice in
my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in
Christ's afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the Church" (Col.
1:24) and it is also an act of reparation to the Lord himself. Here is how
he describes it in a letter to his spiritual director, Padre Agostino of San
Marco in Lamis, dated 20 September 1912:
We must hide our tears from the One who sends them,
from the One who has shed tears himself and continues to shed them every day
because of man's ingratitude. He chooses souls and despite my unworthiness,
he has chosen mine also to help him in the tremendous task of men's
salvation. The more these souls suffer without the slightest consolation,
the more the sufferings of our good Jesus are alleviated.20
Less than a month later he writes to Padre Agostino
once again emphasizing this double objective i.e., that his victimhood is
for souls and as an act of reparation to the Lord:
Believe me, dear Father, I find happiness in my
afflictions. Jesus himself wants these sufferings from me, as he needs them
for souls. But I ask myself what relief can I give him by my suffering?!
What a destiny! Oh, to what heights has our most sweet Jesus raised my
soul!21
1. Victimhood for Sinners.
Perhaps one of the most striking testimonies about his acceptance of
victimhood for sinners is the following transcription of words taken down by
Padre Agostino during an ecstasy on 3 December 1911 while the young Padre
Pio was having a vision of Christ badly wounded:
My Jesus, forgive and put down that sword ... but if it must fall, let it be
only on my head ... Yes, I want to be the victim ... punish me and not the
others ... send me even to hell provided that I love you, and that everyone,
yes everyone, be saved.22
Several years later, on 17 October 1915, he writes to Father Agostino: "You
exhort me to offer myself as a victim to the Lord for poor sinners. I made
this offering once and I renew it several times a day."23 From this
statement it would seem reasonable to conclude that Padre Pio's acceptance
of his manifold sufferings always included intercession for sinners.
2. Victimhood as consolation to Jesus.
Secondly, there is the note of reparation or consolation offered to Jesus.
Padre Pio writes of "alleviating the sufferings of our good Jesus". This is
the motive for reparation found especially in the revelations of the Lord to
St. Margaret Mary who tells us that he asks for the communion of reparation
to his Sacred Heart on the First Friday of the month.24 Pope Pius XI also
deals with this concept in his magisterial Encyclical Miserentissimus
Redemptor on the theology of reparation.
The first and obvious question that comes to mind is this: "Since Jesus is
now in glory at the right hand of the Father, how can we offer him
'consolation'?" Pius XI first cited a very apposite quotation from St.
Augustine: "Give me one who loves, and he will understand what I say,"25 and
then gave the following reply:
If, in view of our future sins, foreseen by him, the soul of Jesus became
sad unto death, there can be no doubt that by his prevision at the same time
of our acts of reparation, he was in some way comforted when "there appeared
to him an angel from Heaven" (Lk. 22:43) to console that Heart of his bowed
down with sorrow and anguish.26
In other words, as Jesus saw the sins of the world in his agony in
Gethsemane by virtue of the beatific vision,27 so He also saw in advance
every act of consolation offered to him until the end of time. In effect,
the act of reparation which we offer now he could see then.
This second dimension, too, is notably present in Padre Pio's understanding
of the reason for his sufferings. Here is an instance where he develops this
motivation in a meditation on the words of Jesus in the garden of
Gethsemane, "Could you not watch one hour with me?" It is fully in line with
the theology of Miserentissimus Redemptor which we have just sketched above.
O Jesus, how many generous souls wounded by this complaint have kept Thee
company in the Garden, sharing Thy bitterness and Thy mortal anguish ... How
many hearts in the course of the centuries have responded generously to Thy
invitation ... May this multitude of souls, then, in this supreme hour be a
comfort to Thee, who, better than the disciples, share with Thee the
distress of Thy heart, and cooperate with Thee for their own salvation and
that of others. And grant that I also may be of their number, that I also
may offer Thee some relief.28
Not surprisingly, even in this meditation which is oriented to consoling
Jesus, a reference to cooperating in our own salvation and that of others is
not lacking. The two are intertwined in Padre Pio.
B. Specific Applications of Victimhood
Without taking away from the fact that he has already offered himself as a
victim for sinners, for the souls in Purgatory, and in reparation, he
willingly offers his innumerable physical, mental, emotional and spiritual
sufferings together with the demonic assaults which he suffers for specific
intentions and persons who are particularly dear to him. Thus we find him
writing to his dear Padre Benedetto that
It grieves me very much to learn that you are unwell and I am praying the
Lord for your recovery. As there is nothing else I can do for you, I offered
myself some time ago to the Lord as a victim for you. Now that I know you
are ill, I renew my offering to Jesus very often and with great fervour.29
There are at least two other occasions when he reassures Padre Benedetto
that he renews this offering frequently.30 He makes the same offering for
his second spiritual father, Padre Agostino, with a kind of loving audacity:
Apart from everything else, you belong to me and I have every right to
bargain with Jesus even unknown to you. I have offered myself to him as a
victim for you and hence my behaviour cannot but be justified. What is the
use of making a sacrifice if its purpose is to be frustrated?31
Likewise he reassures Padre Agostino on another occasion that "I never
cease, either, to present to Jesus the offering I once made to him for
you."32
He makes the offering of himself in the state of victim similarly for his
Capuchin Province,33 and asks Padre Benedetto for permission to do the same
on behalf of aspirants for the Province.34 He also informs Padre Benedetto
that he has made an offering of himself for the intention which Pope
Benedict XV had recommended to the whole Church.35 It is interesting to note
that all of these acts of self-oblation were made before the definitive
experience of the stigmata which he received on 20 September 1918 and which
marked his body for fifty years.
IV. Source of Padre Pio's
Priest-Victimhood: Union with Christ
Perhaps it is not inappropriate here to ask some questions about all of
these acts of making himself a victim for particular individuals or
intentions. How could Padre Pio offer himself totally for more than one
person or intention? In a human manner of speaking, would he not lessen the
amount of merit available for a particular person or intention the more he
multiplied the dedications of his victimhood? How could he multiply
virtually to infinity the various purposes for which he suffered?
Mathematically speaking, would he not have been reducing the effects of his
suffering with every new intention which he took on?
In a real sense, of course, these questions all dissolve into mystery, but a
mystery which, in effect, is based upon the infinite merits won by Christ on
Calvary. Padre Pio as one man, even an extraordinarily holy man, dwindles
into insignificance in the face of the woes of the world and the mystery of
evil. But as priest and victim, he is united with the Eternal Priest and
Victim and shares in the infinity of Jesus' merits. Let us consider Padre
Pio's description of an experience which took place on 16 April 1912 after a
fearful assault by the enemy:
I was hardly able to get to the divine Prisoner to say Mass. When Mass was
over I remained with Jesus in thanksgiving. Oh, how sweet was the colloquy
with paradise that morning! It was such that, although I want to tell you
all about it, I cannot. There were things which cannot be translated into
human language without losing their deep and heavenly meaning. The heart of
Jesus and my own -- allow me to use the expression -- were fused. No longer
were two hearts beating but only one. My own heart had disappeared, as a
drop of water is lost in the ocean. Jesus was its paradise, its king. My joy
was so intense and deep that I could bear no more and tears of happiness
poured down my cheeks.
Yes, dear Father, man cannot understand that when paradise is poured into a
heart, this afflicted, exiled, weak and mortal heart cannot bear it without
weeping. I repeat that it was the joy that filled my heart which caused me
to weep for so long.36
This mystical experience which Padre Pio manages to describe as the "fusion"
of his heart with the Sacred Heart of Jesus helps us to begin to grasp that
Padre Pio's total identification with the victimhood of Jesus made him a
sharer and, in a certain sense, a dispenser of those infinite merits.
V. Padre Pio's Priest-Victimhood in the
Mass
While the entire earthly life of Jesus constituted a continuous offering of
himself to the Father, "nevertheless the victim state of the Lord reaches
the sacrificial apex at the immolation at Calvary."37 In an analogous manner
we way say that, while the entire priestly life of Padre Pio was lived as a
victim, nevertheless his victim state reaches the sacrificial apex at the
celebration of the Mass. Let us consider these statements of Padre Pio about
his Mass.
I never tire of standing so long, and could not become tired, because I am
not standing, but am on the cross with Christ, suffering with Him.
The holy Mass is a sacred union of Jesus and myself. I suffer unworthily all
that was suffered by Jesus who deigned to allow me to share in His great
enterprise of human redemption.38
Everything that Jesus suffered in His passion I suffer also, inadequately,
as much as it is possible for a human being. And through no merit of mine
but just out of His goodness.39
This is my only comfort, that of being associated with Jesus in the Divine
Sacrifice and in the redemption of souls.40
Not only did Padre Pio experience his greatest suffering during the
celebration of the Mass,41 but it was also for him the time of his most
intense intercession. As on the cross Jesus could see all of us in the
beatific vision,42 so Padre Pio seems to have had a similar gift. According
to Father Schug, the Padre once said that
in this absorption in God, especially at the Consecration of the Mass,
he saw everyone who had asked his prayers. He told his friends that they
could always reach him when he was at the altar. He saw them, actually, in
his gaze on God.43
Again, once asked "Padre, are all the souls assisting at your Mass present
to your spirit?", he answered "I see all my children at the altar, as in a
looking glass."44 Indeed, because the priest is a mediator, it is his
responsibility to pray for the people of God. Padre Pio took this as a
solemn obligation and, even though the petitions pouring into the friary of
San Giovanni Rotondo were countless, he faithfully honored every request for
prayer. His intercession was -- and is still -- so powerful precisely
because of his priest-victimhood. The seriousness with which he took his
role as intercessor should be an admonition to every priest.
VI. Padre Pio and Priests
This brings us to a subject of capital importance: Padre Pio and priests.
The Lord has confided to many victim-souls that his priests are "the apple
of his eye", yet so often they are so far from fulfilling what he expects of
them. Not surprisingly, very early in his state of victimhood, Padre Pio was
called to make reparation for priests. Here is an account which he made to
Padre Agostino, his spiritual father, on 7 April 1913.
On Friday morning [28 March 1913] while I was still in bed, Jesus appeared
to me. He was in a sorry state and quite disfigured. He showed me a great
multitude of priests, regular and secular, among whom were several high
ecclesiastical dignitaries. Some were celebrating Mass, while others were
vesting or taking off the sacred vestments.
The sight of Jesus in distress was very painful to me, so I asked him why he
was suffering so much. There was no reply, but his gaze turned on those
priests. Shortly afterwards, as if terrified and weary of looking at them,
he withdrew his gaze. Then he raised his eyes and looked at me and to my
great horror I observed two tears coursing down his cheeks. He drew back
from that crowd of priests with an expression of great disgust on his face
and cried out: "Butchers!" Then turning to me he said: "My son, do not think
that my agony lasted three hours. No, on account of the souls who have
received most from me, I shall be in agony until the end of the world.
During my agony, my son, nobody should sleep. My soul goes in search of a
drop of human compassion but alas, I am left alone beneath the weight of
indifference. The ingratitude and the sleep of my ministers makes my agony
all the more grievous.
Alas, how little they correspond to my love! What afflicts me most is that
they add contempt and unbelief to their indifference. Many times I have been
on the point of annihilating them, had I not been held back by the Angels
and by souls who are filled with love for me. Write to your (spiritual)
father and tell him what you have seen and heard from me this morning. Tell
him to show your letter to Father Provincial ..."45
In the annals of the mystics there are no few such plaints recorded as
coming from the lips of our Redeemer. The ones from whom Christ looks most
of all for consolation, particularly priests, are often precisely the ones
who are the most indifferent to his loving plea for reparation. Tragically,
some add contempt and unbelief to their indifference.
I believe that this vision which Padre Pio had in the early days of his
priesthood was highly prophetic. If it was true in 1913, it can be verified,
I believe, much more readily today. Indifference, contempt and unbelief have
ravaged tens of thousands of priestly souls, unleashing an extraordinary
tide of devastation upon the Church. Have we reached "high tide" yet? Only
God knows and only he can respond. What is needed to turn the tide? More
than anything else, I believe, are priest-victims.
When one considers the growing impact which the humble friar of the Gargano
continues to have even twenty-seven years after his death, can one doubt
that a legion of priests who willingly embraced victimhood, as he did, could
change the face of the Church? I am convinced that there is no greater need
facing the Church today.
VII. Padre Pio and Victims
You may say that I should be talking to priests and, no doubt, I should.
But, I speak to you because you are here and because there is also a great
need of victim-intercessors for the Church and for priests. Let us listen to
a final excerpt from another letter which Padre Pio addressed to Padre
Agostino just a short time before the previous letter:
Listen, my dear Father, to the justified complaints of our most sweet Jesus:
"With what ingratitude is my love for men repaid! I should be less offended
by them if I had loved them less. My Father does not want to bear with them
any longer. I myself want to stop loving them, but ... (and here Jesus
paused, sighed, then continued) but, alas! My heart is made to love! Weak
and cowardly men make no effort to overcome temptation and indeed they take
delight in their wickedness. The souls for whom I have a special
predilection fail me when put to the test, the weak give way to
discouragement and despair, while the strong are relaxing by degrees.
They leave me alone by night, alone by day in the churches. They no longer
care about the Sacrament of the altar. Hardly anyone ever speaks of this
sacrament and even those who do, speak alas, with great indifference and
coldness.
My heart is forgotten. Nobody thinks any more of my love and I am
continually grieved. For many people my house has become an amusement
centre. Even my ministers, whom I have loved as the apple of my eye, who
ought to console my heart brimming over with sorrow, who ought to assist me
in the redemption of souls -- who would believe it? -- even by my ministers
I must be treated with ingratitude and slighted. I behold, my son (here he
remained silent, sobs contracted his throat and he wept secretly) many
people who act hypocritically and betray me by sacrilegious communions,
trampling under foot the light and strength which I give them continually
..."
Jesus continues to complain. Dear Father, how bad I feel when I see Jesus
weeping! Have you experienced this too?
"My son," Jesus went on, "I need victims to calm my Father's just divine
anger; renew the sacrifice of your whole self and do so without any
reserve."
I have renewed the sacrifice of my life, dear Father, and if I experience
some feeling of sadness, it is in the contemplation of the God of Sorrows.
If you can, try to find souls who will offer themselves to the Lord as
victims for sinners. Jesus will help you.46
I would compare this loving complaint of Jesus to the "great revelation" of
his Heart which he made to Saint Margaret Mary in 1675,47 but what I wish to
underscore here is simply the immediacy, the urgency of the call which Padre
Pio heard. He answered with the sacrifice of his life. Let us take to heart
these final words: "If you can, try to find souls who will offer themselves
to the Lord as victims for sinners. Jesus will help you."
ABBREVIATIONS
AAS -Acta Apostolicæ Sedis (1909 -- )
Alessandro -Alessandro of Ripabottoni, Padre Pio of Pietrelcina,
"everybody's cyrenean" ed. Father Alessio Parente, O.F.M. Cap. (San Giovanni
Rotondo, FG: Editions "Our Lady of Grace Capuchin Friary", 1986)
Carlen 3 -Claudia Carlen, I.H.M, (ed.), The Papal Encyclicals 1903-1939
(Raleigh, N. C.: McGrath Publishing Co., "Consortium Book," 1981)
CCC -Catechism of the Catholic Church (London: Geoffrey Chapman, 1994)
D-S -Henricus Denzinger et Adolfus Schönmetzer, S.I., eds., Enchiridion
Symbolorum Definitionum et Declarationum de Rebus Fidei et Morum, Editio
XXXII. (Freiburg-im-Breisgau: Herder, 1963)
D'Apolito -Padre Alberto D'Apolito, Padre Pio of Pietrelcina: Memories,
Experiences, Testimonials trans. Frank J. and Julia Ceravolo (San Giovanni
Rotondo, FG: Editions "Padre Pio of Pietrelcina", 1986)
Di Flumeri -Father Gerardo Di Flumeri, O.F.M. Cap., The Mystery of the Cross
in Padre Pio of Pietrelcina trans. Florence Di Marco (San Giovanni Rotondo,
FG: Edizioni «Padre Pio da Pietrelcina», 1983)
Epistolario -Padre Pio da Pietrelcina, Epistolario a cure di Melchiorre da
Pobladura e Alessandro da Ripabottoni (San Giovanni Rotondo, FG: Edizioni
«Padre Pio da Pietrelcina»; Vol. I [terza ed.], 1992; Vol. II [seconda ed.],
1994; Vol. III, 1977; Vol. IV [seconda ed.], 1991)
Frezza -Father Vincenzo Frezza, O.F.M. Cap., "Priesthood and Eucharist in
Padre Pio," in Gerardo Di Flumeri, O.F.M. Cap. (ed.), Acts of the First
Congress of Studies on Padre Pio's Spirituality trans. Mary Brink (San
Giovanni Rotondo, FG: Edizioni «Padre Pio da Pietrelcina», 1978) 347-362.
Letters -Padre Pio of Pietrelcina, Letters edited by Melchiorre of Pobladura
and Alessandro of Ripabottoni; English version of Vols. I & II edited by
Father Gerardo Di Flumeri, O.F.M. Cap.; English version of Vol. III edited
by Father Alessio Parente, O.F.M. Cap. (San Giovanni Rotondo, FG: Editions
"Voce di Padre Pio"; Vol. I, 1980; Vol. II, 1987; Vol. III, 1994)
Meditazioni -Padre Pio da Pietrelcina, Meditazioni (San Giovanni Rotondo,
FG: Edizioni Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza, 1991)
McGregor -Augustine McGregor, O.C.S.O., The Spirituality of Padre Pio edited
by Father Alessio Parente, O.F.M Cap. (San Giovanni Rotondo, FG: Edizioni
"Padre Pio da Pietrelcina", 1974)
Ruffin -C. Bernard Ruffin, Padre Pio: The True Story (Huntington, IN: Our
Sunday Visitor, Inc., 1982)
Schug -John A. Schug, Capuchin, Padre Pio (Huntington, IN: Our Sunday
Visitor, Inc., 1976)
Tarcisio -Father Tarcisio of Cervinara, O.F.M. Cap., Padre Pio's Mass edited
by Father Alessio Parente, O.F.M. Cap. (San Giovanni Rotondo, FG: "Padre Pio
da Pietrelcina" Editions, 1992)
TCF -J. Neuner, S.J. and J. Dupuis, S.J. (eds.), The Christian Faith in the
Doctrinal Documents of the Catholic Church revised edition (New York: Alba
House, 1982)
VO -François-Léon Gauthey (ed.), Vie et Oeuvres de Sainte Marguerite-Marie
Alacoque, 3 vols. (Paris: Ancienne Librairie Poussielgue, 1920)
ENDNOTES
1 André Feuillet, The Priesthood of Christ and His Ministers trans. Matthew
J. O'Connell (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1975) 13.
2 Feuillet 13-14.
3 Patrick J. Dunn, Priesthood: A Re-examination of the Roman Catholic
Theology of the Presbyterate (New York: Alba House, 1990) 3.
4 CCC #1547.
5 McGregor 62.
6 Frezza 352-353 (my emphasis).
7 Frezza 353-354 (emphasis mine).
8 Di Flumeri 27 (emphasis mine). Cf. also Frezza 361.
9 Frezza 354.
10 Ruffin 62-63; Schug 29-33.
11 Cf. Schug 43-56.
12 Cf. Introduction in Letters I:59 [Epistolario I:48].
13 Letters I:222, footnote to letter #16 [Epistolario I:196] (my emphasis);
cf. Frezza 351; Alessandro 55.
14 Letters I:234 [Epistolario I:206] (emphasis mine).
15 Letters I:235-236 [Epistolario I:207].
16 Letters I:264-265 [Epistolario I:234].
17 Ruffin 69.
18 Ruffin 70-71.
19 Di Flumeri 24. On the term "invisible" stigimata, cf. Di Flumeri 17-18.
20 Letters I:343 [Epistolario I:303-304].
21 Letters I:346-347 [Epistolario I:306-307].
22 Padre Agostino da San Marco in Lamis, Diario, Testimonianze, 2 a cura di
Padre Gerardo Di Flumeri, (San Giovanni Rotondo, FG: Edizioni «Padre Pio da
Pietrelcina», 171; quoted in Father Fernando of Riese Pio X, O.F.M. Cap.,
"The Mystery of the Cross in Padre Pio," in Gerardo Di Flumeri, O.F.M. Cap.
(ed.), Acts of the First Congress of Studies on Padre Pio's Spirituality
trans. Mary Brink (San Giovanni Rotondo, FG: Edizioni «Padre Pio da
Pietrelcina», 1978) 96.
23 Letters I:756 [Epistolario I:678].
24 Cf. letter #86 to Mother de Saumaise of May 1688, VO II:397-398 [Letters
of Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque trans. Clarence A. Herbst, S.J. (Orlando,
FL: Men of the Sacred Heart, 1976) 127]; letter #133 to Father Croiset of 3
November 1689, VO II:580 [Letters 219].
25 In Ioannis evangelium, tract. XXVI, 4; AAS 20 (1928) 173 [Carlen 3:325].
26 AAS 20 (1928) 174; trans. in Francis Larkin, SS.CC., Understanding the
Heart second, revised edition (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1980) 66.
27 Cf. Arthur Burton Calkins, "The Tripartite Biblical Vision of Man: A Key
to the Christian Life," Doctor Communis 43 (1990) 149-152.
28 Padre Pio of Pietrelcina, O.F.M. Cap., The Agony of Jesus in the Garden
of Gethsemane (Rockford, IL: Tan Books and Publishers, Inc., 1974) 22
[Meditazioni 64-65].
2 9Letters I:887 [Epistolario I:797].
30 Letters I:899; 935 [Epistolario I:808; 840].
31 Letters I:918 [Epistolario I:825].
32 Letters I:968 [Epistolario I:869].
33 Letters I:596; 607 [Epistolario I:532; 542].
34 Letters I:974 [Epistolario I:874].
35 Letters I:1173-1174 [Epistolario I:1053-1054].
36 Letters I:308 [Epistolario I:273] (emphasis mine).
37 Tarcisio 17.
38 Tarcisio 21; cf. also D'Apolito 166-167.
39 Tarcisio 24.
40 D'Apolito 222.
41 Cf. Tarcisio 34-38.
42 D-S #3812 [TCF #661].
43 Schug 110-111.
44 Tarcisio 41.
45 Letters I:395, 396 [Epistolario I:350-351] (emphasis mine).
46 Letters I:385-386 [Epistolario I:342-343] (emphasis mine).
47 Cf. VO II:103 [Vincent Kerns, M.S.F.S. (ed. & trans.), The Autobiography
of Saint Margaret Mary (London: Darton, Longman & Todd Ltd. "Libra Book",
1979) 78].
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