Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Blog 1


Most people have an inadequate knowledge of Saint Ignatius. There is a "deformation" of his person. Many conceive and say that Saint Ignatius is more military than a saint. Also, that he interested obedience as a barracks, the outer composure, discipline, which has nothing of the romanticism of a St. Francis of Assisi, the sweetness of a Saint Francis of Sales, innocence and simplicity of a Saint Theresa of Little Jesus. However, it is a false image of him. He was a lover of nature which he saw the hand of the Creator. It was so nice in the treatment everyone liked to talk to him; It was so straightforward and humble when his fellows at the Foundation for the "Society of Jesus." The Jesuits chose him as their first Superior General, and he refused three times. At the persistence of his peers in selecting him for unanimously, he said that he could only accept after his confessor heard his general confession of his whole life, and if he sent him. He was a terribly tender saint to the point of celebrating Mass flooded with tears, and so many other unknown features of his life that make him a fascinating human being and a man of God.

His love for God and everything that refers to piety and devotion was in him highlighted. His great devotion to the Virgin to whom he called her " My Lady." Since his conversion made the Lady of his dreams and loves. He had an intense life of prayers. He prayed for seven hours daily and also he had his recollection and silence daily. His Masses were the center of his entire day. Even he taught the Mass is the center and summit of the life Christian before then the Second Vatican Council told it. Loyola celebrated his masses soaked in tears and very abundant mystical graces he received there. Before he celebrated the mass, he read and meditate the readings and remained held after at least one hour in thanksgiving. In every Mass, he felt the presence of the Holy Trinity a vivid way and often he left powerless.

His penance at the beginning of his conversion was exaggerated penances because he wanted to repair his lost time days without eating or drinking, going hot or cold, and barefoot. He macerated his body with all kinds of austerities. He suffered all his life from terrible stomach pains. When he died, an autopsy was done to see the cause of such pain and was discovered stones, which some think in those early years, he could have swallowed something perpetually to suffer for Jesus. He had a big spirit of poverty, and he wished to have only God for help. He required all his children a care in the use of things end and never accepted the slightest appearance of luxury or superfluity. His Exquisite purity and no woman ever said she saw some attitude less well, and that in Rome he built the house of "Santa Marta" to rescue fallen women. Loyola, himself looked for, convinced and took them to the house attended by religious. A prelate once he said that the house could solve nothing because these women told very easily they return to their bad life. To which Loyola stated that he was well paid for all efforts so that one of those unfortunate not offend the Lord even one night.His admirable prudence handled all obligations of the Company with a solvency unparalleled insight and lucidity. He always looked for the short or the long run, that his decisions were very wise.

There was not a charity which he did not practice in because he practiced all the works of mercy with overwhelming zeal. Therefore, it seems that his preference was to care for the sick, who, despite being the General Superior of the Company and having so many occupations, He never performed to stop. His spirit of a child was simplicity and affability and was so remarkable that all wanted to talk and be with him, so they called him the seductive. His unshakable strength in what looked to be the Will of God there was no one he could dissuade or problem that was put forward was for him insoluble. If it was God's will, no matter what costs have to carry it out. He had an iron will and a heroic perseverance.His apostolic zeal was overwhelming that urged him to do whatever he could just to save one soul.

Blog 2 Review of the Interior Castle 

St. Teresa writes about herself, and from the experience of being and knowing infinitely loved by the Lord. From the approach to the author, it is discovered that her work Interior Castle is herself delivered to recipients the last link in the process of self-communication and final word. Thus was born one of the top rankings books of spirituality in the world. She wrote the book between June 2 and November 29, 1577, with significant interruptions; it is written in a very short time -3 months approximately- between surprises, travel, fears and the wisdom of life. At this period also experiencing one of the most difficult times in her entire life.

Teresa discerned and wrote most significant of her experience of Christ, the Trinity, ecclesiology and the mystery of the human being.
An architectural symbol systematizes the new writing: the castle, giving it cohesion and depth structure. With this, it encodes data of high theological value regarding your spiritual journey that will serve to support a doctrinal synthesis. She called the book "Treaty", and it has great thematic content and pursues the combination of three elements: the author herself, the gospel and a symbol; that is, her personal history, reading from the Word of God and concentrated on the symbol of the castle. She sank the knowledge of life in which man lives in the castle himself and says the theological reason for the mystical life.

Also, the book is about God's action, creation, salvation, and planning. Interior Castle is the divine biography, not about anything but what is He, and in the light of God the man is; in Christ, the full human being toward which we move is revealed. The essential doctrinal elements are God and man, and the relationship of customization that is reached in the encounter. The book is structured on seven mansions: the ascetic, from the first to the third dwelling; the break and step, the fourth abode; and the mystical, from the fifth to the seventh abode. The idea or concept of dwelling refers to the stage where the relationship is; is the action of God and human response. The distinction is important. Finally, the content of the mystique of its wrapper, as interested discern the grace of the clothes in which comes wrapped. The first readers of the Interior Castle are the Carmelites, although the project was the first thing they saw the "letrados." The first theologian who issues a verdict on the final work is the Jesuit Rodrigo Alvarez.

It has been seen that Teresa was communicated herself in her work, and revealed political axes that enable the development of an anthropological proposal. The systematization of their implicit theological understanding of the Interior Castle will make through listening to the author, investigating how she responds to the mystery of the human being. To this end, a method that is essentially centered on a reading text is used. The Teresian approach to writing is made from the detailed study of the terms and taking into account the symbology, which helps understanding of anthropological concepts and allows the tripartite structure of his theological, anthropology, assuming the rich meaning of fear.

The human longing for full humanization interweaves with the draft deification by God, so that befalls a reciprocal search: God from within man illuminates all the dwellings for human advance to the depths of itself, where he dwells. The study does not cover all the Teresian thought; rather it is limited to the scope of a question through a hypothesis in the key work: Interior Castle, born in existential and vital context decanting their maturation process work. In its theological thought, which she calls "mystical theology" it is the hermeneutical key for communication of experience. The humility style of its works has been extensive and ardently discussed. Teresian anthropology discovered mainly analyzing the idea that the author has of itself. This is the Teresian called Socratic: one does not know itself rather than in the light of God. On the one hand, Teresa values the reason is very cerebral and does not advance its reflection not well understood herself. In the field of love, she has always lived very dear: it is an emotional woman who reaches the end and speaks through the term horror. Teresian breaks theological vision and formulas from the spirit, key opening to transcendence where his prophecy is fullness. 

Sources: https://www.ewtn.com/library/SPIRIT/CASTLE.TXT



Blog 3 Another view of the Reformation

We speak of the Reformation, but usually this term we mean about the Protestant Reformation, yet the term reform can include both the Protestant movement and the internal reform of the Catholic Church. For hundreds of years ago, Catholic efforts to reform the Church were called the "Counter" but some scholars objected to the term based on the explanation that the Catholic reform was reduced to a mere response to Protestantism. Many experts argued that the XVI century was a period of several reform efforts, Protestantism being only one of them, there were Catholics efforts meant more to respond to Protestantism and cut its criticism.


Needless to say, the issue of terminology has not been officially established by specialists, since it 's hard to establish something officially among academics. The Catholic Reformation is probably the dominant expression, although the Counter persists in some circles. The following pattern is used to use one or another term for areas where the Catholic reform was not a direct response to Protestantism; the Catholic Reformation term is used, but if such reforms were in direct response then the term is used (re-reform). It is simple, but not always helpful as it is not clear in all cases the direction of reforms.

In any case, the point is what was done in the Catholic Counter- Reformation or not how we call it. Also, what was done? In one hand, restricted the detrimental impact of the Protestant Reformation, limiting the scope of those things that needed to be reformed and limited the scope of the issues that Protestants could influence a non-Catholic direction. Even above the weak Renaissance popes, Catholic saints emerged, calling Catholics to repent and forming for them a life of holiness, without them, things would have been worse. On the other hand, the Catholic Reformation attended the Church to recover much of what was lost by the initial successes of the Protestant Reformation.

Who were the prominent figures of the Catholic Reformation? Some of them were St. Pius V, St. Charles Borromeo, the martyrs Thomas More, and John Fisher contributed to the beginning of the Catholic Reformation. Saint Ignatius and the Jesuits were great instruments of the Catholic renewal and the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius, a concise but spiritually powerful work. Mystics  spiritual giants like Theresa of Avila, John of the Cross, Saint Phili Neri, St. Peter Canisius and St. Francis de Sales, whose pastoral work deeply penetrated the Catholic laity. These saints helped the Catholic Church and society, but their real job was the transformation of hearts and minds. They called people to return to God, to unite with Jesus Christ and live according to the Gospel in their daily lives, and it has been said that medieval Christianity was monastic and denying the world. Almost in a Manichean sense, what can be said in defense to this charge is that it is not entirely accurate because the Christianity of the Middle Ages created in the Christian culture monasteries both within and outside them. Therefore, a false accusation to the Catholic Reformation; no aspect of daily life, whether of the clergy or the laity, was alien to the spiritual revolution of the Catholic Reformation. Consequently, as the division of Europe into Catholics and Protestants had been accomplished by the time of the Catholic Reformation, spiritual vitality of Catholic renewal gained a lot of people back to full communion with the Catholic Church. In our days, we can see that everything that the Catholic Church has passed through, it has been God's will.

Sunday, April 24, 2016

St. Francis Xavier, S.J.
Setting the World on Fire for Jesus


When closing meetings with or letters to the members of his community, St. Ignatius Loyola directed his followers to, “Go, set the world on fire.”  While many Jesuits have taken that admonition to heart and done great missionary service, few can approach the legacy left by St. Francis Xavier, S.J.  One of the original followers of St. Ignatius and founders of the Jesuits, St. Francis Xavier had a zeal for saving souls that drove him to journey to lands with little or no Christian presence and to develop new methods of evangelization that inspire people to this day.

Xavier: Missionary & Saint is an impressive documentary produced by the New Orleans Jesuit Province that remarkably captures St. Francis’s passion and creativity in saving souls.  Narrated by Liam Neeson, the film includes clips from interviews with numerous historians expertly woven into dramatizations, beautiful location footage, paintings, and excerpts from Xavier’s letters and other primary source documents.

Several important lessons about St. Francis Xavier’s life and ministry emerge from the film.  These ideas are documented in many writings about St. Francis Xavier, but the combination of visual imagery and brief expert explanations really bring the ideas to life in the video.  The first theme emphasized is that Xavier’s passion for spreading the Gospel made him fearless both in evangelizing dangerous mission lands and in confronting corrupt Europeans who were sinfully exploiting the native populations.[1]  St. Francis Xavier did not hesitate to remind those in authority that one day they would answer before God for the souls scandalized and oppressed by such behavior.
. . . early in 1545, he sent a long letter to King John with an account of his mission. He speaks boldly of the harm these adventurers were doing to the cause, and the danger that heathen who had been gathered into the Church might fall away,-"scandalized and terrified by the many grievous injuries and wrongs which they suffer, especially from your Highness' own servants.... For there is danger that when our Lord God calls your Highness to His judgment that your Highness may hear angry words from him: 'Why did you not punish those who were your subjects and owned your authority, and were enemies of Me in India?'"[2]

Second, St. Francis was highly adaptable and creative in finding ways to reach the people.  “To help simple people, he set Catholic doctrines to rhyme, to fit popular tunes, and these songs were sung everywhere, in fields and workshops, in streets and homes.”[3]  He also was careful to record what methods worked and what failed in his letters to St. Ignatius Loyola so that future missionaries would have a guide.
In the space of one month I made Christians of more than ten thousand. This is the method I followed . . . beginning with the first elements of the Christian faith, I taught them there is one God, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; and at the same time, calling on the three divine Persons and one God, I made them each make three times the sign of the Cross; then, putting on a surplice, I began to recite in a loud voice and in their own language the form of the general Confession, the Apostle's Creed, the Ten Commandments, the Lord's Prayer, the Ave Maria, and the Salve Regina. Two years ago I translated all these prayers into the language of the country, and learned them by heart. I recited them slowly so that all of every age and condition followed me in them. Then I began to explain shortly the articles of the Creed and the Ten Commandments in the language of the country . . . [4]

The third point that the movie demonstrates is that much of St. Francis Xavier’s success was based on long periods of hard work as well as authentic witness and preaching.  In India, for example, “Xavier devoted two years to the work of preaching to the Paravas, with notable success. Multitudes flocked to hear him, and at times he was so fatigued from administering the Sacrament of Baptism that he could scarcely move his arms . . .”[5]  At other times, he seemed to have little success but always persevered.  After attempting to evangelize the high-caste Brahmans for over a year, he made only one convert.[6]

A fourth lesson we can clearly learn from the documentary is that while St. Francis Xavier never fulfilled his dream of reaching China and converting many souls in China and Japan, his efforts opened the doors for religious exploration and his letters provided some of the best information on East Asia that was available to Europeans at the time.[7]  At the time of his death in 1552, sick and abandoned on an island while waiting for a boat that could take him to China, his efforts in his last years must have seemed like a failure to St. Francis Xavier.  But, many other missionaries who would follow in his footsteps benefitted from the Saint’s efforts and learned from his experiences.[8]

The idea of lighting a fire for God is truly an apt image for the life St. Francis Xavier.  Fire both brings light and purifies or burns away decaying matter that must be shed.  On Pentecost, the Holy Spirit, appearing as tongues of fire, burned away the fears and desire for self-preservation of the Apostles and miraculously enlightened them so that they could preach the Gospel to all nations.  St. Francis Xavier demonstrates that same charism and inspiration of the Holy Spirit.  In our modern era, when the Church is calling all Catholics to a new evangelization in order to transform our secular culture, we should study and embrace his legacy.  Xavier: Missionary & Saint provides a rich tool for discussions and motivating discipleship.  The film can be purchased through Amazon in DVD format.



[1] Xavier: Missionary & Saint, Directed by Jeremy Zipple, SJ, 2006, Fourth Week Films and the New Orleans Jesuit Province, DVD.

[2] “Saint Francis Xavier: Apostle of the Indies and Japan – 1506-1552,” EWTN, accessed March 28, 2016, http://www.ewtn.com/library/MARY/XAVIER2.htm

[3] Ibid.

[4] Ibid.

[5] J. Wicki, "Xavier, Francis, St.," New Catholic Encyclopedia, 2nd ed. Vol. 14, (Detroit: Gale, 2003), 877-879, Gale Virtual Reference Library, accessed April 5, 2016, http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE%7CCX3407712016&v=2.1&u=23009&it=r&p=GVRL&sw=w&asid=0072afe5d7898b9ebfcd00e2e5ec6729

[6] Ibid.

[7] Xavier: Missionary & Saint.

[8] Ibid.

Bibliography

“Saint Francis Xavier: Apostle of the Indies and Japan – 1506-1552.” EWTN. Accessed March 28, 2016. http://www.ewtn.com/library/MARY/XAVIER2.htm

Wicki, J. "Xavier, Francis, St." New Catholic Encyclopedia. 2nd ed. Vol. 14. Detroit: Gale, 2003. 877-879. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Accessed April 5, 2016. http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE%7CCX3407712016&v=2.1&u=23009&it=r&p=GVRL&sw=w&asid=0072afe5d7898b9ebfcd00e2e5ec6729

Xavier: Missionary & Saint. Directed by Jeremy Zipple, SJ. 2006. Fourth Week Films and the New Orleans Jesuit Province. DVD.
Venerable Solanus Casey
Model of Faith, Trust, and Gratitude


By worldly standards one would not expect much from Fr. Solanus Casey.  Ordained as a simplex priest after barely making it through the seminary, and usually assigned to be the doorkeeper at the monasteries where he served, he will never be known as a great theologian, preacher, or evangelist.  Yet, this simple priest is widely acclaimed as a healer, prophet, and model of trust in God’s providence who inspired the conversion of countless souls.

The film, The Healing Prophet: Solanus Casey, provides a very touching and inspirational picture of this simple man and likely saint.   It especially illustrates three themes fundamental to Fr. Solanus’s spirituality.  The first is profound gratitude to God in all things.  As noted by Fr. Michael Crosby, Collaborator to the Realtor of The Cause of Solanus Casey,
Because he believed in God so much, Solanus was absolutely convinced that our response to the God who has been so loving of us is appreciation and thankfulness and gratitude.  He said, ‘Appreciation is the first sign of a rational being,’ so it again goes back to believing in God and being very thankful that God has been revealed to us in the various forms that God’s presence comes into our lives, and so he would thank God ahead of time.[1]

The second pillar of Fr. Solanus’s spiritual life was his tremendous faith.  It was a faith so apparent that it inspired many who visited him and convinced them that Fr. Solanus was a powerful intercessor with God.  Fr. Dan Fox, Director of the Solanus Casey Center, describes it well. 
When we look at the story of people who are believers, we can always see the handiwork of God at work in the person . . . Solanus is a believer for sure . . . He captures our imagination by his wonderful believing ability.  He is a simple believer.  He accepts God at his word and that is an amazing thing.  It almost shocks us that he can be so certain about his faith, that he can be so assured of it.[2]

The third aspect of his spirituality that inspired many was Fr. Solanus’s unshakable trust in the Lord’s providence.  As one guild member explained, Casey believed that everything that happens is part of God’s loving plan and that when one door closes we can be assured that another is probably already opening.  Fr. Solanus “believed that when bad things happen to good people . . . people need to trust in Gods providence and ask, ‘What should I do next?  Where do I take this or what level do I take it too?’  They need to consider that maybe another door is opening; maybe they need to choose a different path.”[3]

Fr. Solanus inspired thousands of people who came to ask for his intercession and simple words of wisdom.  One reason people found him so accessible was the ordinariness of his life yet strength of his virtues, especially his openness to God’s graces.  A Positio is a report created to document the virtues of a person being considered for the title of Venerable (the second stage in the canonization process).  In Fr. Solanus’s  Positio, it states,
“Holiness does not consist in extraordinary things but in doing ordinary things extraordinarily well.” These words of Pope Pius XI could serve as title to the life of the Servant of God, Francis Solanus Casey . . . With regard to the Servant of God’s virtues, the following words of his are significant: “It seems to me that were we only to correspond to God’s graces, continually being showered down on every one of us, we would be able to pass from being great sinners one day to be great saints the next.”[4]

People were drawn to Fr. Solanus because he was an average American. He was a great fan of baseball, he fell in love and proposed but was rejected.  He worked on farms and as a street car operator, and then spent most of his life after ordination being a simple receptionist at Capuchin monasteries.  Like most people, he could find work monotonous.  He was considered a man of the people and a people's priest.[5]  People could even relate to the fact that, like most of us, he had some of his own unusual habits.  In his case, they included “combining all his food — cereal, coffee, orange juice, potatoes, ice cream — into one bowl at mealtimes, for example, and playing his harmonica to calm the bees in the monastery's hive.  He was also known to play his squeaky violin before the Blessed Sacrament!”[6]

Thanks to his simple acceptance of every aspect of life as an element of God’s loving providence, Fr. Solanus humbly accepted the difficulties and limitations he experienced in his vocation, as well as chronic physical suffering.  After studying for over ten years for the priesthood, in 1904, Solanus was ordained as a "simplex priest", which meant that he couldn't hear confessions or preach formal homilies.[7]  He then spent over fifty years moving between at least seven different monasteries or churches, typically working as a doorkeeper. By 1956, the painful skin condition he had long suffered from had spread to cover his whole body.  He died in 1957 at the age of eighty-six.[8]

Wherever he went, numerous people attributed answered prayers and miraculous healings to Fr. Solanus’s intercession.  “When he enrolled people in the Seraphic Mass Association, which Capuchins used as a means of intercessory prayer, so many of them reported blessings received that Solanus' superiors directed him to keep a record . . . By the end of his life, Casey had filled seven notebooks noting more than six thousand cases of answered prayers!”[9]  But, as noted by Fr. Dan Fox, Director of the Solanus Casey Center, throughout his prayer ministry, Fr. Solanus always understood the real purpose of prayer.  “We don’t pray to change God’s mind.  We pray that our minds may be changed . . . to have our mind be in conformity with the will of God.”[10] 

Fr. Solanus also had the gift of prophecy.  He would often be able to say whether someone would be healed, predict a person’s vocations, or tell the number of children they would have. During WWII, he seemed to know who would come home safely.[11]
The impact that Fr. Solanus had on people was clearly evidenced by the outpouring of support when he died.  “In the three days after his death, more than twenty thousand people came to pay their respects to Fr. Solanus, the ‘simple’ priest who never heard one single confession but who, as porter, opened a doorway to God for so many.”[12] 

One of the strengths of The Healing Prophet is the way the movie documents the continued blessings that are being attributed to Venerable Solanus Casey’s intercession, over fifty years after his death.  But, even when our prayers seem not to be answered the way we want, following Fr Solanus’s example of faith and absolute trust in God’s providence, will lead to anyone to unexpected blessings.  The Healing Prophet: Solanus Casey can be purchased through Amazon in DVD format.  It can also be obtained from the Fr. Solanus Casey Guild.



[1] The Healing Prophet: Solanus Casey, GL Production, Directed by Audrey Geyer, 2012, DVD.

[2] Ibid.

[3] Ibid.

[4] “The Positio,” Fr. Solanus Guild, accessed March 28, 2016, http://solanuscasey.org/who-is-father-solanus/the-positio

[5] The Healing Prophet.

[6] Bob French, “The Surprising Case of Solanus Casey,” Catholic Education Resource Center, 2015, accessed April 4, 2016, http://www.catholiceducation.org/en/faith-and-character/faith-and-character/the-surprising-case-of-solanus-casey.html

[7] The Healing Prophet.

[8] Leo Wollenweber, OFM, Cap, Meet Solanus Casey: Spiritual Counselor and Wonder Worker (Ann Arbor: Servant Publications, 2002), 137-139.

[9] French, “The Surprising Case of Solanus Casey.”

[10] The Healing Prophet.

[11] Ibid.

[12] French, “The Surprising Case of Solanus Casey.”


Bibliography

French, Bob. “The Surprising Case of Solanus Casey.” Catholic Education Resource Center. 2015. Accessed April 4, 2016. http://www.catholiceducation.org/en/faith-and-character/faith-and-character/the-surprising-case-of-solanus-casey.html

The Healing Prophet: Solanus Casey. GL Production. Directed by Audrey Geyer. 2012. DVD.

“The Positio.” Fr. Solanus Guild. Accessed March 28, 2016. http://solanuscasey.org/who-is-father-solanus/the-positio

Wollenweber, Leo. Meet Solanus Casey: Spiritual Counselor and Wonder Worker. Ann Arbor: Servant Publications, 2002.

Saturday, April 23, 2016

St. Damien of Molokai
“The Leper Priest”

In western culture few saints are so closely identified with a ministry to a particular group as St. Damien of Molokai.  When the plight of lepers in modern times is considered, his heroic efforts for the lepers in Hawaii immediately comes to mind.  Knowing that it would eventually cost him his own life Fr. Damien chose to live with, love, and serve this abandoned, suffering population at a time when there were no cures for leprosy and the victims were often erroneously blamed for contracting the disease.

The documentary film, An Uncommon Kindness: The Father Damien Story, does an excellent job of showing the tremendous suffering endured by lepers in the mid-1800s and the great challenges faced by Fr. Damien and the few other missionaries who tried to serve them.  The video is powerfully narrated by Robin Williams and includes a riveting mixture of photos, film clips, and quotations from original sources.  Some of the photos can be difficult to watch for modern viewers unaccustomed to seeing the ravages of leprosy.  But, the many interviews and original source documents show the undeniable humanity of these victims no matter what the disease had destroyed in their bodies.

When Fr. Damien, a missionary from Belgium, volunteered to be the permanent chaplain on Molokai in 1873, there were no known cures for Hansen’s Disease (commonly called leprosy).  His bishop, the lepers on the island, and his religious community knew that if he stayed on the island, it was only a matter of time before Fr. Damien would succumb to the disease himself.  The ship that brought him to the island also carried the bishop of the Catholic mission in Hawaii and fifty newly exiled sufferers of the disease.
As the vessel made its way to the shores of Molokai, Bishop Maigret and Father Damien gave comfort to the poor lepers, knowing, as all aboard did, that those afflicted with Hansen’s Disease would never leave the colony alive. Once they had reached the settlement, Bishop Maigret made a startling announcement to the lepers. While he might be only paying them a visit, he was bringing them a priest ‘‘who will be a father to you…he will become one with you and live and die with you.’’[1]

The first obstacle that Fr. Damien had to overcome was the moral and spiritual despair and degradation that many of the eight hundred inhabitants of Molokai had fallen into given the isolation and horrible conditions on the island.   “As he came ashore . . . some of the lepers boasted . . . ‘Here there is no law!’ Residents preyed on each other, many died alone and largely untreated, and others consumed home-made liquor to spend their days in drunken stupors. The dead were usually wrapped in rags and thrown into the ravine where wild boars ate the remains.”[2]  In response, Fr. Damien worked tirelessly among the lepers to restore their sense of dignity.  The priest was determined  to be “a true pastor to the settlement. He started by making wooden coffins for each corpse, fashioning  600 of them by his own hand. Damien dug the graves himself . . . He fought against those who brutalized the weak, halted the drunken orgies, and cared for the bitterest lepers even as they cursed God for their afflictions.”[3]

Over time, he also enlisted their help in building a chapel, a rudimentary hospice, and many other physical improvements in the settlement.  He tried to visit each patient once a week.  Although his efforts did much to give the people a sense of hope and an eternal perspective, the devastation caused by the disease was ever present.  In one long period, at least one person per day died in the small settlement.[4]

Fr. Damien’s work with the lepers brought him international recognition.  He never sought the personal acclaim, but recognized that the attention would bring desperately needed donations and pressure for better conditions for his isolated flock.  Luminaries throughout the world cited Fr. Damien as an example of heroic service and charity.  For example, Mahatma Gandhi’s praise is frequently quoted, “The world can boast of very few heroes who compare with Father Damien of Molokai.”[5] 

Unfortunately, all the attention created much jealousy and many critics for Fr. Damien during his life.  He was accused of exaggerating the plight of the lepers, trying to embarrass government officials in Hawaii, and even of contracting the disease through illicit sexual activity with the exiles on Molokai.  At one point his superiors even censured him, refused him treatment at the hospital in Honolulu.[6]   Fr. Damien never let these unjust accusations distract him from his ministry.  He endured all these detractions and hardships out of love for his people and simply focused on the needs of the lepers.  The cross that brought Fr. Damien the most pain was the loss of access to the Sacrament of Confession.  He had many long stretches in which he had no access to another priest because none was allowed to land on the island.  But, he never lost his faith in God’s providence or his commitment to his missionary calling.[7]

Fr. Damien died from leprosy in 1889 at the age of 49.  Shortly before his death, a small community of nuns was allowed to join him in Molokai.  So he returned to the Lord knowing that his beloved community would be well cared for.  His death was grieved all over the western world, especially in the United States and his home country of Belgium.  Conditions on Molokai gradually improved and in 1941 a cure for Hansen’s Disease was found and introduced to the remaining residents on the island in 1946.[8]

Overall, An Uncommon Kindness: The Father Damien Story is well worth watching.  The film reminds us of the tremendous suffering that has been endured by abandoned populations in our society, but also what one dedicated soul can accomplish when he follows God’s call and acts for the love of Christ.  It is available through the Amazon Marketplace in DVD format.



[1] Bunson, Matthew E. “The Leper’s Priest.” The Priest. October, 2009. Accessed April 3, 2016, 21. http://eds.a.ebscohost.com/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?sid=984cfcfa-1834-4d81-a09c-17e98c4ce111%40sessionmgr4005&vid=8&hid=4202

[2] Ibid, 23.

[3] Ibid.

[4] An Uncommon Kindness: The Father Damien Story, Narrated by Robin Williams, Fries Home Video, 2003, DVD.

[5] Ibid.

[6] Ibid.

[7] Ibid.

[8] Ibid.

Bibliography

An Uncommon Kindness: The Father Damien Story. Narrated by Robin Williams. Fries Home Video, 2003. DVD.

Bunson, Matthew E. “The Leper’s Priest.” The Priest. October, 2009. Accessed April 3, 2016. http://eds.a.ebscohost.com/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?sid=984cfcfa-1834-4d81-a09c-17e98c4ce111%40sessionmgr4005&vid=8&hid=4202