Posted on 07/28/2009 9:42:48 AM PDT by NYer
The main altar at the church where Padre Pio used to say Mass
It was 1965. My brother and sister-in-law (“sis” for short) had wanted to have a baby in the first five years of their married life but all attempts failed. Anxious and getting desperate, my sis agreed to travel to a then-sleepy town called San Giovanni Rotondo — about a four-hour drive from Rome, Italy — to meet Padre Pio, the Capuchin friar who bore the nail wounds of Jesus on the cross.
She said, “I waited for three hours at the confessional room. Finally, I saw Padre Pio motioning to me to speak. I was holding my knees to keep them from shaking. My confession was brief but I felt that he knew that I was there for something more important. After giving me the Absolution, he looked up and whispered, ‘Next year, you will have a baby boy.’”
“Wow!” my sis exclaimed. “He closed his eyes and made the sign of the cross on my forehead. Immediately, I felt a warm glow, both calming and comforting.”
The following year — as promised by Padre Pio — my sis gave birth to a healthy boy and she named him (you guessed it) Pio. My nephew, Pio, is now 43 years old, happily married and a loving father to two kids.
All the time, one teeny question kept popping into my head: “How did my sister-in-law and Padre Pio communicate? She didn’t speak a word of Italian, nor did Padre Pio speak English.
Simple. Padre Pio’s guardian angel had acted as his translator and spokesman. “You don’t say!” I yelped. “Yes,” said my sis. “I heard Padre Pio speak to me in English!” Still, I was not completely convinced. Maybe there was a hidden booth somewhere with UN-trained translators. That is, until I read a similar incident written by Father Alessio Parente, author of the book on Padre Pio entitled Send Me Your Guardian Angel:
“A little American girl was brought to Padre Pio so that he could hear her first confession. Since she didn’t speak a word of Italian, an American religious sister by the name of Mary Pyle, who was close to Father Pio, brought the little girl to him. ‘Father, I’m here to help you as this little girl doesn’t understand any Italian at all.’
“‘Mary,’ said Padre Pio, ‘you can go, as the little one and I will take care of this.’ Mary Pyle waited outside and when the little girl emerged from confession, she asked her, ‘Did Padre Pio understand you?’ ‘Yes,’ came the reply. Mary, a little surprised, asked one more question: ‘Did he speak in English?’ ‘Yes, in English,’ said the little girl.”
If you enter the area called Ricordi di Padre Pio in San Giovanni Rotondo, you will walk into a room containing some of Padre Pio’s memorabilia. You will see thousands of letters from devotees all over the world encased in glass cabinets. It was a known fact that Padre Pio could only read, write and speak in Italian yet he was able to reply to these letters. How? He counted on his multi-lingual guardian angel and kept him busy and on his toes, in his “translation booth,” so to speak, all the time.
Padre Pio kept an active and vivacious relationship with all guardian angels — including his own — fulfilling a promise he made long ago to all his spiritual children that “If you are too busy to see me, send your guardian angel!” (Note: A special liaison that Padre Pio promised to continue even after his death.)
For example, there was a woman who never failed to attend the daily Mass celebrated by Padre Pio. One day, she was running late so she sent her guardian angel to Padre Pio to “delay” the Mass so she wouldn’t miss it. As a sign that her guardian angel would do this task for her, she told him to hide the skullcap of Padre Pio. When she reached the church, there was Padre Pio, indeed a little late, but ready to say Holy Mass. The woman confessed to Padre Pio what she did. Nonchalantly, Padre Pio replied, “I know that. Your guardian angel hid my skullcap and I could not find it in the usual place and only pointed me to where he kept it after a few minutes.” This guardian angel had played “hide and seek” with Padre Pio in complete obedience to his ward.
A Capuchin brother used to hear Padre Pio talking to himself in his private cubicle. This got him very curious so he asked Padre Pio, “Who were you talking to?” Padre Pio replied, “Guardian angels. They came with petitions and requests and they kept me up late again last night.”
Mind you, Padre Pio was physically beaten up and tormented by the devil, but he remained unyielding, thanks to the encouragement and protection of his personal guardian angel.
There are many more amusing stories of Padre Pio’s interaction with guardian angels and when I finished reading these inspiring stories, I was struck by Padre Pio’s consistent reminder not to forget the Virgin Mother. In the thick of all these amazing “save and rescue” operations, we must remember that our beloved Mary is the Queen of all Angels. They would not have made any move without her stamp of blessed approval (or is it “blessed conspiracy”?).
Incidentally, Padre Pio also had something to say about our tears. “Your tears are collected by the angels and are placed in a gold chalice and you will find them when you present yourself before God.” Now, who wouldn’t want to cry me a river or gather a bucket of tears or let the floodgates (of tears) open?
After a full day of touring San Giovanni Rotondo which included a private Mass in the same church where Padre Pio said Mass, watching videos on Padre Pio’s ministry, shopping for some religious souvenirs and posing for a group photo, Father Dave Concepcion, our tour chaplain, gave us something to think about. “You will notice that all the saints manifest three deep loves in their lives: the love for God, the love for the Holy Eucharist, and the love for Mama Mary.”
I turned to my co-pilgrims and said, “Hey, doesn’t that apply to us as well? Could it be possible that we can also become saints, someday?”
They all laughed — nervously, but maybe hopefully, too.
In the book, there are multiple references to the working relationship St. Pio's enjoyed with his guardian angel. Your guardian angel is ready to assist you too. Get to know your guardian angel and thank God each day for this special messenger in your life.
I can’t read this all the way through it is bringing tears to my eyes and strong emotion to my heart. :-) . I will finish later. Thank you for the post.
This is a Catholic caucus thread.
You should check the religion moderator’s guidelines regarding caucus, open, and ecumenical threads.
Thanks so much.. I’ve been looking for a starting point to do a little reading about the dear Padre.
I agree with your assessment of Ruffin’s book. It is excellent.
The book was recommended by another freeper (apologies for not recalling which one) and is excellent! The author, a Lutheran minister, has been a guest on Fr. Benedict Groeschel's Suday Night Live program. Two weeks ago, the topic was Divine Mercy. A caller strongly encouraged all viewers, regardless of their religious affiliation to read the above book, along with St. Faustina's Diary.
He was a very practical, plain-spoken saint!
And if anything will keep me from being one of those awful Church Ladies, it's the stories in this book of all he had to endure from HIS local Church Ladies . . . !
So many books, so little time.
I’m working on St. Therese right now.
OMG! That was my Lenten read! A days after completing the book, I clicked on an often visited blog and this image greeted me.
St. Therese is one of my patron saints. Without hesitation, I purchased the icon print and had it beautifully matted and framed. It now hangs over the fireplace mantel in my Living Room, a constant reminder of the "little way".
Meant to ping you to this post. Excellent book by a Lutheran minister; have you read it?
Excellent article. The stories about Padre Pio should be spread far and wide in the West. Although nearly unknown in the West, the role of a spiritual father is well known in the East and spiritual fathers with the abilities of Padre Pio are alive and well on the Holy Mountain, throughout Russia and the ME and reportedly even here in No. America. They play a major role in the lives of not only the laity but indeed in the lives of clergy, other monastics and even the hierarchs.
If anyone doubts that Padre Pio understood languages he didn’t speak and was heard by his spiritual children in their own languages which he couldn’t speak, or that he knew what they had come to see him for, or that he communicated with them through their guardian angels, they can experoence these very things right now with monastic spiritual fathers in the Eastern Church.
I sincerely hope and pray that monasteries in the West begin to produces dozens of “Padre Pios”.
Indeed, the author cites the very same example. The above book is one I think you could appreciate and enjoy. It is scrupulously documented.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.