Friday, December 20, 2024

Padre Pio and You, by Mary O'Regan.

Padre Pio and You, the highly anticipated book by Mary O'Regan, is now available for pre-order from the publisher, Sophia Press, at this link: 

https://sophiainstitute.com/product/padre-pio-and-you/

 

Here is my review of her book: 


Mary O’Regan’s new book is quite aptly titled Padre Pio and You, because she takes the reader on a personal journey that relives both the external events and the inner life of this great saint. True, it is a complete biography of St. Pio, but it is much more than that. Chapter after chapter, the author underscores the relationship between Padre Pio’s life experiences and their practical application to the spiritual journey of the reader. 

 

In the theater, an imaginary “fourth wall” is spoken of, that separates the actors on the stage from the people in the audience – there is no interaction between the two groups. But in O’Regan’s book Padre Pio reaches out to the reader, crossing that invisible line. For example after relating a typical incident from the Saint’s life, she writes: “There is a beautiful instruction here for you and me.” And she will indicate just what that instruction might be. Another example: “His prayers for Amalia [who was childless] meant she bore a son. There may be an Amalia in our lives who longs for a little one. If so, ask Pio’s intercession.”   

 

I was particularly impressed by her chapter on Padre Pio’s deep devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary. It begins with the 1959 visit of the Pilgrim Statue of Our Lady of Fatima to Italy, which culminated in the miraculous cure of a seriously ill Padre Pio, as the statue circled his friary in a helicopter over San Giovanni Rotondo. She illustrates St. Pio’s famous attachment to praying the Rosary with such pithy anecdotes as: “A friar who lived with Pio recounted how he had to help Padre Pio wash his hands one at a time – not both hands at once – because he would pray on his left hand while the right was being washed!” As for the author’s personal advice to the reader on praying the Rosary: “We may find it very enlightening that Padre Pio said, “Mary is present in every mystery of the Rosary”. We, too, may invite Our Lady’s presence into our lives when we offer a decade of the Rosary.”

 

For a thorough look at Padre Pio’s entire lifetime, from his parents and childhood to his passing in 1968, this book is invaluable. St. Pio’s relationship with the reigning Popes, those that opposed him and those that favored him….his miracles, the stigmata, charismatic gifts such as reading of souls, his amazing Holy Mass, relations with angels and souls in purgatory, his confessional, his conversions and his persecutors, his letters, hospital and prayer groups….it is all presented in this wonderful book. But possibly even more significant is the practical spiritual direction that the author imparts, which can be life-changing for the reader. As the author of several Padre Pio books myself, I can highly recommend Mary O’Regan’s opus. 

 

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Monday, December 16, 2024

The “Our Father” as Explained by Our Lord – Part Three.

The Lord is speaking to His Apostles after His Resurrection.

 

Bless those who humiliate you.”

 

Jesus stretches out His arms in His usual attitude of prayer and intones: « Our Father Who art in Heaven. » He stops and comments: « That He is a Father is proved to you by the fact that He has forgiven you. [The Apostles had fled after He was arrested]. You, obliged to be perfect more than anybody else, you, who have received so many favors, and so, as you say, unsuited for the mission, which Lord, who were not your Father, would not have punished you? I have not punished you. The Father has not punished you. Because the Son does what the Father does, because the Father does what the Son does, as we are one only Divinity united in Love [...]. So, when I shall have gone, and in this manner you will pray: our, My, your Father, whereby we are brothers, I the first-born, you, the younger brothers, be always willing to see also Me in My Father and yours.


Be willing to see the Word, Who was "the Master" for you, and loved you even to accepting death and beyond death, leaving Himself to you in food and drink, so that you may be in Me and I in you as long as the exile lasts, and then you and I in the Kingdom, for which I taught you to pray, saying: "Thy Kingdom come", after you have implored that your work may sanctify the Name of the Lord, giving Him glory on Earth and in Heaven. Yes. There would be no Kingdom for you in Heaven, the Kingdom for those who will believe like you, if first you did not want the Kingdom of God in yourselves through the real practice of the Law of God and of My word, which is the perfecting of the Law, having given, in the time of Grace, the Law of the chosen ones, that is, of those who are, beyond the civil, moral, religious constitutions of the Mosaic time, already in the spiritual Law of the time of Christ.


You see what it is to have the closeness of God, but not God in you; what it is to have the word of God, but not the real practice of that word. Man has committed every crime by having God close to him, but not in his heart; by having the knowledge of the word, but not the obedience to it. Everything! Everything because of that. Dullness and delinquency, deicide, betrayal, tortures, the death of the Innocent and of His Cain, everything has come through that. And yet, who was loved by Me like Judas? But he did not have Me-God in his heart. And he is the damned deicide, infinitely guilty as an Israelite and as a disciple, as a suicide and a deicide, in addition to his seven deadly sins and every other sin of his. 

 

You can now have the Kingdom of God in yourselves more easily, because I have obtained it for you with My death. I have redeemed you with My sorrow. Bear that in your minds. So let no one trample on Grace, because it cost the life and the Blood of a God. So let the Kingdom of God be in you, men, through Grace; let it be on the Earth, through the Church, let it be in Heaven, for the blessed souls who, having lived with God in their hearts, united to the Body of which Christ is the Head, united to the Vine of which every Christian is a branch, deserve to rest in the Kingdom of Him for Whom all things have been made: Me, Who am speaking to you and Who have given Myself to the Will of the Father, so that everything might be accomplished.

 



I can therefore teach you, without hypocrisy, that you must say: "Thy Will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven". How I have done the will of My Father can be told even by the clods of earth, by plants, by flowers, by the stones in Palestine, by My wounded Body and by a whole population. Do as I did. To the very end. Even unto death on a cross, if God so wishes. Because, remember, I have done it, and there is no disciple who deserves mercy more than I do. And yet I have consumed the greatest sorrow. And yet I have obeyed with perpetual renunciations. You know. You will understand even more in future when you resemble Me drinking a draft at My chalice… Let this thought be constantly present to you: "Through His obedience to the Father, He saved us".


And if you want to be saviors, do what I have done. There will be some who will be acquainted with the cross, some with the tortures of tyrants, some with the torture of love, some with the exile from Heaven, to which they will tend until a very late age before ascending there. Well, in everything let the will of God be done. Consider that the torment of death or the torment of life, while you would like to die to come where I am, are the same in the eyes of God, if they are suffered with cheerful obedience. They are His Will. So they are holy.


Give us this day our daily bread". Day by day, hour by hour. It is faith. It is love. It is obedience. It is humility. It is hope, this asking for the bread for one day, and accepting it as it is. Sweet today, bitter tomorrow, much, little, with spices or with ashes. Always as it is just. God, Who is a Father, gives it. So it is good. Another time I will speak to you of the other Bread, which it would be healthy to eat every day, and to pray the Father to keep it […]. Pray the Father that He may defend His Bread and give you it.


"Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass against us". Since you are all sinners, be meek with sinners. Remember My words: "Why do you observe the splinter in your brother's eye, if first you do not take the plank out of your own eye?" That Spirit that I infused into you, that order that I gave you, grant you the authority to remit the sins of your neighbor, in the name of God […]. Forgive those who offend you, in order to be forgiven and to be entitled to absolve or to condemn. He who is without sin can do so with full justice. He who does not forgive, while he is in sin and feigns to be scandalized, is a hypocrite and Hell awaits him. Because, if there is still mercy for wards, severe will be the verdict against the guardians of wards, guilty of the same or greater sins, although they had the fullness of the Spirit to assist them.


"Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil". That is humility, the fundamental stone of perfection. I solemnly tell you to bless those who humiliate you, because they give you what is necessary for your celestial thrones. No. Temptation is not a ruin, if man remains humbly near the Father and asks Him not to allow Satan, the world and the flesh to triumph over him. The crowns of the blessed souls are adorned with the gems of the temptations they overcame. Do not look for them. But do not be cowards when they come. Humble, and thus strong, shout to My Father and yours: "Deliver us from evil", and you will defeat evil. And you will really sanctify the Name of God with your deeds, as I said at the beginning, because every man, when seeing you, will say: "God exists, because they live as gods, so perfect is their behavior", and they will come to God, multiplying the citizens of the Kingdom of God.


Kneel down, that I may bless you and My blessing may open your minds to meditate. » They prostrate themselves on the ground and He blesses them, then He disappears, as if He were absorbed by a moonbeam. Shortly afterwards the apostles raise their heads, surprised at not hearing any more words, and they realize that Jesus has disappeared… They prostrate themselves again with their faces on the ground, in the age-old fear of every Israelite who experiences the sensation of having been in touch with God, as He is in Heaven. 

 

Based on Chapter 626, Volume 5 of The Gospel as Revealed to Me, by Maria Valtorta. 

 

Biography of Maria Valtorta: Based in part on https://dbpedia.org/page/Maria_Valtorta


Maria Valtorta was an Italian Catholic writer and mystic. Bedridden for a large part of her life, she was a Franciscan Third Order member and a lay member of the Servants of Mary. Maria was born on March 14, 1897 in Caserta, a city near Naples, where her father Giuseppe’s cavalry regiment was stationed. Giuseppe Valtorta was a warrant officer in the regiment. He was a devoted father to Maria, who was an only child. In contrast, her mother, Iside Fioravanzi, who was a French teacher, was often severe and even cruel to both her husband and her daughter. 

 

In her youth, Valtorta traveled around Italy due to her father's military career and the family eventually settled in Viareggio. In 1920, aged 23, while she was walking on a street with her mother, a delinquent youth struck her in the back with an iron bar for no apparent reason. In 1934, the injury confined her to bed for the remaining 28 years of her life. Her spiritual life was influenced by reading the autobiography of Saint Thérèse of Lisieux and, in 1925, at the age of 28, before becoming bedridden, she offered herself to God as a victim soul. From 23 April 1943, until 1951 she produced 13,193 handwritten pages in 122 notebooks, mostly detailing the life of Jesus in his hidden life, public life, and his Passion. 

 

Her handwritten notebooks containing close to 700 supernaturally experienced episodes in the life of Jesus were typed on separate pages by her priest and reassembled, becoming the basis of her 10-volume book The Gospel as Revealed to Me. The remaining pages were published in three volumes as The Notebooks. She also wrote an autobiography. Valtorta lived most of her life in Viareggio, where she died on October 12, 1961.

 

She is buried at the grand cloister of the Basilica of Santissima Annunziata in Florence. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith gave permission to Emilio Pisani at the Centro Editoriale Valtortiano (the publishing house of Maria Valtorta’s works) to continue publishing her work as it is without modifications. In a letter dated May 6, 1992 addressed to Pisani, Bishop Dionigi Tettamanzi, secretary to the Italian Episcopal Conference, gave permission for the work to continue to be published for the “true good of readers and in the spirit of the genuine service to the faith of the Church.”

 

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Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Fears about the future display imperfection.

 

Impatience is never a factor contributing to success.  [...]  Fears about the future display imperfection in the three theological virtues. God can raise up anywhere - and especially in the most unexpected places and beings - what is necessary for a child of His who entrusts himself or herself to Him. [...] It is not enough to say "His Will," but one must do it after it has been expressed. 

 

Jesus to Maria Valtorta, Nov. 15, 1945.

 

From The Notebooks 1945-1950, page 117.

 

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Sunday, November 24, 2024

“If we love You, we shall be saved.”

 

A prayer dictated by Jesus for the octave of His Kingship.

 


Jesus, King of Love, have mercy on us. 

 

Since we want to love You, help us to love You.

 

Since we recognize that You are the true King, help us to know You more and more.

 

Since we believe that You can do all, confirm our faith with your mercy.

 

You, King of the world – have mercy on the poor world and on us who are in it. 

 

You, King of peace – grant peace to the world and to us. 

 

You, King of heaven – grant that we may become its subjects.

 

You know that we are weeping – console us. 

 

You know that we are suffering – relieve us. 

 

You know that we need everything – help us.

 

 


We know we are suffering because of our sin, but we hope in You.

 

We know that what we are suffering is still very little in comparison to what we would deserve to suffer, but we trust in You.

 

We know what we have done to You, but we also know what You have done for us. 

 

We know that You are the Savior – save us Jesus!

 

King, with the crown of thorns, for the sake of this loving martyrdom of yours, be Love coming to our aid.

 

With your pierced hands, open for us the treasures of Grace and graces.

 

Come to us with your wounded feet. Sanctify the earth and us with the blood dripping from your wounds: gems of your Kingship as Redeemer. 

 

Open our hearts to love with the flames of your heart, opened for us.

 

If we love You we shall be saved here in the hour of death, and at the Last Judgment.

 

May your Kingdom come, Lord, on earth, in heaven, and in our hearts.



October 22, 1944. The Notebooks 1944, Maria Valtorta, pp. 602-603.



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Sunday, November 17, 2024

Prayer of Jesus for the Holy Souls.

 

On October 24, 1944, Our Lord said the following to Maria Valtorta -


The month devoted to the deceased is coming. Pray for them in the following way:


O Jesus, who with your glorious Resurrection have shown us what the “children of God” will be like eternally, grant a holy resurrection to our loved ones who have died in your Grace and to us, when our hour comes.


For the sake of the Sacrifice of your Blood, the tears of Mary, and the merits of all the saints, open your Kingdom to their spirits.


O Mother, whose agony ended at dawn on Easter, before the Risen One, and whose waiting to rejoin your Son ceased in the joy of your glorious Assumption, console our sorrow by freeing from affliction those whom we love even beyond death, and pray for us, who await the time when we shall recover the embrace of those we lost.


Martyrs and Saints who rejoice in heaven, turn a gaze of entreaty towards God and a fraternal gaze towards the deceased who are expiating, to pray to the Eternal for them and say to them, “See: peace is opening out for you.”


Beloved ones, who are dear to us, not lost, but separated, may your prayers be for us the kiss we miss, and when, through our suffrages, you are free in blessed Paradise with the saints, protect us by loving us in Perfection, united to us through the invisible, active, loving Communion of the Saints, a foretaste of that reunion of the “blessed” which will be granted to us, in addition to the bliss of the vision of God, on regaining you just as we had you, but rendered sublime by the glory of Heaven.”



October 24, 1944, The Notebooks 1944, page 604, by Maria Valtorta.


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Monday, November 11, 2024

St. John Chrysostom on our Daily Bread and Forgiveness.

Give us this day our daily bread means to take no thought for tomorrow.

 

Perfection of conduct, says He, I require as great, not however freedom from passions; no, for the tyranny of nature permits it not: for it requires necessary food. But mark, I pray you, how even in things that are bodily, that which is spiritual abounds. For it is neither for riches, nor for delicate living, nor for costly raiment, nor for any other such thing, but for bread only, that He has commanded us to make our prayer. And for daily bread, so as not to take thought for the morrow (Matthew 6:34). Because of this He added, daily bread, that is, bread for one day (Matthew 6:11).

 

And not even with this expression is He satisfied, but adds another too, saying, give us this day; so that we may not, beyond this, wear ourselves out with the care of the following day. For that day, the interval before which you know not whether you shall see, wherefore do you submit to its cares? Take no thought for the morrow. He would have us be on every hand unencumbered and winged for flight, yielding just so much to nature as the compulsion of necessity requires of us.

 

Then inasmuch as it comes to pass that we sin even after the washing of regeneration, He, showing His love to man to be great even in this case, commands us for the remission of our sins to come unto God who loves man, and thus to say:

 

Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors.

 

Do you see surpassing mercy? After taking away so great evils, and after the unspeakable greatness of His gift [of Baptism], if men sin again, He counts them such as may be forgiven. For that this prayer belongs to believers, is taught us both by the laws of the church, and by the beginning of the prayer. For the uninitiated could not call God Father. If then the prayer belongs to believers and they pray, entreating that sins may be forgiven them, it is clear that not even after the laver is the profit of repentance taken away. Since, had He not meant to signify this, He would not have made a law that we should so pray. 

 

Now He who both brings sins to remembrance, and bids us ask forgiveness, and teaches how we may obtain remission and so makes the way easy; it is perfectly clear that He introduced this rule of supplication, as knowing, and signifying, that it is possible even after the font to wash ourselves from our offenses; by reminding us of our sins, persuading us to be modest; by the command to forgive others, setting us free from all revengeful passion; while by promising in return for this to pardon us also, He holds out good hopes, and instructs us to have high views concerning the unspeakable mercy of God toward man.

 

For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father also will forgive you (Matthew 6:14). So that the beginning is of us, and we ourselves have control over the judgment that is to be passed upon us. For in order that no one, even of the senseless, might have any complaint to make, either great or small, when brought to judgment; on you, who art to give account, He causes the sentence to depend; and in whatever way you have judged for yourself, in the same, says He, do I also judge you. And if you forgive your fellow servant, you shall obtain the same favor from me; though indeed the one be not equal to the other. For you forgive in your need, but God, having need of none: thou, your fellow slave; God, His slave: thou liable to unnumbered charges; God, being without sin. But yet even thus does He show forth His loving kindness towards man.

 

Since He might indeed, even without this, forgive you all your offenses; but He wills you hereby also to receive a benefit; affording you on all sides innumerable occasions of gentleness and love to man, casting out what is brutish in you, and quenching wrath, and in all ways cementing you to him who is your own member.

 

For what can you have to say? That you have wrongfully endured some ill of your neighbor? But you too are drawing near to receive forgiveness for such things, and for much greater. And even before the forgiveness, you have received no small gift, in being taught to have a human soul, and in being trained to all gentleness. And herewith a great reward shall also be laid up for you elsewhere, even to be called to account for none of your offenses.

 

What sort of punishment then do we not deserve, when after having received the privilege, we betray our salvation? And how shall we claim to be heard in the rest of our matters, if we will not, in those which depend on us, spare our own selves?

 

For if you forgive men, says He, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you forgive not, neither will He forgive you. And nothing makes us so like God, as being ready to forgive the wicked and wrong-doers; even as indeed He had taught before, when He spoke of His making the sun to shine on the evil and on the good (Matthew 5:45). How great punishment then must they deserve, who after all this, so far from themselves forgiving, do even entreat God for vengeance on their enemies, and diametrically as it were transgress this law; and this while He is doing and contriving all, to hinder our being at variance one with another?

 

For since love is the root of all that is good, He removing from all sides whatever mars it, brings us together, and cements us to each other. For there is not, there is not one, be he father, or mother, or friend, or what you will, who so loved us as the God who created us. And this, above all things, both His daily benefits and His precepts make manifest. But if you tell me of the pains, and of the sorrows, and of the evils of life; consider in how many things you offend Him every day. Which one has not been insolent, or vainglorious? Who has not spoken evil of his brother, has not admitted a wicked desire, has not looked with unchaste eyes, has not remembered things with hostile feeling, even till he made his heart swell?

 

But yet from our so great and so many sins, God has given us a short and easy way of deliverance, and one that is free from all toil. For what sort of toil is it to forgive him that has grieved us? Nay, it is a toil not to forgive, but to keep up our enmity: even as to be delivered from the anger, both works in us a great refreshment, and is very easy to him that is willing. For there is no sea to be crossed, nor long journey to be traveled, nor summits of mountains to be passed over, nor money to be spent, no need to torment your body; but it suffices to be willing only, and all our sins are done away.

 

But if so far from forgiving him yourself, you make intercession to God against him, what hope of salvation will you then have, if at the very time when you ought rather to appease God, even then you provoke Him; putting on the garb of a suppliant, but uttering the cries of a wild beast, and darting out against yourself those shafts of the wicked one? Wherefore Paul also, making mention of prayer, required nothing so much as the observance of this commandment. And if when you have need of mercy, not even then will you let go your anger, but art rather exceedingly mindful of it, and that, although you know you are thrusting the sword into yourself; when will it be possible for you to become merciful, and to spew out the evil venom of this wickedness?

 

Let us cease then from this disease and madness, and that kindliness which He commanded let us show forth towards them that have vexed us: that we may become like our Father which is in heaven. And we shall cease therefrom, if we call to mind our own sins; if we strictly search out all our misdeeds at home, abroad, and in the market, and in church.

 

Based on https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/200119.htm



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Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Padre Pio predicted Trump's victory - kind of.

St. Padre Pio: 


Do not let your heart become troubled by the sad spectacle of human injustice, even this has its value in the face of all else.  And it is from this that one day you will see the justice of God rising with unfailing triumph.  

 

From "Padre Pio Councils," p. 25,  published by his Friary at San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy. 

 

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