Urbi et Orbi Communications
Spirituality/Belief • News • Travel
What is happening in the Catholic Church? Veteran Vaticanist Robert Moynihan and other Catholic luminaries bring you fascinating, unbiased interviews and thoughtful discussion.
Interested? Want to learn more about the community?
Letter 57, 2024, Sun, Nov 24: Martyr, 2

Here is the second part of the story of Blessed Fr. Miguel Pro, S.J., who was executed in Mexico on false charges on November 23, 1927, at the age of 36 — 97 years ago yesterday.

This second part covers the last 16 months of Fr. Pro’s life, during 1926 and 1927 in Mexico.

The story is continued from Letter #54 (link), emailed on Saturday, November 23, 2024.—RM

Father Pro of Mexico: The Conclusion (link)

by Mary E. Gentges

Miguel Pro‘s entire life had been a preparation for the next 16 months when he would outwit the police and unselfishly give of himself for souls.

New in the country, he had the immediate advantage of being unknown to the 10,000 secret agents in Mexico City.

While other priests had been exiled, executed, or forced into hiding, he took on a heavy workload.

It is said he did the work of seven priests.

Father Pro celebrated Mass in the homes of faithful Catholics; he witnessed marriages, baptized babies and took the sacraments to the sick.

He was constantly occupied in hearing confessions.

It gave him great joy to reconcile sinners to the Church and to assist the dying.

He gave conferences and retreats, and also taught a band of 150 select youths to go about giving lectures.

He writes: “I have what I call ‘Eucharistic Stations’ where I go around every day to distribute Holy Communion. To baffle the agents who go about here like night birds, I go some days to one place and other days to another, with an average of 300 Communions daily.”

One First Friday the number reached 1,200!

He passed under the scrutiny of the police in a variety of guises: “I look so much like a student that no one can possibly guess my real profession. Day and night I go from place to place doing good, sometimes with a beautiful police dog following at my heels, sometimes riding my brother’s bicycle to which I owe a bruise on the arm and a bump on my head.”

How did the sickly Father Pro do it all?

His superiors, it seems, had sent him home to die of his ailments.

Yet the assurance he had received at Lourdes was real.

After eight years of agonizing daily attacks, the ulcer had subsided to an occasional “fluttering of wings,” and his health held until the end.

He wondered himself, “How do I stand it … It proves that without the fullness of the Divine Element which uses me merely as an instrument I’d have made a mess of everything. I know that of themselves my person and results are worthless.”

He adds, “Not I, but the grace of God in me.”

Boycott

In response to the anti-religious laws the League for the Defense of Religious Liberty organized a boycott, encouraging Catholics to buy only necessities, abstain from all luxuries and entertainments, and withdraw their funds from banks.

A variety of leaflets, promoting the boycott and proclaiming the Kingship of Christ, flowed from secret printing presses.

Calles executed League members at every opportunity.

In life, or in death, the slogan of these confessors of the Faith was “Long live Christ the King!”

Father Pro’s brothers, Humberto and Roberto (both in their early twenties and living at home with their father and sister Ana Maria), were active in the League.

They gave religious conferences and helped priests who were in hiding.

Father Pro had his pockets filled with League leaflets once when he was picked up by the police.

On the way to the station he distracted the driver of the car while he surreptitiously threw the incriminating leaflets out the window!

In October of 1926, on the Feast of Christ the King, over 200,000 pilgrims defied the anti-religious laws and assembled at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

Father Pro was deeply moved to see people of all classes marching on bloodied bare feet, or inching forward on their knees.

As the singing was rather subdued, he elbowed his way into the crowd and loudly intoned a hymn. In minutes thousands were singing in unison, proclaiming Christ their King.

“There is no doubt about it,” he wrote, “the whole of Mexico is Catholic! Our Lady of Guadalupe is Queen of the Mexicans!”

He continues, “The number of martyrs increases day by day. I hope I shall have the luck to be among the first, or among the last, but to be one of the number. If so, prepare your petitions for Heaven!”

His Poor People

Father Pro’s heart went out to the poor, to those living in dire misery because their breadwinner had been imprisoned for the Faith.

Though begging humiliated him, for his poor people he begged homes and provisions, and was soon supporting a hundred families.

He would give his own coat to a poor man.

Or he might be seen laboring along in the heat carrying a heavy sack of flour, or boarding a bus with a halfdozen live chickens in his arms. He organized a dozen volunteers to help with this work.

“Officially I call them ‘Investigation and Commissariat Section’ but between ourselves they are ‘beggars on the go’! I am in close touch with what we read of in the lives of the Saints (Oh, don’t take me for one of them!) for without knowing who the benefactor is I receive at one time 50 kilos of sugar, or biscuits, coffee, chocolate, rice, and even wine …

“Ordinarily my purse is as lean as the spiritual part of Calles, but this causes me no anxiety, for the Heavenly Procurator is so generous ….

“I see the hand of God in everything and almost fear they won’t kill me in these adventures, which will be a fiasco for me who sigh to go to Heaven and play arpeggios on the mandolin with my guardian angel.”

He found himself taking in abandoned babies.

Once as he had paused for a railroad crossing someone slipped a baby onto the back seat of his car!

He describes how he took a baby to its foster parents: “I made the mistake of putting the baby by my side on the car seat. At the first jolt the baby bounced up and had I not caught it on the fly I should have had to take it to the cemetery instead!”

“Nobody knows where I live. I receive letters, and beans for my poor people, at four different addresses. I have even heard confessions in prisons. Really, I go there more often than anywhere else because they are overflowing with Catholics. I take food, blankets, money. If the guards only knew what sort of bird passes right under their noses!”

Continue reading here: https://insidethevatican.com/news/newsflash/letter-57-2024-sun-nov-24-martyr-2/

Interested? Want to learn more about the community?
What else you may like…
Videos
Posts
Articles
ANNOUNCEMENT

I'm excited to join Dr. Robert Moynihan and his team at Inside the Vatican and Urbi et Orbi Communications! And I look forward to meeting and engaging with all of you here on Locals!

Thank you for your support and please keep us in your prayers. All for Jesus through Mary for souls! Vivat Christus Rex!

00:01:27
March 25, 2024
Navigating the Liturgy War - Livestream with Matt Gaspers

Sign up here to be notified with more information for the next Pilgrimage and Retreat with Father Murr: https://forms.gle/FTcikttdzqxYF8hD7

01:10:38
March 25, 2024
Vatican News Week in Review: Live Analysis with Iben Thranholm | Friday Wrap-Up

Sign up here to be notified with more information for the next Pilgrimage and Retreat with Father Murr: https://forms.gle/FTcikttdzqxYF8hD7

00:55:08
Live Stream at 12 noon

Dr. Moynihan is attending a press conference with the American Cardinals at 4pm Rome time. Dr. Moynihan will be live from Rome with special guests from 6pm Rome time/12 noon Eastern. Join us live for a 2 hour discussion on Pope Leo XIV

Live stream with Archbishop Cordileone

Unfortunately, this live stream has to be postponed. We will see you all for the next live stream in a couple of weeks. Have a blessed Easter.

Father Abernethy presents a Lectio Divina on the first book believed to have been printed in the New World! "The Ladder of Divine Ascent" by 6th-century monk John Climacus silhouettes the stages of spiritual life using the metaphor of a 30-rung ladder to Heaven.

post photo preview
Pope Francis Cries Out: “Immediate Ceasefire on All Fronts!”
As the Gaza war bleeds into Lebanon, the Church labors to stop further escalation

By Christopher Hart-Moynihan

“No one wants war but no one can stop it.” 

That was how the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Pierbattista Pizzaballa, characterized the situation in the Holy Land recently, after nearly a year of war, in an interview with Vatican News, the official Vatican news agency. What started with a series of terrorist attacks carried out against Israel on October 7, 2023, has after 10 months spiraled into a conflict that is on the brink of expanding — some would say, has expanded — to the entire Middle East. 

The international community has largely stood by while the terrible bloodshed that broke out on October 7 has continued and grown worse. Many observers have warned that the conditions are now in place for several possible “worst-case scenarios” to play out, which would embroil the world’s major powers in a new “World War” for the 21st century. These concerns were accentuated by several recent targeted bombing attacks outside of Israel, in Lebanon and in Iran, for which Iran and Hezbollah have vowed to retaliate. As of this writing, a definitive retaliation has not yet occurred. 

Of course, as many analysts have observed, the roots of Israel’s current war with Hamas and the increasingly intensifying dispute with Hezbollah and Iran date back decades, making the current iteration of the conflict exponentially more difficult to resolve. Nonetheless, in recent weeks, various voices in the Vatican have continued to work through diplomatic channels in attempts to prevent the conflict from escalating further. 

The task of Cardinal Pizzaballa is made even more difficult by the fact that Christians on all sides of the conflict have experienced, and continue to experience, suffering and loss. In the first week of August, Israel’s northern neighbor Lebanon, which is both the seat of Hezbollah’s operations as well as the home of several sizable Christian communities — including Orthodox, and Maronite, Syriac and Melkite Catholics — saw panicked crowds pack into Beirut’s Rafic Hariri international airport as people desperately tried to leave the country before the outbreak of further hostilities. 

The panic in Lebanon was brought on by the targeted killings of a Hezbollah leader in Beirut and a Hamas leader in Tehran. Airstrikes by the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) killed Fuad Shukr, the Hezbollah commander, on July 30 in Beirut (upper left), and Ismail Haniyeh, the leader of Hamas’ political arm (here), in Tehran on July 31. In response, Hassan Nasrallah, the longtime leader of Hezbollah, stated, “After the assassination of Haniyeh, Iran finds itself obliged to respond. After the assassination of Fuad [Shukr], Hezbollah finds itself obliged to respond.” 

As of this writing, nearing the middle of August, a military response by Iran and/or Hezbollah, of the type that would definitively usher in a wider war, has not yet occurred. However, multiple signs seem to indicate that such a response is imminent. In recent days, Russian military officials have visited Iran and the United States Navy has begun to position warships off the coast of Israel and in the Arabian Sea and the Persian Gulf, to the south of Iran. An escalated conflict could quickly entangle the two superpowers, who are already fighting a shadow war in Ukraine. Meanwhile, the U.S. State Department issued an updated travel advisory for Lebanon on July 31, advising all Americans, “Do Not Travel to Lebanon due to rising tensions between Hizballah [Hezbollah] and Israel. If you are in Lebanon, be prepared to shelter in place should the situation deteriorate.” 

The trust between Pope Francis and Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem Pierbattista Pizzaballa dates back to the beginning of the pontificate. Here, Pizzaballa whispers into the Pope’s ear on May 26, 2014, more than 10 years ago, when Pope Francis visited Israel to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the historic 1964 encounter in Jerusalem between Pope Paul VI and the Ecumenical Greek Orthodox Patriarch, Athenagoras (Photo Grzegorz Galazka)

At his August 7 General Audience, Pope Francis once again called for de-escalation. “I pray that the sincere search for peace will extinguish strife, love will overcome hatred, and revenge will be disarmed by forgiveness,” Francis said, reiterating his long-standing appeal for an end to the violence. He added, “I reiterate my appeal to all parties involved to ensure that the conflict does not spread and to immediately cease fire on all fronts, starting from Gaza where the humanitarian situation is extremely serious and unsustainable.” 

In his interview with Vatican News at the end of June, Pizzaballa alluded to the increasing risk of a wider war, stating, “The internal debate exists in Israel and also in Lebanon: no one wants war but it seems that no one can stop it, and this is the problem. Of course, if the northern front were to open, it would certainly be a tragedy, especially for Lebanon, which risks becoming another Gaza, at least in the southern part. I am not an expert in military matters, but the landscape remains very tense, always on the verge of further escalation.” Discussing the impact of the war specifically on the Christian community, he added, “Christians are not a separate people, they live what everyone else lives. We know the situation in Gaza, unfortunately, but it is also very problematic in the West Bank, especially from an economic point of view. There is a situation of paralysis, work is scarce or non-existent, and this makes the prospects of emigration increasingly attractive, unfortunately especially for Christians.” 

Amidst the chaos and uncertainty, one thing is abundantly clear: this war, thus far, is a human tragedy on a massive scale. While the eyes of the world shift towards Iran and Lebanon, ten months of Israeli efforts to eliminate Hamas have led to at least 39,965 dead and 92,294 wounded, according to U.N. estimates as of August 13. An estimated 1,139 people were killed in Israel during the Hamas-led attacks on October 7, and more than 200 were taken captive. In addition, there now exists “a full-blown famine” in the north of Gaza (according to Cindy McCain, director of the World Food Programme), while Hamas continues to be operational. In the months since the October 7 attacks, millions more have been left without water, electricity, and food. 

During a lecture he gave to the College of Europe in Natolin (located near Warsaw, Poland) in mid-May, Pizzaballa made several interesting observations about the nature of the conflict, and how it affects his leadership and actions as Patriarch. “The Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem… has jurisdiction over Israel and Palestine, the two conflicting parties. I have Catholics who are Israelis, Catholics who are Palestinians. Some Palestinian Catholics are under the bombs and others are serving in the Army, bombing. And this brings tensions also within our church community.” 

Only for Supporters
To read the rest of this article and access other paid content, you must be a supporter
Read full Article
See More
Available on mobile and TV devices
google store google store app store app store
google store google store app tv store app tv store amazon store amazon store roku store roku store
Powered by Locals