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My Memoir of St. Padre Pio: Price of Suffering and Beatification by the Brush of Grace

Padre Pio would pray as if it were akin to waking up and making breakfast for the rest of us

Miraculous testimony of an elite level gymnast touched by Padre Pio: 'Pio, like all the saints, is like the window-washer that scales tall buildings to clear away the muck and allow us to see His luminous rays aflame. God sends them, as He pushes us forward, to wipe clean the windows of not only our own lives, but also of those around us.'

Padre Pio in death.

Padre Pio in death.

BATON ROUGE, LA (Catholic Online) - Life is nothing but a continual struggle against one's self, and it does not open to beauty without the price of suffering.

His lifeless, stony eyes pierced the immortality of my soul and plucked my curiosity right from its youthful perch. The flesh-tones that my mother painted onto the cold, lifeless features of a three-foot tall statue of one of modern times most magnificent soldiers of Christ, Padre Pio, were of little consequence upon our first meeting--I was inexplicably mystified by a beckoning of compassion.

Rather than reveling in the notion of mysticism, my then-callow practicality suggested a more subtle approach to the Lord's will. Then again, I'm always amazed how at any given moment my own discernment can dramatically do an about-face. Staring at nothing more than an inanimate carving of masonry was enough to remind me how insignificant and fickle my own judgments are and how they're steadfastly and boundlessly linked to His greater will. If God wants to reveal Himself, then He'll most certainly do it in His own way, be it through the natural or supernatural.

St. Pio of Pietrelcina, Italy, was not yet a canonized saint when I first became aware of him in 2001, he was the modest Padre...another pious priest from a small country, Catholic city. Pope John Paul II had beatified him in 1999, but he had yet to reach his future saintly heights in the eyes of the Church or the world into which she is sent.

I dare to speak of things that set many uneasy. Perhaps I dare because it happens to be ingrained in my character to turn things on their heads (both literally and metaphorically). I recognize and give prayerful consideration to those who don't believe; faith isn't an easy gift to accept. The seemingly "hocus-pocus" talk of subjects like the stigmata, exorcisms, angels and saints are enough to turn many away from faith out of fear of the unknown. Losing oneself in the secular world of iPhones and Blackberrys can be a sufficient way to squander the divinity of the things we can't see and touch.

Like Pio, I serve only as an apparatus for the Lord's greater honor and glory. God has especially chosen to speak through some and allow us to ask for their intercession. Pio, like all the saints, is like the window-washer that scales tall buildings to clear away the muck and allow us to see His luminous rays aflame. Ascending the dismal heights of our disbelief, the saint's job is oftentimes dangerous and unwelcome...after all, who wants their intimate lives to be seen and meticulously judged? God sends them, as He pushes us forward, to wipe clean the windows of not only our own lives, but also of those around us. In the nine years since I've rediscovered my faith, I've tried to do my small part to propagate my belief, particularly concerning Pio and his message. Over the years, many people have asked me: "Why do you like this Pio guy? How did he come to be in your life?" Sometimes I ask myself this same question; after all, it is a rather strange story...
 
Pondering a future full of potentials, I was on vacation back home in Baton Rouge, LA, suffering from three stress fractures on my L2 vertebrae that I suffered as a result of a training accident in the gym in Houston, TX. I took that opportunity of hurt to go home and try to recover. I was busy doing nothing when the doorbell rang. A family friend stood in the doorway, toting a stone figure whom he wanted to make look "a bit more human-looking." My artist mother agreed to paint on skin-tones as our friend launched into a short narrative of Pio's life. It struck me as strange to have this man, someone who lived in town but whom none of us had seen in quite some time, come unannounced to our home with such a strange request for my mom. Nevertheless, I can remember being fascinated by the story and feeling an intense yearning to know more.
 
After I looked Pio up in the Yahoo! search engine bar, and read a brief summary of his life on Wikipedia, I felt giving a book about him a read could at the very minimum be entertaining. I bought one of the first ones that was recommended on that website: "Padre Pio The Wonder Worker." You have to understand that I was, at that time, suffering from not just the physical calamities of having a broken back, but also from the inner frustration of not knowing where my life was going and if I'd ever be able to be active (let alone do gymnastics) again. The latter part was perhaps the hardest for me; I'd heard many horror stories of athletes and their career-ending injuries. Was my ambitious and active future about to be stomped by 3 hairline stress fractures? It was enough to drive me mad.

I listened to this man, temporarily forgot about my own pain, and shared in the story of another's. Stigmata? Healing powers? But this man is Italian, like me!..and was lived only a few decades ago! That was ...


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1 - 6 of 6 Comments

  1. Dennis
    1 year ago

    I heard your interview on Catholic radio on Sunday, December 4 on Ray Meyer's program. Your story was inspirational. Recently I spoke by with a nun named "Sister Gemma." I was calling her convent to speak with the Sisters about some pro-life work i was doing. When I finished speaking with Sister Gemma and as we were saying good-bye, Sister said, "Suffer well." That statement has stayed with me because I always have said, "Don't waste perfectly good suffering." When I heard your interview and heard you using the words, "suffer properly," it seemed to be saying the same thing the Sister said and what i have always said. After hearing your interview, i looked up St. Gemma. She is an Italian saint who suffered a lot .Perhaps Sister Gemma got that quote ("suffer well") from St. Gemma. I will ask her. I noticed in my reading that St. Gemma is the patron Saint of people with painful back problems because she suffered from back problems during her own life. I will pray for you.

  2. Lana
    2 years ago

    Thank you. I attended a Bible class night and the speaker always likes to discuss a saint during her teachings. Last night it was St. Padre Pio. I was so inrigued. It is wonderful to hear of a saint so close to our decade. This just proves that saints are not make believe stories.
    I will need to go get that book.

  3. JOY KASOLO
    2 years ago

    I PRAY FOR THE SOULS IN PAGURTORY!!

  4. Fred Allen
    2 years ago

    I've known Matt Hicks his entire life. It's amazing that he continues to strive to be part of the U.S. Olympic team for 2012. He had a real chance to be part of the 2008 Olympic team had it not been for a serious injury during the Olympic Trials. He is a young man I admire for his hard work and pains to reach his life dream. He deserves to make that team, because through all the hard work and injuries, I have never heard him complain , He only ask for God's continued support.

    The good Lord and Padre Pio have been part of his life for so long. I believe that his mission may never take him where he hopes to be, but I know it will not be for lack of effort and prayers. Many great Catholics went through life suffering both physical and mental anguish. Matt has done that in some ways. Yet, he continues to give his life to Christ and follow Padre Pios example, in many ways.

    Will Matt get to the Olympics? I don't know,but I know that hiehas won the gold already . The work, time,money, and prayers it takes to be a winner, he has done.You can ask no more of God than what Matt has shown. Therefore, he is a gold medal winner, regardless if he ever wears it around his neck.

  5. Veronica
    2 years ago

    Love this! And I love to hear stories of how St. Pio has helped others grow closer to Jesus too. (And by the way... "The Wonder Worker" is my FAVORITE Padre Pio book ever!) Thanks! St. Pio, pray for us!

  6. Jason Champagne
    2 years ago

    Thank you for the inspirational words, for they are just what I needed to hear. Good luck with your Olympic prospects and may God Bless you and protect you.

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