Padre Pio

one

Stigmata

In Colossians 1:24 Paul wrote: Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the church.

Inspired by this verse, Padre Pio asked Jesus to allow him to share in the suffering of Jesus and by this means to console the Sacred Heart of Jesus and help Jesus save souls.

In 1918, Jesus granted his wish giving Padre Pio the Stigmata. The five wounds of Jesus appeared in the body of Padre Pio in his feet, hands, and side. This lasted for fifty years, miraculously healing right before Pio’s death in 1968.

The wounds of Christ were very painful, still Padre Pio remained patient in his long suffering. Patience is to endure suffering cheerfully. Pio also retained his sense of humor throughout his suffering.  When a woman asked Padre Pio if the bloody wounds of the stigmata hurt, he asked her, with a smile, if she thought the good Lord gave him these for a decoration.

Padre Pio said: Jesus himself wants my sufferings; He needs them for souls.”

Do we accept and offer of sufferings to Jesus to console his Sacred Heart and help him save souls or do we waste them by complaining, becoming more self-absorbed or wishing them away?

two

Bilocation

Padre Pio had the supernatural gift of Bi-location. God enabled him to be in two places at once. He could be in the Monastery in Italy, surrounded by eye-witnesses, and at the same time somewhere else, with eye-witnesses confirming his presence there.

There are so many instances of bilocation but one in particular. Italy began WWII on the side of Germany. The Allied forces conducted many bombing raids across Italy at this time. Allied intelligence reported German munitions near San Giovanni Rotondo, the town in which stood the monastery of St. Padre Pio. However, at the beginning of the war Padre Pio reassured the people that no bomb would touch their small city. True to his word, Padre Pio reportedly went out of his way to make this happen.

At one point an American pilot was just about to drop a payload of bombs on the village when, suddenly, the pilot saw in front of his plane, thousands of feet in the air, a monk gesturing with his arms and hands for the plane to turn back. The shocked pilot did just that and jettisoned his bombs elsewhere. When he returned to the base and told his story, his commanding officer put him in a hospital under observation for mission-fatigue.” The pilot couldn’t get the monk out his mind and after the war he made inquiries to find this monk. Providence led him to Pio’s monastery where he met the “flying monk” Padre Pio. When the pilot revealed the date of the occurrence – all the monks could verify two things – Pio cannot fly without a plane and he was in the monastery the entire day.

three

Padre Pio had the ability to Read Souls

Most of the priestly ministry of Padre Pio was spent in the confessional, averaging about 15 hours a day, hearing up to 40,000 confessions a year! This heavy traffic was due to his ability to read souls to help people make a better confession, without holding anything back.

To one woman who had buried in her soul a sin from many years before, Padre Pio said, “I hear someone crying, don’t you hear someone crying?” “No” the woman said. And he replied, “the cry is from the child you aborted many years ago.” Sobbing, the woman confessed, was forgiven and left the confessional completely free of her guilt, at peace with God and at peace with herself.

Pio’s mystical gifts drew all kinds of people who came for the wrong reasons. Some went to confession merely out of curiosity. To these Pio would yell, “Basta, enough, leave and come back when you are ready to make a good confession.” He was not afraid to be stern and tough. To any priest who questioned his methods, he responded by saying, “I do not give candy to sinners who need a laxative.”

Honestly, I don’t want a confessor who can read my soul. But I am sure I am not aware of so many of my vices and habitual sins because I can be lazy about my daily examination of conscience.

A daily examination of conscience is essential – not optional. Where will you put it into your daily routine and make it a habit?

When specifically each day?

four

Maybe the most famous words of Padre Pio are “Pray, Hope and do not worry!”

Worry is the fear something bad will happen.

What specifically are you worried about? Once you identity it then ask yourself: Can I do anything about this? If yes, then do it and do not procrastinate. So much worry comes from procrastination.

If this thing is not your responsibility or beyond your control or authority or you have done all you can. Then it falls under God’s authority. So stop trying to be God with your worry and leave it to Him.

You do what you can, leave the rest to God because God works all things for the greatest good.

Put your trust and hope in God.

That is why Pio said to pray, hope and do not worry.

five

Rosary

Padre Pio used to carry permanently a Rosary in his hands and would pray it many times a day. 

To one person he said: "When you get tired reciting the Rosary, rest a bit, and then restart again."

One night at 9:00 PM, Pio said to Father Carmelo: "I still have 2 rosaries to pray today. I said only 34 so far. Then I will go to bed."

Answering a question: "Some days I say 40 Rosaries, some other days 50. How do I do it? "How do you manage to not say any?"

Holding the Rosary Padre Pio would say with conviction: "With this, one wins the battles."

“Satan wants to destroy this prayer, but in this he will never succeed. The Rosary is the prayer of those who triumph over everything and everyone.”

Padre Pio is important for our so-called enlightened age that thinks there is no God, no soul and no spiritual world. In Padre Pio God puts the spiritual world on full display for the whole world to see.

His stigmata, bi-location, ability to read souls, miraculous healings and so on were supernatural signs that can only be explained by the existence of God and they bear witness to the truth that Jesus is real, and that the Eucharist, Mary, the Saints and all the Catholic stuff are all true.

 
 
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