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mail : englishspoken@clairval.com
June 27, 2003
Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus
Dear Friend of Saint Joseph Abbey,
Saint Bernard,
associating the verse from Proverbs 3:16, Long life
is in her right hand, in her left are riches and honor,
with the Son of God, commented, «There was an endless
supply of these treasures in Heaven, but poverty could
not be found there. Earth abounded and superabounded
in this kind of merchandise, and men knew not its
value. He came down from Heaven to make it His own,
and so render it precious to us by His choice»
(Sermon for Christmas Vigil). Jesus wished to be born
poor in the stable in Bethlehem, so that you might
become rich by His poverty (2 Cor. 8:9), to
protect us, by His divine example, from the affection
of earthly possessions, and to draw us to the practice
of love of God and of the virtues. Jesus Christ's
poverty brings us more good than all the treasures of
the world, because by making us put the riches of the
world in perspective, it makes us obtain those of
Heaven. I have accounted all else rubbish so that
Christ may be my wealth, says Saint Paul (Phil.
3:8).
Many saints have given us an example of a life of
poverty following Jesus Christ. They have also been
able to recognize the features of the child of
Bethlehem in the faces of the poor. On July 30, 2002,
in Guatemala, the Pope canonized Saint Pedro de
Betancur, a Third-Order Franciscan, founder of the
Order of Bethlehem, who, through his love for Christ,
took up the cause of the poor.
Making himself small
Pedro de San José de Betancur was born on the
island of Tenerife, part of the Spain's Canary Islands,
which lie southwest of Morocco. He was born in the
village of Villaflor on March 21, 1621, and was
baptized the same day. His parents were fervent
Christians for whom faith and God's love were the
greatest of riches. The five children, of whom Pedro
was the eldest, had right before their eyes their
father's ardent prayer, as well as their mother's
sacrifices for the poor. Pedro's character was
influenced by certain qualities that came to him
probably from one of his grandfathers, a Norman
gentleman who had conquered the Canary Islands in the
service of Henry III of Castile. Pride, the desire to
always be in the spotlight, the instinct for victory
and domination, the inclination to make decisions
alone... Severe asceticism, sustained by grace, helped
him correct these faults and practice the virtues of
humility, simplicity, and obedience. His desire was to
make himself small in the eyes of God as well as in
those of his brothers. He inherited from his mother a
spirit of piety, joy, and an aptitude for showing his
religious fervor with spontaneity and good spirits.
While still quite young, the boy looked after his
father's flock which he led to the valleys and beaches
of the island. This contact with nature developed in
him a capacity for wonder and calm contemplation of
God in creation. After his father's death, Pedro left
his work as a shepherd to farm the family's small
property. One day he heard Brother Luis de Betancur, a
relative, speak about America, about its forests and
its wealth, but also about the American Indians and
Blacks who were reduced to slavery. A profound
compassion for these unfortunate ones and a desire to
go evangelize them was born in his heart.
However, Mrs. de Betancur was making marriage plans
for her son. Pedro did not share his mother's
intention. He took time to pray and to consult his
aunt who lived nearby. They both considered the matter
before God. Finally, pointing out to her nephew the
road to the sea, the aunt affirmed, «You must go meet
God like Peter on the water.» Filled with joy, Pedro
boarded a ship to cross the Atlantic. Before he left,
he wrote to his mother that a greater love and a
service of utmost importance was pressing him to leave
everything. He disembarked in Havana in 1649. Two
years later, wishing to reach the mainland, he boarded
a ship and signed on as a cabin-boy to pay for the
voyage. He worked so ardently and his kindness was
such that when the ship arrived at its destination,
the commander did not want to give him his freedom.
Pedro discerned in this situation God's temporary and
distinct will, but remained firm in his aspirations to
be a missionary. Shortly thereafter, he came down with
such terrible fevers that they had to disembark him on
a beach in Guatemala, a country in Central America
that belonged to Spain at the time. There, a fisherman
spoke to him about the city of Santiago in Guatemala.
«I wish to go to this city,» he replied, «because a
profound joy and a higher force are pushing me to go
to it!»
Before entering the capital, which he reached on foot,
Pedro knelt, prayed, and kissed the ground. This was
February 18, 1651, at two o'clock in the afternoon.
Now, at this very hour, the beautiful city was shaken
by an earthquake. Forgetting the danger, Pedro
hastened to assist the victims. But the next day,
exhausted by both his voyage and his charitable
devotion, he went to Saint John of God Hospital which
received the most neglected patients, especially many
Native Indians and Africans. In spite of the
seriousness of his condition, Pedro got well and was
taken on as a worker at a bakery. A witness to the
suffering of slaves condemned to forced labor, he was
interested in their fate. He sought to improve their
situation with his own salary, taught them with
kindness, and recited the Rosary with them so as to
change their depraved morals.
At the foot of the
crucifix
One day he knocked on the door of the
Franciscan monastery. Father Fernando Espino welcomed
him with kindliness and, observing the depth of the
young man's spirituality, invited him to study for the
priesthood. An ardent worker, Pedro studied day and
night, but the results were not commensurate with his
efforts. This is why, after having prayed to the
Blessed Virgin Mary, he decided to abandon the path to
the priesthood. He entered the Third Order of Saint
Francis, taking their habit in January 1655 before
withdrawing to El Calvario Church, where he assumed
the role of sacristan. Pedro spent hours in adoration
before a very expressive crucifix which was venerated
in the sanctuary. In his free time, he performed works
of mercy, looking after all the deprived, visiting
hospitals, prisons, the poor, the hungry, and
unemployed immigrants. He taught children their
catechism with songs and games. Little by little, his
kindness and his reputation for holiness drew throngs
of people to El Calvario.
«The works of mercy are charitable actions by which
we come to the aid of our neighbor in his spiritual
and bodily necessities... In its various forms—material
deprivation, unjust oppression, physical and
psychological illness and death—human misery is the
obvious sign of the inherited condition of frailty and
need for salvation in which man finds himself as a
consequence of original sin. This misery elicited the
compassion of Christ the Savior, who willingly took it
upon Himself and identified Himself with the least of
His brethren. Hence, those who are oppressed by
poverty are the object of a preferential love on the
part of the Church which, since her origin and in
spite of the failings of many of her members, has not
ceased to work for their relief, defense, and
liberation through numerous works of charity which
remain indispensable always and everywhere» (Catechism
of the Catholic Church, CCC, 2447-2448).
With the phrase The poor you always have with you,
but me you will not always have (John 12:8), Jesus
«invites us to recognize His own presence in the poor
who are His brethren. When her mother reproached her
for caring for the poor and the sick at home, Saint
Rose of Lima said to her: 'When we serve the poor and
the sick, we serve Jesus. We must not fail to help our
neighbors, because in them we serve Jesus' » (CCC,
2449).
Driven by the same spirit of charity as Saint Rose of
Lima, Brother Pedro bought in February 1658 a very
poor house, which he named «The Little House of Our
Lady of Bethlehem.» He welcomed there street children,
whites, mestizos, Creoles, blacks. Soon, students,
foreigners, and poor convalescents who had been turned
away from hospitals were streaming there. Thus did
this man with little formal schooling become the
founder of the first free basic literacy school in
Central America, and founder of the first
convalescence hospital in the Spanish territories in
the New World. His success was such that he quickly
had to expand the location. Thanks to gifts, Pedro
acquired neighboring houses. Trusting in Providence,
he did not look for fixed revenues, but relied upon
the generosity of wealthy families which took turns
providing food every day for the destitute who lived
there. For other needs, he tirelessly roamed the
streets of the city, appealing for help. In the midst
of all this coming and going, there was no suffering
that he did not try to assuage. One day, having found
at the door to the Saint Francis monastery a poor old
woman, a former slave and now completely abandoned, he
asked her to stay in his home, and carried her there
himself on his shoulders. His charity to all earned
him the title of «Mother of Guatemala,» conferred on
him by Pope John Paul II during his beatification.
The greatest deception
Urged by the charity of Christ, Pedro de
Betancur was truly happy to give his life for God
through service to the poor. In this way, he offers an
example that is still relevant today. During World
Youth Day in Toronto, on July 28, 2002, Pope John Paul
II exhorted the youth to serve God and their brothers,
in these energetic terms: «The 'spirit of the world'
offers many false illusions and parodies of happiness.
There is perhaps no darkness deeper than the darkness
that enters young people's souls when false prophets
extinguish in them the light of faith and hope and
love. The greatest deception, and the deepest source
of unhappiness, is the illusion of finding life by
excluding God, of finding freedom by excluding moral
truths and personal responsibility... Jesus—the
intimate friend of every young person—has the words
of life. The world you are inheriting is a world which
desperately needs a new sense of brotherhood and human
solidarity. It is a world which needs to be touched
and healed by the beauty and richness of God's love.
It needs witnesses to that love. The world needs salt.
It needs you—to be the salt of the earth and the
light of the world.
«Salt is used to preserve and keep. As apostles for
the Third Millennium, your task is to preserve and
keep alive the awareness of the presence of our Savior
Jesus Christ, especially in the celebration of the
Eucharist, the memorial of His saving death and
glorious resurrection. You must keep alive the memory
of the words of life which He spoke, the marvelous
works of mercy and goodness which He performed. You
must constantly remind the world of the power of
the Gospel to save (cf. Rom. 1:16)! Salt seasons
and improves the flavor of food. Following Jesus, you
have to change and improve the 'taste' of human
history. With your faith, hope and love, with your
intelligence, courage and perseverance, you have to
humanize the world we live in, in the way that Isaiah
indicates: Loose the bonds of injustice... share
your bread with the hungry... Then your light
shall rise in the darkness (Is. 58:6-10).»
He who will live, will see
Father Manuel Lobo, a Jesuit who was Brother
Pedro de Betancur's spiritual director for fifteen
years, wrote, «It was because of the great devotion
he professed to the mystery of the birth of the Son of
God, that, inspired from Heaven, he gave his
establishment the name of Our Lady of Bethlehem.
Bethlehem means «house of bread»—here it was that
the humble shepherds found the Son of God incarnate.
Likewise, in this new Bethlehem, the poor must find
not only bread, but the Lord God and, with bodily food,
spiritual food for the nourishment of their souls.»
Pedro started out alone. But the example of his
charity brought young Third Order Franciscans to join
him to aid the needy. He gladly welcomed these
companions and organized a very simple common life in
which prayer and penitence alternated with works of
corporal charity. His desire was to build a real
hospital especially for convalescents who still needed
care and had to recover both their physical strength
and the health of their soul. He explained his plan to
the local bishop, who, after listening to him
attentively, asked him with what resources he would
pay for such a costly building project. «I don't
know,» replied Pedro, «but God knows and will
provide them.» The bishop granted the permission and
work began immediately. However, there was no shortage
of critics. Was it not presumptuous to undertake this
kind of work? One day, the superior of the Franciscan
monastery came to visit the construction site in
Pedro's absence, and he condemned the costly project.
When he returned, the founder, informed of the friar's
thoughts, limited himself to saying, «All this is
done not on this Father's behalf, nor on mine, but on
God's behalf, and who will live, will see.» In fact,
Pedro's faith and humility allowed him to gradually
collect the necessary funds.
The greatest service of
God
During construction of the hospital, Pedro
continued to perform works of mercy. He provided
hospitals and prisons with provisions, assisted the
dying, restored harmony in divided households, and
converted prostitutes, for whom he obtained means of
making an honest living. He gave special attention to
those who were in a situation of greater weakness, and
consequently of greater need. «The option for the
poor [meaning the preference given to the poorest in
works of charity] is inherent in the very structure of
love lived in Christ. All of Christ's disciples are
therefore held to this option» (John Paul II, Apostolic
Exhortation on Consecrated Life, March 25, 1996,
no. 82). Pedro also showed a lively charity towards
the souls in Purgatory for whom he had Masses
celebrated. A very active man, he nevertheless always
remained united with God, never ceasing to pray and
meditate on the mysteries of Our Savior's life. When
he learned that the Most Blessed Sacrament was exposed
in a church, he interrupted his regular occupations to
go adore on his knees, motionless, for long periods of
time. Accustomed to the cross and sacrifices, he
nevertheless condemned penances that harmed charitable
activities. «We serve God better,» he said, «by
carrying a sick person from one room to another, than
by submitting ourselves to excessive penances.» To a
lady who complained about not being able to go to
church because of her paralyzed husband, he answered,
«At a sick man's side, you can pray as much as you
want, and God will hear you as well as in church.»
Another of the humble Tertiary's apostolates was to
travel through the streets of the city at night,
ringing a bell and shouting this warning: «Brothers,
remember that we have a soul, and if we lose it, we
will not be able to regain it.» In this way, he
reminded everyone of the great thought of eternity and
brought about conversions. The most famous of these
involved a young nobleman, Don Rodrigo Arias Maldonado,
the governor of Costa Rica, who had come to Guatemala
to receive a reward from the king of Spain. One of the
noblest and richest ladies in the city was in love
with Rodrigo, and appeared at his palace one night
with impure intentions. But she immediately suffered a
fatal syncope. Don Rodrigo, terrified, didn't know
what to do when suddenly he heard Pedro's nighttime
bell. Furious, Rodrigo rushed into the street, his
drawn sword in his hand, determined to silence this
annoying person. With his humble gentleness, Pedro
stared at him, then, reading the nobleman's heart, he
told him to the letter the events that had just taken
place. Understanding then that he was dealing with a
saint, the gentleman admitted his sins. After hearing
him with great compassion, Pedro went to the dwelling
where the poor woman lay, pale and icy cold. He
murmured a prayer, and made the sign of the cross over
her. Little by little, the lady returned to life and
moaned, trembling all over. Pedro reassured her,
helped her up, covered her with his coat, and sent her
home.
Rodrigo spent the rest of the night without sleeping,
suffering terrible remorse. When day returned, he went
to the hospital and asked to enter Pedro's community.
«It's not yet time,» said the latter, who sent him
home. There, he found the royal note he had been
waiting for since he came to Guatemala—King Philip
IV had granted him the title of Marquis of Talamanca
as well as a handsome salary, and told him that he
would shortly name him Viceroy of New Spain. Three
days later, having thought it over carefully, he
arrived at the hospital once more. This time, Pedro
welcomed him, embracing him. «Brother Rodrigo, peace
be with you. This house is yours. From this day on,
you will be called Rodrigo of the Cross.»
On April 20, 1667, Pedro, weakened by his tireless
work, came down with bronchopneumonia. Seeing death
coming, he designated Rodrigo of the Cross his
successor and, blessing him with the words «May God
make you humble!», he outlined for him the guiding
principles that he needed to maintain in the work he
had undertaken. On April 25, he rendered his soul to
God in a rapture. Rodrigo of the Cross faithfully
executed the founder's wishes and wrote the
constitutions of the Order of Bethlehem. He accepted
Sisters as well as Brothers. In 1674, Pope Clement X
approved the rules of both communities.
A legacy that cannot be
lost
On June 22, 1980, Pope John Paul II beatified
Brother Pedro de Betancur, a simple Third Order
Franciscan who, a poor man among the poor, was able to
recognize in them the Holy Child of Bethlehem. Indeed,
«Christ is poor on earth in the person of His poor...
As God He is rich, as man He is poor. With His
humanity He has gone up to Heaven and, prosperous, is
seated at the right hand of the Father, and yet, here
on earth, still poor, He suffers hunger, thirst and
nakedness» (Saint Augustine). On the occasion of
Brother Pedro's canonization, the Holy Father
expressed himself in this way: «Still today, the new
saint is an urgent invitation to practice mercy in
modern society, especially when so many are waiting
for a hand stretched out to help them. We are thinking
of children and youth who are homeless or lack
education; of abandoned women who must confront so
many needs; of the multitudes of unwanted people in
the cities; of the victims of organized crime,
prostitution, or drugs; of the sick who are wanting
for help or the elderly who live alone.
«Brother Pedro is a legacy that cannot be lost. He
must be the subject of continuous gratitude; he must
be imitated with renewed purpose. This legacy must
inspire among Christians and among all citizens the
desire to transform the human community into a large
family, where social, political and economic relations
are worthy of man, and within which the dignity of the
person is promoted through effective recognition of
his inalienable rights.
«I would like to conclude by recalling that devotion
to the Most Blessed Virgin was always present in
Brother Pedro's life of piety and mercy. May she also
guide us so that, illuminated by the examples of 'the
man who was made charity,' as Pedro de Betancur is
known, we might come to her Son Jesus!»
This is the grace we ask of Saint Joseph for you and
for all your loved ones.
Dom Antoine Marie osb
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