“A faithful man shall be greatly praised; and he that is the keeper of his Lord, shall be glorified.”
–Proverbs 28 (Little Chapter for the Office of Vespers, Feast of St. Joseph)
It is a surprise for us, looking back from our vantage point, to realize just how long it took for Devotion to St. Joseph to develop in the life of the Catholic Church. It was in 1621 that Pope Gregory XV extended the observance of a Feast of St. Joseph on March 19th (piously believed to be the date of his death) to the whole Church. In 1870, the year our protagonist entered the Congregation of Holy Cross and took the name in religion “André”, Pope Pius IX declared St. Joseph to be “Patron and Protector of the universal (i.e., the “Catholic”) Church.
St. Joseph had long been the Patron Saint of French Canada, and, as a child, Frere André had taken to heart a most strong and tender filial devotion to St. Joseph through the example of his mother Clotilde. St. Joseph: the great and and silent Saint who plays such a crucial role in story of our Redemption, and yet we hear no word from him in the Gospel Books. God was to show His divine power through Frere André Bessette by means of the Holy Cross Brother hiding himself in the silence of St. Joseph.
Let us see how this began to unfold. Frere André, as Brother Porter for the College, had some very simple, tedious duties. He opened the door, he cleaned, he said his prescribed prayers, and he kept to his place on the bottom rung of the Community. One day, while watching over patients at the College infirmary he came to the bed of a boy who had been lying there for several days under strict doctor’s orders. He was running a dangerous fever.
“Why are you being so lazy,” the Brother asked the boy. He replied, “But I’m sick.” – “No, you’re not ... Why don’t you go and play with the others?” At this, the boy, feeling a sudden strength, got up from his sick bed, and rejoined his friends, to the astonishment of everybody. The boy was thoroughly examined by a doctor. He was watched. Everyone expected a relapse. But there was none. The sick boy had been instantaneously cured and no-one knew how.
What was the Community’s reaction to this healing? They came down on Brother Porter like a ton of bricks. How dare he! Who did he think he was! And this was just the opener.
As anyone who has ever even
tried religious life or seminary life knows, often enough you can be in for some very rough treatment from other members of your community, especially if they consider you a little odd or “a bit much”. And so it was for Frere André.
Sometimes, instead of telling sick people bluntly that they were cured, the Porter told them to take some oil which had burned under a St. Joseph statue–“St. Joseph’s oil” he called itand to rub their sick limbs or wounds with it. This earned him the derisive label from his Community Brothers of “Old Greaser”, or “Old Smearer”. If St. Joseph were really going to work miracles in their day through someone, why would he use
that one? The question answered itself, didn’t it? It was all too ridiculous!
One day, in the Year 1884 (14 years after Frere André had been in religious life), two men came in carrying a woman crippled with rheumatism. Frere André was busy scrubbing the floor at the entrance to the College. She begged to see the Brother in order that he might cure her. Frere André did not address her. Instead, he said to the two men carrying her: “Let her walk by herself.” The woman managed to walk one step on her own, then another, and another. The whole time Frere André kept on scrubbing the floor. After a while, he finally spoke to the woman: “You’re no longer sick. You can go home now.” And she did–completely cured.
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes is Newton and Needham Massachusetts' oldest Roman Catholic Parish. Founded as Saint Mary Parish in 1870, it was renamed "Mary Immaculate of Lourdes" when the new Church was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1910. In addition to being a regular territorial parish of the Archdiocese of Boston it is also a "Mission Parish" since 2007 with a special apostolate for the Traditional Latin Mass (1962 Missal).
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