Showing posts with label saint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label saint. Show all posts

Friday, February 8, 2013

A life well-lived: Father Stanley Rother


I spent a good chunk of today reading and researching for my current book project, so I thought I’d tell you about it.


I’ve been commissioned by the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City to write a biography of Servant of God Father Stanley Rother, an Oklahoma missionary whose cause for canonization is in progress.

Oklahoma farm boy Stanley Rother was shot to death on July 28, 1981, while serving the poor of Guatemala, earning him a Martyr's crown.  He was 46.

Rother, who ministered at the mission of Santiago Atitlán from 1968 until his death, fell in love with the volatile and stunning land of volcanoes and earthquakes, but above all, with its indigenous Mayan people. 

Padre Apla’s (Francis in their native Tz’utujil) established the first farmers’ co-op, a school, the first hospital clinic, and the first Catholic radio station, which was used for catechesis.


Above all, he gave his heart to the people, choosing to remain with them in spite of being told that he was on a death list.

Rother was one of 13 priests—and the first American priest — slain during Guatemala’s 36-year-guerrilla war, a tragedy that claimed an estimated 140,000 lives. No one has ever been prosecuted for his killing.

I’ve already written several articles on Stanley Rother. Here’s one, and here’s another.

But writing his biography is at a whole other level. Please pray for me? I am humbled and honored to be able to tell his story.


And would you join us in praying for the Canonization of Father Stanley Rother, Oklahoma Martyr?
Heavenly Father,
source of all holiness,
in every generation you raise up
men and women heroic in love and service.
 
You have blessed your Church
with the life of Stanley Rother,
priest, missionary, and martyr.
 
Through his prayer, his preaching,
his presence, and his pastoral love,
you revealed Your love and Your presence
with us as Shepherd.
 
If it be your will,
may he be proclaimed
by the universal church
as martyr and saint,
living now in your presence
and interceding for us all.
 
We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen

Friday, November 16, 2012

st. Raphael, pray for us



The other day I was driving home with my parents from a doctor’s appointment, when I got pulled over by police for speeding.

As I honestly acknowledged to the very polite officer that I was mistaken about the speed limit, I could hear Mami next to me whispering something.

“Don’t worry, St.Raphael will take care of us,” she assured me as I watched the policeman walk away with my driver’s license and insurance information.


Sure enough, the officer returned a few minutes later, handed me a warning ticket to sign, and put his hand on my window, “Please be careful.

Mami just smiled. I was so stunned by the fact that the officer had not given me a ticket, that I accidentally may have made the car tires screech as I pulled out into the street. True story.

From the Old Testament story in the book of Tobit (read about it here), I knew that St. Raphael is the patron of healing. But I had to look up how he applied to my story!

The Healing of Tobit  by Domenico Feti  c. 1620

The name Raphael, in fact, translates in Hebrew as, "It is God who heals,”
 "God Heals,” or "God, Please Heal.” He is an archangel of Judaism and Christianity, who in the Christian tradition is the patron of: the blind, of happy meetings, of nurses, of physicians and of travelers.

So... was it my blindness to the speed limit? My traveling? My happy meeting with the officer?

St. Raphael, pray for us!

Wall at St. William's Catholic Church
Round Rock, TX