Our Saint of the Day was a beloved 🚪 doorkeeper. Can you guess who it is?
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January 6, 2025

Dear John,

 

I love doors. When I went to Italy on pilgrimage years ago, most of the images I brought back were of doors: ornate wooden doors as old as the structures themselves. Every time January rolls around, and we get to our Saint of the Day, André Bessette, I smile because this holy man was given simple tasks to live out his vocation, namely being a doorkeeper for Notre Dame College in Montreal. I think of how this humble holy man greeted those who knocked on their door each morning. What a warm face to welcome people!

 

I like to think that this newsletter is our good morning to you: our way of saying that hope is alive and thriving. André Bessette understood this. In his small way, he helped rebuild the worldwide Church. At Franciscan Media, we are on the same mission: to rebuild a Church that has fallen into disrepair. And that mission is not possible without your support. With your help, we can make this happen.

 

Click here to learn more!

 

Christopher Heffron
Editorial Director 

SAINT OF THE DAY
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Saint of the Day for January 6:
André Bessette

(August 9, 1845 – January 6, 1937)

    

Listen to Saint André Bessette’s Story Here

Brother André expressed a saint’s faith by a lifelong devotion to Saint Joseph.

Sickness and weakness dogged André from birth. He was the eighth of 12 children born to a French Canadian couple near Montreal. Adopted at 12, when both parents had died, he became a farmhand. Various trades followed: shoemaker, baker, blacksmith—all failures. He was a factory worker in the United States during the boom times of the Civil War.

 

At 25, André applied for entrance into the Congregation of Holy Cross. After a year’s novitiate, he was not admitted because of his weak health. But with an extension and the urging of Bishop Bourget, he was finally received. He was given the humble job of doorkeeper at Notre Dame College in Montreal, with additional duties as sacristan, laundry worker and messenger. “When I joined this community, the superiors showed me the door, and I remained 40 years,” he said.

 

In his little room near the door, he spent much of the night on his knees. On his windowsill, facing Mount Royal, was a small statue of Saint Joseph, to whom he had been devoted since childhood. When asked about it he said, “Some day, Saint Joseph is going to be honored in a very special way on Mount Royal!”

When he heard someone was ill, he visited to bring cheer and to pray with the sick person. He would rub the sick person lightly with oil taken from a lamp burning in the college chapel. Word of healing powers began to spread.

 

When an epidemic broke out at a nearby college, André volunteered to nurse. Not one person died. The trickle of sick people to his door became a flood. His superiors were uneasy; diocesan authorities were suspicious; doctors called him a quack. “I do not cure,” he said again and again. “Saint Joseph cures.” In the end he needed four secretaries to handle the 80,000 letters he received each year.

 

For many years the Holy Cross authorities had tried to buy land on Mount Royal. Brother André and others climbed the steep hill and planted medals of Saint Joseph. Suddenly, the owners yielded. André collected $200 to build a small chapel and began receiving visitors there—smiling through long hours of listening, applying Saint Joseph’s oil. Some were cured, some not. The pile of crutches, canes and braces grew.

 

The chapel also grew. By 1931, there were gleaming walls, but money ran out. “Put a statue of Saint Joseph in the middle. If he wants a roof over his head, he’ll get it.” The magnificent Oratory on Mount Royal took 50 years to build. The sickly boy who could not hold a job died at 92.

 

He is buried at the Oratory. He was beatified in 1982 and canonized in 2010. At his canonization in October 2010, Pope Benedict XVI said that Saint Andre “lived the beatitude of the pure of heart.”

 

Reflection

Rubbing ailing limbs with oil or a medal? Planting a medal to buy land? Isn’t this superstition? Aren’t we long past that superstitious people rely only on the “magic” of a word or action. Brother André’s oil and medals were authentic sacramentals of a simple, total faith in the Father who lets his saints help him bless his children.

Discover St. Anthony Messenger magazine and how it can help you become a more joyful, loving peacemaker by exploring many of the issues that are facing the Church and the world today, through a Franciscan lens.

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MINUTE MEDITATIONS
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Be Humble. Let Go.

 

Humility is the hallmark spiritual virtue of letting go. It’s an open-minded, openhearted, openhanded way to move through the world. To be humble is to make room for life as it comes, without the need to grasp too tightly, even to certainty. This kind of attitude is what keeps your vision from clouding up and occluding. No one manages this perfectly, of course.

 

That’s why life seems all too willing to deal us periodic humiliations that knock down our towers of Babel and drop us back onto the ground of our being: the truth that we are held in divine and loving hands, without being able to do anything to deserve or ruin it. In other words, the spirituality of letting go, or beginner’s mind, or humility, or however you want to describe it, is ultimately a way of believing and living that reminds us at every turn that it’s about realities far larger, deeper, more mysterious, and more wonderful than ourselves.

 

—from the book Making Room: Soul-Deep Satisfaction Through Simple Living
by Kyle Kramer

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PAUSE+PRAY
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The Flashlight

 

Reflect

“Siri, turn on Flashlight,” I said one night when the power went out. As the hallway lit up before me, I remembered God’s words in Psalm 119: “Your word is a lamp for my feet, a light for my path” (119:105). How lucky we are that all we need to do to find God’s word is to open our Bibles.

 

Pray

Dear God,
Thank you for your living word,
which is easily accessible and available whenever we need it.
Scripture is alive and active;
through it, you comfort, admonish, encourage, and teach us.
Help us to find time to read and listen to it.
Amen.

 

Act

Carve out a few minutes in your day to read a few verses in the Bible. Consider this quote, for example: “Speak, for your servant is listening” (1 Sam 3:10).

 

Today's Pause+Pray was written by Colleen Arnold, MD. Learn more here!

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