Wednesday, November 13, 2013

God reveals Himself in the service of the poor – Luke 17:11-19; Frances Xavier Cabrini

Memorial of St. Frances Xavier Cabrini; Holy Cross Parish.

Frances Cabrini said thank you to God with her life.  Not for a terribly prosperous life; not for a spectacular moral healing, for she had no great life of dissipation to turn away from.  Not for a miraculous physical healing, for she was a sickly child, and remained in poor health most of her life.  She lived a life of gratitude for the everyday sustenance God provided for her, the slow growth in virtue, the sacramental life she rejoiced to participate in.  She was so grateful for the gift of education in her life that she wanted to join the order of sisters that had taught her, but they wouldn’t have her because of her ill health. 



But, she was determined that she wanted to be of service, so she founded her own religious community, the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart in her hometown just outside of Milan.  At the suggestion of their bishop, they sailed to America to come to the aid of Italian immigrants in New York.  Bit by bit, their ministry expanded, as they founded orphanages, schools and eventually hospitals, expanding from New York to the rest of the United States and eventually other parts of the Americas.  She knew that by serving those in need, she was meeting and offering thanks to Christ himself for all the ways he loved and sustained her.  The Opening Prayer of today’s Mass points to this, asking her intercession that we might “see Christ in all the men and women we meet.” 


Once, she attended a private audience with the Pope, who urged her to “hurry all over the earth if possible, in order to take the holy name of Jesus everywhere.”  She consented, writing: “I will go anywhere and do anything in order to communicate the love of Jesus.”  What she had come to realize was that as she encountered and thanked Christ in the poor she served, so her actions made Christ present.  To look, again, to our Opening Prayer, it calls attention to her immigrant status (and she is one of the patron saints of immigrants today).  Her willingness to move, to enter another world, to stop seeing any other human as foreign, but see Christ in them, to allow herself to be seen as foreign… in all this we see in her the image of God authentically lived out, of God who would (as a song puts it) “leave his place on high, and come for sinful ones to die.”  Compassion moved Frances, moved her miles upon miles.  Each of those miles is a tiny reflection of the chasm Christ crossed to seek and save the lost, to heal us of our sin.  We’ve come together around this table to say thank you.  Saying it here has the power to strengthen us to say it to all those we meet today, all those in whom we can encounter Christ.

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