Salesian Brother Artemides Zatti Is a Saint!
(ANS – Vatican City – October 9, 2022) - “Salesian Brother Artemides Zatti was a living example of gratitude.” With these words, pronounced during the homily of today’s Mass, Pope Francis points all the faithful to the model of the “holy nurse” and “relative of all the poor,” on the day he proclaims his sanctity before the universal Church. The Eucharistic celebration with the rite of canonization of Salesian Brother Artemides Zatti and Bp. John Baptist Scalabrini, bishop and founder of the Congregation of the Missionaries of St. Charles and the Congregation of the Missionary Sisters of St. Charles Borromeo, was celebrated in St. Peter’s Square in Rome.
The solemn rite of
canonization came at the beginning of the liturgy. After the entrance hymn, the
schola of St. Peter’s Basilica intoned the hymn Veni, Creator Spiritus,
and Cardinal Marcello Semeraro, prefect of the dicastery for the Causes of
Saints, accompanied by the postulators of the 2 causes, Father Graziano
Battistella, CS, and Father Pierluigi Cameroni, SDB, went to the Holy Father to
present the Petitio, the request with which they ask to proceed to
the canonization of the two blesseds.
The figures of Bp.
Scalabrini and Bro. Zatti were briefly illustrated through the reading of their
respective biographies by Card. Semeraro.
Then entire square
packed with the faithful invoked through the Litany of the Saints the
participation of the entire heavenly Church to accompany the inscription in the
Roll of Saints of the two blesseds.
At 10:30 a.m. the
Holy Father Francis pronounced in Latin the solemn formula of canonization by
which he declared and defined John Baptist Scalabrini and Artemides Zatti
as saints.
Great applause from
the assembly of the faithful accompanied the proclamation, followed by the
incensation and deposition at the feet of the statue of our Lady of handsome
reliquaries of the two new saints, and by the thanksgiving of the cardinal prefect
of the dicastery for the Causes of Saints, who at the same time asked and
obtained from the Pontiff the consent to the drafting of the apostolic letter
about the canonization having taken place.
The Sunday
Eucharistic liturgy then resumed, concelebrated by several cardinals, archbishops,
bishops, and priests, many of them sons of Don Bosco, led by Fr. Angel Fernandez
Artime. At the time of the homily, the Pope elaborated on the readings of the 28th
Sunday of Ordinary Time. Two aspects emphasized in particular by the
Pontiff: walking together and gratitude.
Walking together is the
characteristic of the ten lepers healed by Jesus. “This image is also
meaningful for us,” the Pontiff says. “When we are honest with ourselves, we
realize that we are all sick at heart, all sinners in need of the Father’s
mercy. Then we stop creating divisions on the basis of merit, social position,
or some other superficial criterion.”
“Brothers and
sisters, let us reflect and see whether in our lives, in our families, in the
places where we daily work and spend our time, we are capable of walking
together with others, listening to them, resisting the temptation to lock
ourselves up in self-absorption and to think only of our own needs,” was the invitation
the Pope elicited.
This is also an
opportunity to denounce once again the exclusion of migrants, which the Pope
flatly calls “scandalous, criminal, disgusting and sinful.”
“Today let us think
of our migrants, those who die,” the Pope added again, leaving the question
open to all, “And those who manage to enter, do we receive them as brothers or
do we exploit them?
Next, the Holy
Father highlighted the value of gratitude, following the model of
the Samaritan, the only one of the 10 healed lepers who returned to thank
Jesus: “This is a great lesson also for us, who daily benefit from the gifts of
God, yet often go our own way, failing to cultivate a living relationship with him.
.... And, thus, we end up thinking that all the gifts we receive each day are
natural and due to us.”
On the contrary,
the Pontiff noted that “gratitude, the ability to give thanks, makes us
appreciate instead the presence in our lives of the God who is love; and to
recognize the importance of others, overcoming the dissatisfaction and
indifference that disfigure our hearts.”
Knowing how to walk
together with others and being able to give thanks, the Pope said, are
precisely what marked the lives of the two saints proclaimed today. The Pope
quoted Bp. Scalabrini, who founded a congregation for the care of emigrants;
the Pope offered a quote to affirm that “in the shared journeying of emigrants
we should see not only problems, but also a providential plan. In the bishop’s
words: ‘Precisely because of the migrations imposed by persecutions, the Church
pressed beyond the confines of Jerusalem and of Israel, and became “catholic”;
thanks to the migrations of our own days, the Church will be an instrument of
peace and of communion among peoples’” (L’emigrazione degli operai italiani
[Ferrara, 1899]).
The Pontiff then
reflected on the forced migration of which the Ukrainian population is a
victim: “Let us not forget today martyred Ukraine.”
On Salesian Bro. Artemides
Zatti, he then reiterated: “For his part, Salesian Bro. Artemides Zatti,
with his bicycle, was a living example of gratitude: cured of
tuberculosis, he devoted his entire life to serving others, caring for the
infirm with tender love. He was said to have carried on his shoulders the dead
body of one of his patients. Filled with gratitude for all that he had
received, he wanted to say his own ‘thank you’ by taking upon himself the
wounds of others.”
The Holy Father’s
homily concluded, therefore, with a final exhortation, “Let us pray that these
holy brothers of ours will help us to walk together, without walls of division;
and to cultivate this nobility of spirit so pleasing to God, which is
gratitude.”
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