Monday, May 25, 2026

Pope Leo XIV's Magnifica Humanitas

Pope Leo XIV’s Magnifica Humanitas

A Manifesto for the Human Person in the Age of AI

(ANS – Rome – May 25, 2026) – In his new encyclical Magnifica humanitas, Pope Leo XIV places artificial intelligence at the heart of today’s social question, calling the Church and the wider human family to choose between a technological future built on domination and one grounded in dignity, justice, truth, and communion.

Entering one of the most urgent debates of our time, the Pope speaks with the calm authority of the Church’s social tradition—explicitly situating Magnifica humanitas in the 135th-anniversary lineage of Leo XIII’s Rerum novarum—and with the prophetic resonance of Scripture. The question before humanity, he suggests, is not whether artificial intelligence will shape the future—it already does. The real question is what kind of future we are building, and what kind of human beings we are becoming.

Babel or Jerusalem

The document’s central image is striking: humanity stands at a crossroads between constructing another Tower of Babel or, like Nehemiah, rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem. Babel represents technological pride, uniformity, control, and self-sufficiency. Jerusalem symbolizes patient reconstruction, shared responsibility, communion, and hope.

Pope Leo does not condemn technology. On the contrary, he recognizes its immense capacity to heal, educate, connect, and serve. Yet he insists that technology is never neutral in practice. It inevitably reflects the values of those who design it, finance it, regulate it, and deploy it. Artificial intelligence can serve the human person—but it can also reinforce a technocratic culture in which people are reduced to data points, productivity metrics, consumers, or instruments of efficiency.

The Anthropological Question

One of the encyclical’s most powerful contributions is anthropological. AI may calculate, imitate, synthesize, and respond—but it does not suffer, love, hope, repent, forgive, or discern. It has no body, no conscience, no spiritual interiority, no moral responsibility. It may simulate empathy, but it cannot become a neighbor.

For this reason, the Pope warns of a subtle yet profound danger: not only that machines might replace human tasks, but that they might reshape our imagination of what it means to be human.

Concrete Fields of Concern

The encyclical applies this discernment to several critical areas:

Public communication: AI can amplify disinformation and blur the boundary between truth and manipulation. Education: It may weaken patience, attention, and the discipline of asking meaningful questions. Work: While it can free people from dangerous or repetitive labor, it may also deskill workers, intensify surveillance, and generate new forms of unemployment. Economy: It risks concentrating wealth and power in the hands of a few, and gives rise to new forms of slavery and a new “data colonialism”—the hidden labor that trains AI systems, the extractive mining behind its hardware, and the commodification of personal and health data. War: It can render violence faster, more impersonal, and less accountable—thru autonomous weapons, a renewed arms industry, and the steady normalization of armed conflict that the Pope warns against.

The Pope’s language becomes particularly forceful when he speaks of the need to “disarm” artificial intelligence. This does not mean rejecting innovation; rather, it means freeing AI from the logic of domination, monopoly, manipulation, and warfare. AI must be transparent, accountable, contestable, and socially governed. Above all, it must remain subject to the judgment of human dignity—not the reverse.

A Call to Conversion

For Catholic educators, communicators, and pastoral workers, Magnifica humanitas is not merely a Vatican reflection on technology. It’s a call to conversion. The Church is invited to form persons capable of living wisely in the digital age: men and women rooted in truth, silence, critical thought, embodied relationships, solidarity with the poor, and care for creation.

The encyclical closes with a 4-part Christian itinerary: the mystery of the Incarnation, the unity of the one Body in Christ nourished by the Eucharist, the “construction site” of our time in the figure of Nehemiah, and the Magnificat as the song of hope from which the document takes its name. Against technological fantasies of transcending human limits, Pope Leo proposes the Christian vision of a God who enters human fragility. Humanity is not saved by becoming less human—more efficient, invulnerable, or machine-like—but by becoming more deeply human in Christ: capable of love, communion, responsibility, and hope.

In the end, Magnifica humanitas is not a document of fear, but of discernment. It calls humanity to stop building towers destined to collapse and to begin rebuilding the city where every person has a place.

Practical Takeaways

In concrete terms, Magnifica humanitas invites every sector of the Church and society to a renewed sense of responsibility. Educators are called to teach young people not only how to use artificial intelligence, but also when not to use it, safeguarding attention, memory, patience, creativity, and moral judgment. Communicators must rediscover truth as a common good, embracing verification, transparency, and accountability as essential commitments in the digital age. Youth ministers are urged to accompany young people within their digital environments, understanding their online world without abandoning them to it. Institutions are encouraged to examine every technological adoption with ethical clarity, asking who truly benefits, who may be excluded, how data is used, and whether decisions remain accountable and open to appeal. Communities, meanwhile, are reminded to preserve spaces of real presence — the shared table, the classroom, the chapel, the playground, visits to the sick, and service to the poor — as irreplaceable signs of authentic human communion. Ultimately, the Pope’s appeal resounds with evangelical simplicity: do not build Babel; rebuild humanity together.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Signs of Providence

“Signs of Providence”

Mary Help of Christians and the Miracles Don Bosco Documented (1866–1875)


Part 1

(ANS – Rome – May 22, 2026) – Between April 27, 1865 – the day the foundation stone of the church of Mary Help of Christians was laid – and 1875, Don Bosco witnessed an extraordinary outpouring of graces attributed to the intercession of the Virgin Mary. The Valdocco shrine quickly became a center for pilgrimages, a place of conversion, and the spiritual heart of the nascent Salesian Family.

In 1875 Don Bosco published the volume Mary Help of Christians, containing accounts of some of the graces obtained during the first seven years (counting from the date of the church’s consecration, June 9, 1868), a text that is not merely a devotional collection but also an accurate and verifiable record: the testimonies included full names, professions, precise locations, dates, signed statements and, in some cases, medical confirmations. Over 90 graces were documented in the first seven years alone.

Don Bosco, a practical and prudent man, wrote, “Everywhere one sees extraordinary effects produced by this trust in Mary Help of Christians” and affirmed with serene certainty: “Mary Help of Christians is the dispenser of graces.” His famous expression remains: “Every brick corresponded to a grace,” indicating how the basilica itself had arisen thru tangible signs of Providence. The events presented here, drawn from the Opere Edite (Published Works), vol. XXVI, and the Biographical Memoirs, constitute a significant selection from that rich body of documentation.

In this first part, we present 12 episodes documented between 1869 and 1875.

1. THE CHILD WHO SAW THE LIGHT (Turin, January 1870)

Giuseppe, aged seven, had been blind from birth. The doctors had been unequivocal: congenital blindness, irreversible. His mother took him to Valdocco and implored Don Bosco. After Mass, the Saint blessed a medal of Mary Help of Christians and placed it over the child’s eyes, praying aloud. Immediately his eyelids trembled: Giuseppe opened his eyes and saw the light, the faces, his mother. The doctor, summoned, certified in writing the complete and scientifically inexplicable healing.

Source: Biographical Memoirs vol. X / Opere Edite vol. XXVI

2. TWENTY YEARS OF SILENCE BROKEN IN AN INSTANT (Turin, March 1871)

Teresa, aged 45, had been deaf for 20 years due to a violent fever. A neighbor gave her a medal from Valdocco. Teresa placed it under her pillow and prayed with simple faith. At dawn she distinctly heard the ticking of the clock, her husband’s breathing, the birdsong. After 2 decades of silence, the world had sound once more. The following Sunday she attended Mass at Valdocco, listening to the choir and the organ. Don Bosco said to her: “She takes such pleasure in helping us!”

Source: Opere Edite vol. XXVI

3. DOUBLE HEALING: BLIND AND DUMB (Alessandria, May 1872)

Carlo, aged 24, blind and mute from birth, was entirely dependent on his parents. His mother made a novena to Mary Help of Christians, promising to walk barefoot to Turin if her prayer were answered. For 9 days she placed the medal on her son’s forehead. On the final day, Carlo uttered, “Mom,” and opened his eyes at the same time. He saw and spoke in the very same instant. His mother kept her vow, walking barefoot for 43 miles to Valdocco, where the young man publicly recounted what had happened.

Source: Biographical Memoirs vol. XIII / Opere Edite vol. XXVI

4. THE GANGRENE THAT DISAPPEARED OVERNIGHT (Turin, December 1869)

Pietro, a 32-year-old bricklayer, was hospitalized with gangrene in his leg; the surgeons had decided on an amputation for the following morning. Don Bosco went to the hospital, placed the medal of Mary Help of Christians on the necrotic area, and prayed: “What the surgeons cannot do, you will be able to do.” By dawn, the gangrene had disappeared. The doctors documented the case in writing. Pietro made a full recovery, and for the rest of his life offered his labor free of charge to the basilica.

Source: Biographical Memoirs vol. X, 163 / Opere Edite vol. XXVI

5. THE BREAST CANCER THAT DISAPPEARED (Vercelli, April 1873)

Anna, a 40-year-old mother of 3, had been diagnosed with a malignant breast tumor, deemed incurable. Don Bosco sent her 3 blessed medals with instructions to apply them 3 times a day while reciting three Hail Marys. Her husband noted the progress: a reduction in pain, a decrease in swelling, and the gradual disappearance of the lump. After 10 days, the tumor was no longer palpable. The doctor certified the inexplicable healing. Anna lived for another 35 years.

Source: Opere Edite vol. XXVI

6. CANCER-LIKE BRONCHITIS HEALED INSTANTLY (Turin, November 1870)

Domenico, aged 19, was dying of bronchitis complicated by pulmonary gangrene. He had received the Sacrament of the Sick. Don Bosco rushed to his side, placed the relic of St. Francis de Sales and the medal of Mary Help of Christians on the young man’s chest, prayed, and said: “Domenico, get up!.” The young man opened his eyes, breathed normally, and sat up. The doctor, who had been called back, found his lungs to be perfectly healthy. Domenico made a full recovery and later became a Salesian coadjutor brother.

Source: Opere Edite, vol. XXVI

7. THE EPILEPSY THAT NEVER RETURNED (Chieri, August 1871)

Francesco, aged 16, had suffered from epilepsy since the age of 8, with frequent and violent seizures. Brought to Valdocco by his mother, he prayed before the altar of Mary Help of Christians and received the medal on his forehead. The seizures ceased completely. In 1879 he wrote to Don Bosco confirming that, after 8 years, they had not returned.

Source: Opere Edite, vol. XXVI

8. UNBELIEVING DOCTOR HEALED AND CONVERTED (Turin, February 1874)

Dr. Emilio Gardini, a Turin-based doctor who was openly skeptical about miracles, was struck down by a severe fever accompanied by bilateral pneumonia. In a critical condition, he asked for a visit from Don Bosco, who prayed and placed the medal of Mary Help of Christians upon him. The fever ceased that very evening; within a few days, his lungs were found to be healthy. His physical recovery was followed by his conversion and a public commitment to the Faith.

Source: Biographical Memoirs vol. XVI / Opere Edite vol. XXVI

9. PARALYSIS OVERCOME AFTER YEARS OF IMMOBILITY (Asti, June 1872)

Caterina, aged 38, who had been paralyzed from the waist down for 10 years following a difficult childbirth, began to be anointed daily with oil from the lamp on the altar of Mary Help of Christians, in accordance with the instructions she had received. After a few days, signs of sensation appeared; within a few months she began to walk again. Six months later she walked to Valdocco to give thanks.

Source: Opere Edite vol. XXVI

10. THE WOMAN SAVED FROM THE FLAMES (Turin, September 1870)

Luigia Ferrero was suddenly engulfed in flames when an oil lamp set her dress alight. With the fire surrounding her, she invoked Mary Help of Christians, clutching the medal she had received from Don Bosco. The flames died down instantly. Her clothes were charred, but her body remained unharmed, with no burns. The doctor, called immediately afterwards, declared the incident inexplicable. Luigia publicly attributed her salvation to the intercession of Mary Help of Christians.

Source: Opere Edite vol. XXVI / Biographical Memoirs vol. XV

11. THE BRICKLAYER WHO FELL UNHARMED  FROM THE FOURTH FLOOR (Turin, May 1868)

Giuseppe Baratta, a 29-year-old bricklayer, fell from the 4th floor of a scaffold in Turin. During the fall, he invoked Mary Help of Christians, whose medal he was wearing. Those present expected him to die instantly; instead, they found him conscious and unharmed. The doctor noted the absence of any fractures or bruises, describing the outcome as incomprehensible. Giuseppe attributed his survival to Mary’s protection and continued to work devotedly on the construction of the basilica.

Source: Biographical Memoirs vol. XVI / Opere Edite vol. XXVI

12. STORM HALTED OVER THE VINEYARD (Monferrato, July 1871)

On July 15, 1871, a violent hailstorm devastated the countryside of Monferrato. Michele Rossi, a devout farmer, had placed a medal of Mary Help of Christians at the edge of his vineyard, praying for the protection of the harvest. During the storm, the hailstorm destroyed all the surrounding fields but stopped exactly at the boundary of his property. The vineyard remained intact. The event was attested to by witnesses and reported to Don Bosco as a sign of extraordinary protection.

Source: Opere Edite vol. XXVI

The 12 episodes collected here, spanning 1868 to 1875, reveal a clear common thread: a simple and concrete trust in the intercession of Mary Help of Christians. Healings from diseases deemed incurable, protection in mortal danger, unexpected conversions — every account converges on the same element: the confident invocation and the mediation of Don Bosco.

For Don Bosco, these events were not a spectacle, nor a search for the miraculous. They were pastoral signs, intended to strengthen the faith of the people and to remind them that Mary continues to work in the lives of her children, and that she not only heals bodies or saves from danger, but renews hearts, restores hope and leads to God. 


Part 2

In the 1st part we considered interventions that saved lives, healed inner wounds, and restored dignity and freedom. This 2d collection broadens our view to the daily fabric of Providence. These are not merely extraordinary events, but signs that touch every sphere of existence: the family threatened by hunger, a business on the brink of collapse, a vocation in peril, land parched by drought, lost honor, sudden illness, and irreconcilable divisions.

Between 1866 and 1875 – the early years of the basilica of Mary Help of Christians in Valdocco – testimonies multiplied, all sharing a common thread: simple, concrete, active trust. A medal clutched between the fingers. A novena recited in the silence of the evening. A blessing given at dawn. A letter sent across the ocean.

Don Bosco did not propose magic formulas, but a filial entrustment. The medal was not superstition, but a visible sign of a living relationship. In these accounts, Mary Help of Christians appears as a Mother attentive not only to great tragedies, but also to material needs, inner doubts, financial anxieties, and the “small” sorrows that are immense for those who experience them. These 12 episodes, drawn from the Biographical Memoirs and the Opere Edite, show how Marian devotion in the Salesian experience was not a form of spiritual escapism, but a transforming force in the concrete lives of people.

1. THE TRAIN STOPPED BEFORE THE TRAGEDY (Alessandria-Turin, March 1873)

Without anyone noticing, a night-time landslide had damaged the tracks along the route being travelled by the 7:15 a.m. train from Alessandria to Turin. The train was heading for certain derailment. On board, Carlo Ferretti, a devotee of Mary Help of Christians, was seized by a sudden and seemingly inexplicable anxiety: he clutched the medal blessed by Don Bosco and began to pray aloud, inviting others to join him. Without any human intervention, the train slowed down until it came to a halt just before the damaged section. The driver described the event as “inexplicable.” 60 passengers were saved. Many went to Valdocco to give thanks.

Opere Edite vol. XXVI

2. THE DRUNKARD TURNED APOSTLE (Turin, October 1869)

Matteo Rinaldi, a slave to alcohol, terrorized his family and squandered his wages. In desperation, his wife Elena turned to Don Bosco, who gave her 3 medals of Mary Help of Christians, urging her to pray with faith. One evening, looking into his glass, Matteo saw his own misery reflected and felt a sudden pang of remorse. From that day on, his desire to drink vanished. Not only did he remain sober for the rest of his life, but he helped others to free themselves from the vice, founding a mutual aid society. He died after 34 years of total abstinence.

Biographical Memoirs vol. XIII / Opere Edite vol. XXVI

3. THE BLASPHEMER WHO BECAME A PREACHER (Cuneo, January 1872)

Antonio Gamba, a blacksmith deeply grieved by the death of his son and wife, lived in hatred of God. Struck down by severe pneumonia, he rejected the priest and the sacraments. A medal of Mary Help of Christians was left on his bedside table. During a feverish night, he dreamt of a Mother who urged him to stop hating. Upon waking, his fever subsided and he asked for confession after 20 years of estrangement. Healed in body and soul, he transformed his workshop into a place of prayer and became an apostle among those who blasphemed, bearing witness to the mercy he had received.

Opere Edite vol. XXVI

4. THE IMPOSSIBLE RECONCILIATION (Asti, June 1873)

Luigi and Marco, brothers estranged for 25 years over a disputed inheritance, no longer spoke to each other. Their wives, in distress, went to Valdocco. Don Bosco entrusted them with 2 medals and a novena to Mary Help of Christians. During those days, both brothers were inwardly moved by memories and dreams of peace. On the 10th day, they met by chance before the altar of Mary. After a moment’s hesitation, Luigi took a step forward: the embrace melted away a quarter of a century of hatred. The families were reunited and lived from then on in fraternal harmony.

Opere Edite vol. XXVI

5. THE SEMINARIAN’S REDISCOVERED VOCATION (Turin, November 1874)

Giovanni Battista Francesia, a 21-one-year-old seminarian, was determined to leave due to doubts and spiritual aridity. His spiritual director sent him to Don Bosco, who gave him a medal and a week’s stay at Valdocco. Among the boys of the oratory and thru prayer before Mary Help of Christians, Giovanni rediscovered the joy of priestly service. He had no visions, but a profound peace. He stayed, was ordained, and became a distinguished Salesian collaborator, educator, and founder of schools. Thruout his life, he attributed his fidelity to his vocation to that week and to the intercession of Mary.

Biographical Memoirs vol. XVII / Salesian Archives

6. THE INNOCENT MAN RELEASED FROM PRISON (Cuneo, April 1871)

Stefano Bartoli, an honest accountant, was sentenced to 5 years for a shortfall of 5,000 lire that he had not committed. His wife, certain of his innocence, implored Don Bosco, who gave her 3 medals of Mary Help of Christians and invited her to pray with confidence. Two weeks later, the new accountant discovered a hidden folder containing the confession of the real culprit. Stefano was released immediately. The family went to Valdocco to give thanks. “Mary has restored my freedom and honor,” he would repeat every year on the anniversary of his release.

Opere Edite vol. XXVI

7. PROVIDENTIAL ECONOMIC RELIEF (Turin, December 1870)

On Christmas Eve, the Colombo family had run out of both bread and money. Paolo had been ill for 2 months; Teresa, exhausted, prayed before the statue of Mary Help of Christians: “Help my children.” At dawn, an elderly stranger knocked on the door and handed over a parcel containing food and 100 lire, accompanied by a note: “From Mary Help of Christians, for your children.” The man vanished without a trace. With that help, they got thru the winter. From then on, every Christmas, the Colombos helped other poor families, remembering the Providence they had received.

Biographical Memoirs vol. XVI / Opere Edite vol. XXVI

8. THE MIRACULOUS HARVEST AFTER THE DROUGHT (Monferrato, summer 1874)

After months without rain, Giuseppe Merlo’s fields were lost. On the advice of the pastor, he went to Valdocco and returned with holy water and medals of Mary Help of Christians. At dawn he blessed the fields, planting the medals at the boundaries. That night a gentle, steady rain fell. In the weeks that followed, while neighboring crops remained meager, his fields flourished in a surprising way. The harvest was extremely abundant. Giuseppe offered a tithe to Don Bosco: “Mary has saved my land.” From then on, he renewed that gesture of trust every year.

Opere Edite vol. XXVI

9. THE DEAL SAVED AT THE LAST MOMENT (Genoa, March 1873)

Carlo Bianchi was facing bankruptcy: a costly consignment of silk remained unsold and his debts were due in 9 days. On his wife’s suggestion, he began a novena to Mary Help of Christians. On the 8th day, an unknown French merchant entered the shop and purchased the entire consignment at the asking price, paying half in cash. The deal saved his home and honor. Carlo went to Valdocco to give thanks and promised to help the poor. From then on, he attributed the salvation of his business to Mary’s maternal intercession.

Opere Edite vol. XXVI

10. FIVE SEMINARIANS EXEMPTED FROM MILITARY SERVICE (Turin, September 1869)

5 clerics from the Oratory received their call-up papers. Their exemption had been rejected and their vocation seemed compromised. Don Bosco gave each of them a medal of Mary Help of Christians: “Take this with you and come back.” At the barracks, one after the other, they were declared exempt due to an “administrative error.” All 5 of them. They returned to Valdocco astonished, holding up their medals. They completed their studies and became Salesian priests, convinced that this unexpected exemption had saved their vocation and their mission.

Biographical Memoirs vol. IX, 337

11. THE VINEYARD IN AMERICA THAT TOOK ROOT (United States, 1870)

After 3 failed attempts to plant a vineyard in California, Margaret O’Connor wrote to Don Bosco from America. She received 12 medals of Mary Help of Christians to be planted at the heads of the rows. With persevering faith, she and her husband tried a 4th time. The vines all took root and thrived extraordinarily, producing abundant grapes of superior quality, never before seen in the area. The vineyard became a living testimony of gratitude. Every May 24, the family prayed among the rows, remembering that Providence knows no bounds.

Biographical Memoirs vol. IX, 337

12. THE INSTANTANEOUS HEALING OF A TOOTHACHE (Turin, August 1868)

Rosa Ferrero had been suffering from a terrible toothache for 3 days. The only possible remedy was extraction without anesthetic, which she feared more than the pain itself. Exhausted, she placed a medal of Mary Help of Christians on her cheek and prayed with simplicity. The pain ceased instantly and never returned. She slept peacefully that night and was able to chew without pain. She went to Valdocco to give thanks, amazed that such a “minor” pain had received so much attention. She kept the medal for the rest of her life, a sign of filial trust.

Biographical Memoirs vol. IX, 337

The events recounted here represent only a fraction of the graces documented during the first 7 years of the basilica of Valdocco. A constant theme emerges in every episode: faith translated into action, prayer becoming active trust, and the grace received transforming into charity toward others. The miracle, in Don Bosco’s view, is never an individual point of arrival: it is the beginning of responsibility. He never sought personal prominence. He would simply repeat: “Mary did it all.” And again: “Whoever trusts in Mary will never be disappointed.”

The basilica of Valdocco remains a tangible sign of this conviction: a sanctuary born of faith, built amid economic hardship and opposition, and sustained by the gratitude of thousands of people who felt they had been heard. For Don Bosco, miracles were not ends in themselves. They were pedagogical signs. They taught trust in Providence, perseverance in trials, filial devotion to Mary, and concrete solidarity with the poorest.

Homily for Solemnity of Pentecost

Homily for the Solemnity of Pentecost

May 24, 2026
John 20: 19-23
St. Francis Xavier, Bronx
Our Lady of the Assumption, Bronx

Christ appears to the disciples
(James Tissot)

Our readings this morning/afternoon offer us 2 versions of Jesus’ bestowal of the Holy Spirit upon the Church.  The more dramatic version comes from the Acts of the Apostles—the 1st book in the New Testament after the 4 gospels, often called the Gospel of the Holy Spirit because of the Spirit’s prominence in it, guiding the 1st decades of the Church’s development.  This version of the Spirit’s coming shows his arrival as “a strong, driving wind” with a lot of noise, and as “tongues of fire” (2:2-3).  The Spirit empowers and emboldens the apostles, until then scared and uncertain, to go out and start preaching Jesus.

Less dramatically, in John’s Gospel Jesus comes to the apostles on the nite of the day he rose from the dead.  He comes quietly and mysteriously, entering a locked room.  He comes to bring them peace, and his presence fills them with joy:  “The disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord” (20:20).

Jesus makes his peace concrete by giving them the Holy Spirit.  He breathes the Spirit into them, just as God the Creator had created the 1st man:  “The Lord God formed man out of the clay of the ground and blew into his nostrils the breath of life, and so man became a living being” (Gen 2:7); God put soul or spirit into him.  In Greek, the language of the New Testament, the word pneuma can mean either breath or spirit.  Jesus’ action is both symbolic and very real.

What makes a person Spirit-filled and alive?  Jesus gives his disciples the Spirit expressly for the forgiveness of sins (20:22-23).  When we’re alienated from God, we can’t be at peace.  The world is full of evidence of that.  When our relationship with God has been restored by the forgiveness of our sins, then we experience peace.  God’s own peace renews us.

Jesus has risen from the tomb.  His 1st action among his disciples is to give them his Spirit, the Spirit of peace and of joy, the Spirit who bonds them into his Church.  The Church’s purpose, the mission for which the Father sent Jesus and on which he now sends them is forgiveness and reconciliation:  “As the Father has sent me, so I send you” (20:21).

The Church bestows the grace of the Holy Spirit on us thru Baptism and Reconciliation.  The words a confessor speaks over a penitent stress that:  “God the Father has reconciled the world to himself thru the death and resurrection of his Son, and poured forth the Holy Spirit for the forgiveness of sins.”

That’s why Jesus came.  That’s why he gives the Holy Spirit to his Church—to renew us, restore us, put us at peace with God.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Fr. Jan Swierc, Polish Salesian Martyr

Fr. Jan Swierc, Polish Salesian Martyr

(ANS – Krakow – May 22, 2026) – Fr. Jan Swierc was the son of Mateusz and Franciszka, née Rether. He was born on April 29, 1877, in Krolewska Huta, now Chorzow. He was baptized in the parish of St. Barbara. In 1894 he went to Valsalice in Turin to begin his secondary school studies.

His Salesian journey

Having completed his secondary education at Valdocco, Turin, in 1897, he entered the Salesian novitiate  at Ivrea. He made his first religious profession on October 3, 1899. He subsequently studied philosophy and theology in Turin. He served as secretary to the rector major, Fr. Michael Rua, and collaborated with Fr. Victor Grabelski on the editing of the Salesian News in Polish. On June 6, 1903, he was ordained in Turin’s cathedral by Cardinal Agostino Richelmy.

On his return to Poland, he was entrusted with organizing the novitiate at the new Salesian house in Daszawa. After its opening, he became chaplain at the Lubomirski Institute in Krakow. In 1905, he was appointed director of the Oswiecim Institute, taking over the post from the first director of the work, Fr. Emmanuel Manassero. Thanks to his commitment and that of Fr. Manassero, the Oswiecim Institute was able to secure the creation of an image of Mary Help of Christians for the church dedicated to her.

In 1911, the rector major, Fr. Paul Albera, appointed him director of the house in Krakow, at the Lubomirski Institute on Rakowicka Street, now the site of the University School of Economics. In 1914, he provided care for wounded soldiers at that institute. In 1915, he organized assistance in Oswiecim, in the Zasole area, for war refugees from Eastern Galicia.

In 1918, he founded the first Salesian mission in the territories that had been part of the Russian Empire, in Kielce, becoming its first director and pastor. In 1923 he returned to Oswiecim, where he organized the 25th anniversary of Salesian activity in Poland and the first pilgrimage of the Salesian Cooperators to Rome. In 1924 he served as a missionary in America for 7 months. From November 1925 to October 1934 he was director and pastor in Przemysl. On August 15, 1934, he was appointed director of the house in Lviv, at the church of Our Lady of Ostra Brama. A serious illness interrupted his work, but by July 1938 he had resumed his pastoral ministry as pastor of St. Stanislaus Kostka Parish in Krakow and director of the local Salesian community, where soon Karol Wojtyla arrived for university studies.

The arrest

On the eve of the feast of Mary Help of Christians, May 23, 1941, he was arrested in Krakow along with other confreres. From the house on Konfederacka Street they were all transferred to the city’s Montelupich Prison. Subsequently, in a convoy together with Krakow’s intelligentsia and Jews, the prisoners were led on June 26, 1941, chained in pairs, from Montelupich prison to the Auschwitz extermination camp. There were 12 Salesians: 11 priests and 1 brother. In the roll-call square, their handcuffs were removed and they were assigned to the punishment company in the death block.

The commander of the punishment company, a grim-looking SS officer, asked each new arrival his profession. When he received the reply “Catholic priest,” he became particularly enraged: he would kick them in the stomach, beat their faces and heads with his whip until blood streamed down their necks and backs. He would shout: “Priest, thief, hypocrite!”; then he would deliver a “welcome speech,” concluding with the invective: “You’ll all die here, you dogs and pigs! Your only hope is the crematorium.”

Martyrdom

The following day, the prisoners set off for work. The penal company worked in the gravel pits. The priests and Jews were separated and placed under the special supervision of the SS and sadistic kapos. Each received an iron wheelbarrow, a shovel, and a pickaxe. The work consisted of breaking up stones and gravel with the pickaxe, loading them onto the wheelbarrows, and transporting them to a pit 25 feet deep. The work had to be carried out “at a run,” under the supervision of special foremen armed with sticks. They beat the prisoners mercilessly and were particularly vicious toward the priests. Before long, their hands were covered in bleeding sores and exhaustion took hold of their aching bones.

The first to collapse was Fr. Swierc, who heard the cruel kapo say: “You don’t want to work! I’ll help you now!” and with the heavy handle he struck him on the head and back. Fr. Swierc grabbed a wheelbarrow laden with heavy stones and slowly made his way toward the pit, while the kapo walked behind him, pressing him on and striking him with terrible blows. Every time the poor man fell to the ground, he forced him to get up again with kicks. Fr. Swierc felt that the final moments of his life were drawing near. With every blow he sighed, “O Jesus, Jesus,” which infuriated the kapo even further. “Now I’ll show you Jesus!” he shouted. “There’s no God here! He won’t snatch you from my hands!”

At one point he struck him with all his might across the face with a stiff whip, so violently that his eye popped out of its socket. It hung limply from his cheek, held in place by a single tendon, whilst a trickle of blood flowed from the dark eye socket. His mangled face was covered in congealed blood, presenting a horrific sight.

Fr. Swierc was still alive and praying. Muffled moans escaped his lips: “O Jesus, have mercy on me!” The blood-stained kapo decided to deliver the fatal blow to his victim. He lifted him off the ground and, with all his strength, hurled him onto the wheelbarrow full of stones, breaking his spine; then, he crushed his dangling head with a stone.

Fr. Swierc was dead. His body was carried on a wheelbarrow to the crematorium. He was the first victim of that memorable day. He died in the infamous gravel pit, on the 2d day of his stay in the camp. He passed to the Lord to receive the reward for his fidelity to his Salesian and priestly vocation.

Fr. Jan Swierc died on June 27, 1941, aged 64, after 42 years of religious vows and 38 years of priesthood. He bore the camp registration number 17352.


Process of beatification

On the beatification process, see the last part of the article on Fr. Karol Golda, below.

Two videos have been produced on Fr. Swierc, both available in 3 languages

Video I:

English - Italian - Polish 

Video II:

English - Italian - Polish 

Homily for Saturday, Week 7 of Easter

Homily for Saturday
Week 7 of Easter

May 23, 2026
John 21: 20-25
Provincial House, N.R.

A slight rewriting of a homily first delivered to an SDB community in 1983.

Jesus with Peter on the seashore
(James Tissot)

“What if I want him to remain until I come?  What concern is it of yours?  Follow me”  (John 21: 22).

Have you ever heard a passage of Scripture, a piece of spiritual reading, a homily, or an examination of conscience and reacted something like, “Boy, I hope so-and-so was listening to that”?  You’re probably not the only one.

It’s true that we are our brother’s keepers.  We are members of Christ’s body.  We do have responsibilities of concern, sharing, support, and correction toward one another.

On the other hand, Christianity is also an intensely personal religion.  Historians of the early Church tell us that its personalism, as well as its brotherly love, was a sociological reason for Christianity’s flourishing so soon after its birth.  Belief in Jesus as Lord involves a keenly personal relationship with the Father thru the Son.  It also means personal responsibility:  every man is ultimately accountable for his own response to God’s grace.

What many of us like about Peter as we see him in the gospels is his plainness.  He’s so like us:  now straightforward, now perplexed, now courageous, now overcome by fright, now self-centered, now generous.  The Peter we see this morning is, in a word, nosy.  He’s just had a personal encounter with Christ, been made responsible for pasturing the flock, been told his earthly destiny, and been instructed to follow his master.  So he turns around, sees the beloved disciple, and wants to know, “Lord, what about him?”

Why do we get so curious, so nosy, so gossipy about other people?  There are various reasons, such as escapism, dominance, and judgment.

By escapism, we mean to avoid our own inner selves—our problems, our struggles, our weaknesses, our shallowness.  We distract ourselves by looking outward at others.

By dominance, we mean to satisfy our self-importance, to make ourselves the center of attention, by what we know and what we can say about others:  “Guess what I know that you don’t know.”  Sometimes we even use that knowledge as a weapon against others.

By judgment, we mean to find out who’s doing what, or why he’s doing it, so that we may make comparisons and pass judgment upon his deeds and upon him.  Maybe that’s a variation of self-avoidance and self-importance.

Whatever….  Jesus sets Peter straight at once and bluntly.  “If I want him to remain until I come again, what business is it of yours?  You just worry about following me.”  Leave your idle curiosity behind and concentrate on discipleship.

May the Lord give us wisdom to sort out nosiness and gossip from genuine brotherly concern.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Homily for Memorial of St. Christopher Magallanes & Companions

Homily for the Memorial of
St. Christopher Magallanes & Companions
Thursday, 7th Week of Easter 

Acts 22:30, 23: 6-11
May 21, 2026
Christian Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.


“I’m on trial for hope in the resurrection of the dead” (Acts 23: 6).

Paul’s core proclamation is that Jesus has been raised from the dead, and that changes everything about our relationship with God and how we live in relationship with God.

The same hope and the same belief motivated the martyrs of Mexico’s persecution in the 1920s, 25 of whom we commemorate today, altho there were hundreds more, and some of them have been beatified.  Most of today’s 25, as well as others on different lists, were priests simply intent on fostering the relationship between believers and God.  For them Jesus Christ was their King, Cristo Rey.

In that, they were aligned with Paul, for whom Jesus was Lord, for whom Christ was life (Phil 1:210.  Christ rendered everything else as so much rubbish (Phil 3:8).  Jesus Christ shows us “the path to life, fullness of joys in [his] presence, the delights at [his] right hand forever” (Ps 16:11).

That is our faith.  That is our hope.  That is the faith and hope of thousands who today suffer harassment and persecution.

Casa De Nicolo' Celebrates the Legacy of Fr. Javier de Nicolo'

Casa De Nicoló Celebrates the Legacy of Fr. Javier De Nicoló 


(ANS – Bogotá, Colombia – May 21, 2026) – 
In an event marked by the deep-rooted charism of St. John Bosco, the Casa De Nicoló educational community, part of the Salesian province of Bogotá, commemorated the birthday of its founder, the venerated Italian missionary Fr. Javier De Nicoló, SDB. The day served as an opportunity to reaffirm the relevance of a Preventive System based on joy, closeness, and family spirit – fundamental pillars in the care of young people in highly vulnerable situations. During the tribute, the children and teens involved in the organization’s programs brought this legacy to life thru various expressions of local culture. 

Dance, the visual arts, and music served as a means of highlighting that the Salesian educational approach is, in essence, a pedagogy of love capable of rebuilding the social fabric and offering horizons of hope for the younger generations. The event was enriched by the participation of the music section of the District Institute for the Protection of Children and Youths, a public body founded in its time by Fr. De Nicoló himself. The conservatory bearing his name presented a repertoire that added splendor to the fraternal celebration. The leadership of the Salesian work expressed public thanks to the educators, benefactors, and institutional partners who support this ecosystem of social protection, reaffirming the Congregation’s commitment to continue responding with charismatic boldness to the challenges facing contemporary youths in Latin America.

[Your humble blogger had the privilege during his senior year in the aspirantate of serving as Fr. De Nicoló’s English tutor.]

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Fr. Franciszek Miska, Polish Salesian Martyr

Fr. Franciszek Miska, Polish Salesian Martyr

(ANS – Krakow – May 20, 2026) – A man of great spirit and wisdom, Fr. Franciszek was an optimist. Faith helped him overcome the hardships of occupation and persecution from the time of the camp in Lad until his martyr’s death in Dachau. Toward the end of his life, it was he who strengthened his brethren in faith and became an example of how to remain faithful unto death.

Childhood and Youth

Francik was born in Swierczyniec near Bierun Stary in Upper Silesia on December 5, 1898, as the 5th child of Jan and Zofia (née Pilorz) in a family of 11 members. The family lived in Bierun.

He was baptized on December 8, 1898, in the church of St. Bartholomew the Apostle in Bierun. The whole family had to make a living from a 25-acre farm. Yet what constituted their true wealth was the faith that filled their home.

In the Miska family home, there must have been a remarkable atmosphere. To raise a large number of children during the time of the partitions and  World War I was no small achievement. It was in his family home that Franciszek learned how to be good to others, how to endure those who were difficult, how to help, and how to forgive.

The parents gave their children the best example of a good Christian life. They also cultivated patriotic traditions by distributing Polish books and magazines, singing patriotic songs, and running a circle of the Society of People’s Reading Rooms. During World War II, the family hid in their home people sought by the Gestapo, as well as prisoners who had escaped from Auschwitz.

Salesian Path

Franciszek attended secondary school in Oswiecim, and after completing it, in 1916 he was admitted to the novitiate in Pleszew. On July 24, 1917, he made his first religious vows there. After philosophical studies in Krakow, he did practical training in Przemysl and Oswiecim. He made perpetual vows in Oswiecim on July 25, 1923.He then went to Turin-Crocetta to study theology, where he was ordained on July 10, 1927. After ordination, he worked in Przemysl as a school councilor and catechist in an orphanage run by the Salesians. After 2 years of work, he was transferred to Vilnius as a catechist in the Salesian school. In 1931 he became the director of the large Salesian work in Jaciazek, leading it for five years. In 1936, he assumed the position of director of the house of the Sons of Mary—that is, men who discerned their Salesian vocation later in life—and also became pastor in Lad on the Warta River.

After the outbreak of the war in 1939, he served for several weeks as a military chaplain, and then returned to Lad to continue his ministry as parish priest.

Arrest   

It was in his family home that the German persecutors arrested Fr. Franciszek. On January 6, 1941, the German authorities transformed the Salesian house in Lad into a prison for priests from Wloclawek, Gniezno–Poznan, and other dioceses, as well as for a group of Salesians present in the house. Among the temporary prisoners was Bp. Michal Kozal, now Blessed, as well as a group of seminarians from the diocese of Wloclawek. The Gestapo appointed Fr. Franciszek Msika as the superior of all the internees, making him responsible for discipline and the conduct of the prisoners. He cared for his confreres as much as he could, often at his own expense. He possessed a spirit of heroism. He strengthened the priests and seminarians who were there. All the prisoners were later transported in stages to the concentration camp in Dachau.

Martyrdom and Death   

During this time, Fr. Franciszek was twice taken to Inowroclaw and Gniezno, where he was beaten until he bled and lost consciousness. From Lad, he was transferred to the transit camp in Konstantynow near Lodz on October 6,  1941, and on October 30 he was sent to the camp in Dachau. In the camp, Fr. Franciszek was assigned exhausting labor. When he was forced to carry cauldrons of soup, he broke his arm. He died of illness and exhaustion on May 30, 1942, Trinity Sunday. Before his death, he prayed and comforted others, encouraging his fellow prisoners. His body was burned in the crematorium.

Beatification Process   

Re: the process of beatification, see the end of Fr. Karol Golda’s sketch below.

Miska -  Video

1st Video:

EN

https://youtube.com/shorts/mx_yhiIhaco?feature=share  

2d Video:

EN

https://youtu.be/GmviTyGmEGk  

 

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Homily for Tuesday, Week 7 of Easter

Homily for Tuesday
Week 7 of Easter
& Ordination Anniversary

May 19, 2026
Acts 20: 17-27
John 17: 1-11
Christian Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.

"You are a priest forever"
(window in provincial house chapel)
“I earnestly bore witness for both Jews and Gentiles to repentance before God and to faith in our Lord Jesus” (Acts 20: 21).

Last year I preached to you on that same text.  But it was on June 3—quite a different context than today.[1]

In his farewell message to the church elders from Ephesus, Paul identifies his ministry as “bearing witness to the Gospel of God’s grace” (20:24).

That summarizes the mission of a priest, one Christ has called out of the world (John 17:6) to go into the world (17:10) to make known God the Father and his Son Jesus Christ, from whom we receive the gift of eternal life (17:2-3).  Jesus announces that he has revealed the Father’s name (17:6), which means the Father himself, to those whom the Father has given him out of the world (17:6).  As Pope Francis often reminded us, the name of God is mercy.  Another word for that is grace.

Jesus gives a tough task to priests—and not only to priests but to many others as well, to be missionaries of the Gospel to a world not eager to hear it, not eager to repent and open itself to grace.  The priest himself comes to Jesus, is summoned by Jesus, as a sinner, one who himself needs “repentance before God” so as to bear witness to grace.  He, too, acknowledges God as “a saving God” who “bears our burdens” so as to lead us to salvation (Ps 68:20).

Jesus tells his Father, “The words you gave to me I have given to them” (John 17:8).  Sharing in Christ’s priesthood, the man whom Christ has called has that same mission:  as a steward of the mysteries (collect of anniversary Mass) to give to Christ’s faithful the words he has received, “the Gospel of God’s grace,” grace he has himself experienced as God’s gift, a gift God want to share with all of humanity.

[1] The preacher's 48th ordination anniversary.



Monday, May 18, 2026

Fr. Franciszek Harazim, Polish Salesian Martyr

Fr. Franciszek Harazim, Polish Salesian martyr

(ANS – Krakow – May 18, 2026) – Fr. Franciszek Harazim was born on August 22, 1885, in the village of Osiny in Silesia, the son of Karol and Maria Harazim. They formed a traditional Silesian family, in which they prayed and worked together, tending to their shared domestic life.

“I have become all things to all people, so that by all possible means I might save some” (1 Cor 9:22). from the very beginning of his life, Fr. Franciszek was taught Christian values in his family home. Each day he knelt in prayer with his parents, thereby deepening his relationship with God. Regular reception of the sacraments was for him a sure path to meeting God in eternity. Confession was the last sacrament he received in his life.

Childhood and Youth

The talented Franciszek, in 1901 at the age of 16 was admitted to the Salesian school in Oswiecim. Two of his brothers also studied at the same school. There his spiritual life developed. He was a gifted man sensitive to beauty. On various school occasions, he wrote laudatory speeches (panegyrics), which were appreciated by both students and teachers.

Salesian Path

After completing his schooling, he entered the novitiate in Daszawa and on January 27, 1907, made his first religious vows. He spent one year of practical training in Oswiecim, and another in Turin, where he worked in the editorial office of the Salesian Bulletin. On March 24, 1910, he made his perpetual vows. He completed his theological studies in Foglizzo Canavese, and after their completion, he received priestly ordination on May 29, 1915, in Ivrea.

As a priest, Fr. Franciszek returned to Poland and was assigned to the Salesian school in Oswiecim, where in 1915–1916 he worked as a teacher. Subsequently, in 1916–1918, he served as the director of the secondary school, and from 1918 he was director of studies of the studentate of philosophy at Losiowka in Krakow, becoming its director in 1920.

In 1922–1927, he was the director of the secondary school in Aleksandrow Kujawski. After 16 years, in 1927, he returned to Krakow, again serving as councilor, lecturer, and educator in the Salesian seminary. In 1938, he was appointed professor in the house in Krakow-Losiowka.

He was remembered as a tactful, gentle, and humble superior. He did not place himself above others. He was respected and esteemed by his confreres, and liked and listened to by the young. His opinion was taken seriously. He was a spiritual pillar of the Salesian Congregation in Poland.


His literary talent was manifested, among other things, in the texts he wrote for the Mystery of the Passion, performed by generations of Salesians, for which the music was composed by Fr. Antoni Hlond (Chlondowski), a Salesian. Fr. Franciszek signed his works as Franciscus Silesius.

Martyrdom and Death   

World War II marked the beginning of the path of his martyrdom. He was arrested by the Gestapo on May 23, 1941, and sent to the Montelupich prison in Krakow. Together with other confreres, on  June 26,1941, he was transported to the concentration camp in Auschwitz.

On the 2nd day of his stay there, June 27, as a member of the penal company, he fell into the hands of a ruthless kapo. Prisoners were transporting stones to a ditch. Fr. Franciszek was thrown into it together with a loaded wheelbarrow.

Lying at the bottom with broken arms and legs, he was beaten by the kapo with a heavy stick. The perpetrator allowed only that another prisoner be called—a Salesian, Fr. Jozef Wybraniec—so that he might hear the confession of the dying Fr. Franciszek.

Beaten to death, Fr. Franciszek was dying while hearing blasphemous insults from the merciless kapo. Before his death, he was absolved by his confrere in a place where others thought that God was absent. Thruout his life, he faithfully received the sacraments. In the final hour of his life, he was also granted the grace of confession.

He was killed together with Fr. Kazimierz Wojciechowski, when both were strangled with a beam pressed against their throats. His body was burned in one of the crematoria. His love for his brethren endured until death.

Fr. Harazim died at the age of 56, in the 34th year of his religious profession and after 26 years of priesthood. His camp number was 17375.

Beatification Process  

Re: the process of beatification, see the end of Fr. Karol Golda’s sketch below.

Harazim – Video

Video I: 

EN

https://youtube.com/shorts/8w2undP5COs  

Video II:

EN

https://youtu.be/4RHkNpZFuq8