Padre Pio/pt: Difference between revisions

From TSL Encyclopedia
(Created page with "Padre Pio")
 
(Created page with "Elizabeth Clare Prophet, 31 de dezembro de 1995.")
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
 
(56 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:
[[File:PadrePio.jpg|thumb|Padre Pio]]
[[File:PadrePio.jpg|thumb|Padre Pio]]


'''Padre Pio''' was the famous twentieth-century Italian monk who for fifty years bore on his hands, feet and side the wounds of the crucified Christ, called the [[stigmata]].  
O '''Padre Pio''' foi o famoso monge italiano do século vinte que, durante cinquenta anos, teve nas mãos, nos pés e no lado do corpo as chagas do Cristo crucificado, denominadas [[Special:MyLanguage/stigmata|estigmas]].  


== His life ==
<span id="His_life"></span>
== Sua vida ==


This gentle, humble priest was born Francesco Forgione on May 25, 1887, in one of the poorest and most backward areas of southern Italy. At the age of fifteen, he entered a Franciscan Capuchin monastery, and he was ordained into the priesthood in 1910.
Este padre gentil e humilde nasceu como Francesco Forgione, em 25 de maio de 1887, em uma das áreas mais pobres e atrasadas do sul da Itália. Aos quinze anos, entrou para um mosteiro dos capuchinhos
franciscanos e, em 1910, foi ordenado sacerdote.


He served in World War I in the medical corps, but was too sickly to continue. In 1918 he was transferred to the small sixteenth-century friary of Our Lady of Grace, about two hundred miles east of Rome. From then on, he never left this isolated mountain area. Yet, by the time of his death in 1968, he was receiving five thousand letters a month and thousands of visitors. He had become renowned for his piety and his miracles.
Na Primeira Guerra Mundial, o Padre Pio serviu no corpo médico, mas devido à sua saúde frágil, não pode continuar nesse posto. Em 1918, foi transferido para o pequeno mosteiro de Nossa Senhora das  Graças, construído no século dezesseis, situado cerca de trezentos quilômetros a leste de Roma. De aí em diante, nunca deixou aquela região montanhosa e isolada. No entanto, quando da sua morte,
ocorrida em 1968, recebia cinco mil cartas por mês e milhares de visitantes. Tornara-se conhecido pela piedade e pelos milagres que realizava.


Padre Pio is thought to be the first Catholic priest to bear the wounds of Christ. ([[Saint Francis]] was the first person known to have received the stigmata.) He also had the gifts of spiritual clairvoyance, conversion, discernment of spirits, visions, bilocation, healing and prophecy. It is said that once when a newly ordained Polish priest came to see him, Padre Pio remarked: “Someday you will be pope.” As prophesied, that priest became Pope John Paul II.
Acredita-se que o Padre Pio foi o primeiro padre católico a apresentar as chagas do Cristo ([[Special:MyLanguage/Saint Francis|São Francisco]] foi a primeira pessoa de que se tem notícia de ter recebido os estigmas). Ele também tinha os dons espirituais da clarividência, da conversão, do discernimento de espíritos, de visões, ubiquidade, cura e profecia. Diz-se que, certa vez, um padre polonês recém-ordenado foi visitá-lo e o Padre Pio comentou: “Um dia você será papa”. Como profetizado, mais tarde aquele padre se tornou o papa João Paulo II.<ref>Kenneth L. Woodward, ''Making Saints: How the Catholic Church Determines Who Becomes a Saint, Who Doesn’t, and Why'' (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996), p. 157; C. Bernard Ruffin, ''Padre Pio: The True Story'' (Our Sunday Visitor, 1982), p. 361.</ref>


Padre Pio spoke frequently in visions with [[Jesus]], [[Mother Mary|Mary]] and his own [[guardian angel]]. On other occasions he spent the night in intense struggles with the Devil. The Padre would be found in the morning with blood and bruises and other physical signs of the struggle. He was often exhausted, sometimes unconscious, and on one occasion suffered from broken bones in his body. On one occasion the iron bars of the window were twisted. Other monks often heard the noise of these encounters, although only Padre Pio saw the demons.
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Author Kenneth L. Woodward writes in his book ''Making Saints'':
</div>


As well as these invisible assaults, Padre Pio also suffered the persecution of people within the hierarchy of his beloved Church. For ten years he was not permitted to serve Mass publicly or hear confessions.
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
<blockquote>From early adolescence on, Padre Pio spoke frequently in visions with [[Jesus]], [[Mother Mary|Mary]] and his own [[guardian angel]]. Those were the good times. Many a night, he reported, was spent in titanic struggles with the Devil, which left him bloodied, bruised and exhausted in the morning.<ref>Woodward, ''Making Saints'', pp. 156–57.</ref></blockquote>
</div>


== His service as a confessor ==
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Author Michael Grosso speaks further of these struggles. He says:
</div>


One of the things Padre Pio was most famous for was his ability as a confessor. Kenneth Woodward writes: “Most of Padre Pio’s energies were devoted to intense prayer, celebrating Mass and, above all, hearing confessions.” People from around the world flocked to his doorstep to have him hear their confessions. Woodward says:
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
<blockquote>
These encounters were physical. In one monastery where he served, you can still see claw marks and splattered ink spots made by the alleged demons. Once, the iron bars of the monk’s cell were found twisted out of shape after a night of grappling with invisible forces. Although no one beside the Padre ever saw the demons, the din they made was often heard by eavesdropping monks. Even more striking, Padre Pio was often found unconscious, sometimes on the floor beside his bed, covered with bruises from the uncanny assaults. On another occasion he was found with broken bones in his arms and legs.
</div>


<blockquote>Padre Pio is credited with the gift of “reading hearts”—that is, the ability to see into the souls of others and know their sins without hearing a word from the penitent. As his reputation grew, so did the lines outside his confessional—to the point that for a time his fellow Capuchins issued tickets for the privilege of confessing to Padre Pio. Sometimes, when a sinner could not come to him, Padre Pio went to the sinner, it is said, though not in the usual manner.</blockquote>
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
The point I want to make  about “demons” and evolution is this: It does appear, as a matter of psychological fact, that the more one advances in higher states of consciousness, the greater the likelihood of attracting combative, destructive forces that try to drag you back down to ordinary reality. The story of the [[Buddha]] struggling to meditate on the Immovable Spot under the Bo tree is a classic Eastern illustration.
</div>


<blockquote>Without leaving his room, the friar would appear as far away as Rome to hear a confession or comfort the sick. He was endowed, in other words, with the power of “bilocation,” or the ability to be present in two places at once.<ref>Kenneth L. Woodward, ''Making Saints: How the Catholic Church Determines Who Becomes a Saint, Who Doesn’t, and Why'' (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996), p. 156–57.</ref></blockquote>
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
In Pio’s case, the combat occurred at two levels: Throughout his life he was molested by invisible, “diabolic” forces. But throughout his life he was also persecuted by jealous, envious and malicious human beings, often individuals within the Church hierarchy.<ref>Michael Grosso, ''Who Is Padre Pio'', pp. 3–4.</ref>
</blockquote>
</div>


Sometimes Padre Pio treated those who came to him for confession sternly. One of his devotees wrote:
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
For ten years he was not permitted to celebrate Mass publicly or hear confessions.
</div>


<blockquote>If he is sometimes severe, it is because many people approach the confessional lightly, without giving the sacrament its true importance.<ref>Laura Chandler White, trans., ''Who is Padre Pio?'' (Rockford, Ill.: Tan Books, 1974), p. 41.</ref></blockquote>
[[File:PadrePiowithChristChild.jpg|thumb|<span lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">Padre Pio with the Christ Child</span>]]


[[File:Padre Pio during Mass.jpg|thumb|Padre Pio celebrating Mass]]
<span id="His_service_as_a_confessor"></span>
== Seu serviço como confessor ==


Many people were transformed who came to hear Padre Pio celebrate the Mass. The same devotee writes:  
O Padre Pio também ficou famoso pela sua habilidade como confessor.
Kenneth Woodward escreveu: “O Padre Pio devotava a maior parte
da sua energia à oração fervorosa, à celebração das Missas e, acima de tudo, a ouvir confissões. Pessoas do mundo inteiro aglomeravam-se à sua porta para se confessarem a ele. Woodward diz:  


<blockquote>When the hour of Mass approaches, all faces are turned toward the sacristy from which the Padre will come, seeming to walk painfully on his pierced feet. We feel that grace itself is approaching us, forcing us to bend our knees. Padre Pio is not an ordinary priest, but a creature in pain who renews the Passion of Christ with the devotion and radiance of one who is inspired by God.</blockquote>
<blockquote>
O Padre Pio foi agraciado com o dom da “leitura de corações”, ou seja, era capaz de olhar a alma de uma pessoa e desvendar os seus pecados, sem ouvir uma única palavra do penitente. À medida que a sua fama crescia, cresciam também as filas do lado de fora do confessionário, tanto que os seus colegas capuchinhos distribuíam senhas para quem quisesse ter o privilégio de se confessar a ele. Às vezes, quando o pecador não podia ir até ele para se confessar, o Padre Pio ia até ao pecador, mas, como era dito, não da maneira usual.


<blockquote>After he steps to the altar and makes the Sign of the Cross, the Padre’s face is transfigured, and he seems like a creature who becomes one with his Creator. Tears roll down his cheeks, and from his mouth come words of prayer, of supplication for pardon, of love for his Lord of whom he seems to become a perfect replica. None of those present notice the passage of time. It takes him about one hour and a half to say his mass, but the attention of all is riveted on every gesture, movement and expression of the celebrant.</blockquote>
Sem deixar os seus aposentos, o frade aparecia em locais distantes, como Roma, para ouvir uma confissão ou consolar um doente. Em outras palavras, ele recebera o dom da ubiquidade: a habilidade de estar em dois lugares ao mesmo tempo.<ref>Woodward, ''Making Saints'', p. 156-57.</ref>
</blockquote>


<blockquote>At the sound of the word “Credo” pronounced with such tremendous conviction, there is a great wave of emotion through the throng. And the most recalcitrant of sinners is carried along as on a stream that is bringing him to the confessional and the renunciation of his old way of life.<ref>Ibid., pp. 39–40.</ref></blockquote>
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Padre Pio had the ability to help souls walk the razor's edge. Like a guru in the Eastern tradition, he was able to wake up people to their true state of ignorance and turn souls back to God.
</div>  


== Miracle-worker ==
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Father Alberto D’Apolito tells this story of a blind man who was converted by what he called Padre Pio’s “loving rudeness.” A priest from the region of Salento told Father Alberto:
</div>


Author Stuart Holroyd relates just a few of the many stories of Padre Pio’s miraculous intercession. He writes:
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
<blockquote>
“Father Alberto, there will come to you a blind man of my parish, who had gone to San Giovanni Rotondo for confession. But Padre Pio, upon seeing him, without allowing him to come close, shouted: ‘You filthy person, go away!’ I think that Padre Pio was too harsh with him.
</blockquote>
</div>


<blockquote>During World War I, an Italian general, after a series of defeats, was on the point of committing suicide when a monk entered his tent and said: “Such an action is foolish,” and promptly left. The general didn’t hear of the existence of Padre Pio until some time later, but when he visited the monastery, he identified him as the monk who had appeared at a crucial moment and saved his life.</blockquote>
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Father Alberto said:
</div>  


<blockquote>During World War II an Italian pilot baled out of a blazing plane. His parachute failed to open but he miraculously fell to the ground without injury, and he returned to his base with a strange story to tell. When he had been falling to the ground, a friar had caught him in his arms and carried him gently down to earth. His Commanding Officer said he was obviously suffering from shock, and sent him home on leave.</blockquote>
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
<blockquote>
“I cannot say anything, for I do not know the reason for such severity. He certainly must have had his reasons. When I meet this blind person, I will question him.
</div>


<blockquote>When he told his mother the tale of his escape, she said: “That was Padre Pio. I prayed to him so hard for you.Then she showed him a picture of the Padre. “That is the man!” said the young pilot.</blockquote>
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
In fact, one morning after Mass, a few days after my arrival in that town, a blind man accompanied by a little girl came to me and said: “Do you know Padre Pio well?
</div>  


<blockquote>He later went to thank the padre for his intervention. “That is not the only time I have saved you,” said Padre Pio. “At Monastir, when your plane was hit, I made it glide safely to earth.” The pilot was astounded because the event the Padre referred to had happened some time before, and there was no normal way he could have known about it.<ref>Stuard Holroyd, ''Psychic Voyages'' (London: Danbury Press, 1976), p. 44–45.</ref></blockquote>
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
At my affirmative reply, he added: “Would you say he is a saint?”
</div>


== His service today ==
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
“No,” I replied. “In order to be a saint, he must first die, and then, after a rigorous process, he must be canonized by the Church."
</div>


In 1975, some seven years after his death, the ascended lady master [[Clara Louise]] told us that Padre Pio is an ascended master. Padre Pio is instrumental in assisting the [[Church Universal and Triumphant|Church the masters have founded]] in the [[Aquarian age]]. He is also renowned for his ability to answer prayers for healing. Padre Pio was officially recognized as a saint of the Catholic Church on June 16, 2002.
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Then the man said: “Father Alberto, I went to San Giovanni Rotondo to go to confession. I was about to approach the confessional when Padre Pio, seeing me, shouted: ‘You filthy person, go away!’ Offended and angry, I went away swearing. If he were a saint, he would not receive sinners in this manner.
</div>


== Sources ==
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
I replied: “Yes, Padre Pio has been very harsh. He used a strong manner with you. He may have had a reason that is unknown to us.”
</div>


{{MTR}}, s.v. “Padre Pio.
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Meanwhile, I already suspected the reason for which Padre Pio had called him a filthy person and sent him away. But I wanted to be sure, through the words of the blind man himself.
</blockquote>
</div>


[[Category:Heavenly beings]]
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
[[Category:Christian saints]]
As Father Alberto questioned the man, he found out that he was sleeping with the young woman who was assisting him but refused to marry her. When the man revealed this fact Father Alberto said:
</div>
 
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
<blockquote>
“Now I can tell you that Padre Pio is a saint, a chosen one of God. He sent you away, calling you a filthy person, without knowing you, because he smelled from a distance the stench of your sins; because the Lord made him see the abyss in which your soul has fallen and the mud that covers it and disfigures it. You went to San Giovanni Rotondo with the hope of gaining the grace of the sight of the body, and not of the soul. This is the reason why Padre Pio called you a ‘filthy person,’ and sent you away—to make you reflect, to shake you and convert you.”
</div>
 
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Not convinced by my words, the blind man got up and went away. [But] after a few days he returned, and approaching the confessional where I was, he said to me: “Father, I need to speak with you.”
</div>
 
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Without making him wait, I left the confessional and went with him behind the main altar. Sitting down, he said to me: “Father, I have meditated for a long time on your words. Yes, what you told me last time was true. I had gone to Padre Pio with the hope of receiving the miracle of my sight, and not to change my life. Padre Pio was right in calling me a filthy person, for I have always been one. I, too, am convinced that Padre Pio is a saint. The young woman who assists me and I have decided to get married as soon as possible. Now, I beg of you to hear the confession of my sins, and to reconcile me with God. As soon as our situation is rectified, we will go to San Giovanni Rotondo to thank Padre Pio for this great grace obtained from God, with his prayers and his  loving rudeness.”<ref>Alberto D’Apolito, ''Padre Pio of Pietrelcina'', pp. 253–56.</ref>
</blockquote>
</div>
 
Uma das suas devotas escreveu:
 
<blockquote>Se às vezes é severo, é porque muitos se aproximam do confessionário levianamente, sem dar ao sacramento a devida importância.<ref>Laura Chandler White, trans., ''Who is Padre Pio?'' Rockford, III.: Tan Books, 1974, p. 41.</ref></blockquote>
 
[[File:Padre Pio during Mass.jpg|thumb|Padre Pio celebrando a Missa]]
 
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
== His celebration of the Mass ==
</div>
 
Muitas pessoas transformaram-se ao ouvir o Padre Pio celebrar a Missa. A mesma devota escreveu:
 
<blockquote>
Perto da hora da Missa, todos os olhares se voltam para a sacristia de onde o Padre Pio sairá, parecendo caminhar com dificuldade com os seus pés perfurados. Sentimos que a própria graça se aproxima de nós e nos força a dobrar os joelhos. O Padre Pio não é um padre comum, mas um ser que sente dor e que renova a Paixão de Cristo com a devoção e a radiação de alguém que é inspirado por Deus.
 
Depois de subir ao altar e fazer o Sinal da Cruz, o rosto do Padre transfigura-se como se ele se tivesse unido ao Criador. Lágrimas descem-lhe pela face e da sua boca saem palavras de oração, palavras que suplicam perdão, palavras de amor pelo Senhor do qual parece ter se tornado uma réplica perfeita. Nenhum dos presentes sente o tempo passar. As missas duram cerca de uma hora e meia, mas a atenção de todos mantem-se presa a cada gesto, movimento e expressão do celebrante.
 
Ao som da palavra “Credo,” pronunciada com muita convicção, uma emoção enorme toma conta da multidão. O mais recalcitrante pecador parece ser arrebatado por uma corrente que o leva a confessar e a renunciar à sua antiga maneira de viver.<ref>Idem, p.39-40.</ref>
</blockquote>
 
<span id="Miracle-worker"></span>
== Realizador de milagres ==
 
O autor Stuart Holroyd relata algumas das muitas histórias das intercessões milagrosas do Padre Pio:
 
<blockquote>
Na I Guerra Mundial, após uma série de derrotas, um general italiano estava prestes a cometer suicídio quando um monge entrou em sua tenda e lhe disse: Isso seria um disparate!”, e imediatamente se retirou. O general só soube da existência do Padre Pio algum tempo depois, quando visitou o mosteiro e o identificou como o monge que lhe apareceu em um momento crucial e lhe salvou a vida.
 
Na II Guerra Mundial, um piloto italiano saltou de um avião em chamas e, apesar de o paraquedas não ter aberto, ele chegou milagrosamente ao solo sem machucar-se. O piloto voltou para a Base contando uma história estranha: enquanto descia em direção ao solo, um padre segurou-o nos braços e carregou-o gentilmente até ao chão. O comandante pensou que o homem estava em estado de choque e mandou-o para casa, de licença.
 
Quando o piloto contou à mãe como havia escapado, ela disse-lhe: “Foi o Padre Pio. Rezei-lhe muito, pedindo que te ajudasse”. E, em seguida, mostrou-lhe uma fotografia do Padre. “É esse homem!”, disse o jovem piloto.
 
Mais tarde, o piloto foi agradecer ao Padre a sua intervenção. “Esta não foi a única vez em que te salvei”, disse o Padre Pio. “Em Monastir, quando o teu avião foi atingido, ajudei-te a aterrissar com segurança”. O piloto ficou muito surpreso porque o fato que o Padre mencionava ocorrera pouco antes e, por meios normais, ele não conseguiria saber do mesmo.<ref>Stuard Holroyd, ''Psychic Voyages''. London: Danbury Press, 1976, p. 44-45.</ref>
</blockquote>
 
<span id="His_service_today"></span>
== Seu serviço hoje ==
 
Em 1975, sete anos após a morte do Padre Pio, a Mestra Ascensa [[Special:MyLanguage/Clara Louise|Clara Louise]] revelou que ele é um mestre ascenso. Ele é fundamental na ajuda prestada à [[Special:MyLanguage/Church Universal and Triumphant|Igreja que os mestres fundaram]] na [[Special:MyLanguage/Aquarian age|era de Aquário]]. Também é conhecido pela habilidade que tem de atender os pedidos de cura. O Padre Pio foi canonizado em 16 de junho de 2002.
 
<span id="Sources"></span>
== Fontes ==
 
{{MTR-pt}}, s.v. “Padre Pio.”
 
Elizabeth Clare Prophet, 31 de dezembro de 1995.
 
<div lang="en" dir="ltr" class="mw-content-ltr">
Elizabeth Clare Prophet, January 3, 1993.
</div>
 
[[Category:Seres celestiais]]
[[Category:Christian saints{{#translation:}}]]


<references />
<references />

Latest revision as of 05:40, 6 January 2026

Other languages:

O Padre Pio foi o famoso monge italiano do século vinte que, durante cinquenta anos, teve nas mãos, nos pés e no lado do corpo as chagas do Cristo crucificado, denominadas estigmas.

Padre Pio

Sua vida

Este padre gentil e humilde nasceu como Francesco Forgione, em 25 de maio de 1887, em uma das áreas mais pobres e atrasadas do sul da Itália. Aos quinze anos, entrou para um mosteiro dos capuchinhos franciscanos e, em 1910, foi ordenado sacerdote.

Na Primeira Guerra Mundial, o Padre Pio serviu no corpo médico, mas devido à sua saúde frágil, não pode continuar nesse posto. Em 1918, foi transferido para o pequeno mosteiro de Nossa Senhora das Graças, construído no século dezesseis, situado cerca de trezentos quilômetros a leste de Roma. De aí em diante, nunca deixou aquela região montanhosa e isolada. No entanto, quando da sua morte, ocorrida em 1968, recebia cinco mil cartas por mês e milhares de visitantes. Tornara-se conhecido pela piedade e pelos milagres que realizava.

Acredita-se que o Padre Pio foi o primeiro padre católico a apresentar as chagas do Cristo (São Francisco foi a primeira pessoa de que se tem notícia de ter recebido os estigmas). Ele também tinha os dons espirituais da clarividência, da conversão, do discernimento de espíritos, de visões, ubiquidade, cura e profecia. Diz-se que, certa vez, um padre polonês recém-ordenado foi visitá-lo e o Padre Pio comentou: “Um dia você será papa”. Como profetizado, mais tarde aquele padre se tornou o papa João Paulo II.[1]

Author Kenneth L. Woodward writes in his book Making Saints:

From early adolescence on, Padre Pio spoke frequently in visions with Jesus, Mary and his own guardian angel. Those were the good times. Many a night, he reported, was spent in titanic struggles with the Devil, which left him bloodied, bruised and exhausted in the morning.[2]

Author Michael Grosso speaks further of these struggles. He says:

These encounters were physical. In one monastery where he served, you can still see claw marks and splattered ink spots made by the alleged demons. Once, the iron bars of the monk’s cell were found twisted out of shape after a night of grappling with invisible forces. Although no one beside the Padre ever saw the demons, the din they made was often heard by eavesdropping monks. Even more striking, Padre Pio was often found unconscious, sometimes on the floor beside his bed, covered with bruises from the uncanny assaults. On another occasion he was found with broken bones in his arms and legs.

The point I want to make about “demons” and evolution is this: It does appear, as a matter of psychological fact, that the more one advances in higher states of consciousness, the greater the likelihood of attracting combative, destructive forces that try to drag you back down to ordinary reality. The story of the Buddha struggling to meditate on the Immovable Spot under the Bo tree is a classic Eastern illustration.

In Pio’s case, the combat occurred at two levels: Throughout his life he was molested by invisible, “diabolic” forces. But throughout his life he was also persecuted by jealous, envious and malicious human beings, often individuals within the Church hierarchy.[3]

For ten years he was not permitted to celebrate Mass publicly or hear confessions.

 
Padre Pio with the Christ Child

Seu serviço como confessor

O Padre Pio também ficou famoso pela sua habilidade como confessor. Kenneth Woodward escreveu: “O Padre Pio devotava a maior parte da sua energia à oração fervorosa, à celebração das Missas e, acima de tudo, a ouvir confissões. Pessoas do mundo inteiro aglomeravam-se à sua porta para se confessarem a ele. Woodward diz:

O Padre Pio foi agraciado com o dom da “leitura de corações”, ou seja, era capaz de olhar a alma de uma pessoa e desvendar os seus pecados, sem ouvir uma única palavra do penitente. À medida que a sua fama crescia, cresciam também as filas do lado de fora do confessionário, tanto que os seus colegas capuchinhos distribuíam senhas para quem quisesse ter o privilégio de se confessar a ele. Às vezes, quando o pecador não podia ir até ele para se confessar, o Padre Pio ia até ao pecador, mas, como era dito, não da maneira usual.

Sem deixar os seus aposentos, o frade aparecia em locais distantes, como Roma, para ouvir uma confissão ou consolar um doente. Em outras palavras, ele recebera o dom da ubiquidade: a habilidade de estar em dois lugares ao mesmo tempo.[4]

Padre Pio had the ability to help souls walk the razor's edge. Like a guru in the Eastern tradition, he was able to wake up people to their true state of ignorance and turn souls back to God.

Father Alberto D’Apolito tells this story of a blind man who was converted by what he called Padre Pio’s “loving rudeness.” A priest from the region of Salento told Father Alberto:

“Father Alberto, there will come to you a blind man of my parish, who had gone to San Giovanni Rotondo for confession. But Padre Pio, upon seeing him, without allowing him to come close, shouted: ‘You filthy person, go away!’ I think that Padre Pio was too harsh with him.”

Father Alberto said:

“I cannot say anything, for I do not know the reason for such severity. He certainly must have had his reasons. When I meet this blind person, I will question him.”

In fact, one morning after Mass, a few days after my arrival in that town, a blind man accompanied by a little girl came to me and said: “Do you know Padre Pio well?”

At my affirmative reply, he added: “Would you say he is a saint?”

“No,” I replied. “In order to be a saint, he must first die, and then, after a rigorous process, he must be canonized by the Church."

Then the man said: “Father Alberto, I went to San Giovanni Rotondo to go to confession. I was about to approach the confessional when Padre Pio, seeing me, shouted: ‘You filthy person, go away!’ Offended and angry, I went away swearing. If he were a saint, he would not receive sinners in this manner.”

I replied: “Yes, Padre Pio has been very harsh. He used a strong manner with you. He may have had a reason that is unknown to us.”

Meanwhile, I already suspected the reason for which Padre Pio had called him a filthy person and sent him away. But I wanted to be sure, through the words of the blind man himself.

As Father Alberto questioned the man, he found out that he was sleeping with the young woman who was assisting him but refused to marry her. When the man revealed this fact Father Alberto said:

“Now I can tell you that Padre Pio is a saint, a chosen one of God. He sent you away, calling you a filthy person, without knowing you, because he smelled from a distance the stench of your sins; because the Lord made him see the abyss in which your soul has fallen and the mud that covers it and disfigures it. You went to San Giovanni Rotondo with the hope of gaining the grace of the sight of the body, and not of the soul. This is the reason why Padre Pio called you a ‘filthy person,’ and sent you away—to make you reflect, to shake you and convert you.”

Not convinced by my words, the blind man got up and went away. [But] after a few days he returned, and approaching the confessional where I was, he said to me: “Father, I need to speak with you.”

Without making him wait, I left the confessional and went with him behind the main altar. Sitting down, he said to me: “Father, I have meditated for a long time on your words. Yes, what you told me last time was true. I had gone to Padre Pio with the hope of receiving the miracle of my sight, and not to change my life. Padre Pio was right in calling me a filthy person, for I have always been one. I, too, am convinced that Padre Pio is a saint. The young woman who assists me and I have decided to get married as soon as possible. Now, I beg of you to hear the confession of my sins, and to reconcile me with God. As soon as our situation is rectified, we will go to San Giovanni Rotondo to thank Padre Pio for this great grace obtained from God, with his prayers and his loving rudeness.”[5]

Uma das suas devotas escreveu:

Se às vezes é severo, é porque muitos se aproximam do confessionário levianamente, sem dar ao sacramento a devida importância.[6]

 
Padre Pio celebrando a Missa

His celebration of the Mass

Muitas pessoas transformaram-se ao ouvir o Padre Pio celebrar a Missa. A mesma devota escreveu:

Perto da hora da Missa, todos os olhares se voltam para a sacristia de onde o Padre Pio sairá, parecendo caminhar com dificuldade com os seus pés perfurados. Sentimos que a própria graça se aproxima de nós e nos força a dobrar os joelhos. O Padre Pio não é um padre comum, mas um ser que sente dor e que renova a Paixão de Cristo com a devoção e a radiação de alguém que é inspirado por Deus.

Depois de subir ao altar e fazer o Sinal da Cruz, o rosto do Padre transfigura-se como se ele se tivesse unido ao Criador. Lágrimas descem-lhe pela face e da sua boca saem palavras de oração, palavras que suplicam perdão, palavras de amor pelo Senhor do qual parece ter se tornado uma réplica perfeita. Nenhum dos presentes sente o tempo passar. As missas duram cerca de uma hora e meia, mas a atenção de todos mantem-se presa a cada gesto, movimento e expressão do celebrante.

Ao som da palavra “Credo,” pronunciada com muita convicção, uma emoção enorme toma conta da multidão. O mais recalcitrante pecador parece ser arrebatado por uma corrente que o leva a confessar e a renunciar à sua antiga maneira de viver.[7]

Realizador de milagres

O autor Stuart Holroyd relata algumas das muitas histórias das intercessões milagrosas do Padre Pio:

Na I Guerra Mundial, após uma série de derrotas, um general italiano estava prestes a cometer suicídio quando um monge entrou em sua tenda e lhe disse: Isso seria um disparate!”, e imediatamente se retirou. O general só soube da existência do Padre Pio algum tempo depois, quando visitou o mosteiro e o identificou como o monge que lhe apareceu em um momento crucial e lhe salvou a vida.

Na II Guerra Mundial, um piloto italiano saltou de um avião em chamas e, apesar de o paraquedas não ter aberto, ele chegou milagrosamente ao solo sem machucar-se. O piloto voltou para a Base contando uma história estranha: enquanto descia em direção ao solo, um padre segurou-o nos braços e carregou-o gentilmente até ao chão. O comandante pensou que o homem estava em estado de choque e mandou-o para casa, de licença.

Quando o piloto contou à mãe como havia escapado, ela disse-lhe: “Foi o Padre Pio. Rezei-lhe muito, pedindo que te ajudasse”. E, em seguida, mostrou-lhe uma fotografia do Padre. “É esse homem!”, disse o jovem piloto.

Mais tarde, o piloto foi agradecer ao Padre a sua intervenção. “Esta não foi a única vez em que te salvei”, disse o Padre Pio. “Em Monastir, quando o teu avião foi atingido, ajudei-te a aterrissar com segurança”. O piloto ficou muito surpreso porque o fato que o Padre mencionava ocorrera pouco antes e, por meios normais, ele não conseguiria saber do mesmo.[8]

Seu serviço hoje

Em 1975, sete anos após a morte do Padre Pio, a Mestra Ascensa Clara Louise revelou que ele é um mestre ascenso. Ele é fundamental na ajuda prestada à Igreja que os mestres fundaram na era de Aquário. Também é conhecido pela habilidade que tem de atender os pedidos de cura. O Padre Pio foi canonizado em 16 de junho de 2002.

Fontes

Mark L. Prophet e Elizabeth Clare Prophet, Os Mestres e os seus retiros, s.v. “Padre Pio.”

Elizabeth Clare Prophet, 31 de dezembro de 1995.

Elizabeth Clare Prophet, January 3, 1993.

  1. Kenneth L. Woodward, Making Saints: How the Catholic Church Determines Who Becomes a Saint, Who Doesn’t, and Why (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996), p. 157; C. Bernard Ruffin, Padre Pio: The True Story (Our Sunday Visitor, 1982), p. 361.
  2. Woodward, Making Saints, pp. 156–57.
  3. Michael Grosso, Who Is Padre Pio, pp. 3–4.
  4. Woodward, Making Saints, p. 156-57.
  5. Alberto D’Apolito, Padre Pio of Pietrelcina, pp. 253–56.
  6. Laura Chandler White, trans., Who is Padre Pio? Rockford, III.: Tan Books, 1974, p. 41.
  7. Idem, p.39-40.
  8. Stuard Holroyd, Psychic Voyages. London: Danbury Press, 1976, p. 44-45.