PADRE PIO:
"MY LIFE FOR EACH OF YOU"
( with 7000+ pictures)
Padre PIO 0-15 (1887-92)
Pietrelcina
Pietrelcina is a rural village of about 3000 souls in the province of
Benevento, in Southern Italy. Pietrelcina is 8 miles distant from
Benevento.
Over the
centuries the name changed several times: “Petrapolcina”, “Petrapucina”,
“Petrapolicina”, “Petrapulcina”, “Pietr’elcina”, “Pietra Elcina”,
“Pietralcina.”[1]
[2]
The
medieval part of the town is called “Rione Castello”. A castle was there
in 1100, destroyed by the earthquakes of 1349 and 1688, and each time
rebuilt.[3]
The
castle was in reality a “Castrum”, a small town fortified with walls,
with two entry doors, inhabited by military and civilians.
[4]
The “Rione
Castello” is standing on a large rock called “Morgia’ or “Morgione”.
The
houses in Rione Castello are made of rough local stones, attached in
rows one to the other.[5]
One of the entry doors to “Rione Castello” is called “Porta
Madonnella”.
The “Pantaniello”
well is the center of the town. The painting on majolica tiles at Porta
Madonnella represents the crowned Madonna in the center, with Saint
Michael the Archangel defeating the devil, and Saint Anthony of Padua on
the sides. The local artist was Giuseppe De Biase.[6]
The
future Padre Pio was born on Wednesday May 25,
1887, at 5:00 PM by
Grazio Mario Forgione, age 26, (1860–1946), and Maria Giuseppa de Nunzio
Forgione, age 28, (1859–1929), in the rione Castello, Pietrelcina. The
birth certificate, by the town’s acting mayor Gaetano Sagliocca, states
that the parents were “possidenti”, meaning property and land owners.
[7]
The
birth certificate gives also the name of Grazia Formichelli, the midwife
that delivered the boy.[8]
She said at birth: “The baby is born wrapped in a white veil, and this
is good sign: he will be great and fortunate.”[9]
She was also the godmother.[10]
Grazio Mario Forgione Maria Giuseppa De Nunzio
The name
of Padre Pio’s father was Grazio, but he was known as Orazio and called
Zi Orazio by his neighbors. The Forgiones were farmers, cultivating
their own piece of land. They had married on June 8, 1881. Both were
illiterate. She brought a dowry of about a hectare of land. They were
not poor. There was food on the table every day. But there was little
cash.[11]
The
Forgiones had 8 children. The first born was Michele. The second child,
Francesco, died after 19 days. The third, Amalia, died at 20 months.
When Francesco, the future Padre Pio was born, he was given the name of
the older dead brother Francesco. He had also three younger sisters,
Felicita, Pellegrina, and Grazia (who was later to become a Bridgettine
nun). The youngest brother, Mario, died before he turned 1 y. o.[12]
The house was located in Vico Storto Valle, 27, and 28, later renumbered 32, and consisted of one room of about 145 square feet, with three external steps to the entrance.[13] Inside there was on the right a bed with iron frame and a nightstand; a window in front, with a basin for face and hand washing, and a chest; on the left there was another chest and two chairs.[14] [15]
Under
the house there was another room, accessed through a trapdoor and also
through a door in the street, were they would keep the donkey, supplies
and tools.[16]
La Torretta
Nearby
there was “La Torretta” (the little tower). It is a room accessible by
outside stairs in the same Crooked Valley Lane, at the #1. The numerous
steps are very steep. The simple room had a bed, a table, and a window.
La Torretta was damaged by the 1962 earthquake, and had to be restored
and reinforced. In this room Padre Pio stayed as a teenager and after
ordination to priesthood, to study, pray, rest, and write letters.[18]
During
his stay in Pietrelcina from 1910-16 Padre Pio did not stay for long at
La Torretta because he was in poor health and the steps were too hard to
climb. He stayed in another nearby house, in Via Santa Maria degli
Angeli #44.
This
house had been bought by his father and brother Michele, when they
returned from America in 1903.
Padre
Pio had his own room on the upper level. Here he wrote letters to his
spiritual directors, had frequent apparitions of Jesus and other
heavenly beings, and was tormented by the devil with multiple physical
assaults.[19]
In the
first year of marriage the Forgiones lived with her parents.
Baptismal font, and interior view of St. Anna's church.
The
future Padre Pio was baptized by Don Nicolantonio Orlando in the nearby
Santa Anna's Church on May 26, 1887 the day after his birth, at 8 in the
morning and given the name of Francesco.[20]
The church of St. Anna is small and simple, built on top of the steep
side of the “Rione Castello”, very close to where the Forgiones lived.[21]
[22]
Infancy with Angels and devils
When
talking about his infancy Padre Pio said that he remembered everything
about it, including when he still was in the crib.”[23]
Still in
the crib he started having the visible companionship of his Guardian
Angel. He later reported in a letter: "The Guardian Angel has been my
companion since my infancy."
[24]
He
started seeing the devils too. Years later he recalled: "When I was in
the crib, and my mom extinguished the lamp I saw those horrible monsters
and screamed terrified. Than mom turned the lamp back on, and the
monsters disappeared, and I stopped screaming."[25]
The devils were constantly lurking around his cradle in the form of
hideous terrifying monsters.[26]
In a
letter to Maria Campanile, in November1922, Padre Pio wrote: “The Lord
from my birth showed me signs of a very special predilection.”[27]
As an
infant Padre Pio cried long hours through the night. His Father Grazio,
years later, recalled that one night he lost his patience, took the baby
and threw him on the bed saying: “What has been born in the house, a
devil instead of a Christian?” The infant slipped from the bed and fell
to the floor. Mamma Peppa scalded the husband: “You killed my son!” She
took the baby in her arms and realized that there had been no harm.[28]
Recalling the episode at his father’s funeral Padre Pio said: “From that
day on I didn’t cry anymore.”
[29] Years later Mamma Peppa
told Padre Pio: “Son, what a scare you gave me that night!” Padre Pio:
‘Mom, it was the devil tormenting me.”[30]
Many
years later Padre Tarcisio asked Padre Pio: “When did you start
suffering?” Padre Pio: “Since I was in my mother’s womb.”[31]
Giuseppe Faiella
Mama
Peppa recalled years later that when the baby was few months old she
took him to the fortune teller of the village, Giuseppe Faiella. He
said: “This baby will be honored by the whole world. A lot of money will
pass through his hands, but he will own nothing.” Mamma Peppa reported
herself thinking “Maybe it means that one day Francesco will go to
America, and the whole world will know him.”[32]
[33] Faiella also said that
Francesco would live to ninety eight (Padre Pio died at eighty one).[34]
Mamma
Peppa also recalled that when Francesco was 2 years old he had frequent
belly aches, so she took him to the healer of the village to remove the
evil eye. The healer held him upside down while pronouncing her
formulas. Padre Pio years later recalled the episode: “She held me by
the legs, like a lamb.”[35]
[36]
The
Forgiones were very religious. When the church bells rang every morning
the family gathered for prayers. They went to church every day and
prayed the Rosary together as a family in the evening. Prayer came
before all other activities in the household.[37]
Around
age three he recited prayers by himself.[38]
[39]
At the
age of five Francesco had the thought and feeling to consecrate himself
forever to God. At that age the ecstasies and the apparitions began.
[40]
[41]
[42] He became an altar boy, went to church twice a day, and also every Sunday afternoon went to religious education classes.[43]
One day
he felt like not playing with the other kids, and sat in a pew in the
church, and Jesus from the tabernacle made a sign with the hand to come
to the altar, and Jesus put his hand on Francesco’s head.[44]
[45]
The Sacred Heart this way attested his pleasure in accepting the
offering of self to him.[46]
[47] When asked later why he
never told his mom of the visions he was having, he said: "I believed
that these things happened to everybody".[48]
Michele Peruto
Francesco used to say to his mom: "I don't want to play with the other
kids because they curse".[49]
"Mom, my companions say bad things and offend Jesus”.[50]
He, in
agreement with the sacristan Michele Peruto had himself locked in the
church, and the sacristan would let him out at a convened time. He
wanted to pray and meditate alone.[51]
One
afternoon he went out dressed in a new garment that his parents had just
bought for him. A few hours later he came home half naked. His response
to his mother’s scolding was: “I gave it to a little boy who needed it
more than I did.”[52]
Andrianella
One
Sunday on his way home after Mass he saw Andrianella, a neighbor women,
sitting on her doorstep, stitching ribbon to a skirt. He told her: “You
don’t work today. It’s Sunday.” “That’s what you think, my son.” She
replied. Francesco went home and came back with a pair of scissors, and
cut the ribbon in pieces before the astonished woman.[53]
Anna Fucci
Fra
Modestino's mother Anna Fucci was the same age of Padre Pio and lived
few yards away. She reported that he refused to play with other kids,
avoided to graze the sheep when she was around, he was always with a
Rosary in his hands, and everybody called him "lu santariello nuostro"
'our little saint'.[54]
To his
mom who saw him at age 8 beating himself with a chain "I must do it like
they made Jesus shoulders bleed."
[55]
[56]
[57]
Ubaldo
Vecchiarino reported that he and his friends, passing by Francesco’s
window, they frequently piled up some stones, and climbing on them they
spied Francesco self-beating with a hemp cord.”[58]
[59]
The
priest of the parish, father Giuseppe Orlando reported that Francesco,
despite the objections of his mother, would sleep on the floor using a
stone as pillow.[60]
[61]
The farm, in Italian “Masseria”
The Forgione farm in Piana Romana Mamma Peppa with her niece Pia
The
Forgione farm was small, by American standards. It yielded grapes,
wheat, Indian corn, olives, figs, and plums. They also raised sheep,
goats, hens, ducks, rabbits, and occasionally kept a milk cow or two and
some hogs.[62]
The farm
was located in Piana Romana. On a lane near their plot they had a
cottage were they stored the equipment, kept the animals, and, in the
summer, cooked, ate and slept.[63]
[64]
Figs and broccoli
One day
Francesco and mamma Peppa, on their way to Piana Romana, passed a field
of broccoli. She said: “How good they look! I’d like to have some.”
Francesco replied: “That’s a sin!” Few days later on the same road they
saw a tree with ripe figs. Francesco got a few and ate them. His mom:
“So, it’s a sin to eat broccoli, but not figs!”[65]
[66] Padre Pio, recalled years
later: “I suddenly got an irresistible craving for them.”[67]
Felicita
Padre
Pio recalled in later years how he played jokingly with his sister
Felicita. Once he pushed down in the basin Felicita’s head while she was
washing.[68]
[69]
Once he
made unusable a pair of pants that he disliked, forcing his parents to
buy a new one.[70]
Shepherd
Francesco didn’t go to elementary school. At age six he was assigned
four sheep and a goat, to take care of them in Piana Romana.[71]
There he
met with other children more or less of his age: Maria, Cosimo and
Mercurio Scocca, Luigi Orlando, Ubaldo Vecchiarino called Baldino,
Antonio Bonavita, Margherita de Cianni, Anna Fucci. When he spent the
night in Piana Romana he stayed at the home of aunt Daria.
[72]
Luigi Orlando, Mercurio Scocca, Antonio Bonavita
Orlando
recalled that when they were fighting “Francesco always won because he
was nearly three years older than me.” He also reported: “Francesco
never said a bad word. He was frequently reciting the rosary.”[73]
During a fight, Francesco was winning, and Orlando said a bad word.
Francesco immediately stopped and run away.[74]
“He absolutely never used bad language nor did he wish to hear it.”[75]
Mercurio
recalled that Francesco frequently organized processions, and he would
lead singing aloud and the other shepherd followed. “We did so many
processions!”[76]
Mercurio
and Orlando recalled that Francesco at Christmas he made with their help
the Nativity scene carving the figurines out of clay.[77]
[78] They also filled with oil
the best snail shells they could find and made lamps to lighten the
cresh.[79]
[80]
Antonio
Bonavita recalled: “The rest of us children were wicked, but he was
always good.”[81]
The water well The water well in Piana Romana
Margherita De Cianni reported that one day Padre Pio’s father Grazio was
digging a well in Piana Romana. He dug forty feet without finding water.
Francesco said that he would never find water there, and then pointed to
a precise spot somewhere else on field where he would find water. Orazio:
“How do you know?” Francesco: “Jesus told me.” Orazio: “I’ll dig there,
but if there is no water, I’ll throw you in the hole.” He dug seven feet
and a copious spring of water burst out.”[82]
[83]
[84]
[85]
The well has been preserved. The Forgionès farming land area in Piana Romana
Padre
Pio also did farm work on the land that the family owned in Piana Romana.
In 1901 in a letter to his father who had migrated to America, he
reported: “This year corn (granone), as you can imagine, was very
little, because we didn’t get rain on time. We filled only four sacks of
it.”[86]
Padre Pio, remembering that age: "I was an unsalted piece of
macaroni."[87]
[88]
[89]
[90] McGregor writes that Padre
Pio didn’t say that. He states that when asked himself about it Padre
Pio cordially replied: “I never said I was like unseasoned maccarone or
at least I don’t remember saying so. I liked to pray but I preferred to
watch, as I was equally interteined.”McG85, 73
Hot peppers and zucchini
At age twelve
Francesco spent forty days sick in bed with typhoid fever. The town’s
physician dr. Giacinto Guadagno said that he had only few days to live.
Francesco said; “If I’m dying I want to see Piana Romana once more.” He
was taken there by donkey.[92]
[93]
Meanwhile mamma
Peppa cooked a large plate of fried peppers and went in the field. When
she returned the peppers were gone and Francesco was in bed sound asleep
with a red face and sweating profusely. She was concerned. But when he
awoke he felt perfectly well, and confessed that he had eaten the
peppers. The indigestion of peppers had healed him.[94]
[95]
[96]
[97]
Francesco didn’t like zucchini. One day his mom prepared zucchini
parmigiana. He didn’t eat it, and his mom burst in tears. Recalling the
episode he would say: “If I had known that my mom would have been so
displeased, I would have devoured all those zucchini.”[98]
[99]
Cigar
Padre Raffaele da
Sant’Elia asked Padre Pio if he had ever smoked in his life. Padre Pio:
“I was about 10 years old when one day, at Piana Romana, uncle
Pellegrino Scocca gave me some money to buy him a “Toscano” cigar and
some matches. On the way back I wandered what smoking is like. I took a
match and lit the cigar. Soon I had nausea and stomach pains, and fell
to the ground from dizziness. My uncle laughed heartily when I told him.
That lesson put a wall between me and smoking.”
[100]
[101]
[102]
[103]
St. Mary of the Angels St. Mary of the Angels
The parish church
in Pietrelcina was Saint Mary of the Angel. In the church was venerated
the “Madonna della Libera”, the Patron Saint of Pietrelcina. Every year
the statue, covered with donations from the faithful, especially the
migrants, was taken in procession. For the town it was the main event of
the year.
The archpriest was
Don Salvatore Pannullo. When
Padre Pio lived in
Pietrelcina as a Priest, Pannullo kept a close friendship with him.
The “Gregaria”
The
Gregaria was an area of open field, just to the right of the parish of
St. Mary of the Angels, were the future Padre Pio in about 1909 used to
walk with the archpriest Salvatore Pannullo, don Giuseppe Orlando, and
other altar boys. Passing by that area he heard a choir of angels
singing and bells ringing coming from an area in the countryside.[104]
[105]
[106]
Years later Padre Pio stated to Orlando that he remembered very
well the episode.[107]
In 1947 the Capuchin convent was opened there, and in 1951 the
Holy Family church was consecrated at the Gregaria.[108]
The archpriest Salvatore Pannullo admired in Francesco three qualities
that he “possessed strongly”: intelligence, sensitivity, and courage.[109]
Altavilla Irpina The church and the altar of the prodigy in Altavilla Irpina
At age nine, on
August 25, 1895, Padre Pio went with his father to Altavilla Irpina for
the feast of Saint Pellegrino. While in the church, a young mother,
holding her deformed sick child, prayed aloud for his recovery. At one
point she approached the altar of Saint Pellegrino, threw the child on
it, and said “If you don’t want to heal him, you got to take him back!’
To the general astonishment the child fell on his feet, and for the
first time in his life he walked. He was healed.
[110]
[111]
[112]
[113]
[114]
Padre Raffaele da
Sant’Elia a Pianisi reported that, many years later, Padre Pio narrated
to him that episode crying abundantly.[115]
[116]
Picture
There is
a picture of a boy of about age eleven, commonly described as the first
picture of the young Francesco Forgione, the future Padre Pio. However,
it could be a picture of his cousin, Franceschino Forgione.[117]
Franceschino Forgione, son of Padre Pio’s brother Michele Forgione and
Giuseppa Cardone, died of meningitis at the age of eleven.[118]
Fra’ Camillo da Sant’Elia a Pianisi Fra’ Camillo da Sant’Elia a Pianisi
Fra’
Camillo da Sant’Elia a Pianisi, was a search brother stationed in the
convent of Morcone. He, stopping by the Forgione farm in Piana Romana
in his rounds of quest for alms, inspired Francesco with his
beard and the stories about St. Francis. Francesco told his parents: “I
want to be a friar with a beard, like fra’ Camillo.”[119]
[120] In later years, Padre Pio
remembering those times, said: “The beard of Fra’ Camillo was so much
impressed in my mind that nobody could distract my desire to become a
bearded friar.”[121]
[122]
[123]
[124]
[125]
Scocca,
Saginato
Francesco had very limited formal schooling. He did not frequent the
three years of public schools in his village. His parents started having
second thoughts about raising him as an illiterate farmer and shepherd,
when Francesco expressed the desire to go to school, and he seemed
motivated to learn. They decided to send him to school when he was ten.[126]
Luigi
Peroni quotes 2 Samuel, 8-9: “I took you from the pasture, from
following the flock, to become ruler over my people Israel. I will make
your name like that of the greatest on earth.”[127]
Cosimo
Scocca, the family friend from a nearby farm in Piana Romana, who had a
fifth grade education, introduced
him to the Alphabet when Francesco was about ten.[128]
His
first teacher was Mandato Saginato (also mentioned as Mennato Saginario)[129],
an artisan who worked hemp during the day as a rope maker, and used to
teach basic reading and writing to four or five kids at night for half
lira per month.[130]
[131] A town priest don Nicola
Caruso also gave Francesco some teaching.[132]
Vecchiarino
Ubaldo
Vecchiarino was one of the night students. He reported that Francesco
was the only one to answer the questions of the teacher “Because he
studied during the day, and we didn’t care, and we have stayed shepherds
and hoers.”[133]
Baldino
(Ubaldo Vecchiarino) also reported that Francesco often was kneeling in
intense prayer and he had to tell him: “You, when you pray, you seem to
be dead, that you are no more on this Earth.”
Vincenzo Salmone
Vincenzo
Salmone also remembered: “How many times I saw him sitting at the small
table learning his lessons! I’d go and invite him to play buttons. He
would raise the head smiling, and say: “Later, Later”, until it grew
dark.”[134]
[135]
Tizzani
Starting
in September 1898, at age 11, Francesco begun private lessons with
Domenico Tizzani, "per cinque lire al mese." Tizzani apparently
had been relieved of his duties as a parish priest because he had
ignored his vows of celibacy. He lived with his wife and daughter, and
spent all of his time at home because he was ashamed to go out.[136]
The tuition of five lire per month was quite a bit in those days.[137]
In the
beginning Francesco learned and made good progress with don Tizzani, to
the point that zi’ Grazio asked him to buy in Benevento the book of
Latin for Francesco,
[138] but on time he felt
uncomfortable. Don Tizzani one day called the boy’s mother and said:
“Send your son to be a shepherd, because that’s all he is good for.”[139]
[140]
After
few months with don Tizzani, he changed teacher.[141]
In
Pietrelcina, years after his ordination to priesthood Padre Pio was
passing one day by Tizzani’s home and saw his daughter Assunta crying on
the steps before the house. Her father was dying and no one had the
courage to approach him. Padre Pio asked permission, entered, and
brought him reconciliation with God and eternal salvation for his soul.
The dying man made his confession with don Giuseppe Orlando, and died
with the comfort of the Sacraments.[142]
[143]
[144] Padre
Pio also obtained that he have a
funeral in church dressed with the priestly robes.[145]
Grazio goes to America Ships with migrants at the times of Zi' Grazio Forgione.
Francesco about his childhood : "In my home you hardly found a penny,
but we never missed anything"[146]
[147]
[148]
To make
money to pay for Francesco's studies Grazio Forgione went to work across
the ocean. It seems that over the years until his death in 1946 nobody
asked zi’ Grazio about his trips to America, and if anybody did there is
no written testimony about it. Probably he went to Brazil or Argentina
in 1897, but came back without money. Also probably in 1899 he worked
for the Erie Railroad,[149]
and later went to work in Mahoningtown, near New Castle, in
Pennsylvania, as a farm laborer. He stayed with a cousin and brought
some money home.[150]
[151]
[152] He was able to repay a
loan of one hundred lire received from don Tizzani when Francesco
started studying with him.”[153]
Padre
Pio later recalled: "My father crossed the ocean twice to give me the
possibility to become a friar."[154]
First Communion and Confirmation
Padre
Pio received the First Communion on 27 September 1899, at age 12, and
was confirmed the same day by the Archbishop of Benevento Mons. Donato
Maria Dell'Olio in the church of St. Anne, in Pietrelcina.[155]
[156]
Years
later Padre Pio recalled the day of his Confirmation: “The day of my
confirmation was very special and I will never forget it in my life. The
Holy Spirit gave me special emotions. Remembering that day I feel like I
am burned by a very lively flame.”
[157]
Teacher Caccavo. His desk has been preserved.
Francesco had completed the studies of the first three years of
elementary school with Tizzani, when he left him and went to study with
Angelo Caccavo.
Caccavo,
a former seminarian, was a teacher in the public schools and also had
night classes at his home. Francesco stayed with him for three years,
from 1900 to 1902. With him Francesco passed the exams for his
elementary diploma, and passed also the tests for admission to high
school.[158]
With Caccavo, Francesco changed from a poor pupil to a brilliant one.[159]
He was the first of the class.[160]
A
notebook with 30 themes developed by Padre Pio when he studied with
Caccavo is still preserved to these days.[161]
Virginia Faella
Virginia
Faella, who lived next door to Francesco, reported how the student would
return from school laden with books, and would study hard to make up for
lost time.
[162]
devil
Don Nicola Caruso,
a priest living in Pietrelcina, reported that when Francesco went home
from school at night he would find many times a priest standing on the
doorway of his home. He did not let Francesco get in the house. Then, a
barefoot child would come, and make the sign of the cross, and the
priest would disappear.[163]
The boys
in Caccavo’s class drafted a love letter, signed in Francesco’s name,
and delivered it to one of the girls. She handed it over to Caccavo. The
teacher beat the boy severely in front of the class. When Caccavo
learned that the note was a forgery he was horrified. He regretted the
beating for the rest of his life.[164]
[165]
[166]
Padre
Pio later said: “All his remorse could not take away the black And blue
marks that I carried about for days.”[167]
Pompeii The image of "Madonna di Pompei and the internal of the Sanctuary.
In 1901
Padre Pio made a pilgrimage to Pompeii with his teacher Angelo Caccavo
and seven schoolmates. He explained in a letter to his father in
America, on October 5, 101, about the pilgrimage, and why he had wasted
some few lire, and told him of his resolution to become a friar: “Next
year I will abandon this life to embrace a better one.”[168]
Preparation to Novitiate
Francesco had decided to consecrate his life to God since age five. He
had also chosen the Capuchin order to become “a friar with the beard”.
The minimum age to enter the Capuchin novitiate is 15. Francesco turned
15 on May 5, 1915. The archpriest Salvatore Pannullo wrote a letter of
recommendation, Padre Pio was not accepted because the novitiate was
already full. Pannullo was told that there would be an opening after the
Christmas holidays, in January 1903.[169]
In a
letter to Nina Campanile in November, 1922 Padre Pio reported the
excruciating interior fights that he endured when he has about to enter
the novitiate 20 years before, in 1903. “There were two powers inside
me, and they fought each other, and they tore my heart; the world wanted
me all for itself, and God called me to a new life.”[170]
And he told God: “You hid me from everyone’s eyes, and entrusted me with
a grand mission; a mission that is known only to You and me.”[171]
“I hear constantly a voice inside me saying: Sanctify yourself and
sanctify others.”[172]
The battle plan: Three Visions. In the days before entering the novitiate Padre Pio
had three visions. He reported those years later under obedience to his
superiors in a manuscript. The transcript is now included in appendix to
the Epistolary, part I.[173]
Right
after Christmas in December 1902, he had a vision: “An immense hall
richly adorned and splendidly lighted. On one side there were many
people of extraordinary beauty. On the other side, horribly looking
people. Jesus took my arm and walked me to the center of the hall. At
that point from the back advance a gigantic beast coming forward with
the attitude of devouring me. I was scared but Jesus encouraged me. When
the monster went close to me he uttered an infernal shout, and fell
stricken dead. Jesus said: “This is what you will have to fight.” And
the vision disappeared.”[174]
A great
multitude divided in two camps, one shining, and the other dark. A
gigantic monster headed the dark. A majestic man of rare beauty heading
the other ordered Francesco to fight the monster. He did and won. The
majestic man said: "The monster you have defeated is the devil and you
will fight this enemy for the rest of your life."[175]
On
January 1, 1903, after receiving the Communion he was suddenly enveloped
by an interior light and he understood that by entering the service of
the Lord he was exposing himself to the unending fight with the devil.[176]
On
January 5, 1903, during the night, Francesco had a vision of Jesus and
Mary encouraging him to go on with his plan to enter religious life. "My
last night at home I saw Jesus and his Mother who, in all their majesty
encourage me and assured me
of their predilection".[177]
Francesco entered the novitiate in Morcone on January 6, 1903.[178]
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[1] Fer10, 36
[2] McG85, 23
[3] Con01, 13
[4] Pio12, 8
[5] Con11, 15
[6] Ale12, 5
[7] Gia12, 7-8
[8] Cap11, 6
[9] Ale70, 14
[10] Cap12, 92
[11] Mul99, 7
[12] Ruf91, 26-7
[13] Con01, 15
[14] Con01, 15
[15] McG85, 29
[16] Con01, 17
[17] Con01, 17-8
[18] Con01, 21
[19] Con01, 22
[20] Gia12, 8
[21] Con01, 25
[22] McG85, 32
[23] Leo76, 27
[24] Epist. I, 321
[25] Fer08, 51
[26] Duc68, 23
[27] Epist. III, 1006
[28] Cov07, 107-8
[29] Mul99, 8
[30] Per02, 23
[31] Per02, 23
[32] Leo76, 28
[33] Cap12, 92
[34] Per02, 24
[35] Leo76, 28
[36] Cap12, 92-3
[37] Leo76, 33
[38] Cas11, 276
[39] Fer10, 389
[40] Ago12, 53
[41] Pre00, 11-12
[42] Per02, 25
[43] Per02, 26-7
[44] Fer08, 50
[45] Pre00, 11
[46] Cas11, 289
[47] Con01, 25
[48] Duc68, 23
[49] Fer10, 41
[50] Ale70, 17
[51] Fer10, 42
[52] Pre00. 12
[53] Duc68, 24
[54] Mod, 01
[55] Ale70, 65-6
[56] Pre00, 12
[57] Con01, 19
[58] Fer10, 50
[59] Ale010, 15-6
[60] Ale70, 14
[61] Pre00, 12
[62] Ruf91, 27
[63] Ruf91, 27
[64] Con01, 38
[65] Duc68, 24-5
[66] Con01, 38
[67] Duc68, 28
[68] Con01, 19
[69] Ale010, 13
[70] Cap12, 93
[71] Pre00, 16
[72] Leo76, 54-5
[73] Ale70, 31
[74] Fer10, 42
[75] McG85, 52
[76] Per02, 31
[77] Ale70, 32
[78] Pre00, 13
[79] Fer10, 43
[80] McG85, 54-5
[81] Ruf91, 31
[82] Lin76, 113
[83] Ruf91,34
[84] Cap12, 112
[85] Con01, 41
[86] Epist. IV, 934
[87] Win88, 54
[88] Mor73, 1
[89] Pas68, 12
[90] Gig65, 26-7
[91] Cap12, 95
[92] Ruf91, 30
[93] Cap12, 94
[94] Per02, 32-33
[95] Leo76, 75-6
[96] Ing75, 7-8
[97] Pre00, 15-6
[98] Cap12, 96
[99] McG85, 68 note
[100] Cap12, 96
[101] Ruf91, 32
[102] Con01, 38
[103] McG85, 73-4
[104] Gig65, 22-3
[105] Con01, 31
[106] Del62, 18
[107] Con01, 37
[108] Con01, 31-7
[109] Del62, 25
[110] Ale70, 37-8
[111] Sal01, 28
[112] Ruf91, 33
[113] Pre00, 13-4
[114] Cap12, 113-4
[115] Fer08, 46
[116] Cov07, 99-100
[117] Mal02, picture 6 of
photo insert.
[118] Ruf91, 407
[119] Gia12,21
[120] Cap12, 58-9
[121] Pre98, 23
[122] McG81, 83
[123] Pre00, 16
[124] Pre00, 16
[125] Con01, 38
[126] Fer10, 45
[127] Per02, 39
[128] Ruf91, 30
[129] Fer10, 46
[130] Leo76, 71-2
[131] Ruf99, 30
[132] Fer10, 45
[133] Fer10, 46
[134] McG85, 68-9
[135] Fer10, 46
[136] DeR08, 17
[137] Nap76, 16
[138] Per02, 48-9
[139] Gig65, 23
[140] Del62, 20
[141] Mor73, 2
[142] Cap12, 98
[143] Mult99, 17
[144] Nap76, 17
[145] Per02, 138
[146] Pas50, 11
[147] Con01, 18
[148] Ale010, 12
[149] Del62,13-4
[150] Ruf91, 36
[151] Reg05, 6-10
[152] Per02, 50
[153] Per02, 49
[154] Mul99, 12
[155] Gia12, 22
[156] Pre00, 15
[157] Epist. I, 471
[158] Gig65,24
[159] Del62, 22
[160] Fer10, 47
[161] Mor73, 3-4
[162] McG65, 67-8
[163] Fernando, 44-5
[164] Mul99, 37
[165] Duc68, 26
[166] Cap12, 99
[167] Leo76, 28
[168] Epist. IV, 933-4
[169] Chi99, 27
[170] Epist. I, 1008
[171] Epist. I, 1009
[172] Epist. I, 1010
[173] Epist. I, 1280-4
[174] Ago12, 53
[175] Epist. I, 1280-2
[176] Epist. I, 1283-4
[177] Epist. I, 1284
[178] Cap12, 8 |