From A Year With Blessed James Alberione,
Compiled by J. Maurus
Blessed Timothy Giaccardo was all to all
Giaccardo entered the Society of St. Paul in 1917 as master of the first group of the small boys recruited with the aim of starting the Society of St. Paul. He was called and remained signor maestro: loved, listened to , followed and venerated by all.
He was the master who preceded everyone with example, taught everything, counselled all, and who built up everything with his warm and enlightened prayer.
He was able to understand everything, opening his soul to everyone, making himself all to all; he was the first to consider himself to be the last. He was most sensible, sweet and delicate.
It can be said that he wrote in every soul and entered into the heart of each priest, brother, Daughter of St. Paul, Sister Disciple, Pastorelle Sister; and all who came in contact with him for reasons spiritual, social, and financial.
From Saint and Thought For Every Day,
Commitment of the mind
Lack of reflection is to be counteracted by keeping a close guard on the mind. The seed that falls on the highway will not sprout. It must be planted deep in the soil. "Mary kept in mind all these things, pondering them in her heart" (Lk 2:19); she meditated. To hear good things and not meditate on them nor apply them to one's practical life in order to carry them out, is like eating but not digesting. It is to be "a hearer of the word and not a doer" (Jas 1:23). In this case, responsibilities are multiplied. Reflection, application, and resolutions made after a sermon are more important than the sermon itself. They require effort, but guarantee results.
What Strikes Me Most Today
What strikes me most today is the above quote, "to hear good things and not meditate on them nor apply them to one's practical life in order to carry them out, is like eating but not digesting. Being a gastroenterologist, the last thing I want you to have is indigestion. So here is a quote from the diary of Blessed Timothy Giaccardo for you to meditate on today: "The Catholic press is a ruling idea of my life, an idea that becomes always more complex and concrete: it lords over my mind, my will, my heart; it is a sun before which other ideas disappear, leading me to what I do. I pray for the Press, to train myself into an apostle of the Press, I pray with unusual fervor, I struggle passionately. May this idea in all its parts be developed in me: the Press is the current mission of Jesus Christ which must, with faith, penetrate the society of Christian civilization; it is the mission of propagation and penetration of the Gospel. I made before God through the Immaculate Mary and St. Paul my vows of purity, obedience, poverty and stability in the House in order to work for the Good Press."
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