St. Joseph of Leonissa
(1556-1612)
Joseph avoided the safe compromises by which people
sometimes undercut the gospel. Born at Leonissa in the Kingdom of Naples,
Joseph joined the Capuchins in his hometown in 1573. Denying himself hearty
meals and comfortable quarters, he prepared for ordination and a life of
preaching.
In 1587 he went to Constantinople to take care of the
Christian galley slaves working under Turkish masters. Imprisoned for this
work, he was warned not to resume it on his release. He did and was again
imprisoned and then condemned to death. Miraculously freed, he returned to
Italy where he preached to the poor and reconciled feuding families as well as
warring cities which had been at odds for years. He was canonized in 1746.
Comment:
Saints often jar us because they challenge our ideas about what we need for
"the good life." "I’ll be happy when . . . ," we may say,
wasting an incredible amount of time on the periphery of life. People like
Joseph of Leonissa challenge us to face life courageously and get to the heart
of it: life with God. Joseph was a compelling preacher because his life was as
convincing as his words.
Quote:
In one of his sermons, Joseph says: "Every Christian must be a living book
wherein one can read the teaching of the gospel. This is what St. Paul says to
the Corinthians, ‘Clearly you are a letter of Christ which I have delivered, a
letter written not with ink, but by the Spirit of the living God, not on
tablets of stone but on tablets of flesh in the heart’ (2 Corinthians 3:3). Our
heart is the parchment; through my ministry the Holy Spirit is the writer
because ‘my tongue is like the pen of a ready scribe’ (Psalm 45:1)."
source:http://www.americancatholic.org/

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