July24
St. Sharbel Makhluf (1828-1898)
St. Sharbel Makhluf (1828-1898)
Although this saint never traveled far from the Lebanese village
of Beka-Kafra, where he was born, his influence has spread widely.
Joseph Zaroun Makluf was raised by an uncle because his father, a
mule driver, died when Joseph was only three. At the age of 23, Joseph joined
the Monastery of St. Maron at Annaya, Lebanon, and took the name Sharbel in
honor of a second-century martyr. He professed his final vows in 1853 and was
ordained six years later.
Following the example of the fifth-century St. Maron, Sharbel
lived as a hermit from 1875 until his death. His reputation for holiness
prompted people to seek him to receive a blessing and to be remembered in his
prayers. He followed a strict fast and was very devoted to the Blessed
Sacrament. When his superiors occasionally asked him to administer the
sacraments to nearby villages, Sharbel did so gladly.
He died in the late afternoon on Christmas Eve. Christians and
non-Christians soon made his tomb a place of pilgrimage and of cures. Pope Paul
VI beatified him in 1965 and canonized him 12 years later.
Comment:
Blessed John Paul II often said that the Church has two lungs
(East and West) and it must learn to breathe using both of them. Remembering
saints like Sharbel helps the Church to appreciate both the diversity and unity
present in the Catholic Church. Like all the saints, Sharbel points us to God
and invites us to cooperate generously with God's grace, no matter what our
situation in life may be. As our prayer life becomes deeper and more honest, we
become more ready to make that generous response.
Quote:
When Sharbel was canonized in 1977, Bishop Francis Zayek, head the
U.S. Diocese of St. Maron, wrote a pamphlet entitled “A New Star of the East.”
Bishop Zayek wrote: “St. Sharbel is called the second St. Anthony of the
Desert, the Perfume of Lebanon, the first Confessor of the East to be raised to
the Altars according to the actual procedure of the Catholic Church, the honor
of our Aramaic Antiochian Church, and the model of spiritual values and
renewal. Sharbel is like a Cedar of Lebanon standing in eternal prayer, on top
of a mountain.”
The bishop noted that Sharbel's canonization plus other
beatification cases prove “that the Aramaic Maronite Antiochian Church is
indeed a living branch of the Catholic Church and is intimately connected with
the trunk, who is Christ, our Savior, the beginning and the end of all things.”
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