On
August 15, 1654 on the island of Ischia, off the coast of Naples, a
little boy was born to an exemplary, well-to-do couple, Joseph and Laura
Calosirto. Baptized the same day, the new arrival was given the name of
Carlo Caetano. One of seven boys, five of which were to enter religion,
Carlo gave early signs of seeking sanctity, which his family recognized
and respected.
At sixteen Carlo had a talk with the superior of
the Franciscan Monastery of Santa Lucia del Monte in Naples. Discerning
a great vocation, the superior received him despite his youth. The new
novice did not disappoint his superiors to the point that at age
twenty-one, and not yet a priest, he was appointed superior of a new
monastery in Piedmont.
Though he wished to remain a deacon like
his founder, St. Francis of Assisi, his superiors insisted that he be
ordained, and so he was in 1677. Despite his youth and innocence he
proved to be an exceptional, insightful confessor.
Fr. John
Joseph spent his life in the service of his order at times as superior,
at times as novice master, always a loving, balanced and wise director
of souls.
At one period of great aridity in his life he was
consoled by a vision of a departed brother who reassured him as to his
condition. After this incident, Fr. John Joseph began to demonstrate the
powers of a wonder worker, with miraculous cures and the multiplication
of food for the house. His fame spread so quickly that when he returned
to Ischia to visit his dying mother, his town acclaimed him as a saint.
In 1722, Fr. John Joseph was the wise and tactful arbiter in a great conflict that arose regarding the management of his order.
Warned
of his death, he talked freely of it to those about him but continued
to carry out his duties. On March 1, 1734 he had an apoplectic seizure
and died five days later. Almost immediately his tomb became a place of
pilgrimage. He was canonized in 1839.
Friday, March 5, 2021
St. John Joseph of the Cross
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