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Tuesday of the Second Week of Advent
Today's Lectionary Readings
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Give comfort to my people!
Recently at the multi-cultured parish where I serve as Pastoral
Administrator, one of our young men from Togo introduced to me a
couple from Togo in our gathering area after Mass.
Very early that same morning, their 4 - year old son had suddenly
died. The family was resettled by an agency in Arizona, but moved to
Louisville where their son could receive needed medical help for a
serious condition he'd had from birth. They had just begun to
see a specialist when his brain shut off his breathing, something they
had moved here to prevent. The couple had no family here nor means to
cover the costs of having to bury their beloved boy. They also have an
older daughter who they had yet to tell about her brother. If anyone
needed comfort, it was this mom and dad.
I knew I needed to do more than offer prayer. And because of my years
at Catholic Charites, and having been a key part of bringing an
Indigent Burial Program there prior to retiring, I made a call to the
person we'd hired to lead this incredible program.
Within a matter of hours, the wheels were in motion! In only two days,
between the agency and my parish, we were able to secure a funeral
home, cemetery with a plot, interment, casket, and service to the
family at absolutely no cost to them. You can only imagine the comfort
this brought to them. Since then, they have officially joined the
parish and have introduced to me several new Togo families to join as
well.
Is this not what we do? Does this not fulfil in a very concrete way
today's beautiful Advent words from the prophet Isaiah? Did we
not act like that tender Shepherd described by Isaiah and in
Jesus' gospel parable? This is but one recent personal example
of what the partnerships between parishes and Catholic Charity
agencies do all the time. We seek out the least and little ones,
gather and carry them, leading them with care towards healing and
wholeness. And like Jesus said, it is the Father's will that
none should be lost.
So let us be heralds of glad tidings by sharing such stories as mine
which bring hope and comfort to a nation and world saturated with fear
and 24/7 news of violence and despair. We are tangible evidence that
God has not abandoned this world, but is here with us - even in
the midst of the struggles and challenges our world faces daily.
Comfort, give comfort to my people, says your God!
Deacon Lucio Caruso is Pastoral Administrator of Saint Ignatius Martyr
Parish in Louisville, Kentucky. For twelve years he served as Director
of Mission for Catholic Charities Louisville.
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