Friars Minor Capuchin
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St. Francis Mary of Camporosso, OFM Cap
(1804-1866)
A Confessor of the First Order, Saint
Francis Mary was born in 1804 and died in 1866. His whole life bore witness to
that aspect of our life in Christ that realizes it is more blessed to give than
to receive. He began his life as a shepherd in the tiny village of Camporosso,
near San Remo, from which occupation he gladly contributed to the support of his
family. Having always been considerate of other's needs, he joined the Capuchins
of the Genoa province and stated, "I came to the convent to be its beast of
burden."
This ideal which he was readily able
to carry out when he was subsequently appointed as infirmarian and also called
upon to go questing. He was neither afraid nor ashamed to call at the palaces of
nobles; neither did he hesitate from distributing the alms he had received among
the poor of the village. Although he was frequently heckled and assaulted, he
continued to go questing in the unfavorable quarters of the seaport, where he
would pick up the stones thrown at him and kiss them.
Such a man soon had all these people
fascinated, especially when talk began concerning miracles, cures and
conversions, which reportedly Francis Mary was working. As his fame began to
spread, people of all classes were pestering him night and day for advice on
every conceivable topic.
His personal austerity and observance of poverty made him a well beloved member
of his fraternity and, as with the greater majority of Capuchins down through
the years; he had a most touching love for Mary our Mother. It was not unusual
for him to spend the whole night on his keens adoring Jesus in the Blessed
Sacrament. With bread, advice, and a sympathetic ear, Francis Mary was ever
ready to minister to the sufferings and the needs of all whom Jesus led to him.
This life of self-sacrifice he was to crown in 1866, with the onset of an
epidemic, which promised to reap a devastating harvest of pain and death, seized
with the desire to make one last magnanimous sacrifice for the Virgin Mary,
offering through her hands, his own life to God as a victim of expiation. Our
Mother must have heard his request, for on September 17, 1866, he departed this
life as a victim, and the epidemic ceased that very day. Francis Mary of
Camporosso was subsequently beatified by Pope Pius XI; and canonized by Pope
John XXIII, on December 9, 1962.
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