Friday, March 6, 2026

An interview with the Papal Preacher, Fr. Robert Pasolini

 

Fr. Roberto Pasolini, Preacher of the Papal HouseholdFr. Roberto Pasolini, Preacher of the Papal Household  (VATICAN MEDIA Divisione Foto)

Papal Preacher: Humble power of love produces peace even amid conflict

Fr. Roberto Pasolini, Preacher of the Papal Household, speaks to Vatican News about the themes at the center of the Lenten sermons, which he will deliver every Friday from March 6 to 27.

By Salvatore Cernuzio

For the Franciscan papal preacher, it was almost a natural choice that St. Francis of Assisi would be the focus of his Lenten sermons, as this year marks the 800th anniversary of the saint’s death.

Beginning on March 6 and continuing every Friday until March 27—before the start of Holy Week—Fr. Roberto Pasolini will therefore present St. Francis in his reflections to the Pope and the Roman Curia “as a concrete path of conversion and evangelical life.”

The guiding theme of these reflections is "'Whoever is in Christ is a new creation' (2 Cor 5:17), conversion to the Gospel according to Saint Francis.” They will also focus on the topics of freedom, hope, mission, and fraternity.

In the following interview with Vatican News, the Preacher of the Papal Household says he will keep current events close in mind, just as the Gospel is closely connected to concrete life and its tensions. Only an “abstract vision” of a theoretical or idealistic Christianity could separate the Gospel from the world, Fr. Pasolini notes.

Q: Fr. Pasolini, what theme will you address in the Lenten meditations? And why this choice?

The theme of preaching, in the end, is always the same: the Lord Jesus Christ, the announcement of his Easter, and the grace of a new life in him through the gift of the Spirit. Then, depending on the circumstances, this single theme takes different forms.

This year, remembering the 800th anniversary of the death of St. Francis of Assisi and during the Jubilee Year proclaimed by the Holy Father for this occasion, for a Franciscan apostolic preacher, the choice was almost natural: to present St. Francis as a concrete path of conversion and evangelical life.

Q: The Jubilee of Hope ended not even three months ago. Right now, hope is being severely tested by wars, tensions, and fears. How can we live the Lenten season in the midst of all this?

Christian hope bears the mark of the cross: it is both luminous and fragile. God has chosen to govern the world with love, respecting our freedom.

He has taken seriously the mystery of evil and violence but has decided to confront it only with the power of good. That is why paths toward peace are slow: they depend on hearts and minds willing to accept the logic of the cross and to live it with humble courage within conflicts.

Yet the seed of a new civilization—one of fraternity—has already been planted. The Kingdom of God “in the whole world it is bearing fruit and growing.”

The problem is that the noise of wars often drowns out the quiet growth of good. We struggle to believe that the humble power of love will ultimately produce lasting fruits of justice and peace.

Q: Will current events somehow appear in your meditations?

Not directly. I do not think that is my role in this context. However, only an abstract vision of faith could imagine a separation between the Gospel and concrete life.

Often, we think that on one side there are Christian values and on the other side reality, with its tensions. This is a sign of a Christianity reduced to theory or to an unreachable ideal.

But when the Gospel truly touches us, it immediately changes the way we live. And by changing us, it also changes the world: we become more capable of loving, of creating justice, and of widening fraternity, simply by allowing the Spirit who conforms us to Christ to act within us.

Q: In addition to military violence, we see today also a lot of verbal violence. The Pope invited the faithful to fast from words that wound. What words would you suggest using during this time?

I do not think that disarming language can be reduced to a list of words to say or avoid. Such a list would constantly need updating. What generates violence is not only words but also tone and intention.

We are violent when we speak without listening. When we presume to know the other without understanding their reasons. When we speak only to assert ourselves. When we do not carefully choose words suited to the situation.

We also risk hurting others when, speaking from positions of authority or privilege, we do not consider the influence our words may have.

Verbal disarmament is born from a simple question: are we willing to face the effort of dialogue and to build respectful and equal relationships?

Q: Conversion to the Gospel according to St. Francis will be the guiding theme of your reflections. What message does he offer us today? Why is he still relevant?

St. Francis is relevant because he reminds us clearly and radically that God is alive and can dwell in our lives if we make space for Him. At a time when Christianity risks being reduced to moral effort or ethical consistency, his experience brings us back to what is essential: the Gospel as a living word, to be listened to and lived with freedom.

St. Francis speaks to the hearts of all because he touched the deepest expectations of the human person: recognizing one another as brothers and sisters, looking at creation with gratitude, and building a more just and peaceful coexistence.

His relevance does not depend on celebrations, but on his ability to show that a life reconciled with God immediately becomes more human, simpler, and more fraternal.

1st Lenten Sermon delivered to Pope Leo XIV and the Papal Household by Fr. Pasolini

 

The preacher of the Papal Household offers his first Lenten meditation in the Paul VI Audience HallThe preacher of the Papal Household offers his first Lenten meditation in the Paul VI Audience Hall  (@Vatican Media)

First Lenten Sermon: Peace comes from the courage to be small

Fr. Roberto Pasolini, the Preacher of the Papal Household, gives his first Lenten meditation, with Pope Leo XIV in attendance, reflecting on the importance of humility as part of our ongoing conversion.

By Benedetta Capelli

On March 6, Fr. Roberto Pasolini, the Preacher of the Papal Household, gave the first of his Lenten Sermons, which will take place every Friday until March 27 in the Paul VI Audience Hall, with Pope Leo XIV present.

The series is centered around the theme: “If anyone is in Christ, they are a new creation (2 Cor 5:17). Conversion to the Gospel according to Saint Francis.”

This first meditation’s topic was "Conversion: Following the Lord Jesus on the Path of Humility." The Capuchin friar recounted how "in the days that are once again marked by pain and violence, to speak of smallness might seem to be an abstract discourse, almost a spiritual luxury. In reality, it is a practical responsibility, linked to the destiny of the world."

Peace, he explained, is not only born from political agreements or diplomatic or military strategies, but from men and women who find the courage to be small. This happens when people step back, renounce violence in all its forms, refuse to give in to the temptation of revenge and dominance, and choose dialogue even when circumstances seem to deny its possibility.

Awakening of the image of God

Fr. Pasolini called it “a demanding and daily task,” one that concerns everyone who sees themselves as children of God and knows that “this conversion of the heart” is their responsibility.


Introducing his reflection—related to the life of St. Francis—Fr. Pasolini described him as a "man traversed by the fire of the Gospel, capable of rekindling in each of us the longing for a new life in the Spirit."

But what exactly does "conversion" mean? This is a question we must ask because "if we get the starting point wrong, we risk building on fragile foundations," he said.

"Evangelical conversion," the preacher said, "is first and foremost God’s initiative, in which man is called to participate in full freedom." It happens "in the most intimate point of our nature, where the image of God impressed upon us waits to be reawakened."

The response to grace

St. Francis speaks of "doing penance" when he enters the path of conversion. He refers to a “change of sensitivity,” a way of seeing others with mercy and through the light of the Gospel, sweeping away "the bitterness of a life filled with many things but still empty of its essential value."

Doing penance marks the beginning of a fight to defend the "new taste of things," while faithfully nourishing the seed that God has placed in each person's heart.

Conversion is no longer the attempt to straighten life out with one's own strength, but a response to a grace that has redefined the parameters of our way of perceiving, judging, and desiring.

Recognizing sin

Conversion is connected to "the depth of the furrow that sin has etched in us," the Capuchin friar explained, but sin is a word that today seems to have disappeared.

"In the collective consciousness – and sometimes even in the life of the Church – everything is explained as fragility, wound, limitation, conditioning. When sin is still mentioned, it is often reduced to a small mistake or weakness." "If every sin becomes just a symptom," he pointed out, we risk losing something essential: "the greatness of human freedom and its responsibility."

If there is no longer the possibility of true evil, we cannot believe in the possibility of true good. If sin disappears, holiness too becomes an abstract and incomprehensible destiny.

In sin, man recognizes that "his freedom is real, and that with it he can build or destroy himself, others, the world." A "deep healing" is therefore necessary to recover a relationship with God—repeatedly choosing to live in love and freedom, even enduring hardships that are not "sterile" but are expressions of "fidelity of those who have already glimpsed the meaning and value of what they are living".

Returning to humility

St. Francis is seen as the saint of poverty. But it is also impossible to separate him from humility. Both spring from the mystery of the Incarnation. They are the very traits of God that man is invited to live in order to resemble Him.

"Humility," Fr. Pasolini highlighted, "is a path that every baptized person is called to follow if they want to fully embrace the grace of life in Christ." It is "a way of inhabiting the world and relationships" to reduce the "the inflated image we have of ourselves" and to return to truth. He called it "a gift of the Spirit even before it is an ascetic exercise."

However, humility does not impoverish man. Rather, it returns him to himself. It does not lessen him but restores him to his true greatness. For this reason, it is so closely linked to conversion. Original sin arises precisely from a rejection of humility: from not wanting to accept ourselves as human beings, finite and dependent on God. Conversion, then, must also be understood as a return to humility.

The face of the new man

The greatness of man, the preacher explained, comes through his smallness. The saint of Assisi—by embracing the smallest—understood that this is "the privileged place" chosen by the Lord. "In them that the 'power' spoken of in the Gospel is manifested, that of becoming children of God."


A child who is not ashamed to ask the Father for things experiences "a particular strength: the ability to inspire goodness in others." "The little ones, with their fragility, awaken mercy," Fr. Pasolini continued, "which is perhaps the most precious energy in the world." It is a radical openness that requires the hospitality of the other; "becoming small is an essential dimension of being Christians."

When we choose to become—not remain—small because we have recognized God's smallness and have felt welcomed and loved by Him, then this choice is not a form of regression or renunciation. It is the face of the new man that Baptism restores to us.

Constant conversion

The final step is to recognize that conversion never ends. We remain sinners, always asking to be sanctified by the Spirit. "To convert means to continually begin again this movement of the heart, through which our poverty opens itself to God’s grace," even in our reluctance to diminish our self-image, by doing ongoing inner work that places us "at service, freely and concretely."

Fr. Pasolini recalled St. Paul, who understood that ": weakness is not a phase to be overcome, but the very form of his life in Christ," "the form of baptismal life."

However, we often think that evangelical smallness is only possible when everything is going well. In reality, the opposite is true. It is precisely in conflicts and difficulties that this littleness is even more necessary. When the instinct is to defend oneself or impose oneself, that is where we see if we have truly learned the Gospel of the cross. Light, in fact, shows its strength not when everything is clear, but when darkness reigns.

The meditation ended with a prayer from St. Francis and an invocation to "follow in the footsteps of your beloved Son, our Lord Jesus Christ."

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Saint of the Day for Friday

 

St. Colette


Feastday: March 6
Patron: Women seeking to conceive, expectant mothers and sick children
Birth: 1380
Death: 1447
Beatified: January 23, 1740 by Pope Clement XII
Canonized: May 24, 1807 by Pope Pius VII



Colette was the daughter of a carpenter named DeBoilet at Corby Abbey in Picardy, France. She was born on January 13, christened Nicolette, and called Colette. Orphaned at seventeen, she distributed her inheritance to the poor. She became a Franciscan tertiary and lived at Corby as a solitary. She soon became well known for her holiness and spiritual wisdom but left her cell in 1406 in response to a dream directing her to reform the Poor Clares. She received the Poor Clares habit from Peter de Luna, whom the French recognized as Pope under the name of Benedict XIII, with orders to reform the Order and appointing her Superior of all convents she reformed. Despite great opposition, she persisted in her efforts. She founded seventeen convents with the reformed rule and reformed several older convents. She was reknowned for her sanctity, ecstacies, and visions of the Passion, and prophesied her own death in her convent at Ghent, Belgium. A branch of the Poor Clares is still known as the Collettines. She was canonized in 1807. Her feast day is March 6th.

Vatican Media interviews Chicago Cardinal Cupich as military action continues in Iran and the Middle East

 

Cardinal Cupich: 'We must embrace principles to avoid wars'

In a wide-ranging interview with Vatican Media, Cardinal Blase Cupich, Archbishop of Chicago, calls for restraint to avoid unnecessary military escalation abroad and prevent things from quickly spiraling out of control. He also urges overcoming polarization and protecting the human dignity of all peoples in the United States, in a way that ensures law and human rights are not opposed, but united.

By Deborah Castellano Lubov

Once your open the door with attacks, it's very hard to close it, and things can get out of control very quickly.

In a wide-ranging interview with Vatican Media, Cardinal Blase Cupich, Archbishop of Chicago, gave this warning, while reflecting on tensions abroad and domestically. 

After the joint U.S.-Israeli attacks that hit Tehran and several Iranian cities on Saturday, Iran launched retaliatory strikes on various areas in the Gulf region, hitting airports, buildings, ports, and several civilian structures, particularly in cities such as Doha, Manama, and Kuwait City. During the Angelus on Sunday, Pope Leo XIV said that “faced with the possibility of a tragedy of enormous proportions,” he made a heartfelt appeal to the parties involved "to assume the moral responsibility to stop the spiral of violence before it becomes an irreparable abyss!”

During the conversation, Cardinal Cupich reflects on the dramatic events in the Middle East, and the world at large, and the power of the Pope's voice and call for moral responsibility. He also reflects on division and the Pope's reception and ability to unify back home in the United States, amid other challenges, especially at the borders. Finally, the Cardinal Archbishop of Chicago reflects on what the Windy City's offering the world its first Pope means to Chicago and the effect it is having on the Church.

****

Vatican News: Your Eminence, what is Pope Leo’s contribution to peace? The Holy Father made an impassioned appeal on Sunday at the Angelus address. How significant is his voice in today's global tensions?

Cardinal Blase Cupich: What the Holy Father is doing is simply recalling the principles by which nations have agreed since the Second World War to deal with tensions and conflicts and disputes. We have had over this period of time, these eighty years, a way and ability, through the United Nations and other bodies, to respect human rights, but also the sovereignty of nations as disputes are in many ways taken up. What the Holy Father is doing is trying to recall us back to that, so we do not lose that all. In fact, there is a threat that we are losing that consensus. That's an important role that he is playing here. I think he is speaking on behalf of many people who are worried about what happens when that consensus breaks down.

With the recent events in the Middle East, the world is living through days of great tension and great fear. How are you experiencing these days? And what is your prayer at this time?

Well, I joined Cardinal [Joseph] Tobin [Archbishop of Newark] and Cardinal [Robert] McElroy [of Washington D.C.] in making a statement about these very issues at the time in which the United States was taking action or threatening action, for instance, in Greenland and what it did in Venezuela. We predicted that, in fact, more would happen if we didn't change course. And it is having an impact on people's lives. Almost a thousand people now have been killed in this latest intervention with Iran. We're also seeing the use of weapons as a way by which we solve our difficulties. When we begin to take on that approach, we are going down a road that's very hard to come back from. We see that more and more in this particular moment. So, I think people are afraid. They have no idea how this is going to end and things can get out of control very quickly.

And as you had alluded to, today many people perhaps are accepting that war has once again become somewhat of a normal way of resolving international disputes. What would you say to these people?

I would say we have been down that road as a world in the past. Let's remember the First World War started with an assassination of the Archduke in Sarajevo. Then it blew up into a great war when Franz Josef declared war on behalf of the Austrian Empire. He thought it would be a very quick solution to a problem. Well, it turned out to be years of terrible conflict in which millions of people were killed. So, once you open that door, it's very hard to close it.

In your view, Your Eminence, is it legitimate to launch military attacks against a sovereign country and under what conditions?

I think that it is very questionable on why we would do that if there is no immediate threat that's there that has to be nullified. As far as I understand and seeing that there was no immediate threat that was part of what was happening in this country. We have been told that the nuclear capabilities of Iran, the Iranian government have been neutralized by a bombing that took place months ago. And so, the sovereignty of a nation is very important. We have the same issue with regard to the war in Ukraine. When in fact that principle of the sovereignty of a nation is violated, then we can make any excuse to go ahead and wage war. That is a principle that we have to safeguard and part of the consensus that we had since the Second World War.

Ten days after Pope Leo XIV gave his address to the Diplomatic Corps accredited to the Holy See, as you had mentioned, you and two other American Cardinals issued that joint statement rejecting war and urging US foreign policy to be grounded in peace, human dignity, and religious liberty. The letter suggested that events in Venezuela, Ukraine, Greenland raise fundamental questions about military force and the meaning of peace. With the latest attacks in the Middle East, what role should the Catholic Church play in promoting diplomacy over escalation?

We have of course a full diplomatic effort that goes on through our diplomatic stations throughout the world, and that is so very important. Not only in terms of bringing people together, but also providing us information, firsthand information, which in fact is key right now. And the Holy Father mentioned this in his address to the Diplomatic Corps on January 9th. At the heart of it, at the core, was that line in which he said we are entering a period of relativism where truth now then becomes a matter of opinion. It's reduced to opinion. And if we are not committed to really saying what's true, then I think we're going to live in a world of illusion. And so, the Holy See, the Holy Father can call the rest of the world to acknowledge what's really true here rather than going by opinion or fake news as people call it.

American society and even the Church seem rather polarized. How can the Church be or become a force for unity rather than division? And is Pope Leo helping foster greater unity?

I think that's a very important question. The three Cardinals when we made our statement earlier in the year, we decided that in fact, we wanted to give our people the language on how they should understand what's happening. I think that's what the Holy Father is doing as well. Because once you begin to, in fact, just attack personalities or individuals, you lose that ground. What we can do as a service to our people is to help them understand what's happening, to give them the language by which they can see and frame what these issues are about, and what's at stake whenever we ignore the principles of living in this world for the common good. Then in fact, if we can do all of that and give [this to] our people, then we can make headway. And I think we can break through that polarization. It's a matter of helping our people understand what's really happening. That is an important contribution.

In recent months, The US Church has often found itself having to intervene on the US government's migration policies, raising its voice in the defense of migrants. What principles do you wish to reaffirm?

Well, at the center is something you alluded to already, and that is respect for human dignity. That's the core principle. Human dignity has to be respected not in the way only in which people are rounded up, but also human dignity is an issue when you break apart families, when you don't respect the fact that people who have been in the United States for many years without documents contributed in many ways to the livelihood not only of their family but of society in which you also demean them by language that dehumanizes them. Then you violate human dignity and that's why we raised our voice. There was a line in particular in the November statement that our Bishop's Conference made that we oppose the indiscriminate mass deportation of people. That caught the attention of the world and helped our people understand what's at stake here because that's what was happening: the indiscriminate mass deportation of people when in fact you don't take into consideration the various circumstances that brought people here and the fact that we as a country have for too long ignored the need for significant immigration reform.

Migration policies are a political issue that deeply divides public opinion. What is the path to holding together respect for the law and respect for the rights of the person?

We've always said that a nation has the obligation and the right to defend it, to defend its borders, and to secure its borders. That's never been an issue for the Church. But at the same time, it can't be done at the expense of undermining the dignity of people. Those two can be held. They're not opposed to each other. They can be held in union. And we have done it in the past. We can make sure that people's rights are not violated, that we don't have to live in fear as we have seen in the United States where communities are torn apart as we saw in Minnesota and where people rise up and say this is wrong to the point where we then begin to have civil unrest in our cities. There's a better way to do this and that's why we have consistently called for the legislators and administration to enact immigration reform that's significant. We can deal with this problem if in fact they do their job.

How should Catholics engage in politics today, especially in a climate where faith is often used in partisan ways?

I think that we have to make sure that nobody compromises the Gospel for a political partisan view. What we bring, however, are the truths of the Gospel. And as I said earlier, what we as leaders of the Church have to do is to help our people know what the language is in which they should discuss these issues. If they use the language of partisan politics or even of a government that wants to secure a particular policy, we're lost. I think we have to look at these issues through the lens of what the Gospel tells us. That's the job of the Bishops, of the teachers of the Church, to remind people who we are, why we say what we do, why we do what we do as Christians based on the core values of the Gospel.

Cardinal Cupich, you are the Cardinal Archbishop of Chicago, the city where Pope Leo XIV was born and spent a fraction of his life. What does giving a Pope to the Universal Church mean for Chicago? And how has the city, the Windy City, experienced this first year more or less of his pontificate?

Well, I think there's a justifiable pride that we can say we produced a Pope. It's not just the fact that he is from Chicago, but his life in some way was formed by the culture of Chicago where people work hard. They love their families. They appreciate the international flavor of the city itself. For instance, we celebrate Mass in 26 languages in Chicago. All of that is a part of who the Holy Father is. I think that we take great pride in that. We had a celebration in the stadium of the Chicago White Sox on June 14th. Thousands of people showed up for it, some were not even Catholic, just to express pride about the election of the Holy Father. In many ways, it also has given people, especially young people because he addressed young people in a video that he produced that we showed, for them to look at what their faith is all about. We saw for instance during the rite of election just this past week in the four ceremonies that we had, a 20 percent increase in young people from the age of 20 to 35 coming into the Church, electing to be baptized or coming into full communion with the Church. So something is stirring in people. It's the Holy Spirit, but I also think that it's the election of the Holy Father.

Anything else you would like to add, Your Eminence?

I would just want to make sure that we as a world, as Christians in the world, stay close to the Gospel in these very turbulent times. That will be the light for us. We may not know or we may be confused about what is the way forward, but we have to remember that Jesus says, "I am the way." And so, we have to attend to what he has to say here, not to partisan politics, not the diatribe of a particular agenda of a country, but to stay close to what the Gospel tells us. That is our job as members of the hierarchy to tell our people what in fact we really believe and why we believe it. But we can have an influence on world politics, on world actions if we in fact stay close to the Gospel.

His Catholic Faith defined Coach Lou Holtz

 

Lou Holtz is carried off the field following a win in the Orange Bowl. Holtz won 100 games, including the 1988 National Championship, during his 11-year tenure in South Bend.


Lou Holtz’s Catholic faith is bigger than football


The former football head coach shined not only on the field, but also off the field through his religious values


Legendary Notre Dame head football coach Lou Holtz might be remembered for his greatness on the field, but his enduring Catholic faith led him to be a positive and enduring force shaping Notre Dame football and its reputation for years to come.

Holtz died March 4 at age 89. The 1988 national championship winner began his tenure in 1986 for Notre Dame to help resurrect a struggling Irish team. In addition to giving ten years, 100 wins, five New Year’s Day bowl victories, an undefeated 12-0 season and a national championship, Holtz left his mark with his visible Catholic faith and commitment to cultivating virtuous men on the football field.

Holtz’s early life was formed by the Sisters of Notre Dame at St. Aloysius Grade School in East Liverpool, Ohio. Holtz once told the National Catholic Register that the nuns and early education “influenced my life tremendously. This was due to the fact that they encouraged you always to make sure that God is the focus of your life, and they didn’t allow you to do anything except to the very best of your ability.”

Holtz told the Register that he prayed to God to be a great athlete, only to have been made a coach instead. Holtz’s weekly attendance and trust in the Church on religious principles helped “bring meaning and lasting happiness to life.”

Holtz took on his position at Notre Dame after various stops along the way, including William & Mary, NC State, Arkansas and Minnesota. The opportunity at Notre Dame was not only a larger one in the public eye, but inherently had faith tied into football on the field as a world-renowned Catholic university. Holtz immediately embraced the rich football and Catholic tradition, publicly sharing his faith, re-instating a mandatory Mass attendance prior to games and prioritizing moral messaging to players. His teams began to take the virtues of fortitude, prudence and temperance onto the football field and quickly translated to success for the Irish. Holtz leaned into the distinctiveness of Notre Dame as a truly Catholic and faithful university, which reflected and shared the faith on a national stage. He helped reassert that the football program wasn’t separate from the University’s religious mission — it was part of it.

Holtz posted the famous “Play Like a Champion Today” sign in 1986 hoping to inspire players as they entered the field. After spotting the sign in a college football book, he felt that it “was appropriate for Notre Dame” and brought it along with the team for road games to encourage players and remind them of the sacrifices it took to get to their position. These actions helped make a lasting impact and shape the modern landscape of Notre Dame football that fans across the world recognize today.

Holtz’s time at Notre Dame is certainly remembered for his undefeated national championship season in 1988. However, he is also remembered as a legend for his unforgettable pregame speeches and instillment of virtue in his players. He shared that he wanted “Good people who happen to be good football players” for Notre Dame football. His messaging for speeches was often focused on integrity in the players, respect, self-control and academic excellence, aligning directly with the pillars of Notre Dame. Holtz made Notre Dame’s Catholicism visible on a national stage and reinforced its intimate ties with football.

Lou Holtz retired from Notre Dame in 1996 for a few years before picking up his final job at South Carolina for six seasons. Holtz began to appear in commentary roles for ESPN and other televised programs, bringing his witty sense of humor and passion for the game to every broadcast. In 2020, Holtz earned the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Donald Trump as the White House described him as “one of the greatest football coaches of all time” and a “philanthropist, author and true American patriot.”

Lou Holtz “is remembered for his enduring values of faith, family, service and unwavering belief in the potential of others,” his family said. They posted a statement sharing a Mass of Christian Burial at the Basilica of the Sacred Heart at the University of Notre Dame to be announced as details are finalized. As the University of Notre Dame and nation remembers Lou Holtz for his football excellence and transformation of collegiate programs, it is important not to forget the ways he impacted players and communities beyond the game through his Catholic faith.

Saint of the Day for Thursday

 

St. John Joseph of the Cross


Feastday: March 5
Patron: of Ischia
Birth: 1654
Death: 1739



St. John Joseph of the Cross was born about the middle of the seventeenth century in the beautiful island of Ischia, near Naples. From his childhood he was the model of virtue, and in his sixteenth year he entered the Franciscan Order of the Strictest Observance, or Reform of St. Peter of Alcantara. Such was the edification he gave in his Order, that within three years after his profession he was sent to found a monastery in Piedmont. He became a priest out of obedience, and obtained, as it seems, an inspired knowledge of moral theology. With his superiors' permission he built another convent and drew up rules for that community, which were confirmed by the Holy See. He afterward became Master of Novices. Sometimes later he was made provincial of the province of Naples, erected in the beginning of the eightheenth century by Clement XI. He labored hard to establish in Italy that branch of his Order which the sovereign Pontiff had separated from the one in Spain. In his work he suffered much and became the victim of numerous calumnies. However, the saint succeeded in his labors, endeavoring to instill in the hearts of his subjects, the double spirit of contemplation and penance bequeathed to his Reform by St. Peter of Alcantara. St. John Joseph exemplified the most sublime virtues, especially humility and religious discipline. He also possessed numerous gifts in the supernatural order, such as those of prophesy and miracles. Finally, consumed by labors for the glory of God, he was called to his reward. Stricken with apoplexy, he died an octogenarian in his convent at Naples on March 5, 1734. His feast day is March 5th.