Saint Sharbel Makhlouf

<http://vultus.stblogs.org/2008/07/saint-sharbel-makhlouf.html>http://vultus.stblogs.org/2008/07/saint-sharbel-makhlouf.html
 


By <http://vultus.stblogs.org/>Father Mark on July 24, 2008 12:47 PM

charbel06.jpg


Saint Sharbel the Miracle-Worker has followed me from the earliest 
days of my monastic journey. I remember learning of his beatification 
at the close of the Second Vatican Council in December 1965. Saint 
Sharbel's three inseparable loves, depicted in this image -- the Most 
Holy Eucharist, the Blessed Virgin Mary, and the Word of God -- are 
the mystical treasure of those who seek, in some way, to follow him 
in a life of silence and adoration.

Collect from the Missale Romanum 2002

O God who called your priest, Saint Sharbel to the singular combat of 
the desert and imbued him with every manner of piety, grant us, we 
beseech you, that by striving to be imitators of the Passion of the 
Lord we may be found worthy of becoming sharers in his kingdom. 
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with 
you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God, forever and ever.

Ex Oriente Lux

<http://www.ayletmarcharbel.com/SaintCharbelEn.htm>Saint Sharbel 
(also spelled Charbel) of Lebanon is one of those in whom the Holy 
Spirit fashioned a heart of flesh, a heart exquisitely sensitive to 
the mystery of Divine Love. The hermit priest Sharbel was beatified 
by Pope Paul VI on December 5, 1965, at the close of the Second 
Vatican Council. It was as if Paul VI wanted the Council to end with 
Rome gazing Eastward.

Another Saint Anthony of the Desert

Just before the beatification, a prelate at the Congregation for the 
Causes of Saints in Rome said to Bishop Francis Zayek, the shepherd 
of Maronite Catholics in the United States, "Reading about the holy 
hermits of the desert, we used to consider many reported facts as 
mere fables. In the life of Blessed Sharbel, however, we notice that 
these facts are authentic and true. Blessed Sharbel is another Saint 
Anthony of the Desert, or Saint Pachomius, or Saint Paul the 
Anchorite. It is marvelous to observe how you, Maronites, have 
preserved the same spirituality of the fathers of the desert 
throughout the centuries, and at the end of the nineteenth century, 
1500 years later, produced a Sharbel for the Church."

A New Turning

Meanwhile, in Kentucky, a Trappist monk was emerging from a long 
period of spiritual depression. Thomas Merton had been in the Abbey 
of Gethsemani for nine years. He wrote in his journal, "Sharbel lived 
as a hermit in Lebanon -- he was a Maronite. He died. Everyone forgot 
about him. Fifty years later, his body was discovered incorrupt and 
in short time he worked over 600 miracles. He is my new companion. My 
road has taken a new turning. It seems to me that I have been asleep 
for 9 years -- and before that I was dead." Sharbel, the 19th century 
hermit of Lebanon, pulled America's most famous 20th century monk out 
of a spiritual crisis. That is the communion of the saints!

Like a Lebanon Cedar

On October 9, 1977, Pope Paul VI canonized Sharbel, citing the psalm, 
"The just will flourish like the psalm tree and grow like a Lebanon 
cedar" (Ps 91:13). The New York Times gave extensive coverage to the 
canonization in Rome and to the corresponding festivities in Lebanon, 
days of celebration that brought Orthodox and Catholic Christians 
together with Muslims.

Holiness in Clusters

Saint Sharbel's influence continues to grow. In Russia he has an 
immense following of Orthodox Christians. Muslims continue to seek 
his intercession, going in pilgrimage to his tomb. In Lebanon and in 
the Lebanese diaspora he continues to teach the way of silence, the 
way of the Cross, the way of humble love. On May 10th, 1998, Pope 
John Paul II beatified Saint Sharbel's professor, the monk, Father 
Nimutallah al-Hardini. Holiness grows in clusters.

A Eucharistic Death

Saint Sharbel suffered a stroke on December 16th, 1898 while 
celebrating the Holy Liturgy. He was reciting the prayer, "Father of 
Truth, behold your Son, a sacrifice pleasing to you. Accept this 
offering of Him who died for me." He fell to the floor holding the 
Holy Eucharist in his hands. He died on December 24th. Sharbel had 
lived twenty-three years in solitude. A lifetime of saying "Yes" to 
Love prepared him for a fully Eucharistic death and an abiding 
mission in the Church, one that, even today, is prophetic.


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