Uncle Eddy's E-mail -- April 5
Saint Vincent Ferrer (entered heaven in 1419)
Dear Vinnie,
Let nothing deter you from following your vocation. If you think God may be calling you to be a
Dominican, then go knock on the Dominicans’ door. Your continual struggle with chastity
means nothing. I will remind you of your namesake, the great Dominican preacher, St Vincent
Ferrer, as energetic a Spaniard as there ever was. Like you, he was an extraordinary youth,
gifted with exceptional intelligence, deep faith, and devastating good looks. Early on in his
vocation he met with remarkable success – prophecies, miracles, and huge numbers of
conversions. But he was also beset with temptations. The devil and his minions assailed
him from within (unspeakable torments from the powers of darkness), while some women who had fallen
for him assailed him from without (this was an age full of clerical infidelities, remember).
When he resisted their advances they lashed out in response, viciously slandering his unblemished
reputation. What a trial it must have been! But he kept faith in his divine calling, and
for the next forty years he was constantly on the move, preaching to immense crowds, from Turin
(that’s in northern Italy, my geographically-challenged nephew) to Flanders, from Barcelona to
Brittany, and everywhere in between. Not only did he and his band of followers have to set
aside “office hours” so he could miraculously heal the hundreds of sick and maimed who
crowded around him, but God did wonders with his voice: when he preached, you could hear him clear
as a bell at half a mile away (and this was before fancy sound engineering), and even though he only
spoke Spanish and a tinge of Latin and Hebrew, Germans, Dutch, French, and Italians all understood
his rousing sermons. (His favorite sermon topic, by the way, was the fast-approaching Day of
Judgment.) On one occasion, 8000 Muslims in Grenada (that’s in Spain, you know) asked to
be baptized after hearing one of them. Eight thousand! And to top it all off, he was
instrumental in ending the Great Schism (and if you don’t remember what that was, well…
well… well you should remember!). So you see, when we focus on what God wants us to do,
and not on how hard it may be to do it, truly great things can happen.
Happy Saint’s Day. Uncle Eddy.
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