Biographical selection: Born in 1786 at Bra, near Turin, Italy, he studied in the Turin seminary and was ordained in 1811. He was parish priest in Bra and Corneliano, and then became canon of the Church of the Trinity in Turin.
He died of typhus at Chieri, Italy, in 1842, and was canonized in 1934. Comments of Prof. Plinio: I visited the house of St. Joseph Benedict Cottolengo and saw the room where Our Lady used to appear to him. I also visited the House of Divine Providence, which is really a city of suffering and pain. There, all kinds of sick persons are received and all are well treated. I remember being touched seeing the section for epileptics. The charity of the Church in ministering to those poor persons is particularly expressive of how seriously she considers each one of her children and how far she goes to care for them. St. Joseph Benedict Cottolengo founded many congregations – 14 in all – some to care for the sick in his Piccola Casa, and some contemplative communities to assist the others by their prayer.
Someone once said to me that St. John Bosco told St. Cottolengo: “If Your Reverence does not know who to give the money to, give it to me and I will keep it.” I don’t know whether this is a true anecdote or not. If it is true, it reveals a beautiful antinomy in the ways God oriented two great saints living close to each other, demanding from one a form of perfection that He did not ask of the other. But what is certainly true is that although God asked St. Benedict Cottolengo not to keep any money, the funds were never lacking for him to accomplish the work God asked him to do. This extreme confidence in Divine Providence is very impressive. Our Lady responded to it with an extreme generosity, giving not only the means to conserve what St. Cottolengo had founded, but to greatly expand his work to the point that it became a great institution.
This Naturalism can be reflected in the political sphere. With regard to the great efforts for the Catholic cause, one could be tempted to only risk what is proportional to his natural means, without considering that the supernatural normally allows a man to reach much higher and further than he can naturally grasp. Obviously, in such enterprises one must have discernment and a certain criteria to know when it is really Our Lady asking us to exercise this kind of extreme confidence that St. Benedict Cottolengo had. I don’t believe, for example, that normally speaking, we should refuse to sleep if we have some money saved. It seems very justifiable and a factor for tranquility to have some means put aside to continue our fight for the Catholic cause. But on those occasions when we discern that Our Lady is demanding this heroic confidence from us, we should practice it following the good example of St. Joseph Benedict Cottolengo. |