|
Blessed Andre Bessette
b. 1845 d. 1936
Feastday: January 6
When Alfred Bessette came to the Holy Cross Brothers in 1870, he
carried with him a note from his pastor saying, "I am sending you
a saint." The Brothers found that difficult to believe. Chronic
stomach pains had made it impossible for Alfred to hold a job very
long and since he was a boy he had wandered from shop to shop, farm
to farm, in his native Canada and in the United States, staying
only until his employers found out how little work he could do.
The Holy Cross Brothers were teachers and, at 25, Alfred still did
not know how to read and write. It seemed as if Alfred approached
the religious order out of desperation, not vocation.
Alfred was desperate, but he was also prayerful and deeply devoted
to God and Saint Joseph. He may have had no place left to go, but
he believed that was because this was the place he felt he should
have been all along.
The Holy Cross Brothers took him into the novitiate but soon found
out what others had learned -- as hard as Alfred, now Brother Andre,
wanted to work, he simply wasn't strong enough. They asked him to
leave the order, but Andre, out of desperation again, appealed to
a visiting bishop who promised him that Andre would stay and take
his vows.
After his vows, Brother Andre was sent to Notre Dame College in
Montreal (a school for boys age seven to twelve) as a porter. There
his responsibilities were to answer the door, to welcome guests,
find the people they were visiting, wake up those in the school,
and deliver mail. Brother Andre joked later, "At the end of my novitiate,
my superiors showed me the door, and I stayed there for forty years."
In 1904, he surprised the Archbishop of Montreal if he could build
a chapel to Saint Joseph on the mountain near the college. The Archbishop
refused to go into debt and only would give permission for Brother
Andre to build what he had money for. What money did Brother Andre
have? Nickels he had collected as donations for Saint Joseph from
haircut he gave the boys. Nickels and dimes from a small dish he
had kept in a picnic shelter on top of the mountain near a statue
of St. Joseph with a sign "Donations for St. Joseph." He had collected
this change for years but he still had only a few hundred dollars.
Who would start a chapel now with so little funding?
Andre took his few hundred dollars and built what he could ...
a small wood shelter only fifteen feet by eighteen feet. He kept
collecting money and went back three years later to request more
building. The wary Archbishop asked him, "Are you having visions
of Saint Joseph telling you to build a church for him?"
Brother Andre reassured him. "I have only my great devotion to
St. Joseph to guide me."
The Archbishop granted him permission to keep building as long
as he didn't go into debt. He started by adding a roof so that all
the people who were coming to hear Mass at the shrine wouldn't have
to stand out in the rain and the wind. Then came walls, heating,
a paved road up the mountain, a shelter for pilgrims, and finally
a place where Brother Andre and others could live and take care
of the shrine -- and the pilgrims who came - full-time. Through
kindness, caring, and devotion, Brother Andre helped many souls
experience healing and renewal on the mountaintop. There were even
cases of physical healing. But for everything, Brother Andre thanked
St. Joseph.
Despite financial troubles, Brother Andre never lost faith or devotion.
He had started to build a basilica on the mountain but the Depression
had interfered. At ninety years old he told his co-workers to place
a statue of St. Joseph in the unfinished, unroofed basilica. He
was so ill he had to be carried up the mountain to see the statue
in its new home. Brother Andre died soon after on January 6, and
didn't live to see the work on the basilica completed. But in Brother
Andre's mind it never would be completed because he always saw more
ways to express his devotion and to heal others. As long as he lived,
the man who had trouble keeping work for himself, would never have
stopped working for God.
In His Footsteps:
Brother Andre didn't mind starting small. Think of some service
you have longed to perform for God and God's people, but that you
thought was too overwhelming for you. What small bit can you do
in this service? If you can't afford to give a lot of money to a
cause, just give a little. If you can't afford hours a week in volunteering,
try an hour a month on a small task. It is amazing how those small
steps can lead you up the mountain as they did for Brother Andre.
Prayer:
Blessed Brother Andre, your devotion to Saint Joseph is an inspiration
to us. You gave your life selflessly to bring the message of his
life to others. Pray that we may learn from Saint Joseph, and from
you, what it is like to care for Jesus and do his work in the world.
Amen
Copyright 1996 by Terry Matz. All Rights Reserved.
|