| 5. Saint Charles of Mount Argus (1821-93) |
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Saint Charles of Mount Argus was renowned for his gifts of bodily and spiritual healing during his many years of service at the Passionist Church at Harold's Cross, Dublin. Patrick Duffy tells the story. On Sunday, 3rd June 2007, a Dutch-born Passionist priest who spent most of his life at Mount Argus, Dublin, Charles of St. Andrew (born Johannes Andreas Houben), was canonised as a saint along with three others.Childhood
Born John Andrew Houben on 11th December 1821, he was the fourth of eleven children of Peter and Joanna Houben of Munstergeleen, a village in the south-east of Holland near the border with Germany and Belgium. The family worked at a mill owned by his uncle. John Andrew was a shy but cheerful boy who like singing to himself around the house. He liked serving Mass and visiting the church during the day. A slow learner, for ten years he walked the two miles to a secondary school at nearby town of Sittard. Neighbours began to wonder if he would ever finish school. He joined the army as a reserve in 1840, but as he wasn’t very good at being a soldier he only spent three months on active service. While in the army he heard of the Passionists and decided he wanted to become a Passionist priest. This meant he had to resume studying. Vocation He was good-humoured and cheerful as a novice and student. When his ordination day came on 21st December 1850, his father had died and, because of the huge expense of his father’s long illness and funeral, none of his family was able to make the journey to attend his ordination at Tournai in Belgium. In February 1852 he was assigned to England. Here he came in contact with the many Irish who, unable to go to America, had gone to England because of the Famine and his heart went out to them. He admired their struggle and their loyalty to the faith. Even then, he began to call them “my people”. At Mount Argus It became a daily routine for him to walk from the monastery to the Church preaching to the kneeling people about the love Jesus showed in his passion. Inside the church he would pray privately, ask the people to renew their baptismal promises, bless them with the relic of St. Paul of the Cross, and then move among them laying his hands on them in prayer. Great graces were attributed to his prayers – not only physical cures but also healing of depressions and psychological disorders. Often people would send carriages to bring him out through the city and into the country to visit the sick at a distance. Allegations Return to Ireland and death His grave in the community cemetery soon became a place of pilgrimage. But people sometimes took away pieces of clay. In 1949 his body was transferred to a shrine inside the church. He was declared Venerable by Pope John Paul II in 1979. Miracles of healing The second miracle mentioned above took place in Charles’ home village of Munstergeleen in 1999. JHA Dormans experienced abdominal pains that turned out to be a ruptured appendix. From the beginning of his illness Mr Dormans entrusted himself in faith into the hands of Blessed Charles. Surgery exposed porous intestines and every effort to stem the leaks only seemed to make matters worse. The surgeon explained to the family he had reached the limits of what he could do. Mr Dormans received the last sacraments and the family said their good-byes. They invoked Blessed Charles to guide him through the difficult hours. But he did not die. Doctors could not believe it when he began to recover. Subsequent surgery revealed that the intestines had healed naturally; only a small suture was needed to complete the process. Mr Dormans was present at the canonisation of the saint who healed him. As Archbishop of Dublin, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin has been the Actor in the cause of Blessed Charles. He and many Passionists along with many lay people will attend the canonisation in St Peter's Rome on Sunday morning. Prayer for the intercession of Blessed Charles
Our Father, Hail Mary, and Glory be to the Father.
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