Current Issue

Print Edition: May 19, 2013

Sign-up for our E-letter!



 

  • Donate
  • Archives
  • Blogs
  • Store
  • Resources
  • Advertise
  • Jobs
  • Radio
  • Subscribe
  • Make This
    My Homepage
  • Resources
  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Books
  • Commentary
  • Culture of Life
  • Education
  • In Person
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Sunday Guides
  • Travel
  • Vatican
  • Dan Burke
  • Jeanette DeMelo
  • Edward Pentin
  • Mark Shea
  • Matthew Warner
  • Jimmy Akin
  • Matt & Pat Archbold
  • Simcha Fisher
  • Tito Edwards
  • Jennifer Fulwiler
  • Steven D. Greydanus
  • Tom Wehner
  • Our Latest Show
  • About the Show
  • About the Register
  • Donate
  • Subscribe
  • Stations
  • Schedule
  • Other EWTN Shows
  • Advertising Overview
  • Editorial Calendar
  • Order Web Ad
  • Order Print Ad
Print Article | Email Article | Write To Us
Print Edition » News

St. John Hardon?

  • Tweet
by JOSEPH PRONECHEN, Register Staff Writer Monday, Aug 14, 2006 10:00 AM Comment

BARRINGTON, Ill. — Preliminary steps toward opening a cause of canonization for Jesuit Father John Hardon don’t surprise those who knew the priest.

At the annual Marian Catechist Apostolate retreat in July in Barrington, Ill., Archbishop Raymond Burke of St. Louis made an appeal for testimonies to the sanctity of Father Hardon, the apostolate’s founder.

“I think if half of Father Hardon’s ideas were implemented, we’d be living in a nation of saints,” said his friend and occasional collaborator Father Joseph Johnson, rector of the Cathedral of St. Paul in St. Paul, Minn.

He remembers how people who came to Father Hardon for his advice or blessing for their work would walk away with three other projects.

“He’d take the good you were doing and help you fine-tune it, and say, as long as you’re going down this road, here are a few other things,” Father Johnson said.

Father Hardon himself always added those “few other things” to his own endless apostolic work that lasted until he died at age 86 during the hour of Divine Mercy on Dec. 30, 2000.

A priest for 53 year and a member of the Society of Jesus for 64, he showed his zeal for souls writing scores of books and endless articles, giving countless conferences and retreats, founding a number of apostolates, and promoting Eucharistic adoration and devotion to the Sacred Heart and the Blessed Mother.

He worked at the Vatican for more than 30 years and promoted the use of all the media to evangelize and catechize.

In fact, Father Hardon was asked to write the catechist-training home correspondence course for Blessed Teresa of Calcutta’s Missionaries of Charity, which every sister in the order takes to be able to evangelize and catechize. He became a spiritual adviser to Mother Teresa, and he developed the same course to prepare lay catechists to re-Christianize society, teaching and spreading the faith through the Marian Catechist Apostolate he founded.

According to Elizabeth Mitchell, dean of students at Trinity Academy in Pewaukee, Wis., in Oct. 2005 the Marian Catechist Apostolate asked its national director, Archbishop Burke, to look into introducing the cause for Father Hardon’s canonization.

“There seems to be quite a groundswell of support because of the number of people convinced of the heroic sanctity of Father Hardon,” Mitchell said.

Among them is Richard Guzior of The Real Presence Association in Chicago, an apostolate Father Hardon founded to promote and spread Eucharistic adoration (TheRealPresence.org).

On all the trips Guzior took with Father Hardon, especially to Eucharistic congresses, he remembers the priest always working from 5 or 6 a.m. to midnight or later.

“He never wasted any time,” Guzior said. “He would always be saying the Rosary for everybody’s intentions — thousands and thousands of Rosaries.”

With people talking about sainthood and the sixth anniversary of Father Hardon’s death approaching, Archbishop Burke said the time seems right to look into the possibility of opening the cause.

He enlisted Mitchell, a Marian Catechist and former translator for L’Osservatore Romano, to look into the process and do the groundwork.

“I myself discovered it was possible for one apostolate to introduce a cause for the sainthood of the founder of the apostolate,” Archbishop Burke said. “Right now we’re doing the preliminary work to see if the Marian Catechist Apostolate would be in a position to ask for the cause.”

The archbishop had worked with Father Hardon on the development of this apostolate and had asked its founder to establish it in the La Crosse, Wis., Diocese, where he was bishop at the time.

“When I met him he was quite elderly and seriously ill but tireless in carrying this forward,” Archbishop Burke told the Register. “With Father Hardon, I got to know a number of the lay people and priests in the apostolate and see the terrific influence he had on them, leading them to a greater holiness of life and dedicating themselves in a more generous way to the apostolate.”

The same holds for his other apostolates like the Father John A. Hardon, S.J. Media Apostolate, of which Mitchell is an advisory board member.

“Father Hardon couldn’t stress enough the urgent need for the Gospel to be proclaimed through the means of mass communication in the modern world,” she said. “It’s truly a part of his whole vision on the formation of the Church — catechesis and evangelization through the media — with a serious commitment to prayer so that by truly becoming individual saints, we would re-evangelize our nation and the world.”

Used Lord’s Gifts

Jesuit Father Joseph Fessio, provost of Ave Maria University, recalls how Father Hardon encouraged new groups and movements.

“It wasn’t just a kind word,” Father Fessio said. “He’d pray for them and go out of his way to speak to them. If the smallest group asked him to come, he’d travel around the country to give a talk.”

Despite speaking very softly and not including anecdotes in his talks, “people flocked to hear him preach,” Father Johnson recalls. “The integrity of the message coming from his heart so full of love for Christ was what made it so powerful.”

“Father Hardon took every gift the Lord had given him,” he added, “and he used it 100%.”

When could the official opening of the cause and naming Father Hardon a Servant of God come? Once protocols are met, practically anytime, explained Mitchell. She has already received a directive from Rome to begin gathering testimonies from people of advanced age so as not to lose their witness.

Archbishop Burke also must name a postulator well prepared to direct the cause of the saint before announcing the cause has been opened.

At the same time, Mitchell said, Archbishop Burke would like to see a groundswell of prayer for the eventual cause, and, of course, prayers to Father Hardon himself for help in all good endeavors and particular needs.

Joseph Pronechen is based in

Trumbull, Connecticut

Information

People who would like to give a testimony can contact

Elizabeth Mitchell

c/o Trinity Academy

W225 N3131 Duplainville Road Pewaukee, WI 53072

Elizabeth.mitchell@trinityacademy.net

Filed under

Comments

Post a Comment

Post a Comment

By submitting this form, you give The National Catholic Register permission to publish this comment. Comments will be published at our discretion, and may be edited for clarity and length. For best formatting, please limit your response to one paragraph and don't hit "enter" to force line breaks.

Name:

Email:

Write your comment:

     

Notify me of follow-up comments.

Also in this Issue

  • Arts & Culture

    Video Picks & Passes
  • Weekly TV Picks
  • When the Walls Came Tumbling Down
  • Commentary

    The Distress of Same-Sex Attraction
  • America’s Moral Nuances
  • THE HERO POPE OF WORLD WAR II
  • Culture of Life

    Humble Ambition
  • Mother Rise
  • Prolife Victories
  • You Gotta Have The Want-To
  • Worker in the Vineyard
  • Positive Peer Pressure
  • Education

    1 Bread, 1 Body, 1 Summer for Christ
  • Campus Watch
  • In Person

    From Building Homes to Building a Radio Network
  • News

    Adoption Activism
  • World Media Watch
  • News In Brief
  • National Media Watch
  • Redefining Death
  • Bringing the Gospel to the Mobile Set
  • Women ‘Priests’ Remove Themselves From Church
  • Opinion

    Letters to the Editor
  • Benedict and the Martyrs
  • Vatican

    Vatican Media Watch
  • WEEKLY CATECHESIS
  • ‘Make Us One’
  • Miracle Report Advances Archbishop Sheen’s Canonization Cause
  • Holy Land Institute Help Families from Israel

Most Popular Now

  • Most Read
  • Most Commented
  • Arts & Entertainment

    ‘Verily’ Promotes True Femininity (4468)
  • Opinion

    Pentecost, Prudence and Immigration Reform (3655)
  • Culture of Life

    Honor Our Lady of Fatima: Spend ‘A Day With Mary’ (3559)
  • Culture of Life

    Moms, Imitate the Mother of God’s Virtues (2157)
  • Culture of Life

    Honor Mom (1632)
  • Sunday Guides

    Imagine There’s No Heaven? (1386)
  • Sunday Guides

    The Holy Spirit’s Two Comings (1285)
  • Inperson

    Franciscan President Recalls 13 Years Battling Culture of Death (1228)
  • Sunday Guides

    Christ Isn’t in the Sky (899)
  • News

    Science Shines New Light on Shroud of Turin’s Age (586)
  • Opinion

    Pentecost, Prudence and Immigration Reform (53)
  • Culture of Life

    Honor Our Lady of Fatima: Spend ‘A Day With Mary’ (35)
  • Sunday Guides

    Imagine There’s No Heaven? (7)
  • Culture of Life

    Honor Mom (5)
  • Culture of Life

    Moms, Imitate the Mother of God’s Virtues (4)
  • Culture of Life

    Kansas for Life (2)
  • Sunday Guides

    The Holy Spirit’s Two Comings (0)
  • Sunday Guides

    Christ Isn’t in the Sky (0)
  • News

    FDA Makes Plan B Contraceptive Available to 15-Year-Olds (0)
  • News

    Science Shines New Light on Shroud of Turin’s Age (0)
 
Close

Free Newsletter Sign-Up

Enter your e-mail address below to receive the latest news and blog posts in your inbox each day.

As part of this free service you will receive occasional free offers from us. We won’t share your information, and you can unsubscribe at anytime.
Click here if you don't want this message to show again.

National Catholic Register

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Subscriptions
  • Donate
  • Advertise
  • Press Releases
  • RSS Daily Register
  • RSS Bloggers
  • RSS Print
  • Contact
  • Jobs

Copyright © 2013 EWTN News, Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction of material from this website without written permission is strictly prohibited.
Accessed from 23.22.76.170