Blessed Eugene (Vincent) Bossilkov of the Sacred Heart

For years a portrait of this Passionist Bishop hung on the wall of the first corridor in the Passionist Motherhouse of Saints John and Paul in Rome.  The portrait had been executed for Father Eugene’s consecration as Bishop in 1947.  He was appointed for the Diocese of Nicopolis, one of the four Latin Dioceses in Bulgaria.  Every time someone passed the portrait during the 1950s and 1960s, they wondered if Eugene were still alive.

He had been arrested in 1952 by the Communist government.  A series of trials were held behind closed doors and it was known that Bishop Bossilkov was to receive a death sentence.  No one knew whether or not it was carried out.  It was the intention of the Communist leader, Marshall Josip Broz Tito to set up Bishop Bossilkov as leader of a schismatic national church.  The Bishop was arrested in the garden of his brother’s home.  His niece who witnessed the arrest was a religious sister.  She reported that he remained calm and offered no resistance.  He told her to, “Be at peace.  This is God’s will and all will work out well.”

A collection of clothing and personal belongings of Blessed Eugene Bossilkov C.P., in the care of Fr. Giovanni Zubiani, C.P., Postulator General of the Passionists, St. John and Paul's Monastery, Rome.

Official notification of his execution did not come until 1975 when Tito visited Pope Paul VI and the Pontiff asked him, “Where is Monsignor Bossilkov?”   “He’s dead,” came the reply.  It was later learned that he had been executed on November 11, 1952.  Some bloodstained clothes were returned to his family, along with his pectoral cross.  In December, his niece had brought him a basket of food that was refused at the gate of the prison.  By that gesture, she intuitively knew that he had been shot.  By June of 1953 the Blessed Ildefonse Schuster, then the Cardinal Archbishop of Milan, revealed that someone from within the Bulgarian government had disclosed the torture and death of the Bulgarian prelate, but he was quick to add that it was just a rumor.

Bishop Bossilkov was baptized Vincent at his birth on November 16, 1900.  In 1919 he made his Passionist novitiate at Ere in Belgium, taking the name of Eugene of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.  He had a brilliant academic career as a seminarian and young priest.  He studied in Rome and wrote the definitive work:  The Union of the Bulgarians of the Church of Rome at the Beginning of the XIII Century.  In 1931 he returned to Bulgaria.  The Diocese of Nicopolis was essentially run by the Passionists.  He served them both as priest and secretary to the Bishop.  Pope John Paul II commemorated him twice.  Once was on the occasion of his beatification in 1998 when he called him  “the brightest glory in Bulgaria’s Church.”   In 2000 when Pope John Paul celebrated the Jubilee Year for the Martyrs of the Twentieth Century, he selected Bishop Bossilkov as the first martyr to be highlighted and claimed that his courage was found in the Passionist tradition with its contemplative spirituality.

- Father Jerome M. Vereb, C.P.

More about Bl. Eugene Bossilkov

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Blessed Pius of Saint Aloysius Campidelli, C.P.

No one was more surprised at the announcement of the Beatification of Blessed Pius Campidelli in 1985 than the Superior General of the Passionists, Father Paul Boyle, C.P.  Although he was a Passionist from a territory near Rimini, his Cause had been kept so discrete that the General did not know about it.  Of course, he was proud that another Passionist had been added to the Litany of the Saints.  Born in 1868, he was the fourth child of six.  His father, Giuseppe Campidelli and his mother, Filomena Belpani were peasant farmers.  His father died in 1874, leaving the farm to his wife and children.  An Uncle came to help run the farm.  The family worked very hard to maintain their land and produce a reasonable crop every year.

The young boy’s name was Luigi.  He was especially affected by the piety of his mother who was dedicated to the Passion of Jesus and to his Blessed Mother.  At the age of 14, he thought to apply to the diocesan seminary, but he had no funds.  He then applied to the Passionists who accepted him immediately.  The year was 1882.  The Province was that of Eastern Italy, dedicated to the Sorrows of Mary (Pieta).  This Province had been suppressed in 1866 with the rise of the Italian National Movement.  It was reestablished in 1882 and young Luigi was among the first candidates to enter.

In 1884 he professed his vows.  Simultaneously, he pursued philosophical and theological studies.  His companions were impressed with his intelligence and his all-around affability.  He was popular among them.  It was obvious to them that he lived in the presence of God.  He was regular in his keeping the observances and profoundly prayerful.  He was zealous to work to expand the Passionists in Italy, since the Congregation had suffered its suppression at mid-century.  When he was transferred to the Monastery at San Eutizio near Viterbo, a city close to Rome, it was discovered that Pius was suffering from tuberculosis.  He died on November 2, 1889.  In his death, he offered his life for the Church.

In particular, Pius Campidelli left a spirituality based upon the wearing of the Passionist habit.  The central element was the Passionist Sign with its white heart and the words “Passion of Jesus Christ” in Latin and in Greek.  He saw this article of devotion as an act of evangelization.  Worn daily by all Passionists, the symbol contains the consequences of God’s love.  All who reflect upon the Passion are united in the Church to the Holy Spirit and through the Holy Spirit.  The black tunic was a sign of a day wrapped in prayer, silence and recollection.  He boasted to others of the difference of the Passionists, not only in their garb, but also in their way of life. Because of his appeal to laypeople and because of his association with Passionist spirituality as a viable mode of life in Italy he is the patron saint of Passionist Associates.

- Father Jerome M. Vereb, C.P.

Prayer

O God who reveals yourself in a marvelous way to the little ones and to the pure of heart, manifest yourself to us, we beseech you, as you did to Blessed Pius.  As our one and true Good, grant that we may follow you unceasingly in purity and sincerity of life, loving you above all things and loving others with your love.  We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit on God, forever and ever.  Amen.

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St. Paul of the Cross on rocks in the sea

Quote

“Have you ever noticed rocks in the sea, beaten by the tempest? A furious wave dashes against the rock, another and yet another does likewise, yet the rock is unmoved. But look at it after the storm has subsided, and you will see that the flood has but served to wash and purify it of the defilement it had contracted during the calm. Hereafter I wish you to be as a rock.
A wave dashes against you? Silence! It assails you ten, a hundred, a thousand times? Silence! Say, at most, in the midst of the storm, “My Father, my Father, I am all Thine! Oh dear, ‘O sweet will of God, I adore Thee !”
“The statue must be chiselled with very sharp tools before it is fit to be placed in the grand gallery.”

Solemn Novena to St. Ann 2011

You are invited to participate in the Solemn Novena to St Ann at St. Ann’s Basilica in Scranton, PA. The novena is scheduled to begin on July 17 and conclude on July 26. The first Solemn Novena to St. Ann began in the small monastery chapel back in 1905. More than 100 years later, the novena continues with thousands attending every year.

You can download the novena schedule and prayers and send us your special intentions for the novena at: http://www.thepassionists.org/novena.html

We hope that you will join us for these very special days of prayer and worship either in person or by praying along with us at home.

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Update from St. Benedict’s Clinic in Tegucigalpa, Honduras

Medicines from Europe being delivered to the clinic

We have just received this update from the Dr. Casey, the Medical Director of our clinic in Honduras.

“Things have been rather hectic in Honduras with an outbreak of dengue fever. Because of the grant we are able to manage well the needs of the people that we serve as well as some others who are coming to us because they know we have medicines and the other clinics don’t.

The medicines were purchased from a grant of $15,000  that was obtained from the Catholic Human Services Foundation located in New Jersey.

St. Benedict’s Clinic in Tegucigalpa serves more than 45,000 women, men and children a year bringing the most modern and efficient medical treatment to poor families in the nation’s capital, a sprawling city of millions.

Please consider a donation to help the Passionists in their ministry to people living in poverty: Please make checks payable to PASSIONIST MISSIONARIES.

Passionist Missionaries Inc.
526 Monastery Place
Union City NJ 07087-3398
Tel: 888/806-6606
E-mail: DLisotta@cpprov.org

Donate on-line by clicking the button below.
The Donate Now button will redirect you to Caring Habits, Inc. (CHI) which is the credit card processing company for The Passionist Missionaries website.


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