Biography
Padre
Pio was born May 25, 1887 in
Pietrelcina, Italy, a small
country town located in
southern Italy. His parents
were Grazio Mario Forgione
(1860-1946) and Maria Guiseppa
de Nunzio Forgione
(1859-1929). He was baptized
the next day, in the nearby
Castle Church, with the name
of his brother, Francesco, who
died in early infancy. Other
children in the family were an
older brother, Michele; three
younger sisters: Felicita,
Pellegrina and Grazia; and two
children who died as infants.
Religion
was the center of life for
both Pietrelcina and the
Forgione family. The town had
many celebrations throughout
the year in honor of different
saints and the bell in the
Castle Church was used not for
ringing the hour, but for
daily devotional time. Friends
have described the Forgione
family as "the
God-is-everything-people"
because they attended Daily
Mass, prayed the Rosary
nightly and fasted three days
a week from meat in honor of
Our Lady of Mt. Carmel.
Although Padre Pio’s
grandparents and parents could
not read and write, they
memorized Sacred Scripture and
told the children Bible
stories. It was in this lovely
family setting that the seeds
of Faith were nurtured within
Padre Pio.
From
his early childhood, it was
evident that Padre Pio had a
deep piety. When he was five
years old, he solemnly
consecrated himself to Jesus.
He liked to sing hymns, play
church and preferred to be by
himself where he could read
and pray. As an adult, Padre
Pio commented that in his
younger years he had conversed
with Jesus, the Madonna, his
guardian angel, and had
suffered attacks by the devil.
Padre
Pio’s parents first learned of
his desire to become a priest
in 1897. A young Capuchin
friar was canvassing the
countryside seeking donations.
Padre Pio was drawn to this
spiritual man and told his
parents, "I want to be a
friar… with a beard." His
parents traveled to Morcone, a
community thirteen miles north
of Pietrelcina, to investigate
if the friars would be
interested in having their
son. The Capuchins were
interested, but Padre Pio
would need more education than
his three years of public
schooling.
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In
order to finance the
private tutor needed to
educate Padre Pio, his
father went to America
to find work. During
this time, he was
confirmed (September 27,
1899), studied with
tutors and completed the
requirements for
entrance into the
Capuchin order. At age
15, he took the Habit of
the Order of Friars
Minor Capuchin on
January 22, 1903. On the
day of his investiture,
he took the name of Pio
in honor of Saint Pius
V, the patron saint of
Pietrelcina, and was
called Fra, for brother,
until his priestly
ordination. |
A
year later, on January 22,
1904, Fra Pio knelt before the
altar and made his First
Profession of the Evangelical
Counsels of Poverty, Chastity,
and Obedience. Then, he
traveled by oxcart to the
seventeenth-century friary of
St. Francis of Assisi and
began six years of study for
the priesthood and continued
his development in community
life toward the profession of
his solemn vows. After three
years of temporary profession,
Padre Pio took his final vows
in 1907.
Then
on August 10, 1910, the
much-anticipated day finally
arrived. The twenty-three year
old Fra Pio was ordained a
priest by Archbishop Paolo
Schinosi at the Cathedral of
Benevento. Four days later, he
celebrated his first Mass at
the parish church of Our Lady
of the Angels.
Within
a month of his ordination,
(September 7, 1910), as Padre
Pio was praying in the Piana
Romana, Jesus and Mary
appeared to him and gave him
the wounds of Christ, the
Stigmata. For Padre Pio’s
doctors, the wounds created
much confusion. He asked Jesus
to take away "the annoyance,"
adding, " I do want to suffer,
even to die of suffering, but
all in secret." The wounds
went away and the supernatural
life of Padre Pio remained a
secret...for a while.
On
November 28, 1911, Padre
Agostino, who was a
contemporary, friend, and
confidant, was advised that
Padre Pio was ill. He rushed
into Padre Pio’s room to care
for him. Padre Agostino
observed what he thought was a
dying man and rushed to the
chapel to pray. When he
finished praying, he returned
to Padre Pio’s room and found
his friend alert and full of
joy.
This
was the beginning of Padre
Pio’s documented ecstasies –
all of which were "edifying,
theologically correct and
expressed a deep love for God.
"
Due
to Padre Pio’s on-going ill
health, he was sent home to
recuperate and was separated
from his religious community
from the end of 1911 – 1916.
During this time, the Capuchin
Constitution required a friar
who was sent home because of
illness had to maintain his
friar life as much as
possible. Padre Pio did this.
He said Mass and taught
school.
On
September 4, 1916, Padre Pio
was ordered to return to his
community life and was
assigned to San Giovanni
Rotondo, an agricultural
community, located in the
Gargano Mountains. Our Lady Of
Grace Capuchin Friary was
approximately a mile from town
and was not easy to reach. The
Capuchins had a reputation for
their holiness and simple
life. When Padre Pio became a
part of the community at Our
Lady of Grace, there were
seven friars.
With
the outbreak of the war, only
three friars stayed at Our
Lady of Grace; the others were
selected for military service.
At the beginning, his
responsibilities included
teaching at the seminary and
being the spiritual director
of the students. He spent his
free time reading the Bible
and handling correspondence.
When another friar was called
into service, Padre Pio became
in charge of the college.
In
August 1917 Padre Pio was
inducted into the service and
assigned to the 4th
Platoon of the 100th
Company of the Italian Medical
Corps. During this time he was
very unhappy. By mid-October
he was in the hospital, but
was not discharged. Finally,
in March 1918, he was
dismissed and returned to San
Giovanni Rotondo.
Upon
his return, Padre Pio became a
spiritual director and had
many spiritual daughters and
sons. He had five rules for
spiritual growth: weekly
confession, daily Communion,
spiritual reading, meditation
and examination of conscience.
In explaining his spiritual
growth rules, Padre Pio
compared dusting a room, used
or unused on a weekly basis,
to weekly confession. He
suggested two times of daily
meditation and
self-examination: in the
morning to "prepare for
battle" and in the evening to
"purify your soul." Padre
Pio’s motto, "Pray, Hope and
Don’t Worry" is the synopsis
of his application of theology
into daily life. A Christian
should recognize God in
everything, offering
everything to Him saying, "Thy
will be done". In addition,
all should aspire to heaven
and put their trust in Him and
not worry about what he is
doing, as long as it is done
with a desire to please God.
In
July 1918, Pope Benedict XV
urged all Christians to pray
for an end to the World War.
On July 27, Padre Pio offered
himself as a victim for the
end of the war. Days later
between August 5 -7, Padre Pio
had a vision in which Christ
appeared and pierced his side.
As a result of this
experience, Padre Pio had a
physical wound in his side.
The experience has been
identified as a "transverberation"
or piercing of the heart
indicating the union of love
with God.
A
few weeks later, on September
20, 1918, Padre Pio was
praying in the choir loft in
the Church of Our Lady of
Grace, when the same Being who
appeared to him on August 5,
appeared again. It was the
wounded Christ. When the
ecstasy ended, Padre Pio had
received the Visible Stigmata,
the five wounds of Christ,
which would stay with him for
his remaining 50 years.
By
early 1919, word about the
stigmata began to spread to
the outside world. Over the
years countless people,
including physicians, examined
Padre Pio’s wounds. Padre Pio
was not interested in the
physicians’ attempts to
explain his stigmata. He
accepted it as a gift from
God, though he would have
preferred to suffer the pains
of Christ’s Passion without
the world knowing.
God
used Padre Pio – especially
the news of his stigmata – to
give people hope as they began
to rebuild their life after
the war. Padre Pio and his
spiritual gifts of the
stigmata, perfume, prophecy
and bilocation was a sign of
God in their midst and led
people back to their Faith. So
life at the friary and the
Church of Our Lady of Grace
began to revolve around Padre
Pio’s ministry. A room and
priests were designated to
handle the correspondence and
the remaining friars heard
confessions. San Giovanni
Rotondo began to be filled
with pilgrims. Since there
were no hotels, people slept
outdoors. A normal day for
Padre Pio was a busy nineteen
hours – Mass, hearing
confessions and handling
correspondence. He usually had
less than two hours to sleep.
As
his spiritual influence
increased, so did the voices
of his detractors. Accusations
against Padre Pio poured in to
the Holy Office (today the
Congregation for the Doctrine
of Faith). By June 1922,
restrictions were placed on
the public’s access to Padre
Pio. His daily Mass time
varied each day, without
announcement to diminish the
crowds, and he was ordered not
to answer correspondence from
people seeking spiritual
direction. It was also rumored
that plans were being
developed to transfer Padre
Pio. However, both local and
Church authorities were afraid
of public riots and decided
that a more remote and
isolated place than San
Giovanni Rotondo could not be
found.
Despite
the restrictions and
controversies, Padre Pio’s
ministry continued. From 1924
– 1931 various statements were
made by the Holy See that
denied the supernaturality of
Padre Pio’s phenomena. On June
9, 1931, the Feast of Corpus
Christi, Padre Pio was ordered
by the Holy See to desist from
all activities except the
celebration of the Mass, which
was to be in private. By early
1933, Pope Pius XI ordered the
Holy See to reverse its ban on
Padre Pio’s public celebration
of Mass, saying, "I have not
been badly disposed toward
Padre Pio, but I have been
badly informed."
Padre
Pio’s faculties were
progressively restored. First,
the confessions of men were
allowed (March 25, 1934) and
then women (May 12, 1934).
Although he had never been
examined for a preaching
license, the Capuchin Minister
General granted him permission
to preach, honoris cuasa,
and he preached several times
a year. In 1939 when Pope Pius
XII was elected pope, he began
to encourage people to visit
Padre Pio. More and more
people began to make
pilgrimages.
In
1940, Padre Pio convinced
three doctors to move to San
Giovanni Rotondo and he
announced plans to build a
Home to Relieve Suffering. As
Padre Pio expressed to Pope
Pius, " …a place that the
patient might be led to
recognize those working for
his cure as God's helpers,
engaged in preparing the way
for the intervention of
grace." The doctors were
excited about the building,
but were fearful that this was
not the time to begin such a
project with Europe being on
the brink of another world
war.
These
fears did not stop Padre Pio
and the project began. After
the war, Barbara Ward, a
British humanitarian, came to
Italy to write an article on
postwar reconstruction. She
attended Padre Pio’s Mass and
met one of the physicians who
came to San Giovanni Rotondo
to work with the Home to
Relieve Suffering. Upon
learning of the project, she
asked that the Home to Relieve
Suffering receive a part of
the funds designated for
reconstruction. Consequently,
the United Nations Relief and
Rehabilitation Administration
(UNRRA) gave a grant of
$325,000 for the project. The
building opened its doors on
May 5,1956. A year later,
Padre Pio announced plans for
a medical and religious center
where doctors and interns
could further their medical
studies and Christian
formation.
With
the opening of the hospital,
Padre Pio was truly now an
international figure and his
followers greatly increased.
To accommodate all the
pilgrims, a new, large church
was constructed.
In
the mid-1960s, Padre Pio’s
health began to deteriorate,
but he continued to say Daily
Mass and hear fifty
confessions a day. By July of
1968, he was almost bedridden.
On the fiftieth anniversary of
the stigmata (September
20,1968), Padre Pio celebrated
Mass, attended the public
recitation of the Rosary and
Benediction. On the next day,
he was too tired to say Mass
or hear confessions. On
September 22, he managed to
say Mass and the attendees had
to struggle to hear him. Just
after midnight, in the early
morning hours of September 23,
Padre Pio called his superior
and asked to make his
confession. He then renewed
his vows of poverty, chastity,
and obedience. At 2:30am,
Padre Pio died in his cell. As
he foretold, Padre Pio lived
sick but died healthy, with
the stigmata healed.
On
September 26, 1968, over a
hundred thousand people
gathered at San Giovanni
Rotondo to pay their respects
to this holy man. He was
buried in the crypt prepared
for him in the Church of Our
Lady of Grace.
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