The Shepherd Who Didn't Run. Maria Ruiz Scaperlanda

The Shepherd Who Didn't Run - Maria Ruiz Scaperlanda


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Why Me?

       Chapter 4: MICATOKLA: Stanley’s New Home

       MICATOKLA

       Fitting in at MICATOKLA

       Building the Hospitalito

       Building Communication

       The Making of a Home

       The Tz’utujil People

       And Then There Was One: MICATOKLA Changes

       Chapter 5: Padre Francisco

       The Missionary’s Work of Love

       Family Bonds Across the Miles

       Living a Eucharistic Life

       The Gift of Humor

       The Great Earthquake of 1976

       Where Two or More Are Gathered

       Build My Church

       Watching Storms Building from a Distance

       Chapter 6: He Died an Atiteco

       First Signs of Danger

       The Violence Reaches Lake Atitlán

       Orejas, Not for Listening

       An Unwanted Top 10 List

       The New Normal

       A Martyr of Charity

       Diego Quic

       A Bloodbath in Atitlán

       “What Can I Do?”

       Stanley Rother’s Garden of Gethsemane

       The Letters

       Coming Home

       Summertime in the Village

       The Hour Has Come

       This Is My Blood …

       Chapter 7: The Flesh of Jesus

       The Tree Cried Out and Bled, But It Did Not Die

       “They Killed Stan”

       Witness to the Living Christ Present in His People

       A Martyr for His People

       “From the Beginning of Our Priesthood”

       Father Stanley Rother: Patron for All Priests

      Epilogue by Most Reverend Eusebius J. Beltran, Archbishop Emeritus of Oklahoma City

       Notes

       List of Works Consulted

       Acknowledgments

       Map of Guatemala

       Preface to the Revised Edition

      I consider myself genuinely privileged to be the person, to be the author, who gets to tell the story of Father Stanley Rother, the martyr from Okarche, Oklahoma. From book signings and radio shows, to speaking at women’s conferences and parish events — the desire of people to know more about our first American martyr has been boundless.

      Two things have become clear to me since I first wrote this book. First, we are all in great need of the witness of humble servants like Blessed Stanley Rother. As a faithful man who dared to love Jesus with everything he had, he is a testament to the difference that one person — even an ordinary person like me — can, and does, make. And as a diocesan priest, Blessed Stanley has touched the hearts of seminarians and parish priests hungry for that zealous witness of what the priesthood is and what it can be.

      The second thing that is undeniable is that the Holy Spirit wants Blessed Stanley Rother’s story told! As a Church, we need Stanley Rother’s servant spirit, his faith witness, his ordinary story — especially at this particular moment in our history. His beatification is nothing short of Divine Providence, and an exceptional gift to the Church — especially the Church of the Americas.

      In his 1959 encyclical titled Sacerdotii Nostri Primordia (From the Beginning of Our Priesthood), Pope John XXIII presented the life of St. John Vianney as a model for priests and seminarians.

      The pope concluded that encyclical with a prayer that, throughout the world, the French Curé d’Ars “will stir up the pious zeal of priests and of those whom God is calling to take up the priesthood” (119). Ironically, it is a prayer that undoubtedly graced and guided Stanley Rother, who that year had just failed the first year of theology at one seminary and was begging God to find him a new seminary home.

      The words Pope John XXIII meant for St. John Vianney are uncannily appropriate for the steadfast trust of our first American martyr: “How could anyone help being moved deeply with a life so completely dedicated to Christ shining so clearly there before him?” (80).

      Blessed Stanley Rother, the first U.S. priest to be beatified, has already had a profound impact on all who have heard his story. This is not only because of the witness of his death as a martyr, but even more significantly because his life, his devotion, and his priestly service make him an ideal patron for all missionary disciples.

      One final thought — a request. Please help me spread the story of Blessed Stanley Rother’s life!

      Go to StanleyRother.org to learn more about the sainthood cause and see the plans for the beautiful Blessed Stanley Rother Shrine being built in Oklahoma City — the church that will serve as his final resting place. You can also sign up to receive updates from the archdiocese on the cause for Stanley Rother’s canonization.

      Above all, please pray for a miracle through the intercession of Blessed Stanley Rother. Bring him your petitions. He is a good listener, a brother in the faith who wants to help you!

      María Ruiz Scaperlanda

      December 2018

       Foreword

      Much has occurred since the 2015 publication of this biography of Blessed Stanley Rother, most notably his beatification on September 23, 2017. In 1981, I learned about the heroic death of Father Stanley Francis Rother. I was a seminarian at his alma mater, Mount Saint Mary’s Seminary in Emmitsburg, Maryland. From that time until this day, the witness of Blessed Stanley’s life and death has been a source of encouragement and inspiration to me as a seminarian, priest, and now as a bishop. I consider it a great gift of Divine Providence to be entrusted with overseeing the continuation of his cause for canonization begun by my predecessor, Archbishop Eusebius J. Beltran.

      Stanley Rother was born and raised in Okarche, Oklahoma, and ordained a priest in 1963 for what was then the Diocese of Oklahoma City and Tulsa. He served parishes in Oklahoma for five years before his priestly ministry fully blossomed as a missionary, serving the parish of Santiago Atitlán and its mission in Cerro de Oro in the Diocese of Sololá-Chimaltenango


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