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Holy Cowboy!

September 15, 2013 by

Fr. Kevin’s wanderings continued…

Saturdays of my childhood began with the Looney Tunes, Bugs Bunny and the rest. My father liked those old cartoons. Saturday afternoon was my mother’s time for watching “Westerns”. Mom came from a small mountain town and her father and relatives had horses and livestock. The Lone Ranger was a favorite for us to watch; part of Rossini’s William Tell Overture played as opening music and the cool surname of the actor who played Tanto was Silverheels.  I remember also Wyatt Earp, “brave, courageous, and bold”, as the theme song went. The Earp character would have many later admirers via the film Tombstone.

blessed jose2The Westerns are no longer a staple of Saturdays, but I was reminded of them so clearly when on Saturday morning September 14th, 2013 I read about a beatification. On that Saturday Cardinal Amato, representing Pope Francis, beatified a priest of Argentina–Padre José Gabriel Brochero. Blessed Jose Gabriel is known in Argentina as the “cowboy priest”. This gaucho, as local cattle-herders are known, served a large parish spread over miles of mountainous terrain.

Bl. Jose showed bravery in his first years as a priest by ministering to victims of a cholera epidemic in the city of Cordoba, Argentina. At 29 he was assigned to St. Albert, a remote parish numbering about ten thousand souls with neither schools nor roads. Padre Jose went on the back of a mule along the mountains to care for his flock, carrying a Mass kit and an image of the Blessed Mother. His flock was, in a sense, “lost”, so remote were they from the larger society. Father Jose said of his people that “they were abandoned by everyone, but not by God”. Early in his tenure, he desired spiritual renewal for his parish and so he led a group across mountains in a snowstorm to a retreat being held at Cordoba on the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius. This beginning in prayer produced much fruit in the parish.

His priestly ministry drew him to the people, to “go out”, as Jesus and his apostles went out to where the people were to be found. This “going out” involved risk: the danger of terrain, long days far from home, and the unexpected. Pope Francis has especially encouraged priests and generally all Christians to get out on the roads and into the public squares as a necessary first step in evangelization, in sharing Christ.

Blessed Jose Gabriel was not unknown to the public for his incarnational way of ministering. He worked alongside his people.  A Cordoba newspaper wrote about this priest’s way of serving in an 1887 article:

“He practices the gospel. Are you missing a carpenter? He’s a carpenter. Are you missing a laborer? He’s a laborer. He rolls up his cassock wherever he is, takes the shovel or hoe and opens a public road in 15 days aided by his parishioners.”

In these tasks Bl. Jose found a space of communion in labor with his parishioners and a solid imitation of his patron, St. Joseph. He worked to build roads, schools, and to get mail and telegraph couriers for the good of the people. In his letter to those gathered for the beatification ceremony Pope Francis said: “This shepherd who smelled of sheep became poor among the poor,”

Bl. Jose Gabriel was born in 1840, the same year of birth as St. Damien of Molokai. Like Damien, Jose Gabriel served those who were considered untouchable, the lepers, and like Damien he died a leper. He continued to pray and offer Mass although ill and blind. His “going out” was a complete emptying of self. Pope Francis wrote: “Brochero did not stay in the parish offices: he would exhaust himself riding his mule and he ended up being sick with leprosy.” Bl. Jose Gabriel died January 26, 1914.

The beatification ceremony at Cordoba was attended by close to 150,000 people, including three thousand gauchos wearing the traditional ponchos of the Argentine cowboy. This priest was a lone ranger when he had to be and, like his Divine Master, was brave, courageous, and bold.

Long may his story be told!

blessed jose1

Filed Under: Fr. David's Blog

Project H2O

Imagine what your life would be like if you awoke tomorrow morning and found that there was no water coming into your home. What would you do? Probably you'd get a few gallons of bottled water, and feel a bit grungy and inconvenienced until the water came back on. Other than that, things would really be OK. But what if the water never came back on? And what if the stores ran out of bottled water? What if the nearest drainage ditch became the only place we could get any water at all? … Help The Thirsty

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