Parish of Hope
In this edition of Mother Angelica Live, Bishop Francisco Garmendia discussed his ministry at Saint Thomas Aquinas Church. This was recorded on 9-16-1992. Special thanks to EWTN for permission to share this video online.
In this edition of Mother Angelica Live, Bishop Francisco Garmendia discussed his ministry at Saint Thomas Aquinas Church. This was recorded on 9-16-1992. Special thanks to EWTN for permission to share this video online.
Bishop Francisco Garmendia was my Spiritual Director. Through the friendship of Tony and Lillian DeFeo (two very dear friends of the bishop) that’s how I met the bishop. They thought I should meet him, and ask him to be my Spiritual Director!
Lillian called him, and next thing I knew, I was in his office. We spoke a while, bonded a little, and he said he would pray about it. I was about to leave when the bishop asked me if I could hang this picture for him. Next thing I know I’m hanging the picture. “Nice job, ” the bishop said.” Then he said, “I have some other pictures you could hang, the next time you come.” The next time!!? (Betty Cleary, the bishop’s secretary thought and laughed to herself, “This poor guy doesn’t know what he’s in for” she told me later on.) “Does that mean that you’ll be my Spiritual Director?” He said, “Well it looks like that’s what the Blessed Mother wants.”
How blessed was I.
We became best of friends in so much as he once turned and said to me, “Tommy sometimes you’re like my son, and sometimes you’re like my brother.” I could have died happily right then and there. I loved this man, and became his “right-hand Man,” as Betty was his “right-hand Girl.” Between ALL the work that had to be done, the three of us still managed to have fun.
Here we were working with a male Mother Teresa! Thanks be to God he’s finally resting with the Lord—-finally Resting. We all look forward to seeing him again, when it be God’s Will.
Talking about working with the bishop, let me tell you about the first “big job” he sentenced me to, I mean—gave me. He asked me one day as we were walking down the front steps of St. Thomas Aquinas, if I would turn around and look up at “that space” over the doors. Didn’t I think that a nice statue of our Blessed Mother, looking over the Parish, would fit there very nicely. (He knew I was friends with a man who owned his own statuary) I told him, “Bishop, do you know what that would take to do?! ” “No, but you know!” Who could EVER say no, or decline anything that Bishop Garmendia would ask of you—and boy, he took full advantage of it. You never knew what you were getting into, or where it would take you to! So allow me to fast forward and tell you what happened.
I called my statuary friend and told him what the bishop wanted. Without hesitation he said, “Tommy, I’ll donate the statue, ( a five foot statue of the Blessed mother, and he would have it painted) but you have to pay the painter, and he’ll give you a break.” Next, I found a carpenter who would install the statue——no charge—-and install he did! Praise God, and thank you Mother Mary! So, that’s how the statue of the Blessed Mother came to be sitting atop the church, looking over the parish of St. Thomas Aquinas. Amen.
On to my next adventure—-off to Cuba with the bishop and Pope John Paul ll. Yes, the bishop invited me to go along with him to Cuba as sort of an unofficial sidekick. It was a holy thrill of my life! One day he was invited to Castro’s palace for lunch with the Pope, cardinals, and other bishops. He tried to get me in with him—-but couldn’t swing it. He told me when he got back to our room, he would share with me—-and he did. He met with Castro, and Castro tried to impress the bishop with scripture he knew. (Castro had been schooled earlier in his life by the Jesuits) He asked the bishop, after having finished quoting scripture; “Well what do you think of that my dear bishop?” Without missing a beat the bishop replied, “Too bad Fidel, you would have made a good Jesuit.” A big smile spread across the bishop’s face after he told me that. I told him, “Only you bishop, could have gotten away with that, what did he say?” “He just shook my hand and gave me a smile.” I was going to ask the bishop a few questions, however I saw he was tired so I asked him to just tell me one more highlight of being here in Cuba. Without any hesitation he said, “Seeing the faith, hope, and spirituality in the eyes of all the people.” The people of Cuba left an indelible mark on the heart of the bishop, as did the people of Mexico, when we pilgrimaged to Mexico to be with Pope John Paul ll, along with the cardinals and bishops.
On one occasion while visiting Guadalupe, we wound up 1 inch from the glass covered Tilma of Guadalupe. What an experience that was! The bishop and I just stared at the image of Our Blessed Mother on the Tilma, as Juan Diego must have stared at her. We looked at each other, smiled, said a prayer, and off we went to Santiago where the Holy Father was offering a Mass for the people. We were amazed when we arrived at the area where the Mass was to be offered. A simple stage had been erected in a huge field as far as the eye could see, filled with thousands of people as far as the eye could not see! Bishop and I sat about 10 feet away from the Holy Father. I was filled with awe and humility between being this close to the Pope and the thousands of people, and of course my Spiritual Director—-His Most Reverend Archbishop Francisco Garmendia.
There are too many stories to mention here, like always praying to St. Joseph for a parking spot whenever we had to go to Manhattan——we always got one and never had to pay for parking! Most memorable though, was when he wanted to introduce me to Mother Teresa! Mother was in her convent in the South Bronx, and asked the bishop to please come over and offer a Mass for all the Sisters. So I went along—–met Mother Teresa—–she wrote on a piece of paper, “God bless you, Sister Teresa.” That’s how humbly she signed her name. I put that precious piece of paper in a small gold frame which is above my desk, and I’m looking at it right now. How blessed I was that day to be in the company of two Saints——-Mother Teresa and Bishop Garmendia. At times I ask them to intercede for me, as I will ask them to intercede for you.
May God and Mother Mary bless us all.
Thank you for letting me share.
The following excerpt was taken from The Good News of The Source of Life newsletter, V14, #37, December 25, 1997
The second commentary was a homily given a few days before Christmas by Bishop Francis Garmendia. It was at a funeral mass for a woman killed in an accident at the wheel of her car only a minute from the safety of her home.
The Bishop in speaking to us, so often people of little faith, faced unspoken problems. There can be in the minds of Christians especially at Christmas and year’s end, concealed questions: Where is this place to which the dead go? To which I will go? How can it be better than all the good things we have here, or at least the things we can hope and dream to have? Heaven holds little attraction for many Christians. We even fear eternity, heaven, and God.
The Bishop had to speak of time, death, eternity, heaven.
He immediately connected her death with the death that Holy Child born in Bethlehem would suffer on the Cross for us and her. The death that gives all deaths meaning. And His new life that alone gives our future any meaning.
And because of the holiness of his words, and the holiness of his life, which many in the Church knew of, he was able to make heaven real.
The scripture scholar, William Barclay, writes of what our life will be; “The present body is in weakness; the future body will be in power. Time and time again our physical constitution says to our visions and plans, Thus far and no farther.’ We are so often frustrated because we are what we are. But in the life to come the limitations will be gone. Here we are compassed about with weakness; there we will be clad with power. ”
“The present body is a natural body; the future body will be a spiritual body. Here we are but imperfect vessels and imperfect instruments for the Spirit; but in the life to come we will be such that the Spirit can truly fill us, as can never happen here, and the Spirit can truly use us, as is never possible now. Then we will be able to render the perfect worship, the perfect service, the perfect love that now can only be a vision and a dream.”
A NEW WORLD. “This is not our real home” Bishop Garmendia said in the slight accent of his native Spain, “Christmas is coming. Jesus is coming. And a new world is coming.”
“Our sister who has died in Christ, is now in that true home and serving us, acting on our behalf. She sees Jesus and Mary and is united with us in a fuller way than ever before possible. Now she knows.
Gently he said, “Life is hard. Life is difficult. She knows this and is praying for you al1 now. And I know you very well. But Jesus is the one who knows us above all. He gives us the Catholic Church, Holy Eucharist and Holy Penance, and all the sacraments to give us life and strength.”
INTERCESSORS. People like Bishop Garmendia are saints and intercessors. In our weakness and in the terrors of life they stand in the gap, reminding and encouraging, calling us to be saints. Here and now. Not just to wait for our role of service and intercession in heaven.
St. Paul tells us that faith comes from hearing. Often we drift into occasions of sin. We need to put ourselves into occasions of faith. The bishop is an occasion of faith.
All that Bishop Garmendia spoke of was incomprehensible also to many of those Jesus spoke to. They had much understanding of God, but they thought that they knew everything. And so they limited him. He could not become man. He could not give heaven. We also limit God. We cannot accept heaven and eternity.