AN ORDINARY, BUT GREAT, LOVE By Fr. Andrew Gawrych, CSC At the time I met Brother Donald Kuchenmeister, CSC, I had not yet heard of Blessed Brother André. Brother Donald was the Holy Cross brother who ran the orphanage and foster home in Santiago, Chile, where I lived and worked as an exchange student back in 2000. The orphanage, named Hogar Santa Cruz, was home to 30 children from as young as 3 or 4 to as old as 18. Like all children the world over, they were easy to love. But like all children who had lived through such suffering and pain in their young lives, they struggled to love.Starting August 29th, seven Holy Cross priests and brothers from around the world will be telling their personal stories in relation to Brother André. The site is: www.cscpriestsandbrothers.blogspot.com.Brother Donald loved each and every one of those children as if they were his own, and he helped them learn, little by little, how to love and be loved. It was amazing to see how the children were transformed through his love and care. And it was not as if he had discovered any big secret in terms of reaching out to at-risk children. Instead, he simply loved them in all the little moments, day in and day out – like making meals for them, cutting their hair, playing bingo with them, or asking how their days at school had gone. But it was through his fidelity to those little things that the depths of his love shone forth to those children. As I came to know more about Blessed Brother André, I was reminded of Brother Donald. With Blessed Brother André, it is tempting to get caught up in all the miraculous healings or in the construction of the magnificent oratory and believe they are the definite marks of the depths of his love. Over the course of his life as a religious brother, however, Blessed Brother André, much like Brother Donald, spent as much time, if not more, showing his love for others through his fidelity in the little things. After all, Blessed Brother André spent many of his years in Holy Cross, even the years including the miraculous healings, serving as barber, janitor, porter, driver, repairman, carpenter, and handyman extraordinaire. His fellow blessed, Mother Teresa of Calcutta once said, “In this life we cannot do great things. We can only do small things with great love.” Blessed Brother André did just that; he did the small things with great love, and that is why he is such a great and inspiring saint. And yet, he certainly is not alone in that regard. Countless others, including many of his fellow Holy Cross brothers like Brother Donald, continue to show forth the great love of our God through the little things they do. That is not to say they don’t have great responsibilities or important missions. Yet the mark of what they do – and the mark of what we all do – is more often than not our faithfulness in doing the little things with great love. That is greatness. That is saintliness.
In his Wednesday General Audience, Pope Francis continued this cycle of catechesis on "Jesus Christ our Hope," as part of the Jubilee 2025. This week he reflected on the Magnificat, the Virgin Mary's Song of Praise after she is greeted by her cousin Elizabeth.
Reflecting on the vision given to St. Joseph in the Gospel of Matthew, Pope Francis said that "He dreams of the miracle that God fulfils in Mary’s life, and also the miracle that he works in his own life: to take on a fatherhood capable of guarding, protecting, and passing on a material and spiritual inheritance."
Pope Francis continued this cycle of catechesis on "Jesus Christ our Hope." Reflecting on the Angel Gabriel's greeting to the Virgin Mary at the Annunciation, he said that "The 'Almighty,' the God of the 'impossible' is with Mary, together with and beside her; He is her companion, her principal ally, the eternal 'I-with-you.'"
In his weekly catechesis, Pope Francis reflected on the fruits of the Spirit. Beginning with Joy, he said that "not only is it not subject to the inevitable wear of time, but it multiplies when it is shared with others! A true joy is shared with others; it even spreads."
In his weekly catechesis, Pope Francis reflected on how the Holy Spirit empowered the Blessed Virgin Mary to become the Mother of God.