FSSP
United Kingdom and Ireland
June 4, 2018

Places for Girls on Summer Camp St Petronilla

 

We have spaces left for girls aged 10 – 17 years-old on Summer Camp St Petronilla this August 13-18. Among much else, we invoke Our Lady, St Louis Marie de Montfort and St John Bosco to improve the spiritual eyesight of all participants. If you would like to know more about the camp or to request a booking form, please email us here. FLICKR albums from previous years’ camps can be viewed here: Girls 2017;  Boys 2017; Girls 2016; Boys 2016.

 
Opening the Eyes of the Soul to See God

Believing that while Jesus walked in Israel He caused the blind to see by touching them, it is coherent to believe that He does the same now from Heaven through His new Body, that is the Church, specifically through His Saints in Heaven and on Earth. And if the scores of people who are physically healed at Lourdes is a sign of the countless thousands who are spiritually healed, so Don Bosco’s work with our Lady to restore the physical sight of a blind girl is surely a sign of their ongoing work to enable the spiritual sight (that is the Faith) of countless girls and boys today. If this were not possible, why would the Gospels recount to us Jesus having opened the eyes of the blind 2,000 years ago?

The passage below is taken from Saint John Bosco, Seeker of Souls by F.A.Forbes (1935), pages 93-93:

“The miracles of Don Bosco have remained famous. He was indignant when they were attributed to him. ‘I only tell people to invoke our Lady,’ he would say, ‘it is all her doing.’ When very hard pressed, and by obvious facts, he would sometimes admit: ‘Well, you see, we work together, she and I’…

Another day it was a blind girl who, led by two others, went to the church to pray, and afterwards asked to see Don Bosco. ‘How long have you been blind?’ he asked.

‘My eyes have been bad for some time, but a year ago I went completely blind,’ she answered, ‘the doctors say it is hopeless,’ and she begs to cry. Don Bosco led her to a window.

‘Do you not see the light?’ he asked.

‘Nothing at all.’

‘Do you wish to see?’

‘How can you ask such a question? I am a poor girl and my life depends on it.’

‘If you had your sight, would you use it for the good of your soul and for God’s service?’

‘Indeed I would!’

‘Trust in our Lady and she will help you.’

‘I know she will, but in the meantime I am blind.’

Don Bosco held a medal of our Lady before the sightless eyes. ‘What is this?’ he said.

‘I can see,’ cried the girl, ‘it is a medal.’

‘Whose medal?’

‘Our Lady’s.’

‘And on the other side, what do you see?’

‘An old man with a staff — oh, St Joseph!’

‘Holy Mother of God!’ cried the two women, ‘she can actually see!’

The girl dropped the medal which rolled into a dark corner of the room. One of them made a dash to recover it.

‘Let it alone,’ said Don Bosco, ‘let us see if our Lady has really given her back her sight.

The girl went straight to the corner and picked it up. She was beside herself with joy. Later on she became a nun in the religious Order founded by Don Bosco to do for girls what he himself was doing for boys…”

 


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *