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Giuseppe Marello (1844-1895)
Joseph Marello was born in Turin on December 26, 1844. He spent his childhood in S. Martino
Alfieri near Asti. His special devotion to the Virgin Mary determined his choice
of vocation and his fidelity to it. He entered the seminary of Asti, where he
inspired his companions with his goodness and holiness.
Ordained a priest on September 19,1868, Joseph Marello lived his priestly
life intensely: he served the diocese of Asti first as secretary to the Bishop
and then as Chancellor, directing the Curia's activities; he devoted himself to
the ministry of confession, spiritual direction and catechesis; he took
seriously the moral and religious education of youth and helped in the pastoral
ministry; he showed himself sensible to the elderly, taking over a home for the
aged which did not have the means to help those living in it; he engaged the
laity through the Catholic initiatives being set up to support the Pope's person
and actions at a difficult time for the Church.
At the same time he was contemplating the idea of dedicating himself
totally to Lord in a Carthusian monastery. But His Bishop, Monsignor Savio,
dissuaded him saying that the Lord was asking something different from him. He
wanted to channel Marello's aspiration of total dedication to the Lord by
starting a new Religious Family, which would revive in Asti the presence of Men
religious, a presence which had been suffocated by the revolutionary laws of the
time.
Marello founded the Congregation of the Oblates of St. Joseph on the 14th
of March 1878, for which he proposed St. Joseph as the exemplar of intimate
relationship with the Divine Word and of "looking after Jesus". Above all, he entrusted to the Fathers and Brothers of the Oblates of St.
Joseph the task of spreading devotion to St. Joseph, training the young and
assisting in the ministry of the local churches.
During the 1st Vatican Council, His Eminence Gioacchino Cardinal Pecci,
later Pope Leo XIII, had occasion to appreciate the virtues and talents of the
young priest Joseph Marello, who accompanied his Bishop as secretary. Pope Leo
XIII nominated Joseph Marello as Bishop of Acqui and he was consecrated on
February 17, 1889. As a bishop, Joseph Marello approached everyone and strived
to create unity between the clergy and the faithful. In his pastoral work he
promoted the study of the catechism, the Christian education of youth, the
parish missions and Christian living.
Joseph Marello died on May 30, 1895 in Savona, where he had gone, despite
poor health, to take part in the celebrations for the third centennial of St.
Philip Neri.
The cause for his canonization began on May 28, 1948. On June 12, 1978 the
Degree of heroic virtue was read in the presence of Pope Paul VI. The Holy
Father, Pope John Paul II, beatified Joseph Marello on the 26th of September
1993 in Asti, and pointed him out as an example of charity, of untiring and
silent work for youth and the abandoned, and as a model for all Pastors of the
People of God and for all those who throughout the world carry on the work of
the apostles.
Then by a solemn decree on December 18, 2000, the Holy Father declared
thatAthe miracle worked by God through the intercession of Blessed Joseph Marello,
Bishop of Acqui, Founder of the Congregation of the Oblates of St. Joseph, has
been verified: namely the sudden, complete and enduring recovery of the children
Alfredo and Isilia Chávez León, who were both restored to health at the same
time from broncho-pulmonitis, a sickness accompanied by high fever,
dyspnoea and cyanosis in patients, and usually caused by chronic malnutrition'.
After the recognition of this miracle, Pope John Paul II on the 13th of
March 2001, during a public ordinary consistory for the canonization of the
Blessed, solemnly pronounced: "By the authority of Almighty God, of the holy Apostles Peter and Paul and of Our
own, We declare that: ...the Blessed Joseph Marello... be inscribed in the Album
of Saints on 25th November 2001".
Homily
of John Paul II
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