The Life of Saint Guido Maria Conforti
The Sign of the Cross
Guido Conforti was the eighth of ten children of Rinaldo Conforti and Antonia
Adorni.
He was born on March 30th 1865 at Casalora di Ravadese, in the
midst of a fertile land.
All the educational efforts undertaken by his
parents geared toward a specific goal, dreamed by his father: to have his son be
the future administrator of the farm and its properties.
Guido attended the school of the Christian Brothers in Parma, and he could have
very well been a successful manager.
Yet, God started to ask him a few
questions about his life.
On the way to school, Guido developed the habit
to stop in prayer in front of a huge Crucifix in the Church of Peace.
There was an intense conversation among the two of them: “I looked at Him, and
He looked at me, and it seemed he was telling me many things” used to retell
later Guido Conforti when he became bishop.
In that meeting with the
Crucifix, Guido felt called to the priesthood.
We can just imagine the
opposition of his father Rinaldo when Guido shared the news of entering the
local seminary.
But through the support he found in his mother, and the
strength he received from his daily dialogues with the Crucifix, Guido seemed
very determined.
While in the Seminary, Guido lived an austere life, detached from his natural
family, for seldom he received visits from his parents.
But he found in
his rector Blessed Andrew Ferrari, a great teacher and father.
Fr. Ferrari
later became Cardinal of Milan.
Still, Christ was not done with Conforti,
for as Guido was preparing himself for priesthood, he felt the vocation to
missionary life, too.
The spark came from reading a biography of St.
Francis Xavier This great Jesuit worked tirelessly in India and Japan as a
missionary, and died in Sancian in 1552, a small island facing China.
Millions upon millions of Chinese were waiting the hear Christ’s message, and it
seemed evident for Guido that he should continue the work begun by St. Francis
Xavier.
With this in mind, the young seminarian Guido approached both
Jesuits and Salesians, sharing through letters his willingness to go overseas.
These inquiries turned out to be a great disappointment for Guido.
The
Jesuits answered back, saying that they could not assure Guido that he would
leave for missionary work.
And Don Bosco, the founder of the Salesians,
asked one of them to send a Thank You note for the offering received, but no
answer came about Guido’s request to join them.
As Guido was struggling alone with his missionary dream, he was also
experiencing some nervous related illness.
He would pass out for a few
hours, and he seemed out of breath.
This almost precluded his priesthood
ordination.
His classmates would be ordained, but Guido was asked to wait,
and get better.
Guido made trips to the local shrine of Our Lady and to
the Shrine in Bologna.
Our Lady gave him the strength to endure those
difficult months, and he finally received the grace of Ordination to the
Priesthood.
His first Mass was at the Shrine of Our Lady at Fontanellato,
on September 22nd, 1888.
This 23 year old priest, who knocked at the door of missionary congregations,
was becoming aware of a new call in life: the founding of a community totally
dedicated to the mission of Christ.
He asked the bishop of Parma to be sent into a parish, but instead he was told
to follow the young students at the Seminary.
But his project of founding
a community of missionaries never waver, even in the midst of social turmoil in
Italy, and the shortage of priests in the diocese.
In a Christmas letter
(1889) to a priest friend, he shares: “But please, keep this absolutely to
yourself, for it could be bad for me, as young as I am, to be even thinking and
harboring such daring plans.”