The Life of Saint Guido Maria Conforti
The Love of God's People
Bishop Conforti dedicated a lot of time in prayer, even though
he was not a monk. In the serenity of that “nest of eagles,” as he used to call
his community, and with the fresh air of his native Parma, he regained his
strength. On September 16, 1907 Pope Pius X sent Conforti a letter, asking him
to become collaborator of the dying bishop of Parma, Bishop Magani. The Pope
began his letter with these words: “It’s two of us who are asking you this great
favor, a service to be accepted at any cost and personal sacrifice.” It was a
request from both the Pope and the Bishop of Parma, and Conforti accepted with
the words “On the tomb of the Apostles, I now vow to die on the Cross.”
Bishop Magani died soon after, and Conforti was a “missionary in his land,”
ready to combat battles from many fronts. His heart was saddened by the
departure of many priests of the diocese. There was social rebellion in Parma,
with known anti-clericalism, which undermined the spiritual and social growth of
the city and surrounding farming communities. Bishop Conforti found himself
trying to fight religious ignorance and indifference, with a gentle yet firm
hand. It was his first pastoral priority.
Once, during a pastoral visit, as he was having dinner with one of his priests,
Bishop Conforti said to the priest: “Most Reverend Pastor, what a big difference
between this table cloth and the altar cloth. And yet, on the altar we feed
ourselves of the Body of Christ, while here we eat only earthly food!”
Because of his closeness to his priests and his people, because
of his many confessions and homilies, and because of his many visits to the
sick, the dying, and those in prison, Conforti’s fatherly love reached out to
many. He told his secretary, as he was coming home from a mountain village:
“Every pastoral visit reminds me of being a missionary! How hard it is to be
heading home!”
In many occasions, Conforti would find a group of poor beggars on the steps of
the Cathedral or in front of his house. It was the harsh reality of a city
divided in two, by the river. Those who lived across the river were poor
families, searching for their daily bread. And those on this side, affluent
people, yet looking for their own good. There was a Franciscan friar, Fr. Lino,
true man of charity, who encouraged the rich of the city for the need of change
in their lifestyle, and to consider the plights of the poor in their city. They
had become complacent in their ways, who thought of themselves as socially
advanced, while forgetting that they were first of all Christians. It was the
height of social hypocrisy, atheistic thought, social materialism, all of which
created an abyss of insensitivity and mistrust among the people.
Urged by a true missionary spirit, Bishop Conforti tried to bring peace among
them, and to bring the Gospel deeply in those fertile and generous souls. He
used to say: “They are not bad people, but ignorance abounds among them. We need
to bring them a piece of bread wrapped in a page of the catechism.” Bishop
Conforti was a pioneer in teaching the Christian religion in a systematic way.
He also thought about a liturgical reform, for he saw how his “people are
strangers to the Eucharistic Celebration.”
Bishop Conforti wrote a vast archive of letters and documents during his years
in Parma, which showed the wide scope of pastoral activities and the many
relationships he established in different fields, with the sole purpose of
extending the Reign of God. “Faith has always been the norm of my life and
thought. This faith, I have always desired to proclaim, the faith of the
apostles, the faith of the Church.”