The Sacrament of Confirmation is often misunderstood as a religious graduation or a rite of passage where a young person finally chooses their faith. In reality, it is much more profound: it is the completion of baptismal grace . Through the laying on of hands and the anointing with sacred chrism, the faithful are sealed with the Gift of the Holy Spirit . This isn't a human-initiated milestone, but a divine strengthening. As the Catechism teaches, it roots us more deeply in our divine filiation, incorporates us more firmly into Christ, and strengthens our bond with the Church. It is the moment the soul is fully equipped with the sevenfold gifts—wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, knowledge, piety, and fear of the Lord—transforming a passive believer into a spiritual soldier. To truly understand Confirmation is to recognize it as a commissioning for mission. By receiving this character, or spiritual seal, the confirmed person is strictly obliged to spread and defend the fait...
Blessed Solanus Casey was far from a cartoon character of holiness; he was a man of grit who found humor in the humble. Known for his penitential morning mash-up—where he’d pour his entire breakfast, coffee and all, into a single bowl—and his penchant for singing loudly and poorly to the playful chagrin of his brother friars, Solanus embraced the awkward and the ordinary. His life was marked by significant trials, from losing siblings to diphtheria to being ordained a simplex priest. Because he struggled with the Latin and German required for seminary studies, he was denied the faculties to preach formal sermons or hear confessions. Instead of harboring bitterness, he served as a humble porter, greeting the brokenhearted at the monastery door and even working little miracles that revealed God’s tender care. Perhaps the most charming was the ice cream miracle of 1941, where two cones left in a desk drawer for an hour on a sweltering summer day remained perfectly frozen, simply so he co...