A wonderful story from one of the catholic groups I belong to. Please read and enjoy.
THE WEIGHT OF THE HOLY MASS (From the Catholic Society of Evangelists Newsletter, August, 1999)
The
following TRUE STORY was related to Sr. M. Veronica Murphy by an
elderly nun who heard it from the lips of the late Reverend Father
Stanislaus.
One day many years ago, in a little town in
Luxembourg , a Captain of the Forest Guards was in deep conversation
with the butcher when an elderly woman entered the shop. The butcher
broke off the conversation to ask the old woman what she wanted. She had
come to beg for a little meat but had no money.
The Captain was
amused at the woman and the butcher. “Only a little meat, but how much
are you going to give her?”, he wondered.
“I am sorry I have no
money, but I’ll hear Mass for you”, the woman told the butcher. Both the
butcher and the Captain were indifferent about religion, so they at
once began to scoff at the old woman’s idea.
“All right then”,
said the butcher. “You go and hear Mass for me and when you come back
I’ll give you as much as the Mass is worth”.
The woman left the shop and returned later. She approached the counter and the butcher said. “All right then we’ll see.”
He took a slip of paper and wrote on it ‘I heard a Mass for you.’
He placed the paper on the scales and a tiny bone on the other side, but nothing happened.
Next he placed a piece of meat instead of the bone, but still the paper proved heavier.
Both
men were beginning to feel ashamed of their mockery but continued their
game. A large piece of meat was placed on the balance, but still the
paper held its own. The butcher, exasperated, examined the scales but
found they were alright.
“What do you want my good woman? Must I
give you a whole leg of mutton?” At this he placed the leg of mutton on
the balance, but the paper outweighed the meat. A larger piece of meat
was put on, but again the weight remained on the side of the paper. This
so impressed the butcher that he was converted and promised to give the
woman her daily ration of meat.
As for the Captain, he left the
shop a changed man and became an ardent lover of daily Mass. Two of his
sons became priests, one a Jesuit and the other a Father of the Sacred
Heart.
Father Stanislaus finished the story by saying, “I am from the Religious of the Sacred Heart and the Captain was my father.”
>From this incident the Captain became a daily Mass attendant and his children were trained to follow his example.
Later,
when his sons became priests, he advised them to say Mass well every
day and never miss the Sacrifice of the Mass through any fault of their
own.
If you like the story, share it with someone.*
Remember too that 'a Holy Mass a day keeps the Devil away'.
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