Padre Benedetto hit the mark when
he defined this mission and the charism of which we are speaking by the concise
and forceful expression, “a vocation to co-redemption.” On 27 August 1918, in his reply to Padre Pio’s
letter of the 21st of that month, in which he told him of the
mystical phenomenon of transverberation and his consequent painful anxiety,
Padre Benedetto writes as follows:
“All that is happening to you is the effect of love. It is a
trial, it is a vocation to co-redemption and hence a source of glory […] The Lord is with you. He is with you: patient, suffering, eager
love, crushed and trampled upon, heartbroken, in the shadows of the night and
even more so in the desolation of Gethsemane, he is associated with your
suffering and associates you with his own.
This is the whole fact of the matter, this is the truth and
the only truth. Yours is not a purgation
but a painful union.
The fact of the wound completes your passion just as it
completed the Passion of the Beloved on the Cross.”
This “vocation to co-redemption” of
sinful mankind was carried out by Padre Pio through his participation in the
sufferings of the crucified Lover who chose him to be a victim of love and
suffering.
From "Padre Pio of Pietrelcina, Letters I", by Fr Gerardo Di Flumeri OFM Cap.
From "Padre Pio of Pietrelcina, Letters I", by Fr Gerardo Di Flumeri OFM Cap.