
Orange, Calif., Mar 6, 2017 / 03:39 pm (National Catholic Register).- On Friday, Feb. 17, a rainstorm was raging in Orange County, California. During a lull in the storm, at around 5:00 p.m., Teresa Johnston left to walk an elderly neighbor’s dog.
“She was always like that—making or doing things for our neighbors. She would pick flowers from one neighbor’s garden, and she would give them to another neighbor who was sad, had a trauma, or was sick. That’s why they called Teresa the ‘neighborhood’s sunshine,’” said Teresa’s father, Dr. Roch Johnston, D.C.
When Teresa failed to return home around an hour later, her parents, Roch and Vera, became worried. “She was always like clockwork: leave our house, go to the neighbors, walk the dog for 30 minutes, and be back 40 minutes after she left our house,” says Roch.
After calling the owner of the dog that she was supposed to have been walking, the Johnstons learned that their daughter had never arrived to get the dog. “That’s when our radars went up. Our first concern was that she had been abducted,” he says.
Frantically, the Johnstons searched their neighborhood for Teresa. “One of my sons and I ran through all of the different paths and trails where she walks, and we climbed over the very tree that struck her,” says the father of seven.
Transported to the Hospital
What the Johnstons hadn’t known was that their daughter was already at the hospital. Teresa had walked only a few minutes away from their home when the 60-foot tree struck her. According to a Los Angeles Times article, a neighbor, who had heard the tree fall, came to Teresa’s rescue. While waiting in the rain for emergency response to arrive, the neighbor covered the unconscious girl with a blanket and held an umbrella over her. Firefighters removed Teresa from the scene without having to dig her out or to move any tree branches. Teresa was being transported to the hospital before her family even had an inkling that anything was wrong.
Unsettling Diagnosis
During their hunt for Teresa, Roch flagged down a policeman, who quickly verified that Teresa had been found, but he didn’t tell the Johnstons about the condition of their daughter. “We saw her in the emergency room just before they transferred her to CCU,” he recalls. “I felt faint when I saw her, and when they read the diagnosis, I almost passed out.”
The Johnstons learned that Teresa suffered multiple cranial facial fractures. On their YouCaring page, Misha Johnston, Teresa’s older sister, writes, “The base of her ocular orbit is fractured with possible damage to the optic nerve. There are fractures of her maxillary bone, her zygomatic arch, her mandible, her hard pallet, her clavicle, and possible compressions of her T6, T7, and T8. Also, there is intracranial bleeding in her right frontal lobe and right occipital lobe.”
The outlook looked bleak for Teresa, and she appeared to be declining because of swelling on her brain. The Monday after the accident, doctors took Teresa off the medical coma drugs, so she could undergo a five-hour surgery, which involved removing part of her skull to alleviate intracranial pressure due to excess blood. During the operation, doctors feared that she might have had a stroke—if this was the case, then it was likely that Teresa would never wake up from her deep comatose state.
Why Bad Things Happen to Good People
Most of us have stories proving how God has protected us in our moment of need, so it can be easy to think that prayer will keep us immune from accidents and tragedies. Fr. Alan Benander, O. Praem, Dean of St. Michael’s Prep in Silverado, California, has kept many vigil hours at Teresa’s bedside. Her parents are Third Order Norbertines, so they are particularly close to Norbertine community of St. Michael’s. He told NCR, “Prayer does not make us immune from accidents and tragedies simply because sometimes it is not part of the Will of God that we avoid a given evil. God allows such evils to occur to us in order to bring about a greater good (e.g., the salvation of more souls).”
Fr. Benander continues, “Thus, for example, Our Lord Himself […] asked that the ‘chalice of suffering’ be removed from Him (though adding, importantly, ‘not my will, but Thine be done’). However, this chalice was not removed simply because that was not part of the Divine Will; the Divine Will allowed Christ to suffer in order that a greater good might be obtained, namely, the eventual glorification of Christ, in his Sacred Humanity, in the Resurrection and Ascension, and the redemption of the entire human race.”
Tragedy Becomes Catalyst for Conversions
Within hours after Teresa’s injury, thousands of people all over the of the world—including in Australia, Norway, France, England, Scotland, Czech Republic, Israel, Jordan and Brazil—began praying for the young girl, who is known for her smile and generosity. As messages started pouring in, the Johnstons learned that their daughter’s accident has been the catalyst for conversions. “I have family members who were away from the church for years and have gone to confession. One of my daughter’s teachers sent me a letter saying she had stopped praying because she felt separated from God. Now she’s back praying on her knees for Teresa.”
He continues, “Another lady told us that she got on her knees immediately and started praying for our daughter. She thought of another friend that has cancer and then another friend. Teresa’s accident is causing people to pray for others not just our daughter.”
The consistent presence of the Norbertine Fathers at the hospital has also impacted strangers. “Not only has Teresa been able to receive the graces of priestly blessings and the Sacraments, but, also, other persons, both Catholic and non-Catholic (i.e., other patients, visitors, even hospital staff and media), have had opportunity to receive the Sacraments, blessings, and prayers from us priests, and simply an opportunity to talk to a priest about God and the Catholic Faith,” Fr. Benander explains.
Because the Norbertine priests were there visiting Teresa, they had the opportunity to administer the last Sacraments to dying people in the hospital and console their families. “All these graces have been given to souls there precisely because of the situation involving Teresa,” Fr. Benander says.
Teresa’s mother, Vera Johnston, writes on their YouCaring page, “There have been so many visible touches from above with His grace that bring us peace and consolation through this all. Our little queen is enthroned in the hospital bed, and God is using her now to shower His graces upon us all.”
Asking for the Intercession of Blessed James Kern
The family is asking that people pray for the intercession of Bl. James Kern, so that Teresa may have a complete healing. “At first, I didn’t want to leave anyone out, I wanted to pray to all of the saints for their intercession, but one of the Norbertine priests said that’s the wrong way to think about it. Whenever you pray for the intercession of any particular saint, all of the saints join in especially when this could be a miracle that could raise the canonization process,” Roch explains.
Bl. James Francis Kern (1897-1924) entered the Norbertine Order because he wanted to be a victim soul and to make reparation for a schism.
In 1916, while serving in the Army during World War I, he received a bullet wound in his lung that doctors thought would be fatal. He surprised them by living. Though he was still unwell, he went on to join the seminary of the Archdiocese of Vienna. “About this time, a sad event occurred in the Czech Republic. A group of Catholics separated themselves from Rome and founded the schismatic Czech National Church. Isidore Bogdan Zahradnik, a Norbertine canon of Strahov and a doctor of philosophy, also fell away and became a leader of the schism. […] James was deeply shocked by all this and decided to offer himself in atonement for Isidore,” according to Premontre.org, a Norbertine website.
In 1924, Fr. James Kern ultimately died due to his war injuries. On June 21, 1998, he was beatified by Pope John Paul. He only needs one more miracle to further his cause for canonization.
Eyes Open
As the Johnstons, and tens of thousands of other people, continue to invoke Bl. James Kern, Teresa’s condition has taken a turn for the better.
As of February 27th, Teresa’s sister Misha writes, “Teresa opened her eyes today—she is waking up! And she was moving her legs and arms around a bit (and getting annoyed at the nurse shining lights in her eyes, hitting the flashlight away with her hand)! I spoke to her a bit (telling her the whole world loves her and is praying for her), not sure if she understood any of that, but she is waking up! Thanks be to God!”
To help pay for Teresa’s medical expenses, visit her YouCaring page. As of Feb. 28, 1,154 donors have donated more than $95,000.
This article was originally published by the National Catholic Register.
[…]
As the shadow Church lines up its ducks in anticipation for elevation to the next papacy they stealthily smear would be opposition, cardinals like Müller who’ve had nothing but grief from His Holiness, beginning with Francis’ sudden ad hoc dismissal of then prefect CDF Müller’s finest clergy assistants in prosecuting abusive homosexual clergy. His response to the Cardinal’s question Why?, Pope Francis abruptly responded, It is not necessary for me to explain my actions. I’m the pope. So much for collegiality, never mind listening.
It was pope Francis who dismissed the civil conviction of child rapist [convicted on eight counts] Fr Inzoli. Then reversed his decision when the abuse scandal continued with cries of outrage. Should we be at a loss in finding rationale for Archbishop Cordileone being withheld appointment to Cardinal of major diocese San Francisco while McElroy Bishop of San Diego is? Should we expect more of the same suffered by Cardinal Müller for other viable orthodox papal candidates?Robert Burns may have said it best,
But Mousie, thou art no thy-lane, In proving foresight may be vain: The best laid schemes o’ Mice an’ Men Gang aft agley, An’ lea’e us nought but grief an’ pain, For promis’d joy!
The same people accusing Cardinal Muller of corruption are also responsible for hollowing out the Vatican Bank and wasting the Holy See’s finances to pay for gay sex orgies and a biopic about Elton John. Let that sink.
Like the current character assassination, the Synod on Synodality itself might also be a side-show…
A decoy to distract the Church from back-room work on “hot-button themes” by the ten study groups. Their paperwork will come several months after the Synod of October 2024 has possibly self-destructed. About which (and repeating from a recent posting), these ten questions from a peasant-layman in the back bleachers:
1.About the “East,” will the Eastern Orthodox Churches (estranged by Fiducia Supplicans) be sacrificed to a secularist/homosexualized church-within-a-Church?
2. About the “cry of the poor,” how to not exclude those who are impoverished spiritually and culturally (Centesimus Annus, n. 57), and how to respect “the right of the faithful to receive Catholic doctrine in its purity and integrity” (Veritatis Splendor, n. 113)?
3. About the “digital environment,” how to preserve analogue reality—like the Reality of the incarnate Jesus Christ—over a Nominalist digital cosmos and Kantian/Rahnerian theology?
4. About a “missionary perspective,” how to not displace the Deposit of Faith with more of a plebiscite sociology?
5. About “ministerial forms,” how to respect the “hierarchical communion” (Lumen Gentium) and not split from sacramental ordination a non-ordained female diaconate–as an unwitting stepping stone toward an Anglican-style (c)hurch, just as civil unions were a stepping stone toward the oxymoron “gay marriage”?
6. About “ecclesial organizations,” how to not dilute or eclipse the institutional/personal accountability of each Successor of the Apostles (Apostolos Suos,1998)?
7. On the selection, judicial role and meaning of “ad limina visits for bishops,” how to transcend zeitgeist intrusions into the particular (more than “polyhedral”) Churches?
8. On “papal representatives” in a missionary synodal perspective, how to conform a missionary “style” of listening to the prior and inborn natural law (!) about which the Church is neither the author nor the arbiter (Veritatis Splendor, n. 95)?
9. About the use of “theological criteria,” how to housebreak self-anointed theologians who would, procedurally, elevate their criteria/opinions above the Magisterium?
10.About the “ecumenical journey/ecclesial practices,” how to outreach, surely, but without eroding the contours of the sacramental Mystical Body of Christ, or the internal and serving “hierarchical communion” (Lumen Gentium, Chapter Three, plus the integral Explanatory Note)?