September 18
Saints of the Day

 

Saint Joseph of Cupertino, 1603-1663, the Flying Friar; Joseph Desa
The Franciscan priest with many levitations, half of his 63 years in the air, full of humility and penance and prayers and good works of charity

    Born in Cupertino, Naples, his life is a continuous wonder of humility and prayer and mortifications and Levitations , it has been calculated that perhaps half of his life for some 63 years was spent literally above the ground.

    He was born under circumstances remarkably similar to those surrounding the birth of Jesus Christ. Giuseppe's father, a poor carpenter, was forced to leave town with his pregnant wife when he was harassed by creditors, and Giuseppe was born in a stable.  

    Starting at age 8, Joseph received ecstatic visions that left him gaping and staring into space. He was then regarded everywhere as a vagabond and a fool, and his mother in particular was harsh. His young companions called him "Boccaperta," "the gaper." because most of the times he was in ecstasies... however he was always ready to help anyone at anytime, in the street, in the garden works, with the animals, bringing stones to build anything, in the kitchen, but with his ecstasies broke so many dishes that he was not much wanted...

    Apprenticed to a shoemaker, at 17 Joseph applied for admittance to the Friars Minor Conventuals, but was refused due to his lack of education. He applied to the Capuchins, was accepted as a lay-brother in 1620, but his ecstasies made him unsuitable for work, and he was dismissed. Abused by his family, he continued his prayers, and was accepted as an oblate at the Franciscan convent near Cupertino. His virtues were such that he became a cleric at 22, a priest at 25. Joseph still had little education, could barely read or write, but received such a gift of spiritual knowledge and discernment that he could solve intricate questions.

    His life became a series of visions and ecstasies and levitations which could be triggered any time or place by the sound of a church bell, church music, the mention of the name of God or of the Blessed Virgin or of a saint, any event in the life of Christ, the sacred Passion, a holy picture, the thought of the glory in heaven, etc. Yelling, beating, pinching, burning, piercing with needles - none of this would bring him from his trances, but he would return to the world on hearing the voice of his superior in the order. He would often levitate and float sometimes for up to two hours.
    Even in the 17th century, there was interest in the unusual, and Joseph's ecstasies in public caused both admiration and disturbance in the community. For 35 years he was not allowed to attend choir, go to the common refectory, walk in procession, or say Mass in church because his constant levitation will disturb any event, even the meals of the community. To prevent making a spectacle, he was ordered to remain in his room with a private chapel. He was brought before the Inquisition and was completely exonerated of any trick of wrong-doing, and sent from one Capuchin or Franciscan house to another. But Joseph retained his joyous spirit, submitting to Divine Providence, keeping seven Lents of 40 days each year, never letting his faith be shaken.
    Pope
Urban VIII, having seen him in ecstasy, said that should Joseph die first, he himself would give evidence of what he had seen.

    In the Convent:
    Saint Joseph proved himself many times to be perfectly obedient. His humility was heroic, and his mortification most exceptional. His words bore fruit and wakened the indifferent, warned against vice and in general were seen to come from a man who was very kind and very virtuous. He was finally granted the habit. He read with difficulty and wrote with still more difficulty, but the Mother of God was watching over him. When by the intervention of the bishop he had been admitted to minor Orders, he desired to be a priest but knew well only one text of the Gospel, that of the "good shepherd" of Luke 15. By a special Providence of God, that was the text he was asked to expound during the canonical examination for the diaconate. The bishop who was in charge of hearing candidates for the priesthood found that the first ones answered exceptionally well, and he decided to ordain them all without any further hearings, thus passing Joseph with the others. He was ordained in 1628.

    At once his levitations began.
 
    Once, when he was living at their monastery at Orsini, his fellow Franciscans in chapel saw him fly up seven or eight feet into the air, kiss a statue tenderly and float off to his own cell.
    Sometimes when he started flying he would even pick up a fellow friar and lift him up beside him in the air, much to the consternation of the lifted. Only the command of his superior could bring Friar Joseph down for a gentle landing. When he came to, of course, he had no knowledge of what had been going on.
     He was allowed to attend a procession of Pentecost but with a fat brother grasping his arm to avoid his levitation, but there it goes up and up with the heavy brother!, and of course that called the attention of everybody and the procession was over... but what a procession!
     What were the Franciscans going to do with this unique friar?
     The solution they arrived at was to keep him out of sight, so that he wouldn't continue to disturb public order. For thirty-five years, therefore, he was forbidden to attend the community Mass and prayers, obliged to say his own Mass and prayers in a private chapel. From 1653 to 1657, church authorities even took him away from his fellow Conventuals and sent him, now to one, now to another remote monastery of the Capuchin Franciscans. When devoted followers located one of his "prisons," the authorities spirited him off to another.     

    In 1645 the Spanish ambassador to the Holy See, the High Admiral of Castile, having spoken for some time with him in his cell at Assisi, said that his wife too would like to meet him. The Father Guardian told him to go down to the church: Joseph said he would obey but did not know whether he would be able to speak to her. He entered the church, saw a statue of our Lady over the altar and straightway flew some twelve paces above the onlookers to its feet, and after a while, 'uttering his customary shrill cry', returned to the floor and then his cell, having said nothing to the Admiral, his wife and their large retinue. Instances could be multiplied up to the last month of Joseph's life.

    Toward the end of his life all divine consolations were denied the Saint, including his ecstasies. He fell victim to an aridity which was unceasing, and he could find no savor in any holy reading. Then the infernal spirits inspired terrible visions and dreams. He shed tears amid this darkness and prayed his Saviour to help him, but received no answer. When the General of the Order heard of this, he called him to Rome, and there he recovered from the fearful trial, and all his joy returned.

    He still had combats with the enemy of God to bear just the same, when the demons took human form to attempt to injure him physically. Other afflictions were not spared him, but his soul overcame all barriers between himself and God. He died on September 18, 1663, at the age of 63, in the Franciscan convent of Ossimo.
    On his deathbed, in September 1663, Giuseppe fell into a trance and floated gently to the steps of a chapel. He passed on to the Infinite the next day and h
e had celebrated Holy Mass up to and including the day before his death, as he had foretold he would do.

    Yes, I believe some Joseph Cupertinos are needed today, he is my friend.

Born 17 June 1603 as Joseph Desa at Cupertino, diocese of Nardo, near Brindisi in the kingdom of Naples
Died 18 September 1663 at Ossimo of a rapidly developed but severe fever; body is in the church there
Beatified
24 February 1753 by Pope Benedict XIV Canonized 16 July 1767 by Pope Clement XIII

Additional Information
http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/saintj04.htm
Saint: A Concise Biography
http://www.stthomasirondequoit.com/SaintsAlive/id748.htm
http://www.magnificat.ca/cal/engl/09-18.htm
http://www.americancatholic.org/Features/SaintOfDay/default.asp?id=1142
http://antigravitypower.tripod.com/StJoseph/
http://www.crystalinks.com/levitation.html
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Readings
Clearly, what God wants above all is our will which we received as a free gift from God in creation and possess as though our own. When a man trains himself to acts of virtue, it is with the help of grace from God from whom all good things come that he does this. The will is what man has as his unique possession.

-Saint Joseph of Cupertino, from the reading for his feast in the Franciscan breviary

Levitation:

    Levitation is an experience in which objects, people, and animals are lifted into the air without any visibly physical means and float or fly about.

    It can be produced by God, the devil, and, of course, by tricks, magic.

    In the Church, the champion is St. Joseph Cupertino.

    Saint Teresa of Avila was another well known saint who reported levitating. She told of experiencing it during states of rapture. One eyewitness, Sister Anne of the Incarnation, said Saint Teresa levitated a foot and a half off the ground for about a half hour.

    Gemma Galgani, a Passionist nun, reported levitating during rapture.

    In other religions there are reports of Levitation, like in Hinduism, Buddhism and Islam

Saints of September 18:

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