Sunday, May 29, 2011

Spread the Word About the St. Jude Novena Blog


Thank you for visiting and supporting the St. Jude novena blog. Since establishing the blog in late November 2008, we receive nearly 1,800 first-time and returning visitors each month.

Let your family and friends know about this site. We do not advocate spamming people; however, our success at spreading the word about St. Jude and his faith-based power to help us in times of need and desperation can only be achieved with your assistance.

Please let people know of the blog's URL (http://stjudenovenablog.blogspot.com/).

God bless.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Article: Danny Thomas Puts His Life and Work on Paper


When I started this blog, one of the first inspirations I drew upon was the story of Danny Thomas, who perhaps is considered the most recognized American devotee of St. Jude (mainly during the last half of the 20th century). This week, I would to follow-up two previous posts on Danny Thomas (here, and here) with another article on the entertainer and devotee (source link here).

Since its inception, this blog has drawn visitors and readers from 140 countries. My hope is to find and draw attention to the inspiration of and work by devotees of St. Jude from around the world, such as The School of St. Jude founded by Gemma Sisia (here).

"Blessed is he who knows why he was born."

Danny Thomas, 77 years and 1 day old, is sitting on a sofa at his midtown hotel comparing the comedians of today with the ones of his generation. "Most of the new comics have about six or seven great minutes," Mr. Thomas says. "After that, they have to garbage it up to be out there for maybe 20 minutes. In our day, you did an hour."

He raises his left hand to his mouth, and gray smoke from the long cigar that is clenched between his fingers drifts over his not-quite-as-gray hair. He reaches up to adjust the black-rimmed eyeglasses that somewhat disguise his trademark large hook nose, a nose that three movie producers -- Jack Warner, Louis B. Mayer and Harry Cohn -- could not persuade him to change.

"The new comics' subject matter is not deep enough," Mr. Thomas continues. "They don't get to the core of the people. There's really no substance, no universality to what they're doing. There's no artistry there." He takes another puff. "They have one big problem. They have to start on top. They go on the talk shows or to the big comedy clubs and the first time out they must be scared to death. They have no place to stink. We did. Oh, did we stink!" An Autobiography

The tale of the days in which he stank, as well as the years in which he soared, is told in in Mr. Thomas's autobiography, "Make Room for Danny," which he wrote with Bill Davidson and which is being published by G. P. Putnam's Sons.

It is the story of Muzyad Yakhoob (his name was later changed to Amos Jacobs, and his friends still call him Jake), the son of Lebanese immigrants who was born in Deerfield, Mich., on Jan. 6, 1914, and grew up with his eight brothers and one sister largely in Toledo, Ohio. It is the story of a high-school dropout who went into show business with the dream of becoming a character actor. (It is a dream he still pursues; his daughter Marlo Thomas is working on a movie for the two of them to do together.) He was a character actor on radio, although one of his first radio jobs was making the sound of horses' hooves on a "Lone Ranger" show by beating his chest with two toilet plungers.

But he had a yen for comedy and after rough beginnings became a night-club star, with the encouragement and assistance of Abe Lastfogel, then the head of the William Morris Agency. He took the name Danny Thomas, combining the first names of two of his brothers, at the 5100 Club in Chicago in 1940.

Then came movies, followed by major success on television in the situation comedy "Make Room for Daddy," later known as "The Danny Thomas Show," which ran from 1953 to 1964 and is still seen in reruns. And he became a successful television producer, first with Sheldon Leonard and then with Aaron Spelling, creating such shows as "The Real McCoys," "The Andy Griffith Show," "The Dick Van Dyke Show" and "The Mod Squad." No One-Liners

But through it all, he remained a comedian -- a special kind of comedian. Danny Thomas does not deliver one-liners. "My people are inherently storytellers," he explains. "When I was a kid, the entertainment was somebody from the old country or a big city who came and visited and told tales of where they came from. And my mother was very good at it. She could not read or write in any language, yet she would see silent movies and make up her own scenarios."

Of his comic tales, the one that is his signature is known as the Jack Story:

There's this traveling salesman who gets stuck one night on a lonely country road with a flat tire and no jack. So he starts walking toward a service station about a mile away, and as he walks, he talks to himself. "How much can he charge me for renting a jack?" he thinks. "One dollar, maybe two. But it's the middle of the night, so maybe there's an after-hours fee. Probably another five dollars. If he's anything like my brother-in-law, he'll figure I got no place else to go for the jack, so he's cornered the market and has me at his mercy. Ten dollars more."

He goes on walking and thinking, and the price and the anger keep rising. Finally, he gets to the service station and is greeted cheerfully by the owner: "What can I do for you, sir?" But the salesman will have none of it. "You got the nerve to talk to me, you robber," he says. "You can take your stinkin' jack and..."

Mr. Thomas laughs. "The story has the fundamentals of real comedy," he says. "Show me a man or a woman in trouble, and I'll show you a funny man or woman. People can relate to it. They have all been in situations where they suffered anticipation and slow burn, and those are two great commodities in comedy." A Vow Fulfilled

Through the years Mr. Thomas has been known for his deep religious faith. (Bob Hope's one-liner on the subject is that his friend Danny is so religious the highway patrol stops him for having stained-glass windows in his car.) The classic tale about Mr. Thomas is that early in his career, when things were not going well and after his wife, the former Rose Marie Cassaniti, had urged him to leave show business, he prayed to St. Jude Thaddeus, the patron saint of the hopeless, impossible and difficult cases, asking the saint to set him on the right path. He vowed that if the saint did so he would build him a shrine. To this day, Mr. Thomas says, he believes in the saint, and still has conversations with him.

"After that, everything happened to me so quickly that it had to be more than a coincidence," he says. "I never prayed for fame and fortune. I wasn't trying to do anything but make a living. I was hoping that the radio producers would have more faith in my ability to play character roles. All I wanted was to get a house in the country, buy a station wagon, raise my kids."

The shrine he built, with the help of many other people, turned out to be the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. And, he says, there is no doubt in his mind that the hospital is his most important accomplishment.

"There's no question of it," he says proudly. "That's my epitaph. It's right on the cornerstone: Danny Thomas, founder."

He still spends much of his time raising money for the hospital. "We raised $92 million last year," he says, "and spent only 22 cents on the dollar to raise it."

It is, he is convinced, the reason he was born. A while back, he had a family coat of arms designed, with a family motto. "The motto is 'Blessed is he who knows why he was born,'" he says. "And I am blessed."

"I never prayed for fame and fortune," said Danny Thomas during an interview. "I wasn't trying to do anything but make a living."

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Sermon: St. Jude: An Icon of Hope


A sermon by Rev. Karen Siegfriedt of St. Jude the Apostle Episcopal Church, Cupertino, California, U.S.A., given October 29, 2000 (source link here)

Without hope, the human heart would break.

Today we are celebrating the feast of St. Jude Thaddeus, the patron saint of St. Jude the Apostle Episcopal Church in Cupertino. St. Jude is known as a symbol of hope; the patron saint of desperate causes. When you talk about St. Jude, you talk about the world in despair because Jude is the last stop. That is why so many sanctuaries of hope (such as homes for troubled children, cancer hospitals, and hospices) are named after Jude. Hope is an openness to the future of new possibilities, even in the face of darkness, despair, and evil. It is based on the conviction that with God, all things are possible even in the face of impossible odds. If having a patron saint is to have any meaning, then there needs to be a connection between a church's mission and its patron saint. So if Saint Jude is an icon of hope, then we as a parish must carry out that virtue of hope in our lives and in our own community of faith. If St. Jude is an icon of hope, then we who claim his patronage, must offer this place as a sanctuary of hope to those who are outside our community. How can we as a parish be faithful to our namesake? This is the topic of today's sermon on hope.

Michael Downey was a young man who was experiencing a lot of grief in his life. His father died much too young. His grandmother outlived her mind by 20 years. His cousin was left to die of a drug overdose while his buddies slept in the same room of a crack house. In addition to his personal losses, his sense of darkness was fed by the many losses and tragedies of so many of his friends and their families. And in that darkness, in that depression, questions poured out of his heart, such as: "What happens when what you once believed no longer seems believable? What happens when what you have staked your life on, no longer seems reliable? What happens to hope, when a person can no longer believe? Can you have hope, hope in God, when faith in God is gone?"

The answer is "yes". "When you can no longer believe, that is precisely when hope begins." It is when faith crumbles and love grows dim, that hope begins. For we do not hope for what we already have. We do not hope for what is already possible. Rather, we hope for what we do not have and cannot see. Hope is the willingness not to give up when our faith is shaky or absent. Hope does not try to determine how God's ways will be shown. Rather hope remains open to new and astonishing manifestations of God. It allows something to come into life that is not self-generated. So in other words, a person can lose her faith and continue on. A person can be bereft of love, and still exist. But without hope, a person usually does not survive long. For without hope, the human heart will break.

As I was preparing this sermon, someone asked me to address the desperate situation in the Middle East. Now there is a place that needs St. Jude. For centuries, Jews, Muslims, and Christians, have been fighting viciously for their right to the Holy Land. Years of hurt, shame, violence, disrespect, power struggles, and different value systems have plagued this area. Dialogue, forgiveness, compromise, kindness, and respect are absent. Is there a reason to hope? The answer is, YES. For without hope, the human heart will break.

Hope is an openness to a future of new possibilities. As Christians, we are to be mediators and ambassadors of hope. We need to keep hope alive in a world where evil challenges our capacity to hope; where evil paralyzes even the strongest among us. We keep hope alive by refusing to believe that either the death of people or the death of dreams is the last word. Now on what basis do we do that? Because of the resurrection of Jesus, we hold a different script in our hands. In spite of the crucifixion, when there seemed to be no hope, the story of God in Christ did not end on the cross. In fact, it was a new beginning. The death of Jesus and the continuation of his story, kicked into the universe an incredible spirit of God. This spirit of God in Christ became more powerful and far-reaching than when Jesus was alive. We are here today in this Christian Church, not because a terrible death ended a story, but because a terrible death began a new consciousness in humanity. Without hope, the human heart would break. Hope is different from wishful thinking. Wishing means to place before one's mind, a desired object or goal, and waiting for a favorable outcome. But hope is to remember what God has already done in history and what God has promised to do in the future. Hope is the realization that the love of God has permanently affected humankind and that the whole creation will eventually be lifted up to God and be made new.

Although little is known about our patron saint, Jude was believed to have been an apostle to Persia, now known as Iran. King Abgar of Persia, was dying from a terrible physical disorder which no doctor could heal. After examining the kings' faith in the healing power of Jesus, Jude laid his hands on the king and healed him of his infirmities. Because of this act of healing, King Abgar instructed his citizens to assemble and to hear the preaching of the Good News by Jude Thaddeus. It was in this manner that the gospel was spread to that area of Northern Iran.

So how do we as parishioners of St. Jude the Apostle Church preach the good news to the people of Santa Clara County and offer a vision of hope? Yesterday, the evangelism committee met with interested parishioners to talk about how we might further spread the "Good News" in Christ. Some reflected on the history of St. Jude's parish and spoke about its healing and outreach ministries. Some told personal stories of how this community welcomed them into a new or deeper relationship with God. This is evangelism at its best. We need to continue this tradition of welcoming, healing, and praying with others in a very intentional way. The challenge before us now, is to open our arms wider and embrace all those who need to hear a word of hope. Whoever you are, wherever you are on your journey of faith, you are welcome here.

You are the bearers of hope to this broken world. You hold a different script in your hand; a script of healing and wholeness; a script of hope. May the healing power of Christ which was incarnate in St. Jude as he healed and spread God's love, also fill your mind, body and soul, as you go out and spread the gospel of hope. For without hope, the human heart will break.

May Messages of Thanks


Publish your messages of thanks (and special intentions) to St. Jude for May here.