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Lourdes: A vibrant reminder of the universality of the church
by The Leaven
>> Continued from page 1 most profound healing miracles of Lourdes is penitents experiencing the grace that comes from sacramental confession.
“Sin can be a spiritual infirmity,” he said. “And the healing power of God can come to us through the sacrament of penance; it’s God’s grace that can heal us.
“Christ is the physician of the soul; my experience at Lourdes reinforced that for me.”
Father Stubbs learned about the opportunity to minister at Lourdes through archdiocesan priest Father Harry Schneider, who was a confessor there in 2019.
“Lourdes is my favorite Marian devotion,” said Father Schneider. “To serve there in the ministry was just an incredibly powerful and spiritual experience.”
Father Schneider said he gave Father Stubbs the application information with the hope that “he would have as wonderful experience as I did.”
Father Stubbs’ ministry was to Englishspeaking pilgrims.
“The way it’s set up,” he said, “there’s this building that has all these reconciliation rooms — and each one has a sign. For instance, mine had a sign that said ‘English confessor’ and then my name.”
Priests from all over the world stay together at an auxiliary residence, the Maison des Chapelains, and have opportunities to build friendships.
“There were about 30 other priests there,” said Father Stubbs. “There were several English-speaking priests — one from India, a couple from Nigeria, one from Scotland.
“But I was the only American priest.”
A typical day for a confessor begins with breakfast at 7 a.m.
“You fixed that on your own,” said Father Stubbs. “There was a coffee machine and bread, butter, jam and yogurt.”
The morning session of confessions begins at 9:30 and lasts until daily Mass at 11 a.m.
The midday meal is served buffetstyle at 1 p.m.
Afternoon confessions last from 3:30 to 6 p.m.; and the evening meal is served at 7:30.
“Some days, I would have both sessions [of confessions],” said Father Stubbs. “Some days, I’d have one or the other.”
Father Stubbs was especially moved by the universality of the Catholic Church on clear display at Lourdes.
“The people whose confessions I heard were from Ireland, India, the Philippines, Australia, England — all over the world,” he said. “And there were two times when I took part in international Masses.
“The basilica holds 20,000 people. It was filled up.”
Yet, Father Stubbs also met people who reminded him of home.
“I was at Lourdes during the pilgrimage of the Knights of Malta,” he recalled. “I heard someone call out my name.
“It turned out it was a man who had been a student at Washburn University [in Topeka] when I was chaplain at the Catholic campus center there.”
Another encounter from the Knights of Malta was the son of a deacon from Corpus Christi Church in Lawrence.
During his free time and for a week after his ministry, Father Stubbs was able to explore France.
He went to Toulouse, where he visited the tomb of St. Thomas Aquinas and also took trips to the cities of Albi and Carcassonne.
As a French major in college, he spent his junior year in France, and he found his ability to speak the language very helpful.
“There was one day, on my free day,” he said, “I went to the movie theater in Lourdes and I saw ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ in French.”
The days were arduous but rewarding. Father Stubbs said his most memorable experience from his trip to France was the confessions he heard.
Father Schneider understands that sentiment.
“As time goes on,” he said, “I often just stop and think about how incredibly healing and what an incredible gift is the sacrament of reconciliation.”
The message of Lourdes, according to Father Stubbs, is the healing power of God that comes through Mary.
But you don’t have to go to Lourdes to experience it.
“It can be useful,” he said. “But it is not necessary, because God is everywhere.”