Matt can be considered
the patron of men and women struggling with alcoholism.
Matt was born in Dublin,
where his father worked on the docks and had a difficult time supporting his
family. After a few years of schooling, Matt obtained work as a messenger for
some liquor merchants; there he began to drink excessively. For 15 years—until
he was almost 30—Matt was an active alcoholic.
One day he decided to
take "the pledge" for three months, make a general confession and
begin to attend daily Mass. There is evidence that Matt’s first seven years
after taking the pledge were especially difficult. Avoiding his former drinking
places was hard. He began to pray as intensely as he used to drink. He also
tried to pay back people from whom he had borrowed or stolen money while he was
drinking.
Most of his life Matt
worked as a builder’s laborer. He joined the Secular Franciscan Order and began
a life of strict penance; he abstained from meat nine months a year. Matt spent
hours every night avidly reading Scripture and the lives of the saints. He
prayed the rosary conscientiously. Though his job did not make him rich, Matt
contributed generously to the missions.
After 1923 his health
failed, and Matt was forced to quit work. He died on his way to church on
Trinity Sunday. Fifty years later Pope Paul VI gave him the title
venerable.
COMMENT:
In looking at the life of Matt Talbot, we may easily focus on the later years when he had stopped drinking for some time and was leading a penitential life. Only alcoholic men and women who have stopped drinking can fully appreciate how difficult the earliest years of sobriety were for Matt.
In looking at the life of Matt Talbot, we may easily focus on the later years when he had stopped drinking for some time and was leading a penitential life. Only alcoholic men and women who have stopped drinking can fully appreciate how difficult the earliest years of sobriety were for Matt.
He had to take one day
at a time. So do the rest of us.
QUOTE:
On an otherwise blank page in one of Matt’s books, the following is written: "God console thee and make thee a saint. To arrive at the perfection of humility four things are necessary: to despise the world, to despise no one, to despise self, to despise being despised by others."
On an otherwise blank page in one of Matt’s books, the following is written: "God console thee and make thee a saint. To arrive at the perfection of humility four things are necessary: to despise the world, to despise no one, to despise self, to despise being despised by others."
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