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Editorial: Hugo Chavez Found His Way Home: May He Rest in Peace; May the False Ideology He Championed Die with Him

The great Christian revolution has been to convert pain into fruitful suffering and to turn a bad thing into something good.(St Escriva)


What intervened to effect such a change in Hugo Chavez? One word - and a big one - the disease the whole world fears, cancer. It's devastating and painful effects in Hugo Chavez led him to see with clarity the deeper mystery of life. His final response shows all those - with the eyes to see - the mystery of human suffering and the meaning of mercy.

Hugo Chavez is dead

Hugo Chavez is dead

CARACAS, Venezuela (Catholic Online) - Back in 2008 the now deceased president for life of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, insulted Jorge Liberato Urosa Savino, the archbishop of Caracas, in a public diatribe. He was well known for them. He called this holy man of the Lord and His Catholic Church a "troglodyte" for trying to "scare people about communism."

In fact, the dictator who ruled the people of that beautiful nation with an iron hand was ever ready with a mouth full of insults against the Catholic Church into which he had been baptized. He went further. He demanded that the Cardinal be removed from office by the Pope.

Later that same year he railed against the Pope claiming he was "no ambassador of Jesus on earth, because the true Jesus is in the people and in those of us who fight for justice and the liberation of the meek." Make no mistake; the man was in the grips of the counterfeit ideology which he championed. 

Coming to the defense of the Cardinal back in 2008 was Bishop Jesús González de Zárate Salas of Caracas.

Fast forward to March 6, 2013. The Catholic News Agency, one of the most accurate Catholic News sources in the world, reported that Hugo Chavez died 'in the bosom of the Church'. The report claimed that "a source in Venezuela has revealed to CNA that President Hugo Chavez died "in bosom of the Church" and received spiritual direction and the sacraments in his last days.

In announcing Chavez's death to the nation on March 5, Vice President Nicolas Maduro said the Venezuelan leader died "clinging to Christ." The source in Venezuela told CNA that during the last weeks of his life, Chavez requested spiritual direction and asked to receive the sacraments."

According to CNA, the same Bishop who defended the Cardinal in 2010, Bishop Jesús González de Zárate Salas of Caracas, the secretary general of the Bishops' Conference of Venezuela, has now called for national unity. He proclaimed the Gospel on local television by using this existential moment, the death of the President, to proclaim the heart of the Christian message.

He told a local television reporter, "At this time let us all put forth our best sentiments. Death is not the end of our life. Death only opens the way to a life of complete happiness, at the side of God our Father." The Bishops comment is certainly worthy of his name, Jesús, and instructive for all of us.

During the late President's struggle with cancer in April of 2012, he went home to Barinas, where he had been raised in the Church, to attend Holy Week services. He sought prayers for his healing and requested that he be remembered at Holy Mass. He sought help for his suffering in the Sacrament of Anointing of the sick, from none other than Cardinal Urosa .

Another highly credible news source, the National Catholic Register (the good NCR) confirmed these reports that the former President of Venezuela died in a state of grace: "At 4:15pm on Tuesday, March 5, the death of Chavez was confirmed.A source from the Catholic Church in Venezuela told the Register on the condition of anonymity that Chavez died as "a practicing Catholic, assisted by the sacraments, which he constantly requested in the last period."

What intervened to effect such a change in Hugo Chavez? One word - and a big one - the disease the whole world fears, cancer. It's devastating and painful effects in Hugo Chavez led him to see with clarity the deeper mystery of life. His final response shows all those - with the eyes to see - the mystery of human suffering and the meaning of mercy.

The Catholic Church which welcomed Hugo Chavez home to her Sacraments is the same Church which plunged him into those waters of Baptism all those years ago. We who bear the name Catholic are privileged to belong to that same Church. We should respond with her mind and her heart to the news of the return of one of our members.

St. Jose Maria Escriva wrote of what called 'the Christian Revolution in these words: "The great Christian revolution has been to convert pain into fruitful suffering and to turn a bad thing into something good. We have deprived the devil of this weapon; and with it we conquer eternity." (St. Jose Maria Escriva, The Furrow #887)

All of us can draw comfort from the report that the man who once appeared so full of himself, was filled with grace, divine life, during those final days on earth.

We have published several pieces on the horrid legacy of Hugo Chavez and the regime which he ruled. However, we welcome this news of his final reconciliation and the promise of hope which it holds out to the whole world. No-one is beyond redemption. The Mercy of God is offered to all. For this, we should all rejoice.

As a Deacon of the Church I have had the privilege of being by the side of many who, in those final hours of life, have found the passageway to Life eternal. They have been the most moving experiences of my ministry and, as I have aged, have provided me with the great treasury of hope into which I reach as I offer the Good News, the Gospel, to men and women in an age which has lost its way. We ask our readers to pray for the people of Venezuela. May the legacy which leaves a lasting mark on that beautiful nation be the final one left by a son of Venezuela named Hugo Chavez.   

However, we also ask our readers to pray for an end to the ideology which not only deceived Hugo Chavez until his final days - but continues to imprison so many in our day and age. Hugo Chavez found his way home. May he rest in Peace; May the False Ideology He Championed Die with Him.


- - -

Pope Benedict XVI's Prayer Intentions for January 2013
General Intention:
The Faith of Christians. That in this Year of Faith Christians may deepen their knowledge of the mystery of Christ and witness joyfully to the gift of faith in him.
Missionary Intention: Middle Eastern Christians. That the Christian communities of the Middle East, often discriminated against, may receive from the Holy Spirit the strength of fidelity and perseverance.

Keywords: Hugo Chavez, death of Hugo Chavez, funeral of Hugo Chavez, Venezuela, socialism, marxism, dictator, Hugo Chavez Catholic, Jesse Jackson, Chavez funeral, Chavez wake, mourning Chavez, Chavez communist, Chavez socialist, Chavez Catholic, Deacon Keith Fournie

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1 - 8 of 8 Comments

  1. abey
    2 months ago

    Today Ideology comes by two names namely "Communism & Democracy" opposing each other & since each of the ideology has its religion behind it, the above two can be termed as Communism & Freemasonry(to the core of Ancient Egyptian beliefs) religiously called Atheism & Paganism respectively, in this case one complementing the other to either side of the same coin, by its back seat drivers. The truth of Christ is to neither of these & will become evident with the coming of His brightness, when all the untruths to the corruptions can no longer stay hidden.

  2. Ben Gillmore
    2 months ago

    That is an amazing miracle

  3. Harry Reyhing
    2 months ago

    Great article.How great is the mercy and grace of God.Anyone can be forgiven if he truly repents and finds salvation in Jesus and his church.All catholics should rejoice and never begrudge anyone coming to Jesus in his closing days.Provided that the person is sincere.But as Catholics we must also reject certain liberal heresies that crept into the church post vat 2 that most people go to heaven and Jesus is not the only way to salvation.This is heresy and goes against the teachings oF Jesus and 2000 years of church history.There is a hell and sadly the majority go there because God gave man free will and the majority choose to serve sin and self.But we are to reach as many with the gospel as we can and rejoice when anyone even a ruthless dictator finds God toward the end

  4. John from Nebraska
    2 months ago

    Did Hugo Chavez "die in the bosom of the Church," as described by an anonymous source to the Catholic News Agency? It is the anonymous source who says, "Chavez requested spiritual direction and asked to receive the sacraments."

    With respect, I question un-named sources. What seems more credible is that he died, according to Vice President Nicolas Maduro, “clinging to Christ.” I can see a man facing death "clinging to Christ." But Chavez made no bones about his disdain for the "Institutional" Catholic Church. While he may have reconciled with Christ, this does not mean he reconciled with Catholic Church hierarchy that he felt was interfering with his governing of his country.



  5. Doc G
    2 months ago

    I'm happy for Mr. Chavez. I hope the U.S. wakes up before it's too late.

  6. Msgr. Charles M. Mangan
    2 months ago

    +J.M.J.+


    Thank you, Deacon Fournier, for the good news about the return of President Chavez to the Holy Catholic Church. We give thanks to God through Our Blessed Lady. May he rest in peace. And may anyone harmed by his policies be healed and restored.

  7. Andrew M. Greenwell
    2 months ago

    I had not read about this before. This is good news. Venezuela would have been better off had he found the Lord earlier, but, the last shall be first and the first shall be last.

  8. David Graf
    2 months ago

    I just read, with great interest, the article by Deacon Fournier, about Hugo Chavez' death "in the bosom of the Church". I had just returned from Mass--and today's Gospel told about the "Prodical Son" who meekly came back to his father after having squandered his fortune on sinful pleasures. The father was so happy to see his return, that he ordered the fatted calf be brought forward and a feast was held in the son's honor. An older brother hearing the festive activity, asked his father "Why do you welcome home my brother who disobeyed you and wasted his fortune on worldly pleasures, while I, who loyally stayed home and worked the fields, get no such celebration?" The father answered him with something like this: "Yes, my son had gone away, but now returns, which gives me great joy!" Jesus usd this parable to explain the joy Our Father feels when one of his own returns to the fold. It seems "right and just" that this dictator returns to Christ through the Sacraments as did the Prodical Son in our Lord's parable in today's reading. Very timely indeed. If our Lord can welcome this sinner home, as hard as it may be, we must do the same--and be happy that he is indeed in the "bosom of the Church." Can we, as Christians do this? Let us hope so.

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