  
   You’ve heard rags-to-riches stories. Today, we celebrate the reverse. 
 
James of Oldo was born into a well-to-do family near Milan in 
1364. He married a woman who, like him, appreciated the comforts that 
came with wealth. But an outbreak of plague drove James, his wife and 
their three children out of their home and into the countryside. Despite
 those precautions, two of his daughters died from the plague, James 
determined to use whatever time he had left to build up treasures in 
heaven and to build God’s realm on earth.  
He and his wife became 
Secular Franciscans. James gave up his old lifestyle and did penance for
 his sins. He cared for a sick priest, who taught him Latin. Upon the 
death of his wife, James himself became a priest. His house was 
transformed into a chapel where small groups of people, many of them 
fellow Secular Franciscans, came for prayer and support. James focused 
on caring for the sick and for prisoners of war. He died in 1404 after 
contracting a disease from one of his patients.  
James Oldo was beatified in 1933. 
   Comment:  The death of those we love brings a troubling 
awareness of our own mortality. James had that experience when he gazed 
into a friend’s grave, and it brought him to his senses. He determined 
to use whatever time he had left to build up treasures in heaven and to 
build God’s realm on earth. Our time is limited, too. We can use it well
 or foolishly: The choice is ours. | 
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