There
were no strings attached---He simply loved his neighbor
Good Samaritan public domain |
IT MAKES SENSE TO ME
By Larry Peterson
One of
the most famous Gospel readings is the one we all know as the Parable of
the Good Samaritan. What follows is about someone
who may be among the greatest Good Samaritans of all time, a man we know
almost nothing about.
Servant
of God and Stigmatic, Anna Louise Lateau, passed away at the age of
thirty-three. What is extremely interesting is the fact that Louise
would never have lived into her fourth month of life if it wasn't for a
stranger whose name was Francis Delalieu.
The
Lateau family was literally near death. The father, Gregory, had died from
smallpox just three months after Louise had been born. Adele, with
three little children, was still bedridden after having a very rough
time giving birth to Louise. Louise, still an infant, had also contracted
smallpox. The oldest child, three-year-old Rosina, was trying to be the
in-house caregiver which included taking care of two-year-old Adelina.
The local
doctor, overwhelmed with this smallpox epidemic, had stopped by about a week
after Gregory's death to check on the family. He did his best to show Rosina
what to do. He knew it was hopeless and was sure he would soon come by and find
them all dead. He told his friend, Francis Delalieu, about the family.
Try to
imagine how this newly widowed mother of three babies, with no money, was
feeling. The despair and hopelessness must have been unbearable as she watched
her three children quietly dying before her eyes. Weakened to a point where she
was unable to get out of her bed, she was probably just praying that she would
not be the first to die, leaving them alone. And suddenly the front door opened
and there was Francis Delalieu. God was listening after all.
Francis
immediately took charge. First, he cleaned up the children. Then he reassured
them and left to acquire food and necessities. This man, this stranger, surely
had the love of Jesus in his heart. He was risking his own life by being in a
smallpox-infected household. He was spitting into the eye of the storm as he
cleaned, fed and cared for the little children. This was, after all, 1850 and
not 2017. They did not even have running water.
I have
been (as have many others) a primary caregiver to someone seriously ill.
Some caregivers are helping to nurse their loved one back to health after
a serious surgery or accident. The upside to this type of caregiving is that an
end is in sight because a reachable goal is possible ie;, recovering from open
heart surgery.
Then
there is the alternative of caring for someone who is terminally ill. The goal
in these cases is to help your loved one live as peacefully and as comfortable
as possible until God calls them home. And then you have a person like Francis
Delalieu. The only possible motivation he might have had to step into this
situation was that of a Good Samaritan. There was no family connection. There
were “no strings attached”. He simply LOVED his neighbor.
Who was
this man? Who was this stranger who came into a household that was a breeding
ground for smallpox and had three babies with a bedridden mom living there and
all were near death? Who does this kind of thing simply out of kindness and
compassion? Who would stay for almost two and a half years until the mother and
children were once again healthy? Francis Delalieu is that person. There are
many like him but most are unheralded and unheard of.
All we
can seem to find out about Francis Delalieu is that he was a farmhand or a
laborer and that he lived in or around the small town of Bois d' Haine, in
Belgium. That is about it. It is known he took Adele Lateau and her children
under his care and nurtured them all until they were well. After that period of
time Francis seems to have vanished. There seems to be no record of him after
that point in time which would be around 1853.
Anna Louise Lateau
was gifted with the Stigmata in the year 1868. For
the rest of her life, her nourishment was only the Holy Eucharist and a few
glasses of water per day. She became one of the most famous stigmatists of the
19th century. Francis Delalieu, was just an unknown man who stepped up and took
care of his neighbor just like the Good Samaritan in Jesus’ parable. I am sure
his reward has been great in heaven. When God is involved, all things are
possible.
Copyright©Larry
Peterson 2020 (original published in 2017)
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