While in Cairo, Egypt, I attended a lecture in 1973 by the late Coptic Orthodox Pope Shenouda III in which he said "Do not think that heaven is for saints. Heaven is for ordinary people." He showed that after thousands had their fills of bread, Jesus asked his disciples to pick up the left-over. The disciples picked up seven basketfuls of broken pieces that were left over. Fr. Dr. Louis Hazboun, professor of the Catholic Institute/University in Lebanon wrote a commentary in Arabic on the miraculous augmenting of bread that Jesus performed then and saw the Eucharistic banquet in the distributed bread (here).
In the 20th century, quite a few blessings came to us through the apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary Mother of God to the children in Fatima in 1917 and subsequently the phenomenon watched by 60,000 persons on October 13th of the same year in Fatima of the Sun dancing and coming closer to them showing miraculously the Blessed Virgin Mary on it...It was a moment for them to kneel and ask God for forgiveness of sins...
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In 1925, Pope Pius XI canonized Thérèse; the Little Flower of Lisieux which I visited in 1982 in France and saw her golden hair that she had cut when she entered the Carmel exceptionally at the age of 15. Saint Thérèse wrote her "Story of a Soul" on order of her superior and sister - a book that was soon translated to more than 15 languages. You may wish to read an excellent book about this child of Jesus online here. On Sunday October 19, 1997, Pope Saint John Paul II made Saint Thérèse a doctor of the Church. He himself promoted the mercy of God which we all need...
He also signed a declaration making the mystical theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar a cardinal of the Church.
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I am indebted to Fr. Georges Farah as he entrusted me to give lectures to young adults and adults at Jesus the King Melkite Catholic parish in Toronto from 2004 to 2010. See here one of his most impressive talks on the Dormition of the Mother of God.
Another influential Christian philosopher who passed away in November 2014 is René Girard. Bishop Robert Barron commented on his contribution here. He also wrote in First Things an article titled "Are the Gospels Mythical ?" here.
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Another yet active pastor inspired by Paul Antaki the Great is the current pastor of St. Cyril's parish in Heliopolis, Egypt: Fr. Rafic Greiche.
I wish to end this post with a hymn to the Lord: Love Divine sung at St. Anne's Cathedral in Belfast here.