In Mexico, Carlo embraced the priest nobody would touch; 72 hours later....-mdue - Chainityai

In Mexico, Carlo embraced the priest nobody would touch; 72 hours later….-mdue

Sebastián Ibarra had learned to measure distance by touch that never arrived. At 47, he served San Miguel Arcángel in San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas, Mexico, with the discipline of a man who had stopped expecting tenderness.

His days followed a strict rhythm: 7 a.m. Mass, confessions from 9 to 11, noon Mass, sick visits, rosary at 6, then dinner alone in the rectory. Routine was safer than hope.

The scars began when he was 8. A nighttime fire filled his family’s house with black smoke and feverish heat. His father saved him, but the flames reached the left side of his face, neck, and shoulder.

In 1967, in a small Mexican town, surgery could preserve life but not restore the face he had lost. The skin pulled tight. One eye remained partly closed. His mouth bent unevenly. Children learned cruelty quickly.

They called him monster, burned face, and later Freddy Krueger. Adults were more careful, but not kinder. Their eyes paused, softened with pity or hardened with fear, then escaped. Sebastián memorized that sequence before he reached manhood.

His mother told him God had marked him for a special purpose. When Sebastián was 17, he decided he would become a priest. At 18 he entered the seminary, believing the Church would accept the man the world avoided.

He was ordained at 25, but even holy spaces have human reflexes. The bishop embraced him during the ceremony, yet Sebastián felt the stiffness in the man’s arms. It was not hatred. It was recoil wearing vestments.

For 10 years he served rural parishes. In 1994, he was assigned to San Miguel Arcángel. He hoped a larger community, with tourists and markets and strangers from everywhere, would make his face less frightening.

Instead, the distance only multiplied. Parishioners received communion from his hands, then left quickly. Children hid behind skirts. People greeted him respectfully from across the market, never close enough for warmth.

My hands consecrated the body of Christ every morning, but those same hands rarely felt the warmth of another person’s grasp. That became the silent truth of his ministry, the wound beneath the wound.

Then August 2006 arrived in San Cristóbal, heavy with summer humidity and fair-season crowds. On Tuesday, August 8, after the 7 a.m. Mass, Sebastián prepared for the 11 o’clock service as visitors entered the church.

Among them was an Italian family: Andrea, Antonia, and their teenage son, Carlo Acutis. Carlo wore white Adidas sneakers, worn designer jeans, and carried a backpack shaped by a laptop. He looked 15, perhaps 16.

What Sebastián noticed first was not Carlo’s clothes. It was the boy’s gaze. Carlo looked at him without the usual flinch, without the little betrayal of shock. He listened through the homily and took notes.

The homily was about Christ touching lepers when nobody else would. Sebastián had preached it many times because he needed to hear it himself. Carlo wrote as if every word mattered, his pen moving steadily over paper.

After Mass, Carlo approached the altar. “Father Sebastián,” he said in clear Spanish with an Italian accent. “My name is Carlo Acutis. I am visiting with my parents, Andrea and Antonia, and I need to speak with you.”

In the sacristy, Carlo opened his laptop and showed him a website about Eucharistic miracles. It had photographs, maps, dates, and testimonies from Italy, Poland, Argentina, and Portugal. The work had the order of a researcher and the fire of faith.

Carlo said technology did not have to pull young people away from God. If they spent hours on the internet, he believed, someone should fill that world with evidence of the Eucharist and the reality of Christ.

They spoke for nearly 40 minutes. Carlo laughed easily about computers and spoke reverently about the rosary, the Virgin Mary, and the Eucharist. He was young, but his certainty did not feel childish.

Then he closed the laptop. The click sounded sharp in the small sacristy. He looked into both of Sebastián’s eyes, not around the scars, not above them, not safely at the floor.

“Father Sebastián,” he said, “I know nobody touches you.”

Sebastián could not answer. Carlo continued with impossible precision. He knew the priest had served 12 years in that parish, tolerated but not embraced, trusted for sacraments but avoided as a man.

Then Carlo said that in exactly 72 hours, on Friday, August 11, at 2:30 p.m., the temple would close for three full months. Plaster would fall from the north wall behind the altar of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

Engineers would discover colonial frescos hidden under paint and plaster for more than 200 years. One fresco, Carlo said, would show Christ embracing a leper. Seven people would be present: five women and two men.

The woman in the light-blue dress, always seated in the third pew on the left, would see it first and cry. She was the mother of Matías, an 8-year-old boy with severe cerebral palsy whom she kept hidden at home.

Carlo then did what nobody had done freely in years. He embraced Father Sebastián. Not a quick gesture, not a formal priestly courtesy, but a long, firm embrace that made the priest remember he had a body worth holding.

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