I've gotten two emales on this story ~ one with a sketch
by Rex Babin from my Uncle Paulie and one, from my friend Perla, with the
full story of how a man, one of the passengers on that plane, prayed the
Chaplet of Divine Mercy for the first time while on a business trip to
NY ~ a booklet on Divine Mercy helped him have the grace, at the 3:00 Hour,
to pray, "God, be merciful to us." as the plane was going down. Divine
Mercy Sunday is celebrated the week after Easter ~ this year it falls on
April 19, 2009 ~ and our church, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, will be celebrating
this Feast of Mercy in a big way ~ all are welcome to come.
God
Be Merciful To Us
By Felix Carroll (Feb 4, 2009)
A banker on a business trip in New York City, Fred Berretta
had just checked into his hotel room. He had about 20 minutes down time
before he had to meet his colleagues.
For some reason he decided to clean out his briefcase,
something he hadn't done in a long time. As he emptied it out, he came
across a booklet he had stuffed into a pocket years ago on praying the
Chaplet of The Divine Mercy. He recalls having prayed it a few times years
ago. But by Jan. 15, 2009, it was a good intention mislaid — among spreadsheets
and quarterly reports and matters that seemed far more pressing.
Only two weeks prior, Fred had made a New Year's resolution
to try to get into better spiritual shape. Here in this hotel room was
an opportunity to fulfill it. So he followed along in the booklet and prayed
the chaplet, a prayer our Lord gave to St. Maria Faustina Kowalska in the
1930s during a series of revelations that have sparked the modern Divine
Mercy movement.
The time happened to be 3 o'clock, known as the Hour of
Great Mercy, when Jesus died on the cross. Fred would consider that detail
the following day — as he was preparing to die.
He would be among the 155 people to board a jet airliner
at LaGuardia Airport bound for Charlotte, N.C., his home town. Ninety seconds
after takeoff, the jet would apparently hit a flock of geese, the engines
would explode, and the plane would lose power at 3,200 feet. The aircraft
would be out of reach from any airfield. It would lose thrust and altitude.
Everything would become eerily quiet. Fred would cinch his seatbelt. His
left hand would clutch the armrest, his heart would race, his face would
be flush.
He would think about his family — his wife and four young
children. He would think about God, about death, about trust, about an
extraordinary promise made by Jesus that he read the previous day in that
booklet.
"Prepare for impact," the pilot would say over the PA
system.
What was the promise? Suddenly, it would come to him,
the last passage he read before heading off to his meeting. Jesus said
to St. Faustina, "This is the hour of great mercy. In this hour,
I will refuse nothing to the soul that makes a request of Me in virtue
of My Passion." (Diary of St. Faustina, ¶1320)
As the ground surged into view, Fred would look at
his watch. It would be 3:30, the Hour of Great Mercy!
"I prayed with every fiber of emotion and sincerity I
could muster, 'God, please be merciful to us,'" Fred would recall two weeks
later.
'Miracle on the Hudson'?
You've probably heard about the crash landing of Flight
1549 in the Hudson River on Jan. 15. No one was seriously injured. Politicians
and news anchors quickly dubbed it the "Miracle on the Hudson." In the
history of aviation no jet airliner had ever made an emergency landing
on water without casualties.
Then, there were the news images of a US Airways Airbus
floating gently down the frigid Hudson, like some sort of breaching, people-friendly,
aquatic creature. The passengers stood on its wings, calmly awaiting rescue.
Amidst all the news of economic collapse, of tens of thousands of layoffs
on a weekly basis, of families in peril, of a reckoning at hand for a culture
of greed, this plane, these passengers, its pilot, all served as a sort
of restorative balm on our nation's collective conscious.
The story made you gasp, gulp hard, smile widely, and
be thankful. Thankful for what? For good news. For heroes in the pilot,
Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger, and the rest of the crew. Thankful in the
knowledge that in the panic-filled moments when the plane lurched to a
stop it wasn't every man and woman for himself or herself. Thankful that
humanity's better nature was on display. Thankful the incident wasn't terrorist-related,
but apparently geese-related. Thankful that a guy like Fred Berretta, 41,
would live to walk through the door of his home once again, hug his wife
and children, and make sure they knew he loved them — that he always had
and that he always will.
Vinny Flynn who?
For devotees of Divine Mercy, Flight 1549 serves as further
proof that the Lord keeps His promises.
We may never have learned Fred Berretta's story if it
weren't for Vinny Flynn. Following the crash, Fred felt compelled to send
an email of thanks to Vinny, the former executive editor at the Marian
Helpers Center, in Stockbridge, Mass. Though Vinny and his family are seen
daily at 3 p.m. (EST) on EWTN singing the Chaplet of The Divine Mercy from
the National Shrine of The Divine Mercy in Stockbridge, Fred had never
heard of Vinny until about two hours before he boarded Flight 1549.
Following morning meetings on Jan. 15, Fred found himself
in the unusual position of having some free time on a business trip. It
was noon. He stepped inside Manhattan's St. Patrick's Cathedral. He stayed
for the 12 p.m. Mass. Afterwards, he went into St. Patrick's gift shop.
A book caught his eye — Vinny's 7 Secrets of the Eucharist (Mercy Song
Ignatius, 2006), which, with citations from St. Faustina's Diary, gives
a greater understanding of the mystery of the Eucharist. Fred also purchased
a St. Michael's scapular.
In an interview with thedivinemercy.org this week, Fred
explained what happened next:
"I got into a cab and went to the airport," he said. "My
flight was delayed about 15 minutes, so I sat there and started reading
Vinny's book. I was really taken by it. I boarded the plane and continued
to read. Just as we were rolling out for takeoff, I put the book away and
closed my eyes and began to reflect on what I had been reading. Then, I
heard the impact, then the explosion, and the plane shook violently. I
was sitting in seat 16A, which is behind the wing. I could see smoke coming
out of the left engine. You could smell the jet fuel."
As soon as Fred, a private pilot, realized the second
engine was also not functioning, he became tense, like everyone else around
him.
He heard some cries from the cabin.
"Some of us looked at each other," he said. "There was
nothing to be said. I knew that the only thing I could do was pray."
A Resolution
These were the other things he knew: This sleek, high
performance jet airliner had suddenly and irreversibly become a 73-ton
glider sinking fast above one of the nation's most densely populated regions.
It would touch down somewhere, somehow, very soon, at a speed of about
120 mph. The chances of survival were almost nil.
He thought about his family, how hard his death would
be on them. Indeed, that was the most painful part of the experience for
him, his concern for them.
He thought about the very thing all these years that seemed
to stand in the way of growing deeper in his faith. It came down to this:
trust. He didn't have much. Ever. He had once fancied himself among the
titans of commerce. He once trusted that money would bring security and
peace of mind. This flight wasn't the thing that taught him otherwise.
Rather, it was this past year. The bottom fell out of the economy, and
with it, much of Fred's savings of the last 20 years.
By Christmas, the self-described "half-hearted Catholic"
knew in his heart the only security in the world is the security found
in God, which led to his New Year's resolution; which led to him praying
the chaplet in a hotel room; which led him to buy Vinny's book; which led
him to close his eyes in seat 16A, his trajectory heavenward, and reflect
upon how God is real and He loves us and that He wants us to turn to Him
in trust.
Which is exactly what Fred did when he suddenly realized
it was the Hour of Great Mercy and he would probably be dead in a matter
of seconds. He trusted, truly, for the first time.
All these fragments of thought seemed to piece themselves
into place. The plane was going down, yet everything was making sense.
He admits he was in shock. But he also felt at peace, a deep peace. God
had allowed him to find the Divine Mercy booklet in his briefcase. God
had steered him to Vinny's book. God did all this, he thought, to prepare
him for death.
He hunched over in his seat to brace for impact. He prayed
for God's mercy. Then he prayed two Hail Marys and one Our Father. He made
it halfway though a prayer to St. Michael, the archangel, when the plane
hit the water, came to a stop, and bobbed up and down like a toy in a kiddy
pool.
'True Peace'
"Under the most precarious situations I could ever imagine,"
says Fred, "God taught me what true peace is all about — that it's found
in accepting God's will. That we must try our best in this life, but not
sweat the small stuff, and hand control over to God."
One more thing to mention. A couple weeks before the flight,
Fred had prayed the Rosary for the first time in years. He had recently
learned of the 15 promises that, as legend has it, the Virgin Mary made
to St. Dominic and Blessed Alanus to all who pray the Rosary with a faithful
heart. Fred remembers thinking at the time, "Are those promises real?"
He feels he recently received his answer.
"I still have my boarding pass from the flight," Fred
said this week, "and I couldn't help but to notice all the 15s associated
with the flight. We left on Jan. 15, from gate 15. It was Flight 1549,
with 155 passengers. Also, it took off during the 15th hour, by military
time, which is what the world of aviation uses. I smiled when it hit me
later. There was my answer right there."
He's vowed to embrace the Eucharist, thanks to Vinny;
the Rosary, thanks to all those 15s; and the Chaplet of Divine Mercy, thanks
to that booklet.
God was doing more than preparing him for death: God was
preparing him for life.