June is dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.  Fr. Vincent Capodanno, Servant of God and a devotion to the Sacred Heart came together for a miraculous story of mercy
told by Christine Trollinger about her dear big brother Bill.

In the spring of 1967, my younger brother Mike was reported
missing in action in Vietnam.  Although
it was just a clerical error on the part of the Marines, it gave us all a
horrible fright.  First, we received a
telegram stating Mike was missing in action. Then another informing us Mike had
lost his legs and was critical. Then followed the nightmare of a Marine officer
and chaplain arriving on my parent’s doorstep with the news Mike had died.
It turned out Mike was actually recuperating from a
minor wound in Tokyo, Japan. He called soon after we received the mistaken
report. At this point, my older brother Bill put college on hold and re-joined
the Marines. He asked for duty in Vietnam to be with our brother Mike. His hope
was to convince Mike to file under the Sullivan ruling which states that no
more than one family member has to serve in a life-threatening situation at a
time.
Bill wanted Mike in a safer place–out of the combat
zone– while he served in ‘Nam himself. Bill always looked out for his three
younger siblings, and he was determined to do so again. If Mike refused to
leave, Bill figured they could at least support one another.
On the day he was to leave for retraining, the last
thing my father did was to make sure Bill was wearing his Sacred Heart badge. My
parents had my sister, two brothers, and me consecrated to the Sacred Heart
while were babies. They made sure we made the First Friday devotions, which
were given to St. Margaret Mary. It was to her that Jesus revealed his promises
concerning devotion to His Most Sacred Heart.

Daddy jokingly told Bill: “It might not stop a bullet,
but it can keep you safe along the way. 
Just remember it is only as good as the faith you put with it. If you
wear it as a scrap of material and don’t follow Christ, it will be no help at
all. Remember what’s important–trust Christ and follow him. He will get you
home. Ask St. Margaret to help you too. That’s all the protection you really
need.”
With that last bit of unassuming faith from my father,
Bill left for boot camp wearing the banner of Christ–His Sacred Heart badge. He
landed in Vietnam on August the 21. Sadly, the very day Bill landed, Mike was
again wounded. This time his wounds were more serious. A land mine struck his
amphibious mobile unit and he was badly burned.
Because of the severity of Mike’s wounds, he was soon
transported stateside for medical treatment and the two brothers never saw one
another. Bill’s plans were now just to do his duty and return home to finish
college. He had a sense of duty to serve his country, and strove to follow
Christ even under difficult circumstances.  In order not to worry the rest of us, Bill
wrote letters home telling us he was assigned in Da Nang as a clerk. That was
our Bill; always protecting others. His ploy worked, and we believed that he
was fairly safe in DaNang.
But then, during the night of Sept. 21, 1967, I had a
terrible dream.  I was standing on a
small incline and I saw my brother Billy carrying a machine gun. I heard a
horrible sound of rockets and mortar going off. In my dream I screamed: “Run,
Billy, run!” And then a big flash and explosion landed close to him. Through
the smoke and fire I saw him lying wounded. Both of his hands were gone and
there was blood everywhere. He was moaning in pain but I could not reach him.
My heart broke as I watched and tried to run to him. My beloved Billy was all alone.
I was so close to him and yet so far.
Then, suddenly, I saw a Catholic chaplain sprint over
to Bill. He too appeared to be wounded also but leaned over Bill and comforted
him. He prayed and anointed Bill as best he could. He was so calm and reassuring
to my brother. He said: “Don’t worry son. God is with us this good day.” I was
crying so hard by this time, I woke up from this awful nightmare.  As I always did as a child, I wanted my Dad
to sooth me from the nightmare. I got out of bed and called him at 1:30 am.
The phone barely rang once before Dad picked it up. He
was crying softly when he answered. To this day I don’t remember which one of
us said it first: “Billy is dead.” Dad and I related the exact same dream and
the exact details. We consoled one another, and clung to the hope that it was
just a warning. “Maybe it is just a sign we need to pray harder for Bill,” Dad
said. We both so desperately wanted to believe that.
 
One week later, Sept. 28, the Marines again paid a
visit to my parent’s home. This time there would be no phone call saying it was
a mistake. Instead, our nightmare was confirmed. Billy was dead.
The Marines reported that on September 21, while on
night patrol, Bill’s entire unit was caught in an ambush. They were trapped in crossfire
of rocket and mortar fire, which claimed the life of every man in the unit. My
brother Bill managed to survive alone until another unit found him. One of the
letters we received later, related how the Marines, who ministered first aid to
Bill before he died, had promised to honor Bill’s request: “Please thank the
Padre for helping me die well.”  They
unfortunately did not know the name of the priest who had administered the last
rites of the Church to Bill.  There wasn’t
one in their unit.
We were told Bill was at peace when he died on
September 21, exactly one month from the day that he had landed in Vietnam.
Christ kept his promise to protect those devoted to His Most Sacred Heart even
deep in the jungles of Vietnam. We never could locate the chaplain who helped
my brother. As time passed, we decided we would never be able to thank the
mysterious priest in this life.
My beloved father went home to meet his Lord on Valentine’s
Day, 1985. Before he died, he gave me His most treasured possession– the
tattered and bloodstained Sacred Heart badge that the Marines had returned
after Bill’s death.  He asked that if I
should ever find that wonderful priest who had helped Bill, to thank him
personally.
Many years had passed when I received an email one day
from a friend who had also served in Vietnam. He wanted me to read about a
wonderful chaplain from Vietnam who received the Congressional Medal of Honor
for his extraordinary service. The chaplain was known as the “Grunt Padre.”  As I opened the attachment and saw the
picture of the priest, my heart skipped a beat. It was the priest from my dream
of Bill’s death, all those years before. My father and I had both described him
to each other in the same exact detail. His name was Father Vincent Robert
Capodanno. He also had died in Vietnam in 1967.
Fr. Vince Capodanno
Reading the attachment, I learned that Fr. Capodanno
died of severe wounds. He was missing part of his right hand.  The story explained the extent of his
injuries. They were the same wounds of the priest in my dream.
 
The article stated that Fr. Capodanno was well known for
his council to his beloved troops. He was known to say: “God is with us this
good day.”  It was unbelievable–those
were the words he had said in my dream. 
Then reading the date of his death, I held my breath, blinked, and
looked at the date again. A shiver shot through me from head to toe. Fr.
Capodanno died seventeen days before Bill did.
As part of the communion of saints, Father Capodanno
was truly “A priest forever in the order of Melchezidec.” Father Capodanno was
the man whom Christ sent to fulfill the promise of the Sacred Heart Devotion
revealed to St. Margaret Mary: “I promise thee in the excessive mercy of My
Heart that My all-powerful love will grant to those who communicate on the
first Friday in nine consecutive months the grace of final penitence; they
shall not die in My disgrace nor without receiving their sacraments; My Divine
Heart shall be their safe refuge in this last moment.”     

Bill’s actual badge, Christine gave to Fr. Capodanno’s brother promoting his cause for sainthood.


—————————————————————————————                                                               
This story was originally published in Amazing Grace for the Catholic Heart By Christine Tollinger. She is an
inspired writer and blogs at Writing
for the Lord
.

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For more inspiration, check out Big Hearted: Inspiring Stories From Everyday Families. Your children will laugh while learning spiritual lessons with Dear God, I Don’t Get It! and Dear God, You Can’t Be Serious. 

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