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My name is Marco Santini.

I am 69 years old now, but this story begins 18 years ago when I was 51 working the night shift as a security guard at San Gerardo Hospital in Monza, Italy.

It was the lowest point of my life, though I didn’t know that a dying 15-year-old boy was about to change everything.

You see, I wasn’t always a security guard.

For 15 years, I had been Father Marco Santini, a Catholic priest serving parishes throughout Lombardi.

I had celebrated thousands of masses, performed hundreds of baptisms, married couples, buried the dead, counseledled the brokenhearted.

I had believed with every fiber of my being that I was doing God’s work until everything fell apart.

The details of my downfall don’t matter now.

What matters is that in 2003, I made mistakes.

Serious mistakes.

Not criminal, not evil, but mistakes that shattered my reputation, broke my congregation’s trust, and cost me everything I had worked for since seminary.

The bishop had no choice but to remove me from ministry.

I was leasized, stripped of my priestly duties, forbidden from celebrating mass, cut off from the only life I had ever known.

The shame was unbearable.

I couldn’t return to my hometown where everyone knew Father Marco.

I couldn’t face my family, my former parishioners, the people who had once looked up to me.

I moved to Monza where nobody knew my story, where I could disappear into anonymity.

The only job I could find was security work at the hospital.

Night shifts, walking empty corridors, checking locked doors, writing incident reports that nobody read.

It was honest work, but for a man who once stood at the altar consecrating the Eucharist, it felt like exile.

The irony was cruel.

I spent my nights walking the halls where life and death played out their eternal drama.

Where people prayed desperately to the same God I felt had abandoned me.

I watched chaplain come and go, administering last rights, offering comfort.

Work that used to be mine.

Purpose that used to define me.

By 2006, I had been working those night shifts for three years.

Three years of silence, of spiritual emptiness, of going through the motions of living without really being alive.

I had stopped praying, stopped attending mass, stopped believing that God had any interest in a failed priest walking hospital corridors with a flashlight and a clipboard.

October 11th, 2006 was a Thursday night like any other.

I started my shift at 10.00 p.m.

walking my usual rounds through the different wings of the hospital.

Emergency room, surgical wards, pediatric oncology, intensive care.

Each department had its own rhythm, its own energy.

Some buzzed with activity even at night.

Others settled into the quiet vigilance that hospitals maintain in the dark hours.

Around midnight, I was making my rounds through the pediatric oncology ward.

This was always the hardest part of my job.

Children fighting cancer, families sleeping in uncomfortable chairs, the weight of tragedy that seemed to press down on everything.

I walked these halls quickly, efficiently, trying not to look too closely at the pain that filled every room.

Room 307 was on my checklist.

According to my paperwork, it was occupied by a 15year-old boy with acute leukemia.

Terminal case.

I was supposed to check that the door was secure, that there were no safety issues, that everything was in order.

Standard procedure.

I knocked softly and opened the door, expecting to find a sleeping patient and maybe exhausted parents keeping vigil.

Instead, I found something I didn’t expect.

The boy was awake, sitting up in bed despite the late hour.

He was thin, pale, obviously very sick.

But his eyes, his eyes were alert, bright, almost luminous in the dim room lighting.

He was looking directly at me as if he had been waiting for me to arrive.

“Good evening,” I said quietly, stepping just inside the door.

I’m Marco from security.

Just checking that everything is all right.

The boy smiled and despite his obvious illness, that smile was radiant, peaceful, almost joyful.

Everything is perfect, he said.

Please come in.

Something about his voice, his demeanor made me step further into the room instead of completing my quick check and moving on.

You should be sleeping, I said gently.

It’s after midnight.

I don’t sleep much anymore, he said simply.

There isn’t time for sleep.

But I’m glad you’re here, Marco.

I was surprised he knew my name, though I assumed he had read it on my security badge.

What’s your name? Carlo.

Carlo Acutis.

He gestured toward the chair beside his bed.

Please sit with me for a moment.

I should have declined.

I had rounds to finish, protocols to follow, a job to protect.

But something about this boy drew me in.

I found myself sitting down, looking at this dying 15-year-old who seemed more at peace than I had felt in 3 years.

“You work here every night?” Carlo asked.

Yes, night security.

I make sure everything is safe and secure.

Carlo nodded thoughtfully.

That’s important work, protecting people when they’re most vulnerable.

He paused, studying my face with an intensity that made me uncomfortable.

But you used to protect souls, didn’t you? The question hit me like a physical blow.

I felt my chest tighten, my breathing become shallow.

I don’t know what you mean.

You were a priest, Carlos said softly.

It wasn’t a question for 15 years.

You loved it.

You were good at it until something went wrong.

I stood up abruptly, my chair scraping against the floor.

I should go.

I have rounds to finish.

Please don’t leave,” Carlos said.

And there was something in his voice.

Not pleading, but a gentle authority that made me freeze.

“I know this is uncomfortable.

I know you don’t want to talk about it, but sometimes God uses the most unexpected moments to speak to us.

” God.

I laughed bitterly.

God doesn’t speak to me anymore.

He made that pretty clear three years ago.

Did he? Carlo tilted his head slightly, still looking at me with those impossibly wise eyes.

Or did you stop listening? I sat back down heavily.

All pretense of maintaining professional distance crumbling.

You don’t understand.

I failed.

I disappointed everyone who trusted me.

I brought shame to the priesthood, to my congregation, to the church itself.

God was right to remove me.

“What did you do?” Carlo asked gently.

The words poured out of me.

Words I hadn’t spoken to anyone in 3 years.

I fell in love with a parishioner, a married woman going through a difficult divorce.

I didn’t break my vow of celibacy, but I I let my emotions cloud my judgment.

I gave her advice that served my feelings rather than her spiritual good.

I became involved in her custody battle.

I took sides.

I used my position inappropriately.

I buried my face in my hands.

When it came to light, it destroyed everything.

Her marriage couldn’t be saved.

But now it was tainted by scandal.

Her children were embarrassed.

My congregation lost faith in me.

The bishop had no choice but to remove me from ministry.

And you’ve been carrying that shame ever since, Carlo said quietly.

As I should.

I betrayed my calling.

I broke my promises to God.

Carlo was silent for a long moment.

When he spoke again, his voice was gentle but firm.

Marco, can I tell you what I think happened? I looked up at him, this dying boy who somehow seemed to understand my deepest wounds.

I think you forgot that priests are human beings.

I think you forgot that making mistakes doesn’t disqualify you from God’s love.

I think you believed the lie that perfection is what makes someone worthy of serving God.

But I took vows and you kept the most important ones.

You said yourself you didn’t break your celibacy.

You didn’t steal money or abuse your position for personal gain.

You fell in love with someone you were trying to help.

And you let that cloud your judgment.

You made human mistakes while trying to serve God.

Tears were streaming down my face.

It doesn’t matter.

The damage was done.

People were hurt because of my actions.

Yes, Carlo agreed.

People were hurt, including you.

But tell me something.

In your 15 years as a priest, how many people did you help? How many souls did you touch? How many marriages did you save? How many grieving families did you comfort? How many people did you bring closer to God? I thought about the hundreds of weddings I had performed, the families I had counseledled through crisis, the people who had found faith through my ministry.

I I helped many people.

And did those good works disappear because of your mistakes? Were all those souls untouched by God because their priest was imperfect? I shook my head slowly.

Marco, Carlos said, leaning forward slightly.

God doesn’t need perfect priests.

If he did, there would be no priests at all.

He needs human beings who are willing to serve despite their flaws.

Who can understand suffering because they have suffered.

Who can offer forgiveness because they have needed it themselves.

But the church, the church is made of human beings too.

Sometimes the church makes mistakes in how it handles things.

Sometimes mercy gets lost in the need for justice.

But God is bigger than the church’s mistakes.

just as he is bigger than yours.

” Carlo reached over and took my hand.

His was warm despite his illness, and I felt something I hadn’t felt in 3 years.

Peace.

Can I tell you something, Marco? God isn’t waiting for you to become perfect before he calls you back.

He isn’t sitting in judgment, keeping score of your failures.

He’s waiting for you to remember that his love doesn’t depend on your performance.

How can you know that? You’re just a boy.

Carlos smiled that radiant smile again.

I’m a boy who talks to God every day.

And every day he reminds me that his mercy is bigger than our mistakes.

His love is stronger than our shame.

And his plans for us don’t end because we fall down.

He squeezed my hand gently.

Marco, you didn’t stop being called to serve God because you made mistakes.

You stopped answering the call because you thought you weren’t worthy.

But worthiness isn’t about perfection.

It’s about availability.

I stared at this dying 15-year-old who was speaking words of wisdom that seemed to come from decades of experience.

Even if what you say is true, I can’t go back.

I’m leasized.

The church has rules.

The church has rules, yes, but it also has mercy.

It also has restoration.

It also has second chances for those who truly seek them.

Carlos’s eyes seem to look right through me.

The question isn’t whether God would take you back.

The question is whether you’re ready to forgive yourself.

We sat in silence for several minutes.

I felt something breaking open inside me.

Walls I had built around my heart.

Barriers I had constructed to keep out hope because hope hurt too much when it was disappointed.

Carlo released my hand and leaned back against his pillows.

Even this short conversation had tired him visibly, but his eyes remained bright and alert.

“Can I ask you something?” I said.

“Of course.

Why are you telling me this? You don’t even know me.

Carlo smiled one more time.

And in that smile, I saw something that took my breath away.

I saw the face of Christ himself looking at me with infinite compassion, infinite understanding, infinite love.

Because tomorrow I’m going home to God, he said quietly.

And before I go, he wanted me to remind one of his priests that the calling isn’t over.

It’s just been waiting.

I felt a chill run down my spine.

What do you mean tomorrow? You’re going home.

I’m dying, Marco.

Tomorrow, maybe the next day.

The doctors have done everything they can.

But I’m not afraid because I know where I’m going.

and I know that the work I’m supposed to do here isn’t finished yet.

I looked at this boy, this dying saint, who had just spoken words that pierced through three years of despair and shame.

And I understood that I was witnessing something miraculous, not a physical healing, but pray that we might remember what you taught me in room 307 18 years ago.

That worthiness isn’t about perfection.

It’s about availability.

And thank you, my young saint, for being available to God even in your dying moments.

For using your last breaths to breathe life back into a calling I thought was dead.

Because of you, I learned that resurrection isn’t just something that happened once in history.

It’s something that happens every time someone dead in shame and despair hears the voice of mercy calling them back to life.

The security guard became a priest again.

The failed man became a restored man.

The broken vessel became a channel of grace.

All because a dying boy reminded him that God’s love is bigger than our mistakes.

His plans for us are greater than our failures.

And his calling on our lives doesn’t end when we fall.

It waits for us to remember who we really.