St. Padre Pio Transitional Mug
Changing color right before your eyes, the St. Padre Pio Transitional Mug will start your day with delight and inspiration. The 15 oz. ceramic mug is a solid, soft black color until hot liquid is added, revealing an image on one side and an inspirational saying on the other. When the mug cools, it will return to being solid black. Start your day with prayer and coffee with the saints! Get one for yourself, collect them all or give this "magical" mug as a gift.
■ Microwave Safe
■ Hand Wash Only
■ AAA ORCA Coating™
This is a couture item which is custom made-on-demand. Our couture collections feature exclusive, custom designs with our signature crown somewhere within the design. Not sold in stores and you won’t find this anywhere else. EXCLUSIVELY AT VENXARA.
Video below featuring St. Mary Magdalene is an example of the color changing effect of the Transitional Mugs.
SHIPPING + DELIVERY
This custom made-on-demand Transitional Mug ships world-wide directly from our mug producers in Michigan, USA. Destination tracking is available for most countries. A tracking number will be emailed to you once your order has shipped.
Production Time: 2-5 days
Ship Time: 5-12 days
Please Note: During peak shopping seasons, production and ship time may take a little longer than normal. If you are buying this item as a gift, please order as early as possible. We don't want to disappoint you or the gift recipient with a potentially delayed order.
For countries where tracking numbers are not available, this item should arrive by regular post within 2-4 weeks. Orders that have not arrived within 45 days of order processing are eligible for a free reshipment or a refund.
ABOUT THIS SAINT
ST. PADRE PIO
1887 — 1968
Feast Day September 23
Patron Saint of adolescents, civil defense workers, stress relief and Pietrelcina, Italy.
The Italian Franciscan priest Pio of Pietrelcina, best known as “Padre Pio” was loved by many for his suffering, humility and miracles.
Pio was originally named Francesco Forgione, born in rural Italy in the year 1887. Even as a child he claimed interactions with Jesus and the saints and was perplexed to hear that other children were not, as he was, able to communicate directly with the Lord and the citizens of heaven. As a young man he professed vows as a Capuchin. He took the new name Pio, a modernized Italian form of “Pius” in honor of St. Pope Pius V.
Pio spent much of his early years with the Capuchins afflicted with poor health. In 1918, he received the stigmata, which is a mystical participation in the suffering of Christ that displays itself in actual wounds, making the recipient a kind of living representation of the Crucified Christ. It was also reported that Pio had the capacity for clairvoyance, bi-location, and the power to heal. There are many stories of Pio’s miraculous interventions.
His whole life was marked by long hours of prayer and continual austerity. His letters to his spiritual directors reveal the ineffable suffering, physical and spiritual, which accompanied him all through his life. They also reveal his deep union with God, his burning love for the Blessed Eucharist and Our Blessed Lady.
Worn out by over half a century of intense suffering and constant apostolic activity, Padre Pio was called to his heavenly reward on September 23, 1968.
Pio is a fascinating kind of saint, that is also a bit frightening. He represents very well that our encounter with the supernatural is not an experience that we can easily comprehend or control. The Faith, which is, at its sacred center, a holy meeting with the Mystery of the Living God, is not something that can be domesticated or made easy. Nor is religious experience something that reduces itself easily to the standards of modern rationalism. As the Gospel of Mark notes, the encounter with the Lord left people “amazed and afraid.” An encounter with the Lord will inevitably draw us out of what is predictable and safe. Only when we accept this, do we truly progress in the spiritual life.
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