
ACI Prensa Staff, Aug 12, 2025 / 17:38 pm (CNA).
At 76 years of age, and despite being wheelchair-bound, Reynaldo José Osorio Muñoz doesn't let these factors interfere with his desire to serve God at the altar of his parish in Colombia. With love and dedication, he participates as an altar server at Mass, dedicating his service to God, the Church, and his fellow parishioners.
Osorio lives at the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary Senior Citizen Wellness Center, a Christian-inspired institution dedicated to the comprehensive care of vulnerable seniors.
According to its website, the center offers meals, medical care, recreational activities, and cultural and spiritual formation, "allowing them to meet their basic needs and improve their quality of life in a safe and harmonious environment, through medical and human care, with love and respect."
For a year, Osorio has been serving as an acolyte at Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary Parish in the Diocese of Santa Marta, capital of the Colombian district of Magdalena, located in the Caribbean region.
As he shared in an interview with ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner, his initial involvement began with ringing the bell to announce the start of Mass to his fellow residents at the center. Over time, and thanks to the trust of a priest, that small action transformed into a deeper commitment to the altar.
"For me, it's a very beautiful thing that I never expected because of my age. But thank God he placed me in this position. I appreciate it very much and I love [what I do] at the altar," he said.
According to the Colombian Bishops' Conference, the acolyte is called to "attend to service of the altar, assist the priest and deacon, and serve in the various processions" as well as assist with the incense, the liturgical book, the preparation of the altar, and the purification of the sacred vessels. He may also assist at the offertory, distribute Communion as an extraordinary minister, and expose and reserve the Blessed Sacrament, although without imparting the blessing.
Beyond these visible tasks, the ministry requires, as the same document points out, a "love of the sacraments, of Eucharistic worship, the offering of oneself, and the care of others, especially the most needy and the sick."
A service for the love of God
"I am very devout and I believe deeply in God, and I always ask him to enlighten me," Osorio said. In this regard, he said that even for this task, God "has enlightened me so that I may do it. That's why I do it with all the love and appreciation."
Since taking on this service, he said he feels "satisfied because I serve God, the Church, and all of us," referring to his fellow residents at the center. And although he acknowledges his physical limitations, he said that he carries out his ministry "with all the love, with all the enjoyment, with everything I can manage to do."
For the church's parish priest, Father Mario Rafael González García, Osorio is not defined by his physical "limitations."
In an interview with ACI Prensa, he said he is a person "with a very good sense of humor, cheerful, dynamic, talkative, and with faith."
On the occasion of the World Day of Grandparents and the Elderly, celebrated on July 27, Pope Leo XIV called on every ecclesial community to be protagonists of a "revolution of gratitude and care" for the elderly.
The pope explained that this must be done "by regular visits to the elderly, the creation of networks of support and prayer for them and with them, and the forging of relationships that can restore hope and dignity to those who feel forgotten."
Osorio's testimony, according to González, is an example of this, and "we owe him gratitude for his witness of faith and care in his old age."
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA's Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.