 Bishop Paprocki, it's evident, as you've said, St. Francis sails an amazing and effective preacher and homilist for sure, but also a priest deeply devoted to helping souls love God like he did, helping suffering souls, finding solace. What other saints would you put in this category of saints who effectively used apologetics, not just to convert souls to be Catholics, but to win souls with love and zeal for the church? Well, I would say one of the saints I mentioned previously was St. Joseph Maria Scriva, a priest from Spain, a very difficult time in Spain in the early 20th century when the church was being persecuted. And yet he was able to start with just a very small group of people and start this movement of the sanctification of work and looking, looking at our everyday lives. We all have work to do, whether that's paid work or volunteer work or work in a home, but it's how do we look at that work and the things that we do in everyday life to sanctify our lives. So it's not just doing tasks in order to get a paycheck or just doing things because we have to do them, but doing things, looking at, I'm doing this, I'm gonna try to use my gifts to the best of my abilities because in doing so, I'm showing love for the person that I'm serving. So even if it's somebody that's a cleaning person, while you're cleaning somebody's house in their bathroom, you have that person in mind that you're trying to make this as beautiful as you can for that person. That's one way of looking at it. Another way is simply to say, where everything I'm doing, I'm doing for God. I wanna give honor to God, but God has given me certain talents and abilities. I don't wanna squander them, I don't wanna waste them, so I will use them the best I can. So I think St. Joseph Maria has given a great example how to do that. Another saint, probably the most influential saint in my lifetime in many ways would be Pope St. John Paul II. I'm Polish American by my ancestry. I grew up in Chicago. I was ordained in 1978, the year of three popes, the year that he was elected pope. In fact, I remember very clearly where I was when I found out about that. I was in law school and I was waiting for the elevator and one of my classmates came to me and he said, did you hear the news? They've elected a new pope. This is October of 1978. And I said, no, I hadn't heard that. I said, who is he? He said, well, he's Polish. And I honestly said, what's all right? What's the punchline? I thought he was gonna tell me a Polish joke frankly. And it wasn't a joke, it was that we had a Polish pope. And what an incredible pope he was. The volume of writings that he has the numbers of encyclicals, apostolic letters, apostolic exhortations. I mean, you could just spend years reading through that. And then most significantly I think, well, from my point of view, I'm also trained as a canon lawyer. So he promulgated the 1983 code of canon law, which is still in effect with some amendments, but basically it's the code he promulgated that I'm working with almost every day. And then also the catechism of the Catholic church. There were people who said it couldn't be done. A catechism like that hadn't been written since after the council of Trent. And people were saying the current climate, we couldn't do that. Well, he pulled it off and promulgated in the 1990s, the catechism of the Catholic church, which is a wonderful compendium of the church's teaching. So if you want to know what does the Catholic church teach, go right to that catechism. And then a third saint I would mention is so influential would be his successor of the late Pope Benedict the 16th, who just died as we know last week, but he was very close to John Paul II, then collaborator. So he was the prefect of the congregation for the doctrine of the faith under Saint John Paul II. And the difference between them was that John Paul II was more of a philosopher. And while his writings are very profound, they can also be a little difficult to navigate. What I found with Pope Benedict was he was much more approachable in that sense that people could read him and get a very clear idea of what he was saying theologically. So I think he also had a very profound impact. And so their writings, may they rest in peace, but their writings will still have a, I think a very profound influence on the church and on people for many years to come.