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Recent Posts
- FOR THE REST, I DO MY BEST TO LEAVE IT TO GOD
- GOD ALONE KNOWS HOW TO REWARD WHAT WE HAVE DONE FOR HIM. SO, WE MUST DO EVERYTHING TO PLEASE HIM
- IT IS A CONSOLATION FOR ME TO BREATHE THE SAME AIR, TO OFFER THE HOLY SACRIFICE ON THE SAME ALTARS, TO BE ABLE TO PRAY AT HIS TOMB
- THERE IS NOT A CORNER OF ROME WHICH IS NOT A MONUMENT OF FAITH OR PIETY
- THE ROMAN MARTYRS ARE STILL THE OBJECT OF VENERATION OF PEOPLES
Recent Comments
- Eleanor Rabnett, Lay Oblate on FAITH-FOCUSED INVESTMENT GROUPS: A PRESENCE WHERE DECISIONS AFFECTING THE FUTURE OF THE POOR ARE BEING MADE (Rule 9a)
- Eleanor Rabnett, Lay Oblate on VIVAT: A PRESENCE WHERE DECISIONS AFFECTING THE FUTURE OF THE POOR ARE BEING MADE (Rule 9a)
- Eleanor Rabnett, Lay Oblate on WE SHOW A VERY HUMAN FACE OF JESUS TO THE WORLD, ONE FULL OF COMPASSION AND SOLIDARITY (Rule 9a)
- Eleanor Rabnett, Lay Oblate on JUSTICE, PEACE AND THE INTEGRITY OF CREATION AS AN INTEGRAL PART OF EVANGELIZATION (Rule 9a)
- Eleanor Rabnett, Lay Oblate on WALKING THE LINE BETWEEN PROPHETIC VISION AND SPIRITUAL SUSTENANCE (CONSTITUTION 9)
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“Father Aubert was then appointed parish priest of St. Boniface Cathedral and Vicar General, positions he would hold for five years. He immediately began studying the Ojibwa language… Father Aubert left the West in 1850 and, until 1857, resided at the bishop’s house in Bytown (Ottawa), where he was Vicar General from 1851 to 1856, Superior of the bishop’s house from 1854 to 1857 and Chaplain of the Grey Nuns of the Cross (today the Sisters of Charity of Ottawa) from 1855 to 1857. It was in this last capacity that he worked on the constitution of the community. Appointed Superior of the House of St. Peter the Apostle of Montreal in 1857, Father Aubert acted as the theologian of the Most Reverend Ignace Bourget, Bishop of Montreal, at the Third Provincial Council, held in Quebec City in 1863…. He became ill and returned to France in 1865 where he became superior of the sanctuary of Notre-Dame de Lumières. Elected assistant to the Superior General two years later, he remained in Paris until his death. As an assistant, Father Aubert was a prudent advisor and intermediary between the Superior General and the Canadian authorities. No major decisions were made without consulting him. He was particularly interested in the works of the Oblates in Canada… In 1870, Father Aubert accompanied Bishop Guigues to the Vatican Council as a theologian.” (Gaston Carriere:
I cautiously remind myself that both Eugene de Mazenod and Fr. Aubert were both men of their times and both saw any other religion as pagan and unworthy. Eugene’s words: “I consider you as an apostle… the vanguard of the army which must drive the demon from his last entrenchments… in those regions where the true God was never known” are not considered to be acceptable into today’s world. The apostles were to be men of peace and were sent out to share the Good News. It is their humanness that sometimes throughout the centuries that got them into trouble – it is no different in today’s world.
I think of my life which was once dark and without love before meeting Jesus, before my conversion which set me out on the beginning stance on my life journey. I am still very much a work in progress, and I do not ignore the great goodness of Eugene and the good that Fr. Aubert did in serving God, the Church and the congregation. And as I picture both men, along with many others I cannot help but thank God for placing me where God did in this beautiful Mazenodian Family.
I ask myself this morning how I “raise the sign of salvation, the Cross of the Saviour Jesus” – as I learn that Fr. Aubert did, as I am called to in my own life. As a lay Oblate recognizing that we are called and share in the charism according to our state of life, our milieu and culture. And although I do not raise my beautiful little cross in the way that Eugene is often depicted as doing with his mission cross, I wear it always for it is like a part of who I am and I am known to not only touch and hold it, but to kiss it – the cross of my crucified Saviour. And any actions I might take, I try to do as I stand in St. Eugene’s light, alongside of his many sons and daughters of the world.
“…I love you. I have called you by name and you are mine.” I(Isaiah 43) It is that love which Roland Allen speaks of and that the Founder, St. Eugene de Mazenod calls us to live. It is the love that gives birth to all else!