LET US BE PROUD TO BE ONE WITH SUCH APOSTLES OF THE LORD.

Eugene invites all the Oblates to be inspired by the extreme personal sacrifices being made by the first four members of their religious family to go to western North America to teach people “the love of Jesus Christ.”

I have just received a letter from Father Ricard. It is dated August, and they had another 200 leagues to travel before reaching their destination. Our three missionaries, as well as the brother catechist, are well; but what a trip they have just made.

Let none among us complain anymore of anything. for we have so generous an advanced contingent that makes conquests for Jesus Christ by so many sacrifices, and what merits do they not acquire in the eyes of the Lord and of the Church.

Dear Brothers, how admirable they are! Let us pray much for them and let us be proud to be one with such apostles of the Lord.

Letter to Fr Toussaint Dassy, 12 February 1848, EO X n 966

REFLECTION

In his stirring visionary writing at the beginning of the Oblates, the Preface, Eugene had described the spirit of Oblate missionaries:

” free from inordinate attachment to the world or to family, men filled with zeal, ready to sacrifice goods, talents, ease, self, even their life, for the love of Jesus Christ, the service of the Church, and the sanctification of their brethren. And thus, filled with unbounded confidence in God, they are ready to enter the combat, to fight, even unto death, for the greater glory of his most holy and sublime Name.

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BUT WHAT A JOURNEY THEY HAVE JUST MADE!

The west coast of North America was opening up to Oblate evangelization with the arrival of four missionaries. (See the entry and the ones that follow in: THE FIRST OBLATE MISSION IN THE UNITED STATES – https://www.eugenedemazenod.net/?p=5355)

These four missionaries had sailed from France in February 1847 and after 54 days at sea arrived in New York. Five months later they finally reached in Oregon.

I have just received a letter from Father Ricard. It is dated August, and they had another 200 leagues to travel before reaching their destination. Our three missionaries, as well as the brother catechist, are well; but what a journey they have just made.

Letter to Fr Toussaint Dassy, 12 February 1848, EO X n 966

(Note that at the time of the Founder the word “missionary” denoted priests, which is why he observes the distinction between missionaries and catechist brother. Since then the understanding of the word “missionary” has changed to include all Oblates and members of the charismatic family who are involved in this ministry)

REFLECTION

With our high-speed travel today it is difficult for us to imagine this missionary journey. Let us pause and think of the physical hardships involved and the courage and perseverance involved. Then let us go deeper and reflect on the psychological challenges: Fr. Ricard was 41 years old and had suffered poor health in France. The three others were in their twenties, two being scholastics who had not yet completed their studies. As they left France and loved ones, they knew that in all probability they would never see them and their country of origin ever again.

Such was the price of their love for God and their missionary zeal for the salvation of people who did not know Jesus Christ. It certainly invites us to reflect and challenges us to look at ourselves and our response to God in our fast-moving instant-gratification world…

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THEIR AMBITION SHOULD EMBRACE THE VAST EXPANSE OF THE WHOLE EARTH.

Eugene de Mazenod was a busy person! Superior General of many Oblates in France and elsewhere, Bishop of a large and demanding diocese, and also the power behind the Oblates breaking new ground in the foreign missions. Going through his writings chronologically can be confusing because they deal with all three of these areas at the same time. For the sake of clarity over these past months, I have been reflecting on the writings regarding France and the diocese of Marseilles. A lot was happening in the Oblate world outside of France at the same time, so this will be our focus now.

In 1818, Eugene had expressed his vision of the missionary congregation:

What more sublime purpose than that of their Institute?

Their founder is Jesus Christ, the very Son of God;

their first fathers are the Apostles.

They are called to be the Saviour’s co-workers, the co-redeemers of mankind;

and even though, because of their present small number and

the more urgent needs of the people around them, they have to limit the scope of their zeal, for the time being, to the poor of our countryside and others,

their ambition should, in its holy aspirations, embrace the vast expanse of the whole earth.

1818 Rule

REFLECTION

In 1818 the missionaries were few and focused on Provence but with a founder’s intuition, Eugene saw beyond his corner of the world. Thirty years later, in 1848, that prophetic vision was being fulfilled. The Oblates were in Corsica, England, Canada, the United States and Ceylon.

“True missionaries, who never cease to be disciples, know that Jesus walks with them, speaks to them, breathes with them, works with them.” – Pope Francis

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RESTING IN THE LORD

Celebrating the Incarnation of Jesus Christ and rejoicing in his presence, Eugene sends Christmas greetings:

This is all I can say to you on this holy day spent entirely in church. I officiated yesterday at First Vespers, then during the night, and today both in the morning and in the evening. Thanks be to God, this is never too long for me. That is the only place we can abstract from the world and be occupied solely with Heaven. That is my time of rest.

Goodbye. dear son. I wish you a good remainder of the feast and a Happy New Year.

Letter to Fr Hippolyte Courtès in Aix, 25 December 1848, EO X n 993.

Writing about this in his personal diary:

Pontifical office yesterday at Vespers on account of Sunday, the night and all day of Christmas. I still do not at all feel the weight of the years so as to deprive myself of this great consolation. I have rest only therein; also, the time that I pass in the church these days of the great solemnity always seems short to me.

Eugene de Mazenod’s Diary, 25 December 1848, EO XXI

REFLECTION

As a young man in his twenties, Eugene had experienced the saving love of God as Savior and had committed himself to “act in everything and for everything only for God, to love him above all else”. A few years later he resolved: ” I wish to live only for you, I wish to love you alone and all else in you and through you… My God, my love and my all.”

Forty years later, at the age of 66, we can see that he continued to live by those resolutions and to find his happiness and his rest in the presence of God. What an example for us to learn to follow!

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THE EPISCOPAL CHARACTER OF EUGENE DE MAZENOD

Election day for the President of the Republic. I went to vote. The entire staff stood up to receive my vote. This act of respect for the character with which I am invested edified me.

Eugene de Mazenod’s Diary, 10 December 1848, EO XXI

REFLECTION

Eugene was convinced that a bishop shared in the responsibility given by Jesus Christ to the apostles and received the Holy Spirit to become the chief pastor of the diocese. In his personal diary he uses the word “character” (as opposed to “position”) in the theological sense of a man being transformed through the sacrament of Orders and given the power to celebrate the sacraments.

It was in this sense that he wanted people to recognize the bishop and not the person, and to acknowledge the office and character of the role he was invested in.

“You must all follow the lead of the bishop, as Jesus Christ followed that of the Father; follow the presbytery as you would the Apostles; reverence the deacons as you would God’s commandment. Let no one do anything touching the Church, apart from the bishop. Let that celebration of the Eucharist be considered valid which is held under the bishop or anyone to whom he has committed it. Where the bishop appears, there let the people be, just as where Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church.”  (Saint Ignatius, Martyr and Bishop of Antioch, Letter to the Smyrnaeans, 8.)

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TAKE PARTICULAR CARE OF THE BROTHERS

In 1816, at the beginning of our Congregation, all the members were diocesan priests because its aim was mission preaching and dispensing the sacraments. In 1818 when we became a religious congregation, the situation changed and the Oblate vocation was primarily to religious life which expressed and lived out in the priestly ministry of the missions. Soon some came forward who experienced being called to religious life but not to priesthood. This was the origin of the Oblate Brothers. Each came with his particular gifts, many with a profession, which they placed at the service of the mission of the Congregation. It is no exaggeration to say that the Brothers were the mainstay of community life and ensured the supportive structures of the religious life and what was needed for the Oblate mission to be able to function fully. In the foreign missions in particular, they were the guarantors of religious community life for the priests who were always on the move for the preaching and sacramental ministry. In these cases the missionary contribution of the Brothers was their prayerful support by witnessing to their faith, teaching religion, building churches, running schools and sharing and teaching the local population their particular trades and skills.

Because they were the motor of religious life in a community and had not studied theology, Eugene insisted that the superiors of the communities assist the Brothers, especially the one who had just finished their novitiate to deepen their knowledge and spirituality of religious life.

Designate one of our Fathers to take particular care of the Brothers. giving them at least one instruction a week on their general duties and obligations as religious.

Letter to Fr Joseph Burfin at Limoges, France, 9 December 1848, EO X n 992

REFLECTION

I am always grateful for the Brothers I have met in my life and the inspiration they have been for me. For the seven years that I was a scholastic in Cedara, South Africa, two Brothers ran a dairy farm so as to support our livelihood. (One of them was a British nobleman, entitled to be called “Sir”, but who was a model of simplicity and humility and whom we knew as “Uncle Bob”). They and others whom I have been privileged to know have given their lives to service and inspired me through their dedication to prayer and exemplary religious life. Today we find Oblate Brothers in many important ministries throughout the world, and we thank God for this gift.

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I WAS DEEPLY AFFECTED BY THIS LOSS AS I AM BY THE LOSS OF ALL THOSE FOR WHOM I AM A FATHER IN JESUS CHRIST

Bishop Eugene regarded himself as much a father of his diocesan clergy as he did of the Oblates. This was especially the case if he been the bishop who ordained them to the priesthood. In his Diary he notes his sadness at the sudden death of a 24 year-old diocesan priest whom he had ordained.

I said Holy Mass for the young priest Chaillan, vicar at Saint-Cannat who just died of small pox, contracted from an ill person to whom he had ministered. I was deeply affected by this loss as I am by the loss of all those for whom I am a father in Jesus Christ. I acutely feel how much I am attached to them in every circumstance important to them, but especially when death takes them from me. It could be said that I am bonded to them with ties of blood.

Eugene de Mazenod’s Diary, 18 November 1848, EO XXI

REFLECTION

The concept of spiritual fatherhood was very important for Eugene. He understood his love for his spiritual children as a reflection of God’s loving parental heart.

Today, all of us who are touched by Eugene’s charism can look at him as a spiritual father who mirrors God’s love for us in our daily life.

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IF IT IS GOD WHO INSPIRES IT, HE WILL BLESS HIS WORK, IF NOT, IT WILL FADE AWAY LIKE OTHERS WHICH DO NOT COME FROM HIM

Eugene had always been a promotor of youth ministry and this continued when he was Bishop of Marseille. He noted in his diary an event concerning three of his diocesan priests who consecrated themselves to youth ministry in his diocese.

Mass in my chapel, Reverends Brunello, Guiol and Timon, very good priests, made in my hands the vow to live together in order to devote themselves to the sanctification of youth. According to my custom, I am happy to work with any inspiration which impels to perfection. If it is God who inspires it, he will bless his work, if not, it will fade away like others which do not come from Him.

Eugene de Mazenod’s Diary, 4 November 1848, EO XXI

Fr. Timon-David was close to his bishop and was later to start his own Association for Youth and eventually to become the founder of a religious congregation dedicated to youth ministry, the Religious of the Sacred Heart of the Child Jesus.

REFLECTION

“Send me anywhere, only go with me. Lay any burden on me, only sustain me. Sever any tie, but the ties that bind me to your service and to your heart.”  (David Livingstone)

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BEING OBLATE IS A JOURNEY OF BECOMING

The OMI’s usually renewed their vows on November 1 during the Founder’s lifetime. Because there were 30 Oblate seminarians at the Major Seminary (studying and living with the diocesan students) the ceremony was held at the Seminary.

Customary attendance at the morning Mass of the Major Seminary, after which our Fathers and Brothers renew their vows. Never had the assembly been so numerous; besides the Fathers, about thirty Oblates were present. After the customary address, four priests individually made their renewal, then the Oblates five at a time, finally the two Coadjutor Brothers. This assembly has been among the most touching. It’s self-explanatory.

Eugene de Mazenod’s Diary, 4 November 1848, EO XXI

REFLECTION

When Eugene referred to the OMI scholastics in formation, he always called them “the Oblates” as opposed to the “Fathers and Brothers” who were the ones who had completed their formation. There is something touching about this usage because it gives the impression of a person on a journey of becoming. All of us in the Mazenodian Family are on a journey of becoming what God wants each of us to be each day- accompanied by the example and intercession of Mary Immaculate and Eugene.

 

“Forgetting what lies behind but straining forward to what lies ahead, I continue my pursuit toward the goal, the prize of God’s upward calling, in Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 3:13-14)

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THE POPE WAS INFINITELY TOUCHED BY THE CONDUCT OF FRANCE

With the tense situation around the welfare of Pope Pius IX, in exile in Gaeta, France sent an emissary of the government to invite him to take refuge in Marseilles. Eugene narrated:

In short, the Pope was infinitely touched by the conduct of France and by the personal sentiments of Mr. de Corcelles, but he did not give in for the time being.

Eugene de Mazenod’s Diary, 11 December 1848, EO XXI

Two weeks later, Eugene wrote:

 Letter from the Pope. I had not expected this new mark of his goodness. He had already entrusted Cardinal Antonelli to reply to me. This new reply must be regarded as a favor and a very special proof of benevolence. I value it as such:

“My dear Bishop,

            “Our heart is truly touched by the sight of the filial love which France has manifested to the vicar of Jesus Christ and of the interest it takes in the current situation. May God bless the eldest daughter of the Church and preserve her from the poisoned breath which perturbs such a large part of Europe. May he fill her with his abundant graces, so that she may see the religion of her fathers blossom ever more beautifully within her. We are temporarily in Gaeta. Providence has led us here without a premeditated plan on our part. We have the hope, nevertheless, that the opportunity will present itself for being able to show the French nation, in a more consoling manner, the affectionate feelings of our heart, which at this moment affectionately gives her the apostolic blessing.

            “Given at Gaeta, December 14, 1848. Pius IX, pope.”

Eugene de Mazenod’s Diary, 27 December 1848, EO XXI

REFLECTION

“The authority of the Head of the Church is a ministry entrusted to him for the good of all, to be carried out as a good Shepherd who watches over the salvation of the whole flock. It is incumbent upon the One invested with this ministry to “confirm his brothers in the faith” (Lk. 22:32), according to the glorious privilege given to him by Jesus Christ.” (Bishop Eugene’s Pastoral Letter to the Diocese of Marseilles, 16 February 1860.)

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