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- THE PETITION TO PRESENT TO THE POPE ON THE DAY HE GRANTS ME AN AUDIENCE
- 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
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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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IF YOU KNEW WHAT PLEASURE I DERIVE FROM THE LEAST DETAILS OF WHAT YOU ARE DOING
“Communication leads to community, that is, to understanding, intimacy and mutual valuing.” (Rollo May)
Eugene always regarded himself as being the father of his missionary family – and loved each of its members. He understood well that communication was the cement that keeps a family together, and thus Eugene placed major importance on this, especially once the Oblates began to go to places outside of France.
I have recommended that local superiors write me every three months. Apart from such regularity in correspondence being an exigency of good order, if you knew what pleasure I derive from the least details of what you are doing, you would not be so stingy in giving them.
Letter to Eugene Guigues in Canada, 19 November, EO I n 59
Communication is the cement that keeps our Mazenodian Family united and a powerful force of evangelization and hope in our needy world. Let all of us who honor St Eugene as a father make a greater effort to get to know the other members, the diverse vocational expressions and the many groups that form our widespread missionary family.

WHAT A GOOD INFLUENCE WILL BE PRODUCED BY THE FINE CONDUCT OF A MISSIONARY CORPS DEVOTED TO THE SERVICE OF THEIR NEIGHBOURS
“People listen more willingly to witnesses than to teachers, and if they do listen to teachers, it is because they are witnesses.” Pope St Paul VI
Living in community is the first observable difference between the vocation of a diocesan priest and an Oblate. Eugene underlines this as he writes to Father Guigues, the Superior of the Oblates in Canada. He had been sent to Canada to help the Oblates to assess their missionary response to never-ending pastoral demands and to help them to focus on their vocation to respond and live as part of apostolic community and not as “lone rangers”.
The same applies to lay members of the Mazenodian Family: our call is to be family, to be part of a community brought about and sustained by the charism of St Eugene.
I strongly approve of your having established regularity in the little community you have formed of the three Fathers and two Brothers, as well as the Fathers working in the lumber camps. That is quite a worthwhile beginning and I do not doubt they will earn respect if they are faithful to your directions and those of the Rule.
In a city where priests have always lived alone, what a good influence will be produced by the fine conduct of a missionary corps devoted to the service of their neighbours and yet living under an exact and regular discipline! Keep this up as essential.
Letter to Eugene Guigues in Canada, 19 November, EO I n 59
Today, the same holds true: prospective Oblate vocations want to see what is distinctive about the Oblates being witnessed to in daily life and ministry. In the same way, Associates and others who serve the Mazenodian charism want to be part of a living and visible charism family.
THEY WILL SEE ALL THE GOOD TO WHICH THEY CAN CONTRIBUTE
“Missionary work has never been easy, and yet the joyful rewards cannot be equaled by any other experience.” (Gordon B. Hinckley)
The Missionary Society for the Propagation of the Faith relied on benefactors and annual collections in the parishes to collect money for the missions. An important part of their fund-raising was as the result of publishing accounts of the missions in their periodical, the Annals, so that benefactors could be involved in the works they were supporting. Eugene regularly sent reports to the Annals.
I recently received news from our missions in America. The Fathers chosen for Red River and Hudson Bay left Montreal at the beginning of July. Their journey will take 45 days and they will therefore reach their destination towards the middle of August. However, due to the infrequent communications between those wild zones and the rest of North America we have no positive news of them as yet.
With regard to the missionaries who evangelized the groups of people along the Canadian border this summer, they have returned from their apostolic tour and are preparing the report on their efforts, which will soon be sent to us. It will be a pleasure for me to send you the most interesting excerpts so you can publish them in the Annals and thus your readers, while finding therein material for their own edification, will also see all the good to which the Associates of the Propagation of the Faith can contribute.
Letter to the Central Council of Southern France for the Missionary Society of the Propagation of the Faith, 27 October 1845, EO V n 96
We have our own Mazenodian Annals in many provinces as well as our website that shares our missionary news from all over the world: https://www.omiworld.org/news/
MISSIONS: YOUR SINCERE WISH TO PROVIDE FOR THEIR EXISTENCE AND CONTRIBUTE TO THEIR DEVELOPMENT
“True charity is the desire to be useful to others with no thought of recompense.” (Emanuel Swedenborg)
As generous and zealous as the Oblates were, this was not sufficient for the success of their overseas evangelization. They needed money with which to finance their work among the poor and most abandoned. It is here that the Missionary Society for the Propagation of the Faith came in with generous subsidies. The letters that Eugene regularly wrote to them are full of gratitude as well as providing interesting details about the progress of the missions.
I wish to thank you as well, Gentlemen, for the kind reception reserved to our requests for assistance on behalf of our missions in America, and for including them in the annual distribution of subsidies by the Missionary Society whose executive administration is entrusted to your care. In my eyes, this represents further proof of the interest you harbor for the missions of our Congregation in foreign countries and your sincere wish to provide for their existence and contribute to their development.
Letter to the Central Council of Southern France for the Missionary Society of the Propagation of the Faith, 27 October 1845, EO V n 96
Today we continue to rely with gratitude on the generosity of our Mazenodian Family in the mission of evangelization

PROUD THAT WE HAD SUCH A GREAT SAINT IN OUR MIDST
“To me, there are saints every day. They stand up and help others and live for others and do things for others.” (Theodore Melfi)
Father Dominique Albini had experienced the vocation to become an Oblate in 1823 after hearing the preaching of Eugene. (See https://www.omiworld.org/lemma/albini-charles-dominique/). During his years as an Oblate he was renowned for his holiness which he communicated in his preaching and teaching, especially among the Italian immigrants in Marseilles, missions to the people of Corsica in their volatile existence, in teaching theology to the seminarians among other ministries. Eugene was convinced of the sanctity of this Oblate and started the proceeding for his cause of beatification.
Eugene’s letter to Father Moreau in Ajaccio, Corsica, expresses this project:
I recommend to you a great concern, the introduction of the cause of our blessed Father Albini. If we do not apply ourselves with zeal and follow-up, we will obtain nothing; if we do, success is assured… Speak of this with the Bishop; make him understand just how glorious it would be for his Diocese to have acknowledged the holiness of a man who enjoyed his confidence and did so much good in the Church of Corsica and among its clergy.
Letter to Fr. Francois Moreau in Corsica, 9 October 1845, EO X n 884
A month later, in a letter to Father Semeria, Superior of the Corsica mission:
You have been informed about what I ought to do for the great Servant of God, our good Father Albini. I am distressed that I met with such a feeble echo at Ajaccio in a matter of such great importance and honor for that diocese and for our Congregation.
You know that it is my intention to name you postulator of this precious cause. You will take the matter to heart as becomes a brother and member of the Congregation, proud that we had such a great saint in our midst.
Meanwhile be careful to gather facts of a miraculous nature or approaching the miraculous. Do not let witnesses die without having verified the facts. Two events like the one you told me about the paralytic would be enough to assure his beatification. It is a very beautiful cause, the Avvocato dei Santi whom I consulted in Rome told me.
Letter to Fr. Etienne Semeria in Corsica, 20 November 1845, EO X n 886
Since then, every step of the canonical procedure has been followed – all that remains is a miracle brought about through his intercession.
How many ordinary people have you encountered in your life whose witness and words speak to you of God? You don’t have to have a halo or do out-of-the-ordinary things to be a saint – the mystic, St Theresa of Avila, found God amid the pots and pans in the kitchen. Do you find and love God in the “pots and pans” of your everyday life? That is true sanctity!
WHERE WOULD WE BE IF WE ALLOWED OURSELVES TO BE DISHEARTENED BY THE DIFFICULTIES THAT OUR MINISTRY BRINGS US?
“If you worried about falling off the bike, you’d never get on.” (Lance Armstrong)
As Superior General, Eugene’s responsibility was to accompany his missionaries in their ‘being” and their “doing.” He cared deeply for his missionary sons and for their well-being, encouraging them, and also correcting when necessary. He understood the debilitating effect of anxiety and worry in the missionaries.
Where would we be, my dear Father Bellon, if we allowed ourselves to be disheartened by the difficulties that our ministry brings us? This weakness is only too natural and certainly does not come from God; if we probe deeper into this feeling, we may perhaps discover something even more imperfect. And so I do not approve your worrying about it as you do. Why are you surprised to find the miseries of humanity in people? You must conquer evil with good, pray very much, always distrust yourself, but hope in God, who, precisely on this occasion, has shown you a great proof of his protection. But far from being discouraged, you ought to be full of gratitude to God, that he has enlightened us in time and put us on the track of a devilish scheme which I could luckily prevent. …
We have no idea what this “devilish scheme” was, but it threatened the well-being of Father Bellon, hence the strong words to encourage him to put things into a wider perspective.
We repair the evil, thank God for having discovered it, and continue to work with fresh zeal for the sanctification of souls, precisely because they are being attacked more violently by the enemy of every good. If we acted otherwise, we would be, I say, not only foolish but quite culpable as well.
Letter to Father Charles Bellon at N.D. de Lumières, 21 September 1845, EO X n 881
“Give all your cares to the Lord and He will give you strength. He will never let those who are right with Him be shaken”. (Psalm 55:22)
RECEIVING THESE REFLECTIONS BY EMAIL
The “Eugene de Mazenod speaks to us” blog began in May 2010 and with it came a free service offered by Google to subscribe to an email version of the daily reflections. Several hundred people did this. Many have been contacting me to find out how to continue this. and hence this response.
Unfortunately Google has since discontinued this service and we are no longer able to avail ourselves of a provider to send out emails. There are commercial services available to do this at a high cost – but as there is no income attached to the blog there is no possibility of availing ourselves of these.
Each day it appears in English, French, Spanish and Polish on the relevant site. I also publish it on Facebook and Twitter, and the OMIWORLD site carries it each day. In each case you have to go to the site to access it.
Despite the effort involved in accessing “St Eugene Speaks,” A BIG THANK YOU to the readers who do follow it regularly. A lot of work goes into each entry, and I hope that some find it as beneficial as I do.
I also would like to point out that Oblate Associate, Eleanor Rabnett, responds each day with a personal reflection that is always well worth reading. Some have said that they prefer Eleanor’s handling of the topic to mine! I am delighted that we can all participate in making St Eugene better known and loved so as to learn from him how to live our relationship with our Savior as his co-operators in bringing the Gospel to those who need it most.
Frank Santucci OMI
Posted in WRITINGS
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PUT YOUR CONFIDENCE IN HIM IN WHOSE NAME YOU ARE SENT
“For we are the aroma of Christ for God among those who are being saved and among those who are perishing” (2 Corinthians 2,15)
A wealthy Englishman, Ambrose Phillips owned the mansion of Grace Dieu, in Leicester county, England. He turned it into a Mass-center from which the priests could undertake the evangelization and conversion of the surrounding villages. In 1845 he invited the Oblates to establish a community there. Eugene appointed the 32 year-old Fr. Frédéric Perron as Superior by Eugene. He had only been a priest for 6 years, and Eugene wrote to encourage him in his responsibility of establishing a new mission.
Put your confidence in Him in whose name you are sent and be persuaded that He will bless your obedience and pour most abundant graces upon the work of your ministry…
Constantly in so many of his letters, Eugene repeats that the only source of guidance in any community and mission is to be the Oblate Rule, which is the application of the Gospel according to the charism that he had received.
Above all take great care to be bound by all things prescribed by our Rules and Constitutions. You have in the book wherein they are inscribed a sure and faithful counsellor to guide you on all occasions and advice which will enable you always to do what is most agreeable to God and most useful to yourself and others.
Then we encounter another of Eugene’s favorite expressions for mission: let the beautiful aroma of Jesus permeate from your community to all those whom you are evangelizing.
… Let order and regularity reign in the interior of the house, so that the good aroma of Jesus Christ may spread throughout the places where you dwell.
Letter to Father Frédéric Perron at Grace Dieu, England, 25 August 1845, EO III n 11
Posted in WRITINGS
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