Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MARIAN TITLES, SAINT of the DAY

Madre del Perpetuo Soccorso / Mother of Perpetual Succour (Help), Matka Boża / Mother of God of Gietrzwald and Memorials of the Saints – 27 June

Fifth Sunday after Pentecost (Traditional Calendar) +2021
Thirteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time +2021

Madre del Perpetuo Soccorso / Mother of Perpetual Succour (Help) – Feast 27 June:
Patronage: Porto Cesareo, Italy, Haiti, Labrador City, Labrador, Yorkton, Saskatchewan, 8 Diocese.https://anastpaul.com/2018/06/27/thought-for-the-day-27-june-the-feast-of-our-lady-of-perpetual-succour/

Matka Boża / Mother of God of Gietrzwald, Gietrzwałd, Olsztyński, Warmia, Poland, 1877 – 27 June, 8 September;

Our Lady appeared for the first time to Justyna Szafrynska (13) when she was returning home with her mother after having taken an examination prior to receiving the First Holy Communion. The next day, Barbara Samulowska (12) also saw the ‘Bright Lady’ sitting on the throne with Infant Christ among Angels over the maple tree in front of the church while reciting the rosary. The girls asked “Who are you?” she answered, “I am the Blessed Virgin Mary of the Immaculate Conception!“What do you require, Mother of God?” they asked, the answer was: “I wish you recite the Rosary everyday!” There were 13 more apparitions from 27 June 1877 to 16 September 1877.
2 February 1970 – Pope Paul VI elevated the Church in Gietrzwald to the rank of Basilica Minor.

St Cyril of Alexandria (376-444) Father and Doctor of the Church ) – “The Pillar of Faith” & “Seal of all the Fathers” – Doctor Incarnationis (Doctor of the Incarnation) – (Optional Memorial
Biography:

https://anastpaul.com/2018/06/27/saint-of-the-day-27-june-st-cyril-of-alexandria-376-444-father-and-doctor-of-the-church/
AND:
https://anastpaul.com/2017/06/27/saint-of-the-day-27-june-st-cyril-of-alexandria-doctor-father-of-the-church-the-pillar-of-faith-seal-of-all-the-fathers-doctor-incarnationis-doctor-of-the-incarnation/

St Adeodato of Naples
St Aedh McLugack
St Anectus of Caesarea
St Arialdus of Milan
St Arianell of Wales
Blessed Benvenutus of Gubbio OFM ) (Died 1232) Lay brother of the Order of the Friars Minor of St Francis
St Brogan
St Crescens of Galatia
St Crescentius of Mainz
Bl Daniel of Schönau
Bl Davanzato of Poggibonsi
St Desideratus of Gourdon
St Dimman
St Felix of Rome
St Ferdinand of Aragon
St Gudene of Carthage

Bl Hemma of Gurk
St Joanna the Myrrhbearer
St John of Chinon

St Ladislaus I – (c 1040-1095) King of Hungary, Apostle of Charity, Defender of the Faith.
His Life:

https://anastpaul.com/2019/06/27/saint-of-the-day-st-ladislaus-i-c-1040-1095/

Blessed Louise-Thérèse de Montaignac de Chauvance OSHJ (1820-1885) Religious Sister and Founder of the Pious Union of Oblates of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
An Apostle of the Sacred Heart:

https://anastpaul.com/2020/06/27/saint-of-the-day-27-june-blessed-louise-therese-de-montaignac-de-chauvance-oshj-1820-1885/

Blessed Maria Pia Mastena
St Sampson of Constantinople
St Spinella of Rome
St Tôma Toán
St Zoilus of Cordoba

Martyrs Killed Under Communist Regimes in Eastern Europe: Among the thousands of Christians murdered by various Communist regimes in their hatred of the faith, there were 25 members of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church and Russian Byzantine Catholic Church, priests, bishops, sisters and lay people, whose stories are sufficiently well documented that we know they were murdered specifically for their faith in eastern Europe and whose Causes for Canonization were opened. Their Causes were combined and they were beatified together. They have separate memorials but are remembered together today. They are –
• Andrii Ischak • Hryhorii Khomyshyn • Hryhorii Lakota • Ivan Sleziuk • Ivan Ziatyk • Klymentii Sheptytskyi • Leonid Feodorov • Levkadia Harasymiv • Mykola Konrad • Mykola Tsehelskyi • Mykolai Charnetskyi • Mykyta Budka • Oleksa Zarytskyi • Ol’Ha Bida • Ol’Ha Matskiv • Petro Verhun • Roman Lysko • Stepan Baranyk • Symeon Lukach • Vasyl Vsevolod Velychkovskyi • Volodomyr Bairak • Volodymyr Ivanovych Pryima • Yakym Senkivsky • Yosafat Kotsylovskyi • Zenon Kovalyk. Beatified – 27 June 2001 by Pope John Paul II in Ukraine.

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, OCTOBER - The HOLY ROSARY and The HOLY ANGELS, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on ETERNAL LIFE, QUOTES on FAITH, QUOTES on HELL, QUOTES on LOVE, QUOTES on LOVE of GOD, QUOTES on PRAYER, QUOTES on the CHURCH, QUOTES on the FAMILY, QUOTES/PRAYERS on THE FAMILY, ROSARY QUOTES, The HEART, The HOLY FAMILY, THE HOLY FAMILY - FAMILIAE SANCTAE, The HOLY ROSARY/ROSARY CRUSADE

Quote/s of the Day – 1 February – “Month of the Holy Family of Nazareth”

Quote/s of the Day – 1 February – “Month of the Holy Family of Nazareth”

“Thus, parents, I say, are more vicious,
more cruel than child-murderers;
for, a murderer of children, as Herod was,
separates only the body from the soul;
while the others, give the souls and bodies of their children
to eternal flames!
Further, those who are killed
would have died in the course of time,
though they had not been murdered;
while children, neglected by their parents,
might have avoided eternal death,
had not the wickedness of their parents
prepared it for them.
Besides this, the general resurrection
would have compensated for the bodily death,
while the death and destruction of the soul,
nothing can restore.
A child, condemned by the parent’s fault,
has no hope of salvation
but has to suffer eternal pains.
Hence I am right in saying,
that such parents are worse than child-murderers.”

St John Chrysostom (347-407)
Father & Doctor

“We become what we love
and who we love,
shapes what we become.”

St Clare of Assisi (1194-1253)

“On the journey of this life to eternity,
let me carry You in my heart,
following Mary’s example,
who bore You in her arms,
during the flight to Egypt.”

St Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696-1787)
Bishop and Doctor of the Church

“To hand onto your children.
the faith you received from your parents,
is your first duty
and your greatest privilege as parents.
The home should be the first school of religion,
as it must be the first school of prayer.”

Bl Louise-Thérèse de Montaignac de Chauvance (1820-1885)
“Apostle of the Sacred Heart”

“The family is the basis in the Lord’s plan
and all the forces of evil
aim to demolish it.
Uphold your families
and guard them
against the grudges
of the evil one,
by the Presence of God.

St Charbel Makhlouf OLM (1828-1898)

“ … The family is not made for society;
rather, it is society, which is made for the family.”

“God did not create a human family
made up of segregated, dissociated,
mutually independent members.
No; He would have them all united
by the bond of total love of Him
and consequent self-dedication
to assisting each other
to maintain that bond intact.”

“There is no surer means
of calling down God’s blessing
upon the family,
than the daily recitation
of the Rosary.”

Ven Servant of God Pope Pius XII (1876-1958)

Posted in CHRIST the KING, CHRIST, the WAY,TRUTH,LIFE, DOCTORS of the Church, EUCHARISTIC Adoration, FATHERS of the Church, GOD is LOVE, JUNE-THE SACRED HEART, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on HUMILITY, QUOTES on LOVE of GOD, QUOTES on OBEDIENCE, QUOTES on PRAYER, QUOTES on SELF-DENIAL, QUOTES on the FAMILY, QUOTES on THE MYSTICAL BODY, QUOTES on UNITY/with GOD, QUOTES on WORK/LABOUR, QUOTES/PRAYERS on THE FAMILY, SACRED HEART PRAYERS, SAINT of the DAY, The GOOD SHEPHERD, The HOLY EUCHARIST / The HOLY MASS, The HOLY GHOST, The KINGDOM of GOD, The WORD

Quote/s of the Day – 27 June – Bl Louise-Thérèse de Montaignac and St Cyril of Alexandria

Quote/s of the Day – 27 June – “Month of the Sacred Heart” – Memorial of St Cyril of Alexandria (376-444) and Blessed Louise-Thérèse de Montaignac de Chauvance OSHJ (1820-1885) “Apostle of the Sacred Heart”

“You work for God, without doubt
but one must work IN God.”

you work for god without dout but one must work IN god - bllouise-therese 27 june 2020

“Love dies where there is no humility.”

love dies where there is nohumlity - bllouise-therese 27 june 2020

“To hand onto your children.
the faith you received from your parents,
is your first duty
and your greatest privilege as parents.
The home should be the first school of religion,
as it must be the first school of prayer.

to hand on to your children - bl louise-therese 27 june 2020

Prayer of Bl Louise-Thérèse
“O Jesus, Eternal Life in the womb of the Father,
Life of souls made in Your likeness,
In the name of Your Love,
make Your Heart known and revealed.”

Blessed Louise-Thérèse de Montaignac de Chauvance (1820-1885)
“Apostle of the Sacred Heart”

o jesus eternal life in the womb of the father -bl louise therese de montaignac 27 june 2020

“By nature, each one of us
is enclosed, in his own personality
but supernaturally, we are all one.
We are made one body in Christ
because we are nourished by one flesh.
As Christ is indivisible, we are all one in Him.
Therefore, He asked His Father
“that they may all be One, as We also are one.”

by natue each one of us is enclosed - st cyril of alex - 27 june 2020

“We have passed over the waves
of this present life like a sea,
with its commotion and insane bustle.
We have eaten spiritual manna,
the bread that came down from heaven
giving life to the world.”

my-father-gives-you-the-true-bread-john-6-32-we-have-passed-over-sdt-cyril-of-alex-7-may-2019 (1)

“Christ, has dominion over all creatures,
a dominion not seized by violence
nor usurped but His,
by essence and by nature.

christ has dominion over all - st cyril of alexandria 24 nov 2019 christ the king

“The mark of Christ’s sheep
is their willingness to hear and obey,
just as disobedience
is the mark of those who are not His.
We take the word ‘hear’
to imply obedience
to what has been said.”

john 10 3 he calls his own sheep - the mark of christ's sheep is their willingness to hear - st cyril of alex 13 may 2019

“We must note, therefore,
that he that does things pleasing to God,
serves Christ but he that follows his own wishes,
is a follower, rather of himself and not of God.”

we must note therefore that he does - st cyril of alex - 10 august 2018

“Our lives are all controlled by the Spirit now
and are not confined to this physical world
that is subject to corruption.
The light of the Only-begotten has shone on us
and we have been transformed into the Word,
the source of all life.”

St Cyril of Alexandria (376-444)
Father and Doctor of the Incarnation

our lives are all controlled by the spirit now - st cyril of alex doctor of the incarnation 17 may 2020

More from St Cyril here:
https://anastpaul.com/2019/06/27/quote-s-of-the-day-27-june-st-cyril-of-alexandria-376-444-father-and-doctor/

Posted in ASPIRATIONS and EJACULATIONS, DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MARIAN TITLES, ONE Minute REFLECTION, PRAYERS of the CHURCH, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on FAITH, QUOTES on HUMILITY, QUOTES on TRUTH, SAINT of the DAY, The HOLY EUCHARIST / The HOLY MASS, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 27 June – “Lord, I am not worthy…”

One Minute Reflection – 27 June – “Month of the Sacred Heart”- Saturday of the Twelfth week in Ordinary Time, Year A, Readings: Lamentations 2:210-1418-19Psalm 74:1-720-21Matthew 8:5-17 and the Feast of Our Mother of Perpetual Succour and the Memorial of St Cyril of Alexandria  (376-444) – Doctor of the Church “The Pillar of Faith” & “Seal of all the Fathers” – Doctor Incarnationis (Doctor of the Incarnation) and Bl Louise-Thérèse de Montaignac de Chauvance OSHJ (1820-1885)

“Lord, I am not worthy that you should enter under my roof” … Matthew 8:8

REFLECTION – “When the Lord promised to go to the centurion’s house to heal his servant, the centurion answered, “Lord, I am not worthy to have you come under my roof but only say the word and my servant will be healed.”   By viewing himself as unworthy, he showed himself worthy for Christ to come, not merely into his house but also into his heart.   He would not have said this with such great faith and humility, if he had not already welcomed in his heart, the One who came into his house.   It would have been no great joy for the Lord Jesus to enter into his house and not to enter his heart.   For the Master of humility, both by word and example, sat down also in the house of a certain proud Pharisee, Simon and, though He sat down in his house, there was no place in his heart.   For in his heart the Son of Man could not lay his head.” – St Augustine (354-430) Father and Doctor of Grace – Sermon 62matthew 8 8 lord i am not worthy that you should enter - he would not have said this with such great fiath - st augustine - 27 june 2020

PRAYER – God our Father, You open the gates of the kingdom of heaven to those who are born again of water and the Holy Spirit. Increase the grace You have given, so that the people who have been purified from all sin, may not forfeit the promised blessing of Your love. Grant that we may ever keep Your Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, before our eyes and do all in Him and through Him and for Him and may the prayers of our Mother of Perpetual Succour may ever guide and bear us in her care and may Your Saints pray for Holy Mother Church and us all! We make our pray through Christ, our Lord, in union with You and the Holy Spirit, one God forever, amen.mother of perpetual succour pray for us 27 june 2020st cyril of alexandria pray for us

bl louise-therese de montaignac pray for us 27 june 2020

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 27 June – Blessed Louise-Thérèse de Montaignac de Chauvance OSHJ (1820-1885)

Saint of the Day – 27 June – Blessed Louise-Thérèse de Montaignac de Chauvance OSHJ (1820-1885) Religious Sister and Founder of the Pious Union of Oblates of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.   She was known for her staunch devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.   Her life witnessed her dedication to Catechetical formation and promoting the Sacred Heart in France.   Born on 14 May 1820 in Le Havre-de-Grâce, Seine Maritime, France and died on 27 June 1885 in Moulins, Allier, France of natural causes, aged 65.   Patronage – Oblates of the Heart of Jesus.bl louise-therese de montaignac de chauvance 1

“In this nineteenth century, when there is so much division, frequently even within families, our mission is to unite… To firmly unite souls in a bond of true devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.”    These heartfelt words of Blessed Louise-Thérèse de Montaignac reveal the spirit of the Foundress of the Oblates of the Heart of Jesus.   “A daughter of the Church and a woman in the Church,” said Saint John Paul II, “Louise-Thérèse wished to serve the Lord and the Church, which are one.   Animated by an ardent apostolic desire and sustained by a great devotion to the Heart of Jesus, she began the work in close cooperation with her Bishop, with the Priests of her parish and with the lay faithful.   She founded the Oblates who, through their union among themselves, were called to be agents of unity.” (Beatification Homily, 4 November 1990)

Louise-Thérèse was born in Le Havre on 14 May 1820, to a profoundly Christian family, who passed on the faith to her as a precious heritance.   She was Baptised the next day.   Later, she would express her happiness at being a daughter of God and would celebrate each anniversary of her Baptism.

From her father, Raymond de Montaignac de Chauvance, a civil servant and her mother, Anne de Raffin, Louise-Thérèse received the example of a life open to all.   She was very close to her older sister Anna and her four brothers, she worked to make them happy. As a child, Louise was lively, spontaneous, always active:  “I was made to love, so I desperately clung to all that was good ….”   Her spontaneous nature played tricks on her;  she made lots of foolish mistakes and did stupid things but her confidence disarmed all severity.   The little girl loved to pray.   One day, after a long search, she was found snuggled in a closet.   “I was saying my prayers,” she said and when asked the reason for this strange behaviour, she explained, “It’s so that I don’t do any wrong to God.”

In 1827, Louise went off to boarding school in Châteauroux, at the Monastery of the Faithful Companions of Jesus and then, for the following two years, at the des Oiseaux convent, run by the Daughters of Our Lady.   Boarding school rules did not suit her in the least.   During her first stay, she was still afraid of punishments.   However, she received a grace at Christmas – in contemplating the crèche she discovered the touching mystery of a God-child, poor and suffering. She allowed herself to be taken by Him and began to love Him.   At des Oiseaux, she was “so scatterbrained that she was always in penance and in tears.”   In class, she “consented to study only because her companions were ahead of her.”   In the chapel, she made commendable efforts to be recollected but her good resolutions were always short lived.   Louise would, nevertheless, always keep from these years the memory of happy days, in which her heart opened to God through her confessions as a child, her confidences to the Mother Superior “Mama Sophie” and her first friendships.   But, it must be acknowledged, her studies scarcely progressed.   A change was needed;  her parents entrusted her to her aunt, Madame de Raffin, who was also her godmother.   Over the years, the affection that united the young woman and her goddaughter would turn into a profound closeness. For fifteen years, Louise lived in the Raffin home, sometimes in Nevers, sometimes in the country, without losing the bond with her family.   “It was,” she would say, “one of the greatest graces of my life.”

Her First Communion took place on 6 June 1833. “The little girl, the reediest there ever was,” she would say, had changed into a serious adolescent:   “Since my First Communion, I have always remained under divine action.”   The Eucharist became the centre of her life. Madame de Raffin was a woman of tempered faith but more energetic than tender.   In school, Louise learned to control her natural energy without destroying its dynamism.   She received a solid education, cultivated her artistic gifts and started learning the role of lady of the house.   Under the direction of Father Gaume (1802-1879), the Director of the Minor Seminary, then Vicar General of the Diocese of Nevers, she likewise benefited from a spiritual and doctrinal formation.   Louise immersed herself in the Gospels, the Psalms and read the Fathers of the Church and Saint Teresa of Avila, who became her main patroness. In 1837, when she returned to the des Oiseaux convent, she re-found the force of the faith that was the mark of this house, which radiated devotion to the Heart of Jesus.   She was received into the Children of Mary.   The Most Blessed Virgin, to whom “she confided all her sorrows” when she was a child, would from then on be her “teacher at every moment.”bl meresaintlouisdiocesevannes.2

On Christmas 1836, Louise-Thérèse came out of midnight Mass, with her friend Camille de Breathier, who was murmuring the verse from Revelations:  it is these who follow the Lamb wherever He goes (Rev. 14:4).   Louise was overcome… To follow Jesus wherever He goes!  From that moment on, the white light of the Lamb illumined her steps, tracing out the radiant path on which she strove to follow Him.   On 21 November 1838, Father Gaume gave her permission to take the vow of virginity.   Four years later, at the age of twenty-two, Louise-Thérèse was bedridden for ten months with a bone disease – the first health ordeal which would unite her more intimately with God.   Madame de Raffin helped her to live this time of suffering in recognition that in all things, “God’s will is pure love.”   Following this illness, her aunt asked Louise-Thérèse this blunt question:  “If Our Lord said to you: ‘Do you wish to be attached to the Cross with Me up to the point of death,’ would you accept?”   “Yes,” she replied, “and with all my heart!”   She would fully live out this “folly of love that does not calculate, does not reason, that runs without resting after the Saviour.”

In the era following the Revolution, in a world contaminated by scepticism, many people’s faith was shaken.   In response, fervent Christians dedicated themselves to God through a vow to the Sacred Heart.   The formula of this vow, written by Father Roothaan, the Father General of the Jesuits, spread throughout France.   From this source sprang a veritable spiritual renewal.   Madame de Raffin had heard about it from Father Ronsin, the spiritual director for the des Oiseaux Convent and, in 1841, she made the consecration.   On 8 September 1843, Louise-Thérèse also made it.   This vow is a response of our love to God’s first loving us, revealed by the Heart of Jesus, a response that engages the whole person in carrying out the Father’s plan.   It was already the Oblation that would make the future Oblates. Forty years later, Louise-Thérèse could not recall the memory of this blessed day without profound emotion:  “The vow to the Sacred Heart made my life.   It was for me the source of all graces, of all joys.”bl louise-therese de montaignac de chauvance

To revive the faith, Madame de Raffin conceived a vast plan of uniting Christian women in devotion to the Heart of Jesus:  “Little scattered pieces of coal,” she said, “can produce neither flame, nor warmth: gathered together, they can light a great fire capable of illumining and reheating the world.”   Initially associated with the project, Louise-Thérèse took it over with the death of her aunt in 1845.   She recalled it’s inspiration in light of the Gospel:  “I came to cast fire upon the earth and would that it were already kindled!” (Lk. 12:49).   She dreamed of entering Carmel but gave it up, on Father Gaume’s recommendation: “Your vocation,” he told her, “is to carry Carmel into the midst of the world.”

The Revolution of 1848 shook France.   Monsieur de Montaignac resigned as a civil servant.   The family left Paris and settled in Montluçon, in the province of Bourbonnais, where it’s real roots were. Louise-Thérèse wondered how to awaken the faith in this city that was rapidly growing but marked by religious indifference.   Everyday, she spent two hours in prayer in the deserted parish Church.   Steadfast Christian groups were active in Montluçon, organised by a Priest with a fervent heart, Father Guilhomet.   Louise-Thérèse joined forces with him and agreed to lead the Congregation of the Children of Mary.   She founded the Orphanage of the Sacred Heart and enlisted friends to teach Catechism to the most abandoned.   Having witnessed the abandonment of Churches in the countryside, she established the Charity of Poor Churches, helped spread Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, organised retreats and endeavoured to develop her aunt’s project—the association of Christian women.   Thanks to support from her Bishop, Bishop de Dreux-Brézé and from her parish Priest, these works spread in the Diocese of Moulins and beyond.   However, at this time, the bone disease in her legs that Louise-Thérèse had been stricken with, returned.   For more than thirty years, suffering became her “inseparable companion.”   Handicapped, she could move only with crutches or transported in a little carriage.   She needed all the energy of love to remain tirelessly devoted to others and to maintain the overflowing activity, that characterised her life.

In 1859, Mademoiselle de Montaignac met Father Gautrelet, a Jesuit, who in 1844 had founded the Apostolate of Prayer.   Seeing his Seminarians’ impatience to enter missionary life, this Priest had told them:  “Be apostles right now, apostles of prayer!   Offer what you do each day in union with the Heart of Our Lord Jesus Christ and for what He wants – the spread of the Kingdom of God for the salvation of souls.” A Priest with a great deal of experience, Father Gautrelet would be Louise-Thérèse’s adviser for more than twenty-five years.   With humility, he admitted: “I have great confidence in the direction of the Holy Spirit, the first of all directors!”   That same year, he put Louise-Thérèse  in touch with his confrere, Father Ramière, who had just taken over the leadership of the Apostolate of Prayer.   An ardent Apostle of the Sacred Heart, Father Ramière launched Louise-Thérèse full sail into this movement.   Louise-Thérèse saw in this spirituality the “most universal means for the sanctification of souls,” and found his organisation to be “an excellent way to penetrate society.”bl louise-therese de montaignac de chauvances -glass

At the beginning of the 1860s, Louise-Thérèse began the construction of a beautiful Chapel in the heart of Montluçon, to “unceasingly remind us of the love of the heart of Jesus.”   Dedicated on 31 May 1864, it would become the Chapel of the Mother house of the Association of Christian Women.   The same year, an attempt was made to unite this organisation with the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart in Issoudun.   But in 1874, the Association broke off and became the Pious Union of the Oblates of the Heart of Jesus, under its own rule approved by the Bishop of Moulins.   These years were fruitful – the Christian women consecrated by vow to the Heart of Jesus, were growing in number.   In December 1875, Louise-Thérèse was appointed secretary general of the Apostolate of Prayer.   Her correspondence—more than 1800 letters have been preserved—testifies to the quality of these relationships. Very practical, she entered with her innate common sense into the most minute details of material life, the organisation of houses, health and quite naturally, with tact and discretion, she became a spiritual guide who taught how to live in the light of faith.   Strong friendships, born from these exchanges, marked her life:  “Saint Teresa of Avila,” she said, “greatly loved her friends and this has always encouraged me to warmly love my friends.”

st louise-therese's chapel of sacred heart
Bl Louise-Thérèse’s Chapel of the Sacred Heart

In Montluçon, a small team surrounded Louise-Thérèse.   These first companions led a common life of prayer and hospitality, for they received many individuals.   The Chapel was a centre for retreats, for spiritual encounters.   Thus a first community took shape.   Soon, a House was founded in Paray-le-Monial, then another in Paris.   At the start of the 1880s, the future face of the institute took shape—two different forms of the Oblation for women destined to serve God and neighbour were proposed.   Some, married or not, would remain in their environment, harmonising their family obligations with quite varied forms of apostolate.   They formed “Re-unions” in the true sense of the word: “re-uniting,” that is meeting again, in a group regularly to pray together and practice fraternal charity;  these are secular oblates. The others made vows of religion, poverty, chastity and obedience, in accordance with Louise-Thérèse’s inspiration.   These professed oblates lived in community in the Houses, which were houses of prayer, intended first and foremost for the revitalisation of the secular oblates. Each of the Houses took on one or more apostolates.

On 17 May 1880, Louise-Thérèse was elected Superior General.   Her role was to ensure “unity of spirit and tendencies, freedom in works and deeds, whether collective or individual.”   The oblates’ chapter defined the mission of the institute:  “To unite souls strongly through the bond of a true devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, drawing them to prayer, reparation and devotion in union with Him and manifesting their love in the performance of works for His glory.”   For the Foundress, devotion to the Heart of Jesus is a life of union and conformity with Him Who is eternal life which was with the Father (1 Jn. 1:2).   “Our primary code of life,” she said, “is Jesus’ priestly Prayer,” which appears in Chapter 17 of Saint John’s Gospel: that they may be one even as we are one.   On 4 October 1881, this mission was officially recognised by Pope Leo XIII.   The communities multiplied:  Lyon, Montélimar…

In the last years of her life, Louise-Thérèse experienced an even greater intimacy with Our Lord and grew in her service to others. Restricted to her chair or sickbed, she burned with a fervour more infectious than ever.   “I am,” she gaily said, “like a young, frisky horse that has all four hooves tied down but is whipped to make it walk. … When I see all the work that Our Lord presents to me, I wish to do everything, to undertake everything.”   In Montluçon, newcomers had taken the place of the workers of the first hour.   Louise-Thérèse made formation of these daughters a priority, for they would have to pass on, that which they had received, as in a family. Bl Vitrail Louise Thérèse

Louise-Thérèse invites us to “an intimate communication, continual and full of love, with God, to a respectful and filial familiarity… God must be the breath of our soul, we must move and act only in Him…. True contemplation consists of having one’s mind and heart united with Jesus, speaking, acting, thinking like Him.   What life could be more active and yet more contemplative than His? Always united to His Father, He is our model, our sole guide.   Such are the fervent and energetic souls who are called to make the greatest progress in contemplative life.   Such are the ones, who best carry out Our Lord’s plans.   What is the use of contemplating a model, if one does not have the energy to reproduce it?   The active soul acts on the fruit of one’s prayer, puts into action the lights it has received.   It works in prayer, in humility, in devotion, in self-sacrifice.   This is the true way of putting the life of Jesus into practice.”   If someone close to her was a little stressed by external occupations, she would calm her: “You work for God, without doubt but one must work IN God.”  The formation she gave was completely directed toward the freedom of love:   “There is no barrier between Jesus and the oblate.   Every soul goes where the Spirit leads it;  Love is its only guide.”   She also demanded that all be treated with respect, attention paid to each and to what God wanted of each.   Returning to this humility that is the welcome of God, that He has a place for all, she noted, “Love dies where there is no humility.”

Christmas was a special time each year for Louise-Thérèse.   In 1882, as this feast drew near, she invited the youngest of the oblates to follow “this little Child Who calls us to His crèche to lead us to Calvary where His Heart is always open.”   And she vigorously insisted:  “How could we resist Him?   He shows Himself always to be the Saviour.   Let us be it with Him as his littlest disciples.”   This sums up Louise-Thérèse’s entire life.   Struck by the person of Jesus in the mystery of His Incarnation, she handed herself over to Him so that He might live in her, so that He might continue His mission in her.   By patiently enduring her intensely painful illness, which left her little respite, she united herself ever more closely with the Saviour’s Passion. “If You wish for me to continue to suffer, I will not complain,” she told Him in 1881.   She nevertheless, had to undergo a night of the spirit:  “I see nothing, I feel nothing.   But I have faith in You and that is enough for me.”   During the last hours of her life, she relied upon her Saviour:   “I am counting on Divine Mercy, I will say:  I have loved.” On 27 June 1885, she died as she was replying simply to the name of Jesus that someone close to her was saying:  “My all!”

The institute soon saw a rapid expansion.   The secular oblates’ first foundations were established abroad – Portugal (1887), El Salvador and Poland (1894) and Nicaragua (1903).   Today, the institute is also established in Belgium, South America and Africa.

“Let us ask Blessed Louise-Thérèse of Montaignac de Chauvance to help us recognise the love of the Heart of Jesus and to remind men and women of it unceasingly, as she did so well during her life” (Saint John Paul II).bl louise-therese de montaignac de chauvances -snip