DAY 2
St. Louis's Influence on the Church
There's a story from St. Louis de Montfort's life that
particularly expresses his passion, which we pondered just
yesterday. In the town of Pontchâteau, St. Louis inspired the
peasants to build a huge monument to the Passion of Christ on a
neighboring hill. For 15 months, hundreds of peasants volunteered
their skills and labor to build it. When completed, it stood as a
massive structure, a real labor of love, and on the day before it
was supposed to be dedicated by the bishop, word got back to Louis
that his enemies had convinced the government to destroy it. (They
had lied to the authorities, saying that the structure was
actually meant to be a fortress against the government.) When
Louis received this disappointing news, he told the thousands of
people who had gathered for the blessing ceremony, "We had
hoped to build a Calvary here. Let us build it in our hearts.
Blessed be God."
One thing about doing the Lord's work: It doesn't always turn
out according to our plans. For example, St. Louis surely had
planned that his monument to Christ would last more than a day.
Yet the saint obediently accepted the destruction of his plans and
blessed God. Because of this kind of detachment from his own will
and attachment to God's, Louis became an instrument used by God to
accomplish even mightier works. So, although his physical monument
was destroyed, Louis's teaching eventually became a huge edifice
in the Church that exercised great influence on many Popes and on
Catholic spirituality. Indeed, de Montfort's passionate labors
paid off in the end, even if he didn't see the fruit himself.
As we are just beginning our preparation for consecration to
Jesus through Mary, let's ponder some of the support various Popes
have given to St. Louis's teaching. May the testimony of their
support strengthen our resolve to journey on to Consecration Day,
and may it help us to trust that our consecration truly will bear
great fruit in our lives, even if we don't yet fully understand
how.
- Blessed Pope Pius IX (1846-1878) stated that
St. Louis's devotion to Mary is the best and most acceptable
form.
- Pope Leo XIII (1878-1903) not only beatified
de Montfort in 1888 but granted a Church indulgence to Catholics
who consecrate themselves to Mary using de Montfort's formula.
Moreover, this Pope was reportedly so influenced by St. Louis's
efforts to spread the Rosary that he wrote 11 encyclicals on this
preeminent Marian devotion.
- Saint Pope Pius X (1903-1914), like Leo XIII,
also recommended de Montfort's teaching on Mary to the faithful.
In fact, he granted a plenary indulgence in perpetuum (in
perpetuity) to anyone who would pray de Montfort's formula for
Marian consecration, and he offered his own apostolic blessing to
anyone who would simply read True Devotion. This Pope so strongly
encouraged the faithful to follow de Montfort's path of Marian
devotion because he himself had experienced its power. In fact, in
his Marian encyclical Ad Diem Illum, the saintly Pope expressed
his own dependence on de Montfort in writing it, which becomes
obvious when one compares it with True Devotion. The Pope's
encyclical continually reflects the tone and spirit of de
Montfort's classic work as evidenced by sentences like this:
"There is no surer or easier way than Mary in uniting all men
with Christ."
- Pope Pius XI (1922-1939) simply stated,
"I have practiced this devotion ever since my
youth."
- Venerable Pope Pius XII (1939-1958) canonized
St. Louis in 1947 and, in his homily for the Mass of canonization,
referred to de Montfort's Marian teaching as "solid and
right." Then, when the Pope addressed the pilgrims who had
come for the canonization, he said that de Montfort leads us to
Mary and from Mary, to Jesus, thus summarizing the meaning of
Marian consecration.
- Pope Saint John Paul II (1978-2005) promoted
de Montfort's teaching more than any other Pope. We'll learn more
about this during the fourth week of the retreat. It's enough here
to recall two amazing facts: First, that John Paul's papal motto
was Totus Tuus ("totally yours"), which he took directly
from de Montfort's shorter prayer of consecration; second, that
John Paul described his reading of True Devotion to Mary as a
"decisive turning point" in his life.
Today's Prayer:
Come, Holy Spirit, living in Mary. Prepare me to give
myself fully to living out this true and solid devotion.
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