Champagnat Sean HeartNoBounds en
Champagnat Sean HeartNoBounds en
Champagnat Sean HeartNoBounds en
Sammon, FMS
1999
SAINT
MARCELLIN CHAMPAGNAT
The life and Mission
SAINT
MARCELLIN CHAMPAGNAT
The life and Mission
Edizione:
Istituto dei Fratelli Maristi
Piazzale Marcellino Champagnat, 2
C.P. 10250
00144 ROMA
ITALIA
Tel. (39) 06 54 517 279
Fax (39) 06 54 517 217
E-mail: [email protected]
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements .............................................................................. pag. 5
Introduction ...............................................................................................
15
25
37
51
61
71
References ..................................................
76
Acknowledgements
Marcellin Champagnat
Sweeney, and Henri Vignau, as well as Sister Rachel Callahan,
CSC, John E. Kerrigan, Jr., Sister Rea McDonnell, SSND, and
John and Peggy Perring-Mulligan. If the copy reads well and
is clear and to the point, the credit belongs to them. Any
errors in judgment or factual misstatements are, of course, the
responsibility of the author.
A special word of thanks must go to Brother Leonard
Voegtle, FMS. His careful reading of several drafts of the manuscript and thoughtful advice, helped the author correct a
number of historical inaccuracies.
A final word of thanks to Sister Marie Kraus, SNDdeN, who
edited the text. She is a master at finding a deft phrase and for
attacking the clutter, clutter, clutter that fills the work of most
writers. Thanks, once again, Marie, for your help.
This account was written with lay men and women in
mind, especially the young among them, though others may
also find it of interest. It is, of course, incomplete and influenced by the authors affection for Marcellin Champagnat. It
is not meant to be an historical or biographical record of his
life. Several others have taken on those challenges and with
more satisfying results. A list of their publications appears in
the References section at the end of this book. The author
hopes, though, that the few stories recorded here will help the
reader come to know better Marcellin Champagnat, the
remarkable man who founded the Little Brothers of Mary.
The book was a pleasure to write. It was like taking a class
with Marcellin: he the teacher, the subject his life, and I the
only student. I hope that one day, when I meet him face to
face, he will be compassionate in grading the work of this
erstwhile student of his. Judging from the evidence that I
uncovered in writing the book, I have no doubt that he will.
Introduction
Dear Reader,
Who was Saint Marcellin Champagnat? We know that he
was a priest of the Society of Mary, and the founder of its Little
Brothers of Mary, recognized worldwide today as the Institute
of the Marist Brothers. Yes, he was all of those things, but he
was also so much more. This book sets out to uncover the
message that his life and mission hold for us today.
The story of this young priest takes us back to late eighteenth and early nineteenth century France. Get ready to walk
its roads, and to cherish the terrain he so loved, to meet the
people who shaped him, to suffer through the adversity that
strengthened him, and, in the end, to be seized by the God
who was at the center of his life.
Marcellin Champagnat loved young people. They, in turn,
found his enthusiasm and energy contagious. Three elements
fueled his passion for life and shaped his spirituality: an
awareness of Gods presence, an unwavering confidence in
Mary and her protection, and the two uncomplicated virtues
of simplicity and humility.
As a founder Marcellin was young, aged twenty-seven
years, when he invited his first two recruits to join him. He
gave his Little Brothers a clear mission. Proclaim the Word of
God directly to the young, he said, and among them, particu7
Marcellin Champagnat
larly to those most neglected. He knew that to teach young
people you had to love them first. Marcellin guided his life and
work by that principle and expected his brothers to do the
same.
So, turn the page, and begin to walk alongside this man
whom our Church calls a very modern-day saint, an apostle
to youth. Marcellin Champagnat was both for his time in history; he is no less for ours today.
Sen D. Sammon, FMS
Rome, Italy
22 January 1999
10
Chapter I
In the beginning
Marcellin Champagnat
sold. As a thinker, revolutionary, government official, tradesman, and farmer, what gifts did Jean-Baptiste pass along to his
son? Discernment, compassion for others, diplomacy, a head
for business, the skills of a laborer.
What about the women who inspired Marcellin? Marie
Thrse Chirat, his mother, was the first. A prudent person of
steadfast character, she married Jean Baptiste in 1775. Marked
by utter integrity, sterling faith, and a love of work, this
woman instilled in her son the rudiments of prayer and the
first stirring of his vocation.
Louise Champagnat was the second woman to encourage
Marcellin. A religious Sister of Saint Joseph and a sister to JeanBaptiste, she was expelled from her convent by the new government and sought sanctuary with his family during the days
of revolutionary excess. Louise assisted in the boys early religious formation; she was probably the first to model for him the
merging of a life of prayer with one of service to others.
Finally, there was Mary, the mother of Jesus. While a later
arrival in Marcellins life, in the end, she would make all the
difference. Devotion to her was part of the rich texture of faith
in the local dioceses of Lyons and Le Puy. Marcellin would, in
time, place Mary at the center of the community of brothers
he founded. In keeping with the spirituality of his times and
particularly of the region around Marlhes, she became eventually for him a Good Mother, his Ordinary Resource.
So, a war, one man, and three women were there at the outset. Taking these facts as our starting point, lets begin to
answer the question we asked at the outset of this book: Who
was Marcellin Champagnat? As mentioned earlier, we know that
he was the founder of the Little Brothers of Mary. He was also
a citizen of late eighteenth and early nineteenth century France,
very much a man of his times with all the virtues and limits that
such a description implies. But who was he, really, and what
message do his life and mission have for us today? A look at
some of the events, elements, and people that shaped his early
12
In the beginning
Marcellin Champagnat was baptized within twenty-four
hours of his birth, on Ascension Thursday, 1789. He lived his
life of fifty-one years between two insurrections in France:
one in 1789, another about forty years later. The intervening
period saw successive revolutionary governments, the rule of
Napoleon, the Bourbon restoration, the Revolution of 1830,
the Orleans monarchy, and the uprising at Lyons in 1834.
Other revolutions were also underway; initially less noticeable perhaps, they were just as sweeping in scope and unsettling in outcome. The Industrial Revolution, for example, got
underway after 1830 and transformed the world of work; it
brought with it the exploitation of laborers and a radical
change in their way of living.
Other factors
Terrain also shaped young Marcellin Champagnat.
Growing up in a region known as the Massif Central, he knew
open fields, quiet rivulets, pine forests. But nature is capricious in that part of France; at times, it can be actually dangerous. Where the winters are hard, locals learn how to
endure. The terrain of his region taught Marcellin these
virtues: tenacity, adaptability, and toughness.
Marcellin Champagnat
little to secure the place of teaching and learning in the overall scheme of things.
Marcellin attended school for a very brief time. He failed
to demonstrate much of a capacity for formal schoolwork; the
brutal treatment that teachers meted out to students also
worked against his settling in. By age eleven, he had decided
that he preferred farm work to the world of books. When
Marcellin set out for the seminary at age sixteen, he took with
him his lack of education. This deficiency was to be a cross
for him throughout his life.
Call to be a priest
After the revolution, the power of the Catholic Church in
France was greatly diminished. Napoleon Bonaparte eventually gave the Church greater freedom but for a specific reason:
he planned to use the Church as a prop for his regime.
In 1803, Bishop Joseph Fesch, an uncle of Napoleon, was
asked to head the archdiocese of Lyons. Finding his priests
devastated by the ravages of the Revolution of 1789, he set out
energetically to renew the strength of the clergy. Part of his
plan called for new minor seminaries. To fill them with candidates, the new bishop encouraged staff at the major and
minor seminaries to devote some of their vacation time to
recruiting vocations.
As a result, in 1803 a priest arrived in Marlhes seeking suitable young men for the seminary. Father Allirot, the parish
priest, confessed that he could think of none. After a few
moments of thought, however, he suggested that his visitor
might try the Champagnat family.
Among the boys at home at the time, Marcellin alone
showed any interest when the proposal to train for the priesthood was presented. However, the young man was almost
functionally illiterate. While he expressed himself freely in the
14
Marcellin Champagnat
unusually effective in attending to the needs of his parishioners. Speaking with them in the dialect of the region, for
example, he was often known to roll up his sleeves to help
them with their farm work.
Soutrenon also got along famously with the children and
young people of the parish. Years later, it was obvious that
Marcellin modeled himself as a priest after this fervent and
courageous young clergyman. Father Soutrenon was a great
inspiration to him, and on his return from St. Sauveur,
Marcellin was more determined than ever to be a priest.
Reflection questions
1. Who are the people who have helped you shape your
lifes dream and encouraged you to live it out? In what specific ways did they help?
2. What events in your life gave you a sense of Gods
dream for you? The Lord mapped out a journey for you, what
milestones along the road helped you find your way?
16
Chapter II
ather Prier was the mainstay of the makeshift minor seminary at Verrires. Conditions there were harsh. Most of
the priests young charges were housed in a large but dilapidated parish house; he found space for the overflow in a nearby barn. By the time Marcellin arrived, the group was made up
of somewhere between eighty and one hundred young men.
Marcellin was older than many of his classmates. While
academically unimpressive, he excelled in those tasks that
required manual work. Simply put, when offered a physical
challenge, he would shine. Throughout his seminary days, the
young man had to fight against taking an easy way out and
seeking more tangible results by working with his hands.
Marcellins first year ended on an unhappy note. Father
Prier concluded that he was unsuited for priesthood. The
priest told the young man and his mother that he would not
be welcomed back to the seminary for a second year. Marie
Thrse, while disappointed, immediately set about to resolve
this crisis in her sons life.
Her first recourse was to prayer. Mother and son made a
second pilgrimage together to the shrine of Saint John Francis
Regis. With that journey behind them, Marie Thrse used
17
Marcellin Champagnat
some very human means to further her sons cause. The
parish priest, Father Allirot, was well connected at the seminary, and she prevailed upon him to intervene. She also
sought the help of Father Linossier, a well-respected, highly
qualified, and newly arrived member of the seminary staff.
Due to the combined efforts of these two men, the Superior
at Verrires reversed his decision and agreed to readmit
Marcellin.
Marcellin Champagnat
always played a central role in the peoples lives. Is it any
wonder, then, that Marcellin strengthened his attachment to
Mary during his years at Saint Irenaeus?
Rapid political changes shook France in 1814; the ripple
effects of these unfolding events found their way into the corridors of Saint Irenaeus. Napoleon abdicated on April 6th,
1814. Cardinal Fesch, his uncle, fled immediately to Italy. The
Bourbons returned to the throne of France.
The vast majority of the seminarians had positioned themselves against Napoleon. As a consequence, a great deal of
political discussion occupied their time throughout 1814. One
historian of the period described it as a terrible year, one during which seminarians spoke more of politics than theology.
Despite all the turmoil, political events were far from
Marcellins mind. He appeared to hold himself aloof from this
type of involvement. He was not alone in this pursuit. JeanClaude Colin, future founder of the Marist Fathers and a contemporary of Marcellin at Saint Irenaeus, refers to 1815 as a
wretched year.
In spite of the unrest at the seminary, Saint Irenaeus will
be remembered as a remarkable place in terms of the fruit it
produced. Saint Jean-Marie Vianney, the future Cur of Ars,
was numbered among Marcellins classmates.
Journey to ordination
His teachers and superiors at Saint Irenaeus held Marcellin
in high regard. He had made quite a favorable impression. A
brief survey of some of the young seminarians resolutions
gives an insight into his spiritual journey at this time in his life.
The practice of charity ranked high among the resolutions
Marcellin made in 1815. The ever-present political disputes
common at the seminary at the time no doubt played a role
in the making of this resolution. We note also that the young
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Marcellin Champagnat
quite a bit of history. At age ten, for example, he had contracted a serious eye condition after a bout with smallpox.
Concerned about his limited vision, his mother took her son
to the shrine of Our Lady of Le Puy. There in 1809, at age
twenty-two, he was allegedly cured of his blindness after oil
from a sanctuary lamp had been applied to his afflicted eyes.
This event led Courveille to dedicate his life to Mary. He
claimed in later years to have also heard a voice on the feast
of the Assumption, 1812, directing him to found the Society of
Mary. The purpose of this group was quite simple: it would
do for the Church of nineteenth century France what the
Jesuits had done for the Church of the sixteenth century.
Bochard was eager to speak with Courveille, especially
when he learned of the young mans plan to found a religious
congregation. Since, as was mentioned earlier, the former was
in the process of setting up his own religious association, he
thought that he could wed the two projects.
The Vicar General encouraged Courveille to seek members
for the Marist group he had in mind. Bochards motives, however, were not pure as the driven snow: he set about evaluating each of the men Courveille was considering with an eye to
their eventual membership in the Society of the Cross of Jesus.
Oblivious to the Vicars scheme, Courveille set out on his
membership drive and in a short while had fifteen recruits. All
in their twenties and thirties, they came mainly from French
peasant families. These young men spent the academic year
18141815 hammering out the fundamental principles of the
new Society. It was to be made up of priests, auxiliary brothers, sisters, and lay men and women. The group of priests
would form the Societys core.
Early in the discussion, Marcellin introduced the idea of
establishing another branch of the Society, one made up of
teaching brothers. His fellow seminarians did not express
much enthusiasm for the plan. If nothing else, however, we
know by now that Marcellin was a persistent soul. He kept
22
Marcellin Champagnat
of education. All these elements worked together, pushing
Marcellin forward. However, it would be his encounter with a
young man named Jean-Baptiste Montagne that finally crystallized his dream and filled it with the urgency needed to
make it a reality.
Ordination
On July 22nd, 1816, Marcellin realized his dream of many
years: Bishop Dubourg of New Orleans ordained him a priest.
Sharing the joy of the day and receiving the sacrament along
with him were seven other members of the group now beginning to be known as Marists. The day after their ordination,
the eight, accompanied by four seminarians, set off on pilgrimage to Fourvire. The basilica that fills the site today did
not exist back then. Instead, the group made their way to the
shrine of the Black Virgin, a small chapel that the present day
basilica adjoins. Jean-Claude Courveille celebrated Mass for
them. At its conclusion, all twelve renewed their pledge and
dedicated their lives to Mary.
The original Marist dream called for one Society, not several. The various branches were to be subordinate to the unity
of the whole. In making their pledge at Fourvire, the early
Marists knew that they were committing themselves to some
future action. For the present, they were subject to the authority of diocesan officials who assigned the newly ordained
widely throughout the vast diocese of Lyons. So it came to
pass that Marcellin found himself on his way to the village of
La Valla, located in the obscure foothills of Mount Pilat. There
he took up the work of his first priestly assignment on August
13th, 1816, two days before the feast of the Assumption.
24
25
26
Chapter III
Marcellin Champagnat
La Valla was also not Marlhes. The terrain of the two
regions differed greatly. The word La Valla, meaning valley,
is actually something of a misnomer when applied to the area
around Mount Pilat. Rather than being made up of stretches
of good soil surrounded by hills, hardly any level ground can
be found in the locale. Ravines, rocks, precipices, and fast
mountain streams, etching their way through rock and soil,
are more common sights. During the young curates day,
some places were almost inaccessible for want of passable
roads. Without doubt, Marcellin Champagnat faced a tough
assignment in the midst of some rugged terrain.
Ascetical practices
To keep his fervor alive, the young priest set up a rigorous
schedule of ascetical practices for himself. He rose at 4:00 AM
and began his day with a half-hour meditation. Daily Mass
was preceded by fifteen minutes of recollected prayer.
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Marcellin Champagnat
The founder, though, was also a man of his times. Dancing,
for example, had always been a favorite pastime of the people
of La Valla. The Napoleonic armies, however, brought with
them on their return from the German States a new form of this
diversion: the waltz. In the regions traditional dances, partners
touched rarely, and then only slightly on the hand, hardly
enough to stir the passions. But in the waltz, couples were
required to embrace and to move together as though one.
Marcellin, in keeping with his seminary formation and the
spirit of the times, probably objected strongly to this type of
dancing. Brother Jean-Baptiste suggests that his opposition
took the form of scheduling alternative activities at the same
time as those dances where the waltz was to take place.
The pastor Rebod continued to be a thorn in the young
priests side. Marcellin was not merely an idle dreamer; he
took action to bring his dreams to life. His initiatives, in the
pastors eyes, only upset the somnolence of parish life in La
Valla. Whether threatened by Marcellins activities, or jealous
of the relationship he developed with parishioners, Rebod did
not miss an opportunity to criticize his young assistant or
attempt to humiliate him. Despite the pastors antagonism,
however, the curate won the hearts of those who came to
pray with him or to hear him preach.
Later, when the young priest started his group of brothers,
Rebod was one of the projects most outspoken critics. He
rarely missed an opportunity to condemn it publicly or to
belittle and embarrass its initiator.
Marcellin responded to Rebod with admirable selfrestraint, trying by prayer and friendly advice to help the
parish priest. The young curate deprived himself of wine in
the hope that his example would aid the pastor. While credited with helping to reduce Rebods excessive lapses,
Marcellins interventions ultimately came to no avail. Protests
against the parish priest rose steadily in frequency and volume, and continued throughout the early part of 1824. In June
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Marcellin Champagnat
something better: we want to educate the children, to instruct
them in their duty, to teach them to practice it, to give them a
Christian spirit and attitudes and to form them to religious
habits and the virtues possessed by a good Christian and a
good citizen.
Though two schools existed already in the parish of La
Valla, the young priest did not abandon his intention of establishing a group of teaching brothers as part of the Society of
Mary. He was impressed by the piety and good behavior of a
twenty-two year old parishioner named Jean-Marie Granjon, a
former Grenadier in Napoleons Imperial Guard.
On one occasion, the young man asked Marcellin to visit
someone who was sick in his hamlet. The priest agreed and,
as they walked together, took note of the character and disposition of the young man. So satisfied was he with Granjons
responses to his questions, that Marcellin brought the young
man a copy of The Christians Manual when he returned the
next day to visit the sick.
Granjon refused the book initially, pointing out that he was
unable to read. Marcellin was undeterred. The young curate said,
Take it just the same. You can use it in learning to read and I will
give you lessons if you wish. Granjon accepted the priests offer.
Marcellin Champagnat
him to continue discussing his vocation with his confessor. As
luck would have it, that person was the young priest from La
Valla. The boy told Marcellin that he had resolved to consecrate his life to God. After talking with Jean-Baptiste and his
parents, and reflecting prayerfully on the situation, the priest
invited young Audras to join Granjon.
Two months later the house repairs were complete. The
first two recruits took up occupancy on January 2nd, 1817.
Henceforth, the Bonner house would be referred to, at least
in the Marist world, as the cradle of the Institute, and
January 2nd, 1817 as the foundation date of the Little Brothers
of Mary. Its members were to embrace a spirituality that
included mindfulness of Gods presence, confidence in Mary
and her protection, and the practice of the little virtues of
simplicity and humility.
Throughout the remaining winter months, Granjon and
Audras lived together in the house. Marcellin taught his
charges to read, and gave them the tools they would need to
teach children. He also showed them how to pray and to make
nails. The latter were sold to provide an income for the community.
Both Granjon and Audras assisted the young priest with
many of his pastoral duties. They visited and helped the aged
and infirm in the hamlets, gathered wood for the needy, and
brought them food regularly.
Marcellin Champagnat
When Maisonneuve eventually departed, Marcellin continued to operate the brothers school, appointing Jean-Marie
Granjon, the first member of the Institute, as the schools
headmaster. Jean-Marie threw himself into the task with zest
as he set about educating the children entrusted to him, many
of whom were abandoned and orphaned.
With the passage of time, the success of the brothers
efforts became obvious. They also continued to teach in the
hamlets, and Father Allirot, the priest who had baptized
Marcellin, asked him to establish a school in Marlhes. Late in
1818, two brothers took up that challenge.
Money is a problem
Although Marcellin was a careful steward of funds, money
was always a problem for the young community. Manual
work, characteristic of the brothers, helped to cut costs.
Income from the manufacture of nails, Marcellins modest
salary as curate, and the donations of a number of parishioners helped the young community keep its financial head
above water.
When he judged them ready, the young priest sent his followers out to the nearby hamlets, as well as to the towns of
La Valla and Marlhes. The brothers were full of fervor, fraternal affection, and an apostolic zeal.
In the days ahead they would need all three. Beyond the
hills surrounding La Valla, in the episcopal city of Lyons, trouble was already brewing for the young community. At the
center of their difficulties would be one man, the same Vicar
General who had taken such an interest in Jean-Claude
37
Marcellin Champagnat
Courveilles plan to establish a new religious congregation:
Jean-Claude Bochard.
Reflection questions
1. The needs of others and their suffering often shape and
transform us. How did both affect Marcellins character, outlook on life, spirituality? How did they work together to make
him the person that he became?
2. How have the needs and sufferings of others shaped
and transformed you, made you the person that you are
today? How have they moved you to take action for the
gospels sake?
38
Chapter IV
Marcellin Champagnat
Father Allirot, the parish priest, refused to provide the brothers
and their students with better living conditions. Brother JeanBaptiste describes the house in Marlhes as small, damp,
unhealthy. Marcellin intervened personally and demanded
more suitable accommodations. Allirot would not budge. Then
the young curate made a difficult decision: he withdrew his
brothers from the school in his home parish. Communicating
his final decision to the pastor, Marcellin wrote, Your house is
in so wretched a condition that I could not in conscience leave
either the brothers or the children in it.
This incident teaches us an important lesson about
Marcellin Champagnat. While a generous man, he also knew
when to say no. Since neither he nor his brothers were overly demanding, the situation in Marlhes must have been dreadful indeed. Poverty and simplicity marked the lives of his
Institutes members. However, Marcellin also insisted that suitable lodging be provided for those with whose well-being he
was charged.
He realized, too, that certain elements, such as satisfactory
housing, need to be in place for any educational undertaking
to be effective. Marcellin was fond of saying that you could
not teach children unless you loved them first. Providing adequate shelter was one way of expressing that love in action.
A vocation crisis
By February 1822 the Institute was made up of ten brothers. Their gifts varied and not all found a place in the classroom. Some possessed skills that produced needed income
for the community or were more valuable for its internal management. One recruit, for example, was a skilled weaver. His
trade fast replaced nail making as a means to support the
brothers.
But Marcellin was worried. Vocations appeared to have
40
Marcellin Champagnat
that, to date, Marcellin had not considered for vocations. He
quickly sent a recruiter there to test the climate. Within six
months, more than twenty applicants had come from the area.
For years afterwards, Marcellin insisted that it was Our Lady
of Le Puy who sent them.
Marcellin Champagnat
mended an immediate union between Marcellins brothers
and his own Society of the Cross of Jesus. And what reason
did he give? The latter possessed the legal authorization the
curate, now convinced that his Little Brothers would survive
and grow, so strongly desired. Marcellin avoided making any
commitments and took leave of the Vicar General as quickly
as courtesy would allow. He knew, of course, that he had not
seen the last of Bochard nor was he finally free of his
schemes.
But the young priest was not completely defenseless.
Bochard was only one of three Vicars, and the other two were
favorably disposed toward Marcellin and his brothers.
Following his second meeting with Bochard, the founder set
up an appointment with Father Courbon, the Senior Vicar
General.
At the outset, Marcellin spoke plainly. You know my project, he told Courbon, and all I have done for it. Give me
your candid opinion of it. I am ready to abandon it if you wish
me to do so. I desire only the will of God. The senior Vicar
responded with support, saying, I dont see why they should
annoy you in this way. You are doing very useful work in
training good teachers for our schools. Go on as usual; dont
mind what people say.
Marcellins next encounter with the Vicar General would
take place about a year later. In the interim, however, another event occurred that sheds further light on the character and
spirituality of the founder of the Little Brothers of Mary.
Marcellins spirituality
For some time now, we have been following unfolding
events in the life of Marcellin Champagnat. What insights do
they offer us into the man and his spirituality? Without hesitation, we can conclude that he faced some formidable challenges along the way: lack of adequate preparation for seminary studies, academic difficulties, a troubled and troubling
pastor, an ambitious Vicar General. Each predicament shaped
him, fine tuning in him the virtues of charity, optimism,
resourcefulness, and political acumen.
The episode that came to be known as the Memorare in
the Snow opens another window on the man and his spiritu45
Marcellin Champagnat
ality. What caused Marcellin to set out on his journey in the
first place? Concern for a sick brother. The founders great
love for the early brothers was one of his most memorable
qualities. Marcellins world might have been small when compared to that of many people today. But there was nothing
small about his heart. He lived a practical Christianity; love
always translated itself into concrete action. A brother was
sick; the founder set out to visit him.
With that said, though, we might wonder what possessed the
young priest to begin his return journey in the face of a threatening snowstorm? Some would, after all, judge the founders
return journey from Bourg-Argental to be an act of imprudence.
Whatever other reasons motivated the timing of his return
journey, we can speculate that his sense of Gods presence
and confidence in Mary and her protection caused him to
undertake the trip where others might hesitate. His recourse
to the Memorare in the face of danger was not the final effort
of a dying man. Marcellin was, by this time in his life, aware
of Gods continual and powerful presence; Mary had also
come through for him often enough that he counted on her
protection without question. The Memorare in the Snow was
simply an external manifestation of the much deeper spiritual
reality of the man.
Marcellin Champagnat
de Pins as apostolic administrator of the Archdiocese of Lyons.
The days of absentee governance at the hands of Cardinal
Feschs assistant, Vicar General Bochard, had come to an end.
Bochard eventually transferred from Lyons to the Diocese
of Belley. His departure lifted a great weight from the shoulders of Marcellin and his brothers. Though the now former
Vicar General continued to question the legality of de Pins
appointment, his move to another diocese rendered him harmless when it came to the affairs of the Archdiocese of Lyons.
In late March 1824 Marcellin traveled to Lyons to meet with
the new Archbishop. There in the presence of several clerical
friends and supporters, de Pins gave the young priest the dioceses blessing, a word of encouragement, and some financial
aid to further his work. An historian of the period tells us that
following his meeting with the Archbishop, Marcellin went to
Notre Dame de Fourvire (that small chapel where the first
Marists had pledged their lives to Mary) and spent a long time
at Marys altarutterly overcome.
Marcellin Champagnat
Charlieu and Chavanay. He was also eager to gain legal authorization for his Institute. He pursued this goal relentlessly but
without success for the rest of his days. Unfortunately, the
Kings Council of State had become more and more reluctant
to authorize religious educators, especially those from congregations of men. Marcellins ongoing struggle for authorization sorely tried his patience and sapped his strength.
Courveille a problem
Because Courveille fancied himself the Superior of the
Marists, he began to intrude into the brothers affairs. His first
concern was their style of dress. Earlier, Marcellin had established a specific attire for his community members. Courveille
altered those directives; he prescribed a coat of sky blue color,
covered by a blue cape. At a later date, the founder did away
with both.
Marcellin was busy at this time, so he tolerated Courveilles
interference. The latter developed a first Prospectus for the
brothers and submitted it to Vicar General Cholleton for
approval. That endorsement was granted in July 1824. The
final copy of the Prospectus narrowed the range of apostolic
endeavors that Marcellin had proposed in an earlier draft. Of
note is the fact that the Prospectus contains the first official reference to the Little Brothers of Mary.
While charismatic, Courveille was high-handed and often
lacked judgment. His dealings with the town authorities in
Charlieu demonstrate both facts admirably. Asked by
Marcellin to help establish a school there, Courveille was
quick to request that a brothers novitiate also be built. This at
the same time the founder was toiling to build such a structure at the Hermitage.
Courveille was enthusiastic, too, about setting up a center
for missionary priests. He asked the Charlieu Municipal
50
Reflection questions
1. Marcellin was aware of Gods presence and relied completely on Mary. After reading about his life thus far, are there
other aspects of his spirituality that are apparent to you? If so,
what are they and how did they develop in the man?
2. Does your personal spirituality resemble Marcellins in
any way? If so, just how?
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Chapter V
Continuing adversity
Marcellin Champagnat
tions, the founder asked them to vote a second time. The outcome of the balloting? Marcellin once again.
Courveille, though, was not put off so easily. In November
1825, when the founder was away visiting the brothers
schools, he assumed the role of Superior and wrote to all the
brothers informing them of this fact. Seconded by Terraillon,
he also criticized those at the Hermitage who spoke of the
absent Marcellin as Superior.
Marcellin recovers
Marcellin recovered from his illness, though it permanently weakened his constitution. By February 1826 he was back
at work. The founders business sense, optimism, way with
people, and confidence in Gods presence and providence all
worked together to inspire others to give or lend him money
for the works he undertook. While he was conscientious
about paying his debts, he never appeared unduly concerned
about money.
But Marcellins sickness had taught him an important lesson. At last, he wrote, God, in his mercy, alas, perhaps in
his justice, restored my health. I saw that in this occurrence
neither the one nor the other [that is, Courveille and
Terraillon] had for my young people the sentiments of a
father.
Courveille, as mentioned above, had taken charge during
the founders sickness; by this time, his behavior was driving
the brothers mad. He expected the novices to follow all his
orders without question. These were so numerous and restrictive that they dampened any of the natural liveliness of youth.
Courveille also refused to hear complaints, seemingly indifferent to the fact that young brothers were abandoning their
vocation. Marcellin, still confined to bed, pleaded with
Courveille to be indulgent and paternal in directing the brothers. He was wasting his breath; the request fell on deaf ears.
Fueled by ambition and jealous of the brothers love for
Marcellin, Courveille set about to discredit him with archdiocesan authorities. He presented to the archbishop a list of
complaints about the founder. Father Cattet, a Vicar General,
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Marcellin Champagnat
was sent to the Hermitage to investigate.
Cattet was not pleased with what he found. The Vicar
ordered the priest, by now convalescing at Father Dervieuxs
rectory in Saint Chamond, to give more time to instructing the
brothers, forbade him to undertake any further building projects, insisted that he devote himself less to material things. On
returning to Lyons, Cattet also drew up a plan to merge
Marcellins brothers with the recently founded Brothers of the
Sacred Heart of Father Coindre. The latter was not pleased
with the idea. The archbishop, though still concerned about
the Institutes precarious financial situation, did not support
Cattets plan either. When Coindre died suddenly, the Vicar
General resurrected his scheme. On August 8th, 1826, however, the archbishops Council vetoed any merger.
Courveilles attempt to discredit Marcellin placed further
strain on their relationship and damaged even more the one
he had with the brothers. An incident soon occurred, however, that marked the end of Jean-Claude Courveilles association
with the Little Brothers of Mary.
More upheavals
With Courveilles departure, did life settle down at the
Hermitage? Unfortunately not. Financial problems persisted,
though others appeared to worry more about them than
Marcellin did. The founders optimism about money, however, was not enough to stop departures from the Institute.
Courveille had convinced a few brothers that with mounting
debt, Marcellins project was doomed to fail. He lured two or
three others away to join him in still another religious foundation he had set up in the Diocese of Grenoble.
Brother Jean-Franois, an early follower of Marcellins and
a brother dear to his heart, left the Institute at this time, as did
Jean-Marie Granjon, his first recruit, who was restless and
unable to settle down.
Jean-Maries concept of holiness had also led to some
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Marcellin Champagnat
unhealthy practices. He wore hairshirts, scourged himself, and
prayed for hours in cold, wintry conditions with his arms outstretched. Many brothers feared that he had become mentally
unbalanced. Reason failed to make any inroads. By the end of
October 1826, Jean-Marie was gone.
Father Terraillon left the Hermitage in the same year. He had
been unhappy for a long time, and took the occasion of an invitation to preach a series of jubilee sermons to make his escape.
Marcellin was saddened by his leaving, the brothers less so.
Many had had their difficulties with him. Terraillon was later a
member of the first group of Marist Fathers to pronounce vows
in 1836; he also became an Assistant General to Father Colin.
If 1826 was a low point for Marcellin, it did little to dampen
his zeal or shake his faith and confidence in God. He opened
no fewer than three new schools. Those already operating were
enjoying unprecedented success. A letter from Jean-Claude
Colin, founder of the Marist Fathers, was another source of consolation. Dated December 5th, 1826, it read in part: I cannot
adequately admire the blessings, which God has given to this
most interesting and necessary work of forming young people.
Marcellin worked to help the brothers maintain their fervor
and their sense of poverty. If the past year had been a difficult one for him, it was no less so for them. The founder was
more than anxious to have another priest for the Hermitage.
At the urging of Father Barou, Vicar General, Archbishop de
Pins asked the newly ordained Father Son to help. He was
more than eager to do so.
Marcellin Champagnat
lines of authority within the Institute. He was not an autocratic man, but he realized that excessive individualism destroys
the spirit of sacrifice and cooperation within any group. He
wanted to insure that it would not find too comfortable a
home among the Little Brothers of Mary.
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Chapter VI
Growth continues
Marcellin Champagnat
he introduced the Salve Regina as the first community prayer
of the brothers day, a custom that continues to the present.
Additional developments
The prominence of the Society of Mary grew in the arch64
Persecution increases
As 1831 dawned, the anti-clericals stepped up their attacks
on the Church. The field of education was a convenient target. A royal ordinance called for the conscription for military
service of all non-authorized teachers in religious schools. If
this directive were implemented, the outcome would essentially cripple Marcellins still unauthorized Institute.
Could the situation get any worse? Yes. New government
officials of the Loire took specific aim at the Little Brothers.
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Marcellin Champagnat
Scipion Mourgue, the new Prefect of the area, had this to say:
[The Marist Brothers Institute] is all the less worthy of
encouragement in that it is publicly known that the subjects
who come out of it are of a deplorable ignorance.There [at
Feurs] they brought what they call their teaching, which, I
think, could be called the guarantee of ignorance on the
cheap.Too long has France bowed down beneath the saber
and the censer [that is, the King and the Church].
Mourgue was further incensed when he discovered that
the local people did not want to abandon the brothers
schools. So, he attacked them also. I meet stupid local people, he said, who want this degrading system maintained.
Many of those stupid local people, however, had already
lived through the period of educational collapse after the
Revolution of 1789; they had little interest in seeing history
repeat itself.
Marcellin Champagnat
ever, government approbation for his Institute would elude
Marcellin throughout his life. Events in French history at that
time worked against his petition. The Laws of Associations,
for example, passed in February 1834 and meant to curb
working class militancy, were used to delay authorization.
Marcellin Champagnat
zation was not possible.
In April of 1834 Cardinal Odescalchi wrote to the
Ordinaries of both Lyons and Belley to inform them that Rome
found unacceptable the plans for Colins Society of Mary. He
cited several reasons. One, there was no need for the Marist
Brothers since the De la Salle group existed already and
apparently had the same goal. Two, so many congregations of
women religious existed in France already that it was almost
impossible to count them; why add another? Three, the proposed Third Order of laity was judged to be an outlandish
idea, setting aside the bishops power in favor of the Superior
General of the Marist Society. Was there any good news in this
litany of woe? Yes: Rome supported Colins request to form a
new clerical congregation and to have an elected Superior
General.
Opportunity knocks
In 1835 Vatican authorities informed the bishops of Lyons
and Belley that the Marist priests could, on application to
Rome, become an interdiocesan congregation and elect a
Superior General. No specific work was assigned to the
group.
Full recognition as an religious Institute was not long in
coming. The Vatican was disappointed by the lack of response
to its appeal for missionaries to go to Oceania. Vicar General
Cholleton heard that Rome was looking for a congregation to
fill the gap. He passed along the news to Pompallier, a priest
who had served as a chaplain at the Hermitage, who quickly
informed Colin. The young Marist priests seized the opportunity presented to them and took the mission of Oceania as
their work. On April 29th, 1836, the long awaited approval for
the new society of priests arrived from Rome.
Marcellin was delighted with Romes approval of the
70
Reflection questions
1. Sometimes setbacks in life can turn out to be a great
source of personal and spiritual growth. Identify a setback in
your own life, in what ways did it challenge you to grow more
as a person and as a disciple of Jesus?
2. The founder was delighted with approval of the Society
of Marist priests. For what events or decisions in your own life
do you give thanks to God?
Chapter VII
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Marcellin Champagnat
be happy to send you brothers to help in the work in
America, if it were at all possible. Oceania, however,
remained the sole overseas mission for a number of years.
Marcellin continued to marvel at the growth of the Marist
group in general. He once said to his fellow priests, We who
are at the commencement of our work are but raw stones
thrown into the foundation. One does not use polished stones
for that. There is something marvelous in the commencement
of our Society. What is marvelous is that God has wished such
people to accomplish his work.
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Marcellin Champagnat
always a spirit of poverty and detachment. Have a filial and
tender devotion to Mary, he counseled, make her loved in
every place. Love and be faithful to your vocation, and persevere in it courageously.
Marcellin took seriously the Good News of Jesus Christ. He
was a holy man because he lived his ordinary life exceptionally well, and did ordinary things with extraordinary love.
Having discovered the joy of the gospel and letting it transform him, the founder wanted to share with others, particularly the young, all that he had seen and heard.
The world into which Marcellin Champagnat was born in
1789 was beginning to convulse with the tremors of change.
The one he left fifty-one years later had seen war and peace,
prosperity and hardship, the death of one Church and the
birth of another. A man of his times, he carried within himself
all the greatness and limitations of the people of his age.
Suffering tempered him, setbacks strengthened him, determination drove him, and grace helped him move beyond his circumstances.
Marcellin Champagnat, priest of the Society of Mary,
Superior and Founder of the Little Brothers of Mary. An apostle to youth and an example of practical Christianity. He was
a man and saint for his season and time; he is both for ours
also.
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Marcellin Champagnat
References:
Avit FMS, Frre. Abrg des Annales de Frre Avit. (Roma:
Tipografia S. Pio X, 1972)
Farrell FMS, Brother Stephen. Achievement from the
Depths. (Drummoyne, NSW: Marist Brothers, 1984).
Gibson FMS, Brother Romuald. Father Champagnat: The
Man and his Spirituality. (Rome: Fratelli Maristi, 1971).
McMahon, FMS, Brother Frederick. Strong Mind, Gentle
Heart. (Drummoyne, NSW: Marist Brothers, 1988).
Sester FMS, Brother Paul (Ed.). Letters of Marcellin J.B.
Champagnat 17891840 (Trans. Brother Leonard Voegtle,
FMS). (Rome: Casa Generalizia Dei Fratelli Maristi, 1991).
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