fbpx
Wikipedia

Eugène de Mazenod

Eugène de Mazenod, OMI (born Charles-Joseph-Eugène de Mazenod; 1 August 1782 – 21 May 1861) was a French aristocrat and Catholic priest. Mazenod founded the congregation of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate.


Eugène de Mazenod

BornCharles-Joseph-Eugène de Mazenod
1 August 1782
Aix-en-Provence, France
Died21 May 1861
Marseilles, France
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified19 October 1975 & 19 April 1976, St. Peter's Basilica, Vatican City by Pope Paul VI
Canonized3 December 1995 & 3 June 1996, St. Peter's Basilica by Pope John Paul II
FeastMay 21[1]
Most Reverend

Eugène de Mazenod

SeeMarseille
Appointed2 October 1837
Installed1837
Term ended21 May 1861 (his death)
PredecessorFortuné-Charles de Mazenod
SuccessorPatrice-François-Marie Cruice
Other post(s)
  • Auxiliary Bishop of Marseilles (1832–37)
  • Titular Bishop of Icosia (1832–37)
Ordination history of
Eugène de Mazenod
History
Priestly ordination
Date21 December 1811
Episcopal consecration
Principal consecratorCarlo Odescalchi, S.J.
Co-consecratorsChiarissimo Falconieri Mellini,
Luigi Frezza
Date14 October 1832
Episcopal succession
Bishops consecrated by Eugène de Mazenod as principal consecrator
Joseph Hippolyte Guibert, O.M.I.11 March 1842
Marie-Jean-François Allard, O.M.I.13 July 1851
Alexander-Antonine Taché, O.M.I.23 November 1851
Jean-Etienne Sémeria, O.M.I.17 August 1856
Jacques Jeancard, O.M.I.28 October 1858
Vital-Justin Grandin, O.M.I.30 November 1859

When he was eight years old, Mazenod's family fled the French Revolution, leaving their considerable wealth behind. As refugees in Italy, they were poor, and moved from place to place. He returned to France at the age of twenty and later became a priest. Initially focused on rebuilding the Church in France after the Revolution, their work soon spread, particularly to Canada. Mazenod was appointed Bishop of Marseille in 1837, and Archbishop in 1851.

Bishop de Mazenod was beatified on October 19, 1975, and was canonized twenty years later on 3 December 1995. The Catholic Church commemorates him with an optional memorial on 21 May, the anniversary of his death.

Three schools are named for him, in the Australian cities of Brisbane, Perth and Melbourne.

Biography

Refugee

Eugène de Mazenod was born on 1 August 1782 and baptized the following day in the Église de la Madeleine in Aix-en-Provence. His father, Charles Antoine de Mazenod, was one of the Presidents of the Court of Finances, and his mother was Marie Rose Joannis. Eugène began his schooling at the College Bourbon, but this was interrupted by the events of the French Revolution. With the approach of the French revolutionary forces, the family fled to Italy.[2]

Eugène became a boarder at the College of Nobles in Turin (Piedmont), but a move to Venice meant the end to formal schooling.[2] With their money running out, Eugène's father sought various employments, none of which were successful. His mother and sister returned to France - eventually seeking a divorce so as to be able to regain their seized property. Eugène was fortunate to be welcomed by the Zinelli family in Venice. One of their sons, the priest Bartolo Zinelli, took special care of Eugène and saw to his education in the well-provided family library where the young adolescent spent many hours each day. Don Bartolo was a major influence in the human, academic and spiritual development of Eugène.

Once again the French army chased the émigrés from Venice, forcing Eugène and his father and two uncles to seek refuge in Naples for less than a year, and finally to flee to Palermo in Sicily. Here Eugène was invited to become part of the household of the Duke and Duchess of Cannizaro as a companion to their two sons. Being part of the high society of Sicily became the opportunity for Eugène to rediscover his noble origins and to live a lavish style of life. He took to himself the title of 'Comte' ("Count") de Mazenod, did all the courtly things, and dreamed of a bright future.[2]

Conversion

At the age of twenty, Eugène returned to France and lived with his mother in Aix en Provence. Initially he enjoyed all the pleasures of Aix as a rich young nobleman, intent on the pursuit of pleasure and money - and a rich girl who would bring a good dowry. Gradually he became aware of how empty his life was,[3] and began to search for meaning in more regular church involvement, reading and personal study, and charitable work among prisoners. His journey came to a climax on Good Friday, 1807 when he was 25 years old. Looking at the sight of the Cross, he had a religious experience. He recounted the spiritual experience in his retreat journal:

Can I forget the bitter tears that the sight of the cross brought streaming from my eyes one Good Friday? Indeed they welled up from the heart, there was no checking them, they were too abundant for me to be able to hide them from those who like myself were assisting at that moving ceremony. I was in a state of mortal sin and it was precisely this that made me grieve…Blessed, a thousand times blessed, that he, this good Father, notwithstanding my unworthiness, lavished on me all the richness of his mercy.[4]

Priest

In 1808, he began his studies for the priesthood at the Saint-Sulpice Seminary in Paris and was ordained a priest at Amiens (Picardy), on 21 December 1811.[5] Since Napoleon had expelled the Sulpician priests from the seminary, Eugène stayed on as a formator for a semester. As a member of the Seminary, notwithstanding personal risk, Eugène committed himself to serve and assist Pope Pius VII, who at this time was a prisoner of emperor Napoleon I at Fontainebleau. In this way he experienced at firsthand the suffering of the post-Revolutionary Church.

On his return to Aix, Father de Mazenod asked not to be assigned to a parish but to dedicate himself fully to evangelizing those who were not being reached by the structures of the local church: the poor who spoke only the Provençal language, prisoners, youth, the inhabitants of poor villages who were ignorant of their faith.[3] The goal of his priestly preaching and ministry was always to lead others to develop themselves fully as humans, then as Christians and finally to become saints.

Founder

Oblates of Mary Immaculate

On 25 January 1816, "impelled by a strong impulse from outside of himself" he invited other priests to join him in his life of total oblation to God and to the most abandoned of Provence. Initially called "Missionaries of Provence," they dedicated themselves to evangelization through preaching parish missions in the poor villages, youth and prison ministry. In 1818 a second community was established at the Marian shrine of Notre Dame du Laus. This became the occasion for the missionaries to become a religious congregation, united through vows and the evangelical counsels. Changing their name to Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, the group received papal approbation on 17 February 1826.[6]

Foreign Missions

In 1841, Bishop Bourget of Montreal invited the Oblates to Canada. At the same time, there was an outreach to the British Isles. This was the beginning of a history of missionary outreach to the most abandoned peoples in Canada, United States, Mexico, England and Ireland, Algeria, Southern Africa and Ceylon during the founder's lifetime. In 200 years this zeal spread and took root in the establishment of the Oblates in nearly 70 countries.

 
Bishop Mazenod

Bishop

After having aided for some time his uncle, Fortuné de Mazenod [fr], the aged Bishop of Marseilles, in the administration of his diocese, Father De Mazenod was called to Rome and, on 14 October 1832, consecrated titular Bishop of Icosium, which title in 1837 he exchanged for that of Bishop of Marseilles, a position he held until his death in 1861. During his episcopacy, he commissioned Notre-Dame de la Garde, an ornate Neo-Byzantine basilica on the south side of the old port of Marseille. He favoured the moral teachings of Alphonsus Liguori, whose theological system he was the first to introduce in France, and whose first biography in French he caused to be written by one of the Oblates.[6]

He inspired local priest Joseph-Marie Timon-David to found the Congregation of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Marseille in 1852.[7]

In spite of his well-known outspokenness, he was made a Peer of the French Empire, and in 1851 Pope Pius IX gave him the pallium.[6]

Veneration

 
Diocesan Shrine and Parish at Our Lady of Grace, Caloocan

Some forty-five years after his death, the Diocese of Marseille opened a three-year-long investigation for the cause for Bishop de Mazenod's canonization. In 1935, the cause was opened by the Sacred Congregation of Rites at the Vatican. In May 1970, the Congregation for the Causes of Saints recognized the heroic virtue of Eugène's life, and he was proclaimed "venerable".[8]

Five years later, after the same congregation attributed miracles of healing to Eugène's intercession, and, following that, Pope Paul VI beatified Bishop de Mazenod in Rome on 19 October 1975.[8]

In December 1994, the Congregation for Saints approved another miracle attributed to Blessed Eugène's intercession; John Paul II celebrated his Mass of canonization in 1995, on 3 December.[8] In his homily at the Mass, celebrated on the First Sunday of Advent,[9] the Pope proclaimed Saint Eugène a "Man of Advent", saying:

Eugène de Mazenod, whom the Church today proclaims a saint, was a man of Advent, a man of the Coming. He not only looked forward to that Coming, but... he dedicated his whole life to preparing for it. His waiting reached the intensity of heroism, that is, it was marked by a heroic degree of faith, hope and apostolic charity. Eugène de Mazenod was one of those apostles who prepared the modern age, our age.[10][11][12]

References

  1. ^ "Eugène de Mazenod", Saints Resource, RCL Benziger
  2. ^ a b c "Eugene de Mazenod (1782-1861)", Vatican News Service
  3. ^ a b "Biography: Saint Eugene de Mazenod". OMI World: The Official Website of the General Administration of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. 2017-08-08. Retrieved 2021-01-20.
  4. ^ "Why the Cross as Focus? Because Its Love Conquers the Death of Sin | Eugene de Mazenod speaks to us". www.eugenedemazenod.net. Retrieved 2018-11-22.
  5. ^ "Saint Eugene de Mazenod", Franciscan Media
  6. ^ a b c Morice, Adrian. "Charles Joseph Eugene de Mazenod." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 10. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 30 July 2018
  7. ^ Joseph Timon-David (1823-1891), Bibliothèque nationale de France
  8. ^ a b c "History of the Cause". OMI World: The Official Site of the General Administration of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. 2017-08-11. Retrieved 2021-01-20.
  9. ^ "Catholic Liturgical Calendar | December 1995". thecrawfordfamily.net. Retrieved 2021-01-20.
  10. ^ "Saint Eugene Proclaimed a Man of Advent". OMI World: The Official Site of the General Administration of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. 2018-12-03. Retrieved 2021-01-20.
  11. ^ "Omelia di Giovanni Paolo II per la Canonizzazione di Eugène de Mazenod, Fondatore dei Missionari Oblati di Maria Immacolata". La Santa Sede (in Italian). The Holy See. 1995-12-03. Retrieved 2021-01-20 – via the Italian version of the Holy See's website, this is the text of the original version of John Paul II's homily at the Canonization Mass; quoted in the article is an unofficial translation from the website of the OMI's General Administration.
  12. ^ "25th Anniversary of the Canonization of St. Eugene de Mazenod - YouTube". YouTube (Video reel of clips from the Canonization Mass; includes a recording of this quote from John Paul II's homily.). 2020-11-07. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22. Retrieved 2021-01-20.

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Charles Joseph Eugene de Mazenod". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

External links

  • Who is Eugène de Mazenod?
  • "Eugene de Mazenod (1782-1861) - biography". Vatican Basilica. 3 December 1995. Retrieved 2007-03-09.
  • Biography of Eugène de Mazenod at OMI Lacombe
  • Biography of St. Eugène de Mazenod from American Catholic.org
  • from the Oblate Missions Website of of The Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate

eugène, mazenod, born, charles, joseph, august, 1782, 1861, french, aristocrat, catholic, priest, mazenod, founded, congregation, missionary, oblates, mary, immaculate, saintomiborncharles, joseph, august, 1782aix, provence, francedied21, 1861marseilles, franc. Eugene de Mazenod OMI born Charles Joseph Eugene de Mazenod 1 August 1782 21 May 1861 was a French aristocrat and Catholic priest Mazenod founded the congregation of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate SaintEugene de MazenodOMIBornCharles Joseph Eugene de Mazenod1 August 1782Aix en Provence FranceDied21 May 1861Marseilles FranceVenerated inRoman Catholic ChurchBeatified19 October 1975 amp 19 April 1976 St Peter s Basilica Vatican City by Pope Paul VICanonized3 December 1995 amp 3 June 1996 St Peter s Basilica by Pope John Paul IIFeastMay 21 1 Most ReverendEugene de MazenodOMISeeMarseilleAppointed2 October 1837Installed1837Term ended21 May 1861 his death PredecessorFortune Charles de MazenodSuccessorPatrice Francois Marie CruiceOther post s Auxiliary Bishop of Marseilles 1832 37 Titular Bishop of Icosia 1832 37 Ordination history of Eugene de MazenodHistoryPriestly ordinationDate21 December 1811Episcopal consecrationPrincipal consecratorCarlo Odescalchi S J Co consecratorsChiarissimo Falconieri Mellini Luigi FrezzaDate14 October 1832Episcopal successionBishops consecrated by Eugene de Mazenod as principal consecratorJoseph Hippolyte Guibert O M I 11 March 1842Marie Jean Francois Allard O M I 13 July 1851Alexander Antonine Tache O M I 23 November 1851Jean Etienne Semeria O M I 17 August 1856Jacques Jeancard O M I 28 October 1858Vital Justin Grandin O M I 30 November 1859When he was eight years old Mazenod s family fled the French Revolution leaving their considerable wealth behind As refugees in Italy they were poor and moved from place to place He returned to France at the age of twenty and later became a priest Initially focused on rebuilding the Church in France after the Revolution their work soon spread particularly to Canada Mazenod was appointed Bishop of Marseille in 1837 and Archbishop in 1851 Bishop de Mazenod was beatified on October 19 1975 and was canonized twenty years later on 3 December 1995 The Catholic Church commemorates him with an optional memorial on 21 May the anniversary of his death Three schools are named for him in the Australian cities of Brisbane Perth and Melbourne Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Refugee 1 2 Conversion 1 3 Priest 2 Founder 2 1 Oblates of Mary Immaculate 2 2 Foreign Missions 3 Bishop 4 Veneration 5 References 6 External linksBiography EditRefugee Edit Eugene de Mazenod was born on 1 August 1782 and baptized the following day in the Eglise de la Madeleine in Aix en Provence His father Charles Antoine de Mazenod was one of the Presidents of the Court of Finances and his mother was Marie Rose Joannis Eugene began his schooling at the College Bourbon but this was interrupted by the events of the French Revolution With the approach of the French revolutionary forces the family fled to Italy 2 Eugene became a boarder at the College of Nobles in Turin Piedmont but a move to Venice meant the end to formal schooling 2 With their money running out Eugene s father sought various employments none of which were successful His mother and sister returned to France eventually seeking a divorce so as to be able to regain their seized property Eugene was fortunate to be welcomed by the Zinelli family in Venice One of their sons the priest Bartolo Zinelli took special care of Eugene and saw to his education in the well provided family library where the young adolescent spent many hours each day Don Bartolo was a major influence in the human academic and spiritual development of Eugene Once again the French army chased the emigres from Venice forcing Eugene and his father and two uncles to seek refuge in Naples for less than a year and finally to flee to Palermo in Sicily Here Eugene was invited to become part of the household of the Duke and Duchess of Cannizaro as a companion to their two sons Being part of the high society of Sicily became the opportunity for Eugene to rediscover his noble origins and to live a lavish style of life He took to himself the title of Comte Count de Mazenod did all the courtly things and dreamed of a bright future 2 Conversion EditAt the age of twenty Eugene returned to France and lived with his mother in Aix en Provence Initially he enjoyed all the pleasures of Aix as a rich young nobleman intent on the pursuit of pleasure and money and a rich girl who would bring a good dowry Gradually he became aware of how empty his life was 3 and began to search for meaning in more regular church involvement reading and personal study and charitable work among prisoners His journey came to a climax on Good Friday 1807 when he was 25 years old Looking at the sight of the Cross he had a religious experience He recounted the spiritual experience in his retreat journal Can I forget the bitter tears that the sight of the cross brought streaming from my eyes one Good Friday Indeed they welled up from the heart there was no checking them they were too abundant for me to be able to hide them from those who like myself were assisting at that moving ceremony I was in a state of mortal sin and it was precisely this that made me grieve Blessed a thousand times blessed that he this good Father notwithstanding my unworthiness lavished on me all the richness of his mercy 4 Priest Edit In 1808 he began his studies for the priesthood at the Saint Sulpice Seminary in Paris and was ordained a priest at Amiens Picardy on 21 December 1811 5 Since Napoleon had expelled the Sulpician priests from the seminary Eugene stayed on as a formator for a semester As a member of the Seminary notwithstanding personal risk Eugene committed himself to serve and assist Pope Pius VII who at this time was a prisoner of emperor Napoleon I at Fontainebleau In this way he experienced at firsthand the suffering of the post Revolutionary Church On his return to Aix Father de Mazenod asked not to be assigned to a parish but to dedicate himself fully to evangelizing those who were not being reached by the structures of the local church the poor who spoke only the Provencal language prisoners youth the inhabitants of poor villages who were ignorant of their faith 3 The goal of his priestly preaching and ministry was always to lead others to develop themselves fully as humans then as Christians and finally to become saints Founder EditOblates of Mary Immaculate Edit On 25 January 1816 impelled by a strong impulse from outside of himself he invited other priests to join him in his life of total oblation to God and to the most abandoned of Provence Initially called Missionaries of Provence they dedicated themselves to evangelization through preaching parish missions in the poor villages youth and prison ministry In 1818 a second community was established at the Marian shrine of Notre Dame du Laus This became the occasion for the missionaries to become a religious congregation united through vows and the evangelical counsels Changing their name to Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate the group received papal approbation on 17 February 1826 6 Foreign Missions Edit In 1841 Bishop Bourget of Montreal invited the Oblates to Canada At the same time there was an outreach to the British Isles This was the beginning of a history of missionary outreach to the most abandoned peoples in Canada United States Mexico England and Ireland Algeria Southern Africa and Ceylon during the founder s lifetime In 200 years this zeal spread and took root in the establishment of the Oblates in nearly 70 countries Bishop MazenodBishop EditAfter having aided for some time his uncle Fortune de Mazenod fr the aged Bishop of Marseilles in the administration of his diocese Father De Mazenod was called to Rome and on 14 October 1832 consecrated titular Bishop of Icosium which title in 1837 he exchanged for that of Bishop of Marseilles a position he held until his death in 1861 During his episcopacy he commissioned Notre Dame de la Garde an ornate Neo Byzantine basilica on the south side of the old port of Marseille He favoured the moral teachings of Alphonsus Liguori whose theological system he was the first to introduce in France and whose first biography in French he caused to be written by one of the Oblates 6 He inspired local priest Joseph Marie Timon David to found the Congregation of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Marseille in 1852 7 In spite of his well known outspokenness he was made a Peer of the French Empire and in 1851 Pope Pius IX gave him the pallium 6 Veneration Edit Diocesan Shrine and Parish at Our Lady of Grace Caloocan Some forty five years after his death the Diocese of Marseille opened a three year long investigation for the cause for Bishop de Mazenod s canonization In 1935 the cause was opened by the Sacred Congregation of Rites at the Vatican In May 1970 the Congregation for the Causes of Saints recognized the heroic virtue of Eugene s life and he was proclaimed venerable 8 Five years later after the same congregation attributed miracles of healing to Eugene s intercession and following that Pope Paul VI beatified Bishop de Mazenod in Rome on 19 October 1975 8 In December 1994 the Congregation for Saints approved another miracle attributed to Blessed Eugene s intercession John Paul II celebrated his Mass of canonization in 1995 on 3 December 8 In his homily at the Mass celebrated on the First Sunday of Advent 9 the Pope proclaimed Saint Eugene a Man of Advent saying Eugene de Mazenod whom the Church today proclaims a saint was a man of Advent a man of the Coming He not only looked forward to that Coming but he dedicated his whole life to preparing for it His waiting reached the intensity of heroism that is it was marked by a heroic degree of faith hope and apostolic charity Eugene de Mazenod was one of those apostles who prepared the modern age our age 10 11 12 References Edit Eugene de Mazenod Saints Resource RCL Benziger a b c Eugene de Mazenod 1782 1861 Vatican News Service a b Biography Saint Eugene de Mazenod OMI World The Official Website of the General Administration of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate 2017 08 08 Retrieved 2021 01 20 Why the Cross as Focus Because Its Love Conquers the Death of Sin Eugene de Mazenod speaks to us www eugenedemazenod net Retrieved 2018 11 22 Saint Eugene de Mazenod Franciscan Media a b c Morice Adrian Charles Joseph Eugene de Mazenod The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 10 New York Robert Appleton Company 1911 30 July 2018 Joseph Timon David 1823 1891 Bibliotheque nationale de France a b c History of the Cause OMI World The Official Site of the General Administration of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate 2017 08 11 Retrieved 2021 01 20 Catholic Liturgical Calendar December 1995 thecrawfordfamily net Retrieved 2021 01 20 Saint Eugene Proclaimed a Man of Advent OMI World The Official Site of the General Administration of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate 2018 12 03 Retrieved 2021 01 20 Omelia di Giovanni Paolo II per la Canonizzazione di Eugene de Mazenod Fondatore dei Missionari Oblati di Maria Immacolata La Santa Sede in Italian The Holy See 1995 12 03 Retrieved 2021 01 20 via the Italian version of the Holy See s website this is the text of the original version of John Paul II s homily at the Canonization Mass quoted in the article is an unofficial translation from the website of the OMI s General Administration 25th Anniversary of the Canonization of St Eugene de Mazenod YouTube YouTube Video reel of clips from the Canonization Mass includes a recording of this quote from John Paul II s homily 2020 11 07 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Retrieved 2021 01 20 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Charles Joseph Eugene de Mazenod Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eugene de Mazenod Who is Eugene de Mazenod JEAN LEFLON Eugene de Mazenod Bishop of Marseilles Founder of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate 1782 1861 Vol 1 J Leflon Eugene de Mazenod Vol 3 J Leflon Eugene de Mazenod Vol 4 F SANTUCCI Eugene de Mazenod Cooperator of Christ the Saviour Communicates his Spirit Eugene de Mazenod 1782 1861 biography Vatican Basilica 3 December 1995 Retrieved 2007 03 09 Biography of Eugene de Mazenod at OMI Lacombe Biography of St Eugene de Mazenod from American Catholic org Biography of St Eugene de Mazenod from the Oblate Missions Website of National Shrine of Our Lady of the Snows website of The Missionary Oblates of Mary ImmaculatePortals Saints Biography Catholicism France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eugene de Mazenod amp oldid 1159261142, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.