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The Virtues of the Children of Mary
Origin of the Association
The Houses directed by the Daughters of Charity – the spiritual
daughters of St. Vincent de Paul – for orphans and poor children, having become very
numerous throughout Paris and other cities in the early part of the 19th Century, it was
found necessary to bestow particular care and attention upon this work, which promised to
produce abundant fruits of salvation. To protect the innocence of children, to preserve
their early years from the contagion of bad example, to make them solidly virtuous, to
give them an education suited to their state, to teach them such handiwork as would ensure
for them a livelihood in later life; such were the ultimate objects of these institutions.
The greatest obstacle to be feared was the inconstancy natural to children. Means,
therefore, were to be sought, to excite their emulation, and to preserve them in their
first fervor. Devotion to the Most Holy Virgin Mary – above all, to her Immaculate
Conception – seemed to be the best and most efficacious means to obtain this end, as
Divine Providence had been pleased to favor this devotion with a number of extraordinary
graces. Certainly, one of the greatest of these graces was the apparition of Our Lady of
the Miraculous Medal to the Daughter of Charity, St. Catherine Labouré, in 1830, and the
subsequent promulgation of the Miraculous Medal of the Immaculate Conception. These Houses
were then consecrated to Mary Immaculate, to engage this tender Mother to extend to them
her all-powerful protection. In the schools a Sodality of the Children of Mary was formed,
into which were received those children who had distinguished themselves by strenuous
exertions in overcoming their passions, and advancing in piety and virtue. In the
beginning these associations were not regularly and completely organized. Nevertheless,
they produced the happiest results, and they soon spread throughout the province. The
blessed fruits of salvation which they produced gave rise to the thought of establishing
these sodalities on a more solid and durable foundation.
The Immaculate Mary seemed disposed to encourage the efforts made
in her honor, by the most abundant graces profusely shed upon this new family. Early on,
it was noted that the Sodality had, in every House where it was established, effected
wonderful changes in children formerly reputed as incorrigible. It was only after a trial
of two years in several convents and schools that it was deemed proper to agree upon the
rules and have them printed, that they might be more easily communicated to all the Houses
in which the Sodality was already established. A last, but very powerful motive,
determined the execution of this measure. Until then, the Association of the Children of
Mary had received no Canonical sanction. The great good it produced in all the schools in
which it was established, inspired the Superior-General of the Priests of the Mission and
the Daughters of Charity to solicit approbation from the Sovereign Pontiff then reigning,
Pope Pius IX. This approbation was given on June 20th, 1847 – five years after the
discovery of the manuscript of True Devotion to Mary, by St. Louis Marie de
Montfort. It is perhaps no coincidence that so many of the rules seem to have been
inspired thereby.
The following is an excerpt from Chapter IX of the Manual of the
Children of Mary. While originally these rules were meant primarily for teenage girls,
the principles contained are easily applicable to men, women, boys and girls of all ages:
On the Virtues of the Children of Mary
True devotion to the Most Holy Virgin does not consist merely in
entertaining for her sentiments of the most tender affection, nor in addressing to her
daily prayers, nor even in belonging to an association established in her honor. All this
is doubtless very good and most agreeable to Mary, but it does not constitute true
devotion to her. There is another indispensable condition – the imitation of her
virtues. Such is doubtless the will of this tender Mother, who could address us in the
words of her Divine Son: "Not all those who say to Me, Lord, Lord," that is to
say, who have great devotion in their prayer, shall be saved, "but he who does the
will of My Father who is in Heaven." If then, we heartily desire to merit the
powerful protection of the Immaculate Mary, we must walk in her footsteps. An affectionate
child has her eyes constantly fixed upon her mother, to follow her maxims and to imitate
her conduct. The Children of Mary should study continually the conduct of Mary, and make
it the model of their own. By attentively considering this Mirror of Justice, they
will discover admirable examples to direct them in every circumstance of life. For, as St.
Augustine remarks, if other saints had been distinguished by the practice of one
particular virtue, the characteristic of Mary's sanctity is to excel in all. Among
those virtues there are some, however, which belong especially to the Children of Mary,
who, endeavoring to imitate their Mother by the practice of all the virtues belonging to
their state, should, nevertheless, strive to acquire in a more than ordinary degree, those
we are about to mention, and which constitute the basis and spirit of the Association.
These essential virtues, which form, as it were, the soul of the Society, are chiefly
four: Purity, Humility, Obedience and Charity.
Holy Purity
It must be well understood that the first care of a child who has taken
Mary Immaculate for her Mother and Patroness, should be to preserve within herself the
angelic virtue of purity. Without this virtue it would be impossible to please the
purest of virgins, who will never acknowledge as her daughter, anyone who has the
misfortune of being the slave of the demon of impurity. This virtue extends not only to
the body, but even to the soul. It preserves the body pure and exempt from the least
stain, as the temple of the living God, consecrated by the holy unction of Baptism, and by
the real presence of Our Lord in Holy Communion. But it guards the soul, which is the
sanctuary of this temple, with still more jealous care, lest anything should tarnish its
brilliance and beauty.
It watches attentively over the mind, to remove thence all dangerous
thoughts; over the imagination to repel every impure representation; over the memory, to
banish all dangerous remembrance; and especially over the heart, to guard it from all
inordinate attachments and from every merely earthly and sensual affection. A Child of
Mary should never forget that it does not suffice to be exempt from those grievous sins
which bring instant death to this sublime virtue, but she ought so to love that purity
which elevates her to the rank of angels, that she should fly, as from a serpent, all that
could sully in her this lily of dazzling whiteness, this precious pearl, this delicate
mirror which is tarnished by the least breath.
Modesty is the inseparable companion of purity; it is called by
excellence the virtue of young persons, whose loveliest ornament it forms; and with much
greater reason should it be the virtue of the Children of Mary. Modesty is a balm, the
perfume of which exhales from a pure heart, preserving it, as it were, by its own
fragrance, from all dangerous contact, and imbuing all who approach with the good odor of
Jesus Christ. This virtue regulates the whole conduct of a Child of Mary – her walk,
her tone of voice, her gestures, her postures, above all her eyes, which are, to use the
figurative expression of the Holy Scriptures, the perfidious windows by which death so
often enters the soul. She gives to dress only what decency and circumstances of the time
and place require; but she rejects with horror all that savors of vanity, the spirit of
the world, and with much more reason all immodest apparel.
Humility
The Most Holy Virgin, prevented by most extraordinary graces, endowed
with the most sublime gifts, elevated to the highest conceivable dignity, not only on
earth, but in Heaven, was, nevertheless, the most humble of creatures. She was so highly
exalted, according to the opinion of St. Bernard, only because she humbled herself beneath
every other creature. Thence we naturally conclude that the virtue of humility is
indispensably necessary to the Children of Mary.
Moreover, this virtue is the foundation of our sanctification. St.
Gregory compares the work of our perfection to an edifice, the depth of whose foundation
is in proportion to its height. A Child of Mary, who is called to greater perfection than
common Christians, since she makes special profession of honoring and imitating Mary,
should, after the example of her Immaculate Mother, have a deep-rooted humility.
Consequently, she will be most careful to avoid vanity, the desire of appearing, of
pleasing, either in her dress, her carriage, her words, or in any of her actions, which
should breathe only the love of retirement and obscurity. She will take for her motto
those beautiful words of the Imitation of Christ: "Love to be unknown and
reputed as nothing." She will guard against vain complacency in the gifts of mind or
body, which God may have been pleased to confer on her, remembering they are only a
deposit, of which she will have to render an account. Far from yielding to the whisperings
of self-love, she will ever seek the last place, and consider herself the least among her
companions, instead of wishing to govern them. Not only will she bear, with submission,
humiliations such as admonitions, reprehensions and punishments, which she may deserve,
but she will be glad to have these occasions to practice the virtue of humility. She will
esteem herself happy, if sometimes she is reproved or even punished unjustly; she will
bear the trial in silence. True humility will render the Child of Mary full of deference
to her superiors, and even to her companions; she will gladly renounce her own will and
judgment to submit to that of others. Thus exercised, humility will become for the Child
of Mary the source of all grace, because God "fills the humble with His gifts, while
He resists the proud."
Obedience
The third virtue of the Children of Mary is obedience. This
virtue is indispensably necessary for them, particularly during the time they remain in
the Orphanage or School, where they live together under one rule and under the authority
of their teachers.
The Blessed Virgin is a perfect model of this virtue. From her
Presentation in the Temple and Consecration to the Lord, she had the happiness of living
in community with companions close to her own age, and in this state we cannot doubt that
she was an accomplished model of obedience and submission. After her example, the Children
of Mary should practice in the most perfect manner this meritorious virtue: consequently,
they should be very docile and submissive to their teachers, in whom they must consider
the person of God Himself, whose place Superiors hold, obeying not only their commands,
but anticipating their wishes; executing with generosity the most painful, difficult, and
humiliating commands; never making any impertinent reply, indulging the least interior
murmur, nor speaking to them without great respect and deference.
This obedience extends, in the second place, to the faithful practice
of the rules of the house, without excepting a single point. The Children of Mary will
give example in punctuality, quitting all at the first sound of the bell, endeavoring to
be first at the several exercises, and scrupulously observing the rule of silence. This
virtue requires great fidelity to the particular Rules of the Association, to its various
pious practices, and a great deference towards its Superiors, in whom they should honor
the person of the Blessed Virgin, receiving, with great docility, the counsels they may
give.
Charity
The fourth virtue of the Association is mutual charity. This virtue,
which Our Lord Jesus Christ has given to His disciples as the distinguishing mark, the
characteristic of the New Law, His favorite commandment, should also be the characteristic
of the Association. The Children of Mary should be remarkable for their charity towards
their companions, their mutual support, their meekness and affability.
It does not suffice that this virtue repress in them every harsh
expression, all impatience, the least word that savors of hatred, anger and rancor; it
should lead them to consult the wishes of their companions, whom they ought to cherish as
affectionate sisters, bearing their defects with indulgence, rendering them on all
occasions their little services; in a word, making themselves all to all, to gain all to
Jesus and Mary. The Children of Mary must be well persuaded that the faithful practice of
this virtue will enable them to exercise in the midst of their young companions a real
apostolate, very efficacious and meritorious; for there is nothing that draws hearts more
irresistibly to the love of virtue than charity and meekness.
But this charity, to be genuine, must exclude two defects, which are
equally opposed to it, aversion and particular friendships. The Children of
Mary should never entertain in their hearts any aversion, antipathy, or rancor, under any
pretext whatever. They ought to accomplish to the letter this precept of the Holy Ghost,
"Let not the sun go down upon your anger." If it happen that one companion, even
involuntarily annoy another, she should hasten to beg pardon and be reconciled to her,
even though she be not to blame.
The second defect would be still more fatal, that is, particular
friendships. If they be introduced into the Association, and take root therein,
charity can no longer subsist. Particular friendships, in uniting two or three
hearts by the bonds of selfishness and natural inclination, bring division among all. They
form little cliques, whence spring necessarily detractions, calumnies, murmurs, bitter
criticisms and mockeries. We may add that they destroy true piety in its very source. A
child who is so unhappy as to entertain a private friendship in her heart, finds her
fervor diminish little by little; she experiences disgust for prayer, for the exercises of
piety, which she performs only mechanically and by routine. And how could it be otherwise?
God does not wish a divided heart; He withdraws Himself from a soul that despises Him to
attach herself to miserable creatures. The Children of Mary will endeavor to avoid, as
much as possible, all particular friendships, as they well know that this is one of the
serious faults which expose them to the mortification of being expelled from the
Association.
It is amazing to reflect that
these rules were in use throughout the Catholic world, even through the first half of the
20th Century. How completely foreign are they to the maxims of today's world, and to
the lifestyle of the majority of today's teenage girls!
PRAYER:
THE CHIEF DUTY OF THE CHRISTIAN
The Ascetical Doctrine of Saint Alphonsus Maria Liguori
The Confidence with
which We Ought to Pray
Excellence and Necessity of this Virtue
The principal instruction given to us by St. James is that we pray with
a confidence that feels sure of being heard, and without hesitating: "Let him ask in
faith, nothing wavering" (James 1:6). St. Thomas teaches that as prayer receives its
power of meriting from charity, even so, on the other hand, it receives from faith and
confidence its power of being able to obtain: "Prayer has its power of meriting from
charity, but its efficaciousness for obtaining from faith and confidence" (2.2 q. 83,
a. 15). St. Bernard teaches the same, saying that it is our confidence alone which obtains
for us the Divine mercies: "Hope alone obtains a place of mercy with Thee, O
Lord" (de Annunt. S. 3). God is much pleased with our confidence in His wonderful
mercy, because we then honor and exalt that infinite Goodness which He wished to manifest
to the world in creating us: "But let all them be glad that hope in Thee: they shall
rejoice forever, and Thou shalt dwell in them" (Ps. 5:12).
God protects and saves all those who confide in Him: "He is the
Protector of all that trust in Him" (Ps. 17:31). "Thou who savest them that
trust in Thee" (Ps. 16:7). O, the great promises that are recorded in the Scriptures
to all those who confidently place their trust in God! He whose hopes are in God will not
fall into sin: "None of them that trust in Him shall offend" (Ps. 33:23). Yes,
says David, because God has His eyes turned towards all those who confide in His goodness,
to deliver them by His aid from the death of sin. "Behold, the eyes of the Lord are
on them that fear Him, and on them that hope for His mercy to deliver their souls from
death" (Ps. 32:18-19). And in another place God Himself says: "Because he hoped
in Me, I will deliver him; I will protect him; I will deliver him and I will glorify
him" (Ps. 90:14). Mark the word "because". "Because" he confided
in Me, I will protect him, I will deliver him from his enemies, and from the danger of
falling; and finally I will give him eternal glory. Isaiah says of those who place their
trust in God: "They that hope in the Lord shall renew their strength; shall take
wings as the eagles; they shall run and not be weary: they shall walk and not faint"
(Is. 40:31). They shall cease to be weak, since they shall gain in God a great strength;
they shall not be faint; they shall not even feel weary in walking the way of salvation,
but they run and fly as eagles; "in silence and in hope shall your strength be"
(Is. 30:15). All our strength, the prophet tells us, consists in reposing all our
confidence in God, and in being silent; that is, in reposing in the arms of His Mercy,
without trusting to our own efforts, or to human means.
And when did it ever happen that a man had confidence in God and was
lost? "No one hath hoped in the Lord and hath been confounded" (Ecclus. 2:11).
It was this confidence that assured David that he should not perish: "In Thee, O
Lord, have I trust; I shall not be confounded forever" (Ps. 30:2). Perhaps then, God
could be a deceiver, who offers to support us in dangers if we lean upon Him, and would
then withdraw Himself if we had recourse to Him? "God is not a deceiver, that He
should offer to support us, and then when we lean upon him should slip away from us"
(St. Thomas, Erud. Princ. 1, 2, c. 5). David calls the man happy who trusts in God:
"Blessed is the man that trusteth in Thee" (Ps. 83:13). And why? Because, says
he, he who trusts in God will always find himself surrounded by God's Mercy.
"Mercy shall encompass him about that hopeth in the Lord" (Ps. 31:10). So that
he shall be surrounded and guarded by God on every side in such a way that he shall be
prevented from losing his soul.
It was for this cause that the Apostle recommends us so earnestly to
preserve our confidence in God; for (he tells us) it will certainly obtain from Him a
great remuneration: "Do not therefore lose your confidence, which hath a great
reward" (Heb. 10:35). As is our confidence, so shall be the graces we receive from
God: if our confidence is great, great too will be the graces: "Great faith merits
great things" (In Cant. S. 32). St. Bernard writes that the Divine Mercy is an
inexhaustible fountain, and that he who brings to it the largest vessel of confidence
shall take from it the largest measure of gifts: "Neither, O Lord, dost Thou put the
oil of Thy Mercy into any other vessel than that of confidence" (de Annunt. S. 3).
The Prophet had long before expressed the same thought: "Let thy mercy, O Lord be
upon us, as great (i.e., in proportion) as our hope in Thee" (Ps. 32:22). This was
well exemplified in the centurion to whom Our Savior said in praise of his confidence,
"Go, and as thou hast believed, so be it done unto thee" (Matt. 8:12). And Our
Lord revealed to St. Gertrude that he who prays with confidence does Him, in a manner of
speaking, such violence that He cannot but hear him in everything he asks.
"Prayer", says St. John Climacus, "does a pious violence to God." It
indeed does Him a violence, but a violence which He desires, and which pleases Him
greatly.
"Let us go, therefore", according to the admonition of St.
Paul, "with confidence to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find
grace in seasonable aid" (Heb. 4:16). The throne of grace is Jesus Christ, Who is now
sitting on the Right Hand of the Father; not on the throne of justice, but of grace, to
obtain pardon for us if we fall into sin, and to enable us to persevere if we enjoy His
friendship. To this throne we must always have recourse with confidence, that is to say,
with that trust which springs from faith in the goodness and truth of God, Who has
promised to hear him who prays to Him with confidence, but with a confidence that is both
sure and stable. On the other hand, says St. James, let not the man who prays with
hesitation think that he will receive anything: "For he who wavers is like a wave of
the sea, which is moved and carried about by the wind. Therefore, let not that man think
to receive anything of the Lord" (James 1:6). He will receive nothing, because the
doubt which agitates him is an insult to God, and will hinder His Mercy from listening to
his prayers: "Thou hast not asked rightly, because thou hast asked with doubt,"
says St. Basil; "thou hast not received grace, because thou hast asked for it without
confidence" (Const. Mon. c. 2). David says that our confidence ought to be as firm as
a mountain, which is not moved by each gust of wind. "They who trust in the Lord
shall be as Mount Sion; he shall not be moved forever that dwelleth in Jerusalem"
(Ps. 124:1). And it is this that Our Lord recommends to us, if we wish to obtain the
graces for which we ask: "Whatsoever you ask when you pray, believe that you shall
receive, and they shall come unto you" (Mark 11:24). Whatever grace you require, be
certain of obtaining it, and indeed you shall obtain it.
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