| Chapter 39
CARDINAL POINTS OF THE LEGION APOSTOLATE
1. SOULS ARE NOT APPROACHED EXCEPT WITH MARY
Sometimes Mary is kept in the background so as to meet the prejudices
of those who make small account of her. This method of making Catholic
doctrine more acceptable may accord with human reasonings. It does not
reflect the Divine idea. Those who act in this way do not realise that
they might as well preach Christianity without Christ as ignore Mary's
part in redemption. For God himself has thought fit to arrange that no
foreshadowing or coming or giving or manifestation of Jesus should be without
Mary.
From the beginning and before the world she was in the mind of God.
- God himself it was who first began to tell of her and to sketch out for
her a destiny unquestionably unique. For all that greatness of hers had
a beginning very far back. It began before the constitution of the world.
From the first, the idea of Mary was present to the Eternal Father along
with that of the Redeemer, of whose destiny she formed part. Thus far back
had God answered the doubter's saying: "What need has God of Mary's help?"
God could have dispensed with her altogether, just as he might have dispensed
with Jesus himself. But the course which it pleased him to adopt included
Mary. It placed her by the side of the Redeemer from the very moment in
which the Redeemer was himself decreed. It went further; that plan assigned
to her no less a part than that of Mother of the Redeemer and necessarily,
therefore, of those united to him.
Thus from all eternity Mary was in a position exalted, alone among creatures,
and utterly outside comparison even with the sublimest among them, different
in the Divine idea, different in the preparation she received; and therefore
fittingly singled out from all others in the first prophecy of redemption,
addressed to satan: "I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between
your offspring and hers; he will strike your head, and you will strike
his heel." (Gen 3:15) Here is the future redemption summarised by God himself.
Definitely, Mary is to be in an order of her own; even before her birth,
and ever after, the enemy of satan; below the Saviour, but next to him,
and like unto him (Gen 2:18), and remote from all others. Not any prophet
- even the Baptist - is thus set with him, nor king nor leader, nor apostle
nor evangelist - including Peter and Paul themselves; nor the greatest
among the popes and pastors and doctors; nor any saint; nor David, nor
Solomon, nor Moses, nor Abraham. Not one of them! Alone, out of all creatures
that will ever be, she is divinely designated as the Co-worker of Salvation.
Vividly and unmistakably revealed in prophecy. - The course of
prophecy continues: "The Virgin," "the Virgin and Child," "the Woman,"
"Woman and Child," "the Queen seated at the right hand of the King," the
constantly recurring assurance that a woman is to be a prime element of
our saving. What sort of future does this foretell of her? Do not the very
greatest things that can be said of her seem to follow logically on? Hardly
do we realise how crushing, how conclusive is the bearing of prophecy on
this question of the place of Mary in the Christian religion. A prophecy
is a shadow of a thing to come, a glance which pierces time instead of
space, a pale outline of a distant prospect. Necessarily, a prophecy must
be less vivid, less clear, less real, than the reality of which it speaks.
But necessarily, too, it must preserve harmonious proportion with that
reality. Prophecy which pictured redemption as wrought by a Woman and her
Child together (and no other with that pair), who crush the head of satan,
would be radically inconsistent with an actual redemption which relegates
the woman to obscurity. Thus, if prophecy is truly named, and if Salvation
is a lifelong working of the Incarnation and the death of Jesus Christ
into the fabric of the human soul (and Holy Church and Holy Scripture jointly
so declare); then in the Christian system Mary must be found with Jesus,
inseparable from him in his saving work, the New Eve, dependent on him
but necessary to him - indeed no other than the Mediatrix of all Graces,
as the Catholic Church sums up her gracious office. If what prophecy had
glimpsed is really God's country, then those who belittle Mary are aliens
to it.
Likewise, the Annunciation shows her key-position. - The culmination
of the prophecies arrives ; the fruition of her age-old destiny is now
at hand.
Consider the awe-inspiring working out of the merciful design of God.
Attend in spirit the greatest Peace Conference ever held. It is a Peace
Conference between God and mankind, and it is called the Annunciation.
In that Conference God was represented by one of his high Angels, and mankind
was represented by her whose name the Legion is privileged to bear. She
was but a gentle maiden, yet the fate of all mankind hung upon her in that
day. The angel came with overwhelming tidings. He proposed to her the Incarnation.
He did not merely notify it. Her liberty of choice was not violated; so
that for a while the fate of mankind trembled in the balance. The Redemption
was the ardent desire of God. But in this, as in all matters minor to it,
he would not force the will of man. He would offer the priceless boon,
but it was for man to accept it, and man was at liberty to refuse it. The
moment had arrived to which all generations had looked forward, just as
ever since all generations have looked back to it. It was the crisis of
all time. There was a pause. That maiden did not accept at once; she asked
a question, and the answer was given. There was another pause, and then
she spoke the words: "Let it be with me according to your word" (Lk 1:38),
those words that brought God down to earth and signed the great Peace Pact
of humanity.
The Father made redemption depend on her. - How few realise all
that follows from that consent of hers. Even Catholics in the main do not
realise the importance of the part that Mary played. The Doctors of the
Church say these things: Supposing that maiden had refused the offer of
motherhood that was made to her, the Second Divine Person would not have
taken flesh in her. What a solemn thing that is! "What a terrible thought
to think that God has made the entrance of the Redeemer dependent upon
the 'Let it be with me' (Lk 1:38) of the handmaid of Nazareth; that this
saying should be the termination of the old world, the beginning of the
new, the fulfilment of all prophecies, the turning-point of all time, the
first blaze of the morning star which is to announce the rising of the
sun of justice, which as far as human will was able to accomplish, knit
the bond that brought Heaven down upon earth and lifted humanity up to
God!" (Hettinger). What a solemn thing indeed! It means that she was the
only hope of mankind. But the fate of men was safe in her hands. She pronounced
that consent which, though we cannot fully understand, commonsense nevertheless
tells us must have been inconceivably the most heroic act ever performed
in the world - such that in all ages no other creature but she could have
performed it. Then to her came the Redeemer; not to herself alone, but
through her to poor helpless humanity, on behalf of whom she spoke. With
him, she brought everything that the faith means, and the faith is the
real life of men. Nothing else matters. Everything must be abandoned for
it. Any sacrifices must be made to get it. It is the only thing in the
world of any worth. Consider, therefore, that the faith of all generations:
those that have passed away up to the present, and the uncountable millions
yet to come: the faith of all has depended on the words of that maiden.
No true Christianity without Mary. - In return for this infinite
gift all generations must henceforth call that maiden blessed. She who
brought christianity on earth cannot be denied a place in christian worship.
But what of the many people in this world who hold her cheaply, the many
who slight her, the many who do worse? Does it ever occur to those people
to think that every grace they have they owe to her? Do they ever reason
that if they were excluded from her words of acceptance that night, then
Redemption has never come on earth for them? In that supposition they would
stand outside its scope. In other words, they would not be christians at
all, even though they may cry: "Lord! Lord!" all the day and every day.
(Mt 7:21) And on the other hand, if they are indeed christians, and if
the gift of life has come to them, then it has only come because she gained
it for them, because they were included in her acceptance. In a word, the
baptism that makes a person a child of God makes one simultaneously a child
of Mary.
Gratitude, therefore - a practical gratitude - to Mary must be the mark
of every christian. Redemption is the joint gift of the Father and of Mary.
Therefore, with the words of thanks to the Father must go up the word of
thanks to Mary.
The Son is always found with his Mother. - It was God's will
that the reign of grace should not be inaugurated without Mary. It was
his pleasure that things should continue in the self-same way. When he
desired to prepare St. John the Baptist for his mission of going before
himself, he sanctified him by the charitable visit of his Blessed Mother
in the Visitation. On the first Christmas night those who turned her from
their doors turned him away. They did not realise that with her they refused
him whom they awaited. When the shepherd-representatives of the chosen
people found the Promised of all Nations, they found him with her. If they
had turned away from her, they would not have found him. At the Epiphany,
the Gentile races of the world were received by our Lord in the persons
of the three Kings, but they only found him because they found her. If
they had refused to approach her, they would not have reached him.
What had been done in secret at Nazareth had to be confirmed openly
in the Temple. Jesus made offering of himself to the Father but it was
between the arms and by the hands of his Mother. For that babe belonged
to its Mother; without her the Presentation could not be made.
Proceed, and it is learned from the Fathers that our Lord did not enter
upon his public life without her consent. Likewise her request at Cana
of Galilee was the beginning of the signs and wonders and mighty deeds
by which he proved his mission.
Man for man: Maid for maid: Tree for tree. - When the last scene
came on Calvary which finished the awful drama of Redemption, Jesus hung
upon the tree of the Cross and Mary stood beneath it, not merely because
she was a fond Mother, not in any accidental way, but precisely in the
same capacity as she was present at the Incarnation. She was there as the
representative of all mankind, ratifying her offering of her Son for men's
sake. Our Lord did not offer himself to the Father without her assent and
offering made on behalf of all her children; the Cross was to be their
Sacrifice and his Sacrifice. "For as truly as she suffered and almost died
with her suffering Son"-these are the words of Pope Benedict XV -"so truly
did she renounce her maternal rights over that Son for the sake of our
salvation, and immolate him, as far as with her lay, to placate God's justice.
Hence it may justly be said that with Christ she redeemed the human race."
The Holy Spirit operates always with her. - Come a little further
to the feast of Pentecost - that tremendous occasion when the Church was
launched upon its mission. Mary was there. It was by her prayer that the
Holy Spirit descended on the Mystical Body and came to abide in it with
all his "greatness, power, glory, victory and majesty." (1 Chron 29:11)
Mary reproduces in respect of the Mystical Body of Christ every service
which she rendered to his actual Body. This law applies to Pentecost, which
was a sort of new Epiphany. She is necessary to the one as she had been
to the other. And so of all divine things to the end: if Mary is left out,
God's Plan is not conformed to, no matter what one's prayers and works
and strivings may be. If Mary is not there, the grace is not given. This
is an overpowering thought. It may provoke the question: "Do those who
ignore or insult Mary receive no graces?" They do, indeed, receive graces,
for failure to acknowledge Mary may be excused on grounds of utter ignorance.
But what a sorry title to Heaven! and what a way of treating her who helps
us! Moreover, the graces which come in such circumstances are but a fraction
of what should flow, so that one's life's work is largely failing.
What place must we assign her? - Some may take alarm and say
it is a slight to God to credit such a universal power to a creature. But
if it has pleased God to make it so, how does it slight his dignity? How
foolish it would sound were anyone to say that the force of gravity derogates
from God's power! That law of gravity is from God, and accomplishes his
purposes throughout all nature. Why should one think it disrespectful to
allow as much to Mary in the universe of Grace? If the laws which God has
made for nature show forth his might, why should the law which he has made
for Mary do otherwise than manifest his goodness and omnipotence?
But even if it is conceded that acknowledgment is due to Mary, there
still remains the question of its manner and amount. "How"- some will say
- "am I to apportion prayer to Mary and prayer to the Divine Persons or
to the saints? What is the exact amount - neither too much nor too little
- which I am to offer to her?" Others will go further and their objection
will present itself as follows: "Would I not turn away from God were I
to direct my prayers to her?"
All these grades of doubt proceed from applying earthly ideas to heavenly
things. Such persons are thinking of the Father and the Son and the Holy
Spirit, and of Mary and the saints, as if they were so many statues, so
that to turn to one they must necessarily turn away from others. Various
examples might be utilised to help towards a better understanding of the
true position. But, strange to say, the simplest and at the same time the
holiest solution of such difficulties lies in the recommendation: "You
must, indeed, give all to God, but give it all with Mary." It will be found
that this apparently extreme devotion to her is free from the perplexities
which measuring and moderation bring.
Every action should endorse her Fiat. - The justification of
this method is to be found in the Annunciation itself. In that moment all
mankind were joined with Mary, their representative. Her words included
their words, and in a sense she included them. God viewed them through
her. Now, the daily life of a christian is nothing else than the formation
of our Lord in that member of his Mystical Body. This formation does not
take place without Mary. It is an outpouring and a part of the original
Incarnation, so that Mary is really the Mother of the christian just as
she is of Christ. Her consent and her maternal care are just as necessary
to the daily growth of Christ in the individual soul as they were to his
original taking of flesh. What does all this involve for the christian?
It involves many important things of which this is one: he must deliberately
and whole-heartedly acknowledge Mary's position as his representative in
the sacrificial offering, begun at the Annunciation and completed on the
cross, which earned Redemption. He must ratify the things she then did
on his behalf, so that he can enjoy, without shame and in their fulness,
the infinite benefits thereby brought to him. And that ratification: of
what nature is it to be? Would a once-repeated act suffice ? Work out the
answer to this question in the light of the fact that it was through Mary
that every act of one's life has become the act of a christian. Is it not
reasonable and proper that likewise every act should bear some impress
of acknowledgment and gratitude to her? So the answer is the same as that
already given: "You are to give her everything."
Glorify the Lord with Mary. - Have her before the mind, at least
in some slight way, at all times. Unite the intention and the will to hers
in such fashion that every act done during the day, every prayer you utter,
is done with her. She should be left out of nothing. Whether you pray to
the Father, or to the Son, or to the Holy Spirit, or to a saint, it is
always to be prayer in union with Mary. She repeats the words with you.
Her lips and your lips form the words together, and in everything she has
a part. Thus she is far more than at your side. She is, as it were, in
you; your life is you and she together giving to God all you jointly have.
This all-embracing form of devotion to Mary acknowledges handsomely
the part she played and daily continues to play in the workings out of
salvation. Likewise it is the easiest devotion to her. It solves the doubts
of those who say: "How much?" and of those who fear lest giving to her
is taking from God. But even some Catholics may say: "It is extreme." Yet
where does it offend against sweet reason? And wherein does it deny his
due to the Almighty? The latter fault is better laid to those who say that
they are jealous of the dignity of God, but will not work the plan which
he has made; who say they hold the Scriptures as the sacred word of God,
yet will not hear the verses which sing that he hath done great things
to Mary, and that all generations shall call her blessed. (Lk 1:48-49)
To all these doubting ones it is best to speak in terms of this rich
and full devotion. But how indeed can legionaries talk in any other terms
of her? Minimising and reduction only leave her a mystery. If Mary is a
shadow or a sentimental notion, then surely not the Catholics, but those
who treat her lightly are justified! And, on the other hand, the statement
of the fullness of her claims and of her essential place in christian life
contains a challenge which cannot be ignored by any heart in which grace
has some dominion. Then calm examination of the role of Mary will leave
such people at her feet.
The purpose of the Legion is to mirror Mary. If true to this ideal,
the Legion will share her crowning gift to cast the light into the hearts
of those who are in the darkness of unbelief.
"The great master of Thomas Aquinas, Albert the Great, has a delightful
phrase in a commentary on the Annunciation portion of the Gospel, which,
rendered freely, says that Mary's Son gives infinitude to his Mother's
excellency, there being also in the tree which produces the fruit some
of that infinite perfection which belongs properly to the fruit.
In practice the Catholic Church looks upon the Mother of God as being
an unbounded power in the realm of grace. She is considered as the Mother
of the redeemed on account of the universality of her grace. In virtue
of her divine motherhood, Mary is simply the vastest, the most efficient,
the most universal supernatural power in Heaven and on earth, outside the
Three Divine Persons." (Vonier: The Divine Motherhood)
2. INFINITE PATIENCE AND SWEETNESS MUST BE LAVISHED ON A PRICELESS
SOUL
The note of sternness must be banished from the legionary mission.
Qualities essential to success, and above all when dealing with the outcast
and the sinner, are those of sympathy and unvarying gentleness. Constantly
in the affairs of life, we persuade ourselves that particular cases are
subjects for rebuke or for the cutting word, and we use those words, and
later are left regretting. Possibly in every case a mistake has been made.
Why cannot we remember in time that it is from rough usage - all no doubt
well-deserved - that the hardness and perversity of which we complain have
grown up! The flower that would have opened under the influence of the
gentle warmth of softness and compassion closes tightly in the colder air.
On the other hand, the air of sympathy which the good legionary carries
with him, the willingness to listen, to enter wholeheartedly into the case
as put before him, are sweetly irresistible, and the most hardened person,
completely taken off his (or her) balance, yields in five minutes ground
which a year of exhortation and abuse would have failed to gain.
Those difficult types of people are usually trembling on the verge of
rage. He who further irritates them causes them to sin and hardens their
resistance. He who would help them must lead them in the opposite way.
He can only do this by treating them with extreme forbearance and respect.
Every legionary ought to burn into his soul these words applied by the
Church to Our Blessed Lady: "For the memory of me is sweeter than honey,
and the possession of me sweeter than the honeycomb." (Sir 24:20) Others
may effect good by stronger methods. But for the legionary there is only
one way of doing God's work-the way of gentleness and sweetness. Let him
not depart from that way under any circumstances whatsoever. If he does,
he will not achieve good; he will rather work harm. Legionaries who stray
outside that realm of Mary lose touch with her on whom their work depends.
What then can they hope to accomplish ?
The very first praesidium of the Legion was given the title of Our Lady
of Mercy. This was done because the first work undertaken was the visitation
of a hospital under the care of the Sisters of Mercy. The legionaries thought
they were choosing that name, but who can doubt that in reality it was
conferred by the sweet Virgin herself, who thereby indicated the quality
which must ever distinguish the legionary soul.
Ordinarily, legionaries are not found remiss in their pursuit of the
sinner. Frequently years pile up in the tireless following of some determined
defaulter. But sometimes persons are encountered who put one's faith and
hope and charity to trial. They appear to be outside the category of the
ordinary sinner; persons of superlative badness, incarnate selfishness,
or bottomless treachery, or full of hatred of God or of a revolting attitude
towards religion. They seem not to have a soft spot in them, a spark of
grace, or a trace of the spiritual. So utterly detestable are they that
it is difficult to believe that they are not equally repellent to God himself.
What can he possibly see in the midst of disfigurements so frightful to
make him desire closest intimacy with them in Holy Communion, or their
company in Heaven?
The natural temptation to leave such a one to himself is almost irresistible.
Nevertheless, the legionary must not let go. Those human reasonings all
are false. God does indeed want that vile disfigured soul; so much, so
ardently, that he has sent his Son, our most dear Lord, to that soul, and
he is with it now!
Here is the motive for legionary perseverance, exquisitely put by Monsignor
R. H. Benson: "If a sinner merely drove Christ away by his sin, we could
let such a soul go. It is because - in St. Paul's terrifying phrase - the
sinful soul holds Christ, still crucifying him and making him a mockery
(Heb 6:6), that we cannot bear to leave it to itself."
What an electrifying thought! Christ our King in the possession, so
to speak, of the enemy ! What a watchword for a lifelong campaign, for
the grimmest battle ever waged, for an unrelenting pursuit of the soul
that must be converted in order that Christ's agony be ended ! Everything
that is natural must be burnt up in the white-hot act of faith that sees
and loves and stands by Christ crucified in that sinner. Just as the toughest
steel turns to liquid at the fiery breath of the blow-lamp, so will the
most hardened heart soften under the flame of that invincible charity.
A legionary of wide experience of the most depraved sinners of a great
city was asked if he had met any that were absolutely hopeless. Reluctant,
as a legionary, to acknowledge the existence of that category, he replied
that many were terrible but few were hopeless. Being pressed, he eventually
admitted that he knew of one who seemed to be capable of being so described.
That very evening he received his overwhelming rebuke. Quite accidentally
he met in the street the person he had named. Three minutes' conversation,
and the miracle of a complete and lasting conversion took place!
"One episode stands out in the life of Saint Madeleine
Sophie, in which the faithful pursuit of a soul is seen in all its pathos.
For twenty-three years she clung with persistent love to one whom God's
providence had brought across her path: a lost sheep, who but for the Saint
could never have found the fold. Where Julie came from, no one ever knew-she
never told her own story twice in the same way. But she was alone and poor
and of a difficult and wayward disposition; like nothing in ordinary life,
it was said; deceitful, treacherous, mean, passionate to the verge of frenzy.
But the Saint saw only a soul, found in dangerous places by the Good Shepherd
and put into her care by him. She adopted her as her own child, wrote more
than two hundred letters to her, and suffered much on her account. Repaid
by calumny and ingratitude, the Saint still held on, forgave her again
and again, and ever hoped . . . Julie died seven years after the Saint
and in peace with God." (Monahan: Saint Madeleine Sophie Barat)
3. LEGIONARY COURAGE
Each profession calls for its own particular type of courage, and counts
as unworthy the member without that courage. The Legion's demand is especially
for moral courage. Nearly all of its work consists in the approaching of
persons with intent to bring them nearer to God. Occasionally, this will
be met by resentment or lack of understanding, which will show itself in
various ways, less deadly than the missiles of warfare, but-as experience
shows-less often faced. For the thousands who brave the hail of shot and
shell, hardly one can be found who will not shrink from the mere possibility
of a few jeers, or angry words, or criticism, or even amused looks, or
from a fear that he may be thought to be preaching or making an affectation
of holiness.
"What will they think? What will they say?" is the chilling reflection,
where instead should be the Apostles' thought on the joy of being deemed
worthy to suffer contempt for the name of Jesus. (Acts 5:41)
Where this timidity, which is commonly called human respect, is allowed
free play, all work for souls is reduced to triviality. Look around and
see the tragedy of this. Everywhere the faithful are living in the midst
of great communities of unbelievers or non-Catholics or lapsed Catholics.
Five per cent of these would be won by the first serious effort which presented
the Catholic doctrines to them individually. Then that five per cent would
be the thin end of the wedge to conversions on a great scale. But that
effort is not made. Those Catholics would wish to make it. Yet they do
nothing, because their powers of action are paralysed by the deadly poison
of human respect. For different people the latter assumes different labels:
"common prudence," "respect for the opinions of others," "hopelessness
of the enterprise," "waiting for a lead," and many other plausible phrases;
but all of which end in inaction.
It is told in the life of St. Gregory Thaumaturgus that when he was
about to die, he enquired of those about him how many unbelievers there
were in the city. The reply came quickly: "Seventeen only." The dying bishop
meditated a while on the figure stated, and then remarked: "Exactly the
number of believers whom I found when I became bishop here." Starting with
only seventeen believers his labours had brought faith to all but seventeen!
Wonderful! Yet the grace of God has not been exhausted by the passage of
the centuries. Faith and courage could draw on it as freely to do the same
to-day. Faith is ordinarily not lacking, but courage is.
Realising this, the Legion must set itself to a deliberate campaign
against the operation in its members of the spirit of human respect. Firstly,
by opposing to its action the force of a sound discipline. Secondly, by
educating its legionaries to look upon human respect as a soldier would
upon cowardice. They must be taught to act in the teeth of its impulses,
and brought to realise that love and loyalty and discipline are after all
poor things if they do not bring forth sacrifice and courage.
A legionary without courage ! What can we say about such except to apply
the expression of St. Bernard: "What a shame to be the delicate member
of a thorn-crowned Head!"
"If you fought only when you felt ready for the fray,
where would be your merit ? What does it matter even if you have no courage,
provided you behave as though you were really brave? If you feel too lazy
to pick up a bit of thread, and yet do so for the love of Jesus, you gain
more merit than for a much nobler action done on an impulse of fervour.
Instead of grieving, be glad that, by allowing you to feel your own weakness,
our Lord is furnishing you with an occasion of saving a greater number
of souls." (St. Th?r?se of Lisieux)
4. SYMBOLIC ACTION
It is a fundamental Legion principle that into every work should be
thrown the best that we can give. Simple or difficult, it must be done
in the spirit of Mary.
There is another reason which is important. In spiritual enterprises
there is no telling how much effort is required. In dealing with a soul,
at what point can one say "enough"? And, of course, this applies with particular
force to the more difficult works. In the face of these we find ourselves
exaggerating the difficulty and whirling around the word "impossible."
Most of the "impossibles" are not impossible at all. Few things are impossible
to diligence and skill. But we imagine them to be impossible, and then
by our attitude we render them so.
But sometimes we are faced with works which are really impossible, that
is to say, beyond human effort. Obviously, if left to our own devices,
we will refrain from what we would regard as useless action in those cases
of imagined or real impossibility. Perhaps that might mean that we would
leave untouched three-quarters of the more important work which is waiting
to be done - which would amount to reducing to a mimic warfare the vast,
adventurous Christian campaign. So the Legion formula demands effort in
all circumstances and at all costs - effort as a first principle. Both
naturally and supernaturally the repudiation of impossibility is the key
to the possible. That attitude alone can solve the problems. It can go
further, for definitely it is a hearing of the Gospel cry that with God
no work shall be impossible. It is the believing response to our Lord's
own call for the faith that casts the mountain into the sea.
To think of spiritual conquest without at the same time stiffening one's
spirit into that indomitable attitude would be sheerly fantastic.
Appreciating this, the Legion's primary preoccupation is that strengthening
of its members' spirit.
"Every impossibility is divisible into thirty-nine steps, of which each
step is possible" - declares a legionary slogan with seeming self-contradiction.
Yet that idea is supremely sensible. It forms the groundwork of achievement.
It summarises the philosophy of success. For if the mind is stunned by
the contemplation of the apparently impossible, the body will relax into
a sympathetic inactivity. In such circumstances every difficulty is plainly
an impossibility. When faced with such - says that wise slogan - divide
it up; divide and conquer. You cannot at one bound ascend to the top of
a house, but you can get there by the stairway - a step at a time. Similarly,
in the teeth of your difficulty, take one step. There is no need yet to
worry about the next step; so concentrate on that first one. When taken,
a second step will immediately or soon suggest itself. Take it and a third
will show - and then another. And after a series of them - perhaps not
the full thirty-nine steps of the slogan, which only has in mind the play
of that name - one finds that one has passed through the portals of the
impossible and entered into very promising land.
Observe: the stress is set on action. No matter what may be the degree
of the difficulty, a step must be taken. Of course, the step should be
as effective as it can be. But if an effective step is not in view, then
we must take a less effective one. And if the latter be not available,
then some active gesture (that is, not merely a prayer) must be made which,
though of no apparent practical value, at least tends towards or has some
relation to the objective. This final challenging gesture is what the Legion
has been calling "Symbolic Action." Recourse to it will explode the impossibility
which is of our own imagining. And, on the other hand, it enters in the
spirit of faith into dramatic conflict with the genuine impossibility.
The sequel may be the collapse of the walls of that Jericho. "And at
the seventh time, when the priests had blown the trumpets, Joshua said
to the people, 'Shout! For the Lord has given you the city' . . . As soon
as the people heard the sound of the trumpets, they raised a great shout,
and the wall fell down flat; so the people charged straight ahead into
the city and captured it." (Josh 6:16-20)
5. ACTIVE WORK MUST BE DONE
The Legion without its spirit would be like any other lifeless body.
That spirit of the Legion, so transforming of its members, is not floating
around in the air, waiting to be breathed in. No ! that vital spirit is
the product of grace out of effort. It depends on the work which is being
done, and on the way in which it is being done by the individual legionaries.
If there is no effort, the spirit flickers low and may die.
Due to (a) a reluctance to embark on work which is considered difficult,
or (b) to an inability to discern the work which exists abundantly even
in the smallest places, but most of all to (c) a dread of adverse criticism;
there may be a tendency to avoid active work or to allot insignificant
tasks to the members. But all are warned that the Legion machinery is designed
to supervise substantial active work. There is no justification for setting
up the system at all unless such work is being undertaken. An army which
refuses to engage in battle: what a misnomer! Similarly, members of a praesidium,
which is not engaged in some form of active work, have no right to the
name of legionaries of Mary. It is reiterated that spiritual exercises
do not satisfy the legionary obligation to do active work.
The inactive praesidium is not only untrue to the Legion purpose of
showing a virile apostolate in action, but it does a further grave injustice
to the Legion. It creates the impression that the Legion is not suited
to the doing of certain work, whereas the real fact is that the Legion,
though perfectly capable, is not even being employed on that work.
6. CONTROL OF THE WORK BY THE PRAESIDIUM
The work is to be appointed by the praesidium. Members are not free
to undertake in the name of the Legion any work they may think fit. This
rule, however, should not be interpreted so rigidly as to prevent a member
from availing of a chance of doing good which may cross his path. In fact,
the legionary must regard himself as being in a sense always on duty. Work,
encountered accidentally, could be brought up and reported upon at the
following meeting, and if adopted by the praesidium would then become ordinary
legionary work. But in all this the praesidium should be careful. There
is a natural tendency in many people of great goodwill to do everything
but what they are supposed to do, to wander all over the field instead
of standing at the work which has been assigned to them. These persons
will do harm rather than good, and if not curbed will do much towards breaking
down the legionary discipline.
Once the sense of responsibility to the praesidium, the idea that one
is its messenger going from it with definite instructions and returning
to it to report on the execution of the allotted work, is shaken, the work
itself will soon cease to be done, or else be a source of danger to the
Legion. Should a grave error be the sequel of such independent action,
the Legion would be held to blame, although the fault had proceeded from
disregard of the Legion system.
When specially enthusiastic legionaries complain that their efforts
to do good are being fettered by too much discipline, it is well to analyse
the matter along the above lines. But it is also necessary to take care
that a complaint of this kind is not well founded. The essential purpose
of discipline is to drive people on, not to hold them back; but some persons
seem to have no other idea of exercising authority than to say "no" and
otherwise act restrictively.
7. VISITATION IN PAIRS A SAFEGUARD OF LEGIONARY DISCIPLINE
Visitation should be carried out in pairs. In prescribing thus, the
Legion has in view the following purposes:- First, the safeguarding of
the legionaries. Ordinarily, it will be less the streets than the actual
homes being visited, which will call for this precaution. Second, the visitation
in pairs is a source of mutual encouragement. It is a help against the
movements of human respect or common timidity when visiting difficult places
or homes where one is exposed to a cold reception. Third, it puts the seal
of discipline on the work. It secures punctuality and fidelity in the carrying
out of the appointed visitation. If left to oneself, one is easily led
to alter the time of, or postpone altogether, one's weekly visitation.
Fatigue, bad climatic conditions, natural reluctance to face the unpleasant
visit all operate freely if there is no appointment to be kept with another.
The result is that the visitation becomes disorderly and irregular and
unsuccessful, and eventually is abandoned altogether.
The usual practice in regard to the situation which arises as a result
of a legionary failing to keep an appointment with his co-visitor is the
following. If the work is, say, hospital visitation, or other work where
there is, obviously, no element whatever of risk, the legionary may proceed
to it alone. If, on the other hand, it is work which would throw the legionary
into difficult circumstances, or where disreputable surroundings are in
question, the legionary must forego the visitation. It is to be understood
that the above permission to visit alone is exceptional. Repeated failures
on the part of the co-visitor to keep appointments should be viewed very
seriously by the praesidium.
This requirement as to visitation in pairs is not to be read as meaning
that the two must together address themselves to the same persons. For
instance, if a hospital ward is in question, it would be in order, and
in fact the proper course, for the two legionaries to move about separately
and devote themselves to different individuals.
8. THE INTIMATE NATURE OF THE LEGIONARY WORK MUST BE SAFEGUARDED
The Legion must guard against the danger of being made use of by too
ardent social reformers. The work of the Legion is essentially a hidden
one. It commences in the heart of the individual legionary, developing
therein a spirit of zeal and charity. By direct personal and persevering
contact with others, the legionaries endeavour to raise the spiritual level
of the whole community. The work is done quietly, unobtrusively, delicately.
It aims less at the direct suppressing of gross evils than at the permeation
of the community with Catholic principles and Catholic feeling, so that
the evils die of themselves through lack of a soil favourable to them.
It will consider its real victory to lie in the steady, if sometimes slow,
development among the people of an intense Catholic life and outlook.
It is important that the intimate nature of the Legion visitation should
be jealously safeguarded. It will not be preserved if legionaries gain
the reputation of seeking out abuses for public denunciation. The visits
of legionaries to people's homes, as well as their general movements, would
tend to be looked on with doubt. Instead of being regarded as friends,
in whom complete confidence could be reposed, the suspicion would attach
to them that they were engaged on detective work for their organisation.
Inevitably their presence would be resented, and this would mark the end
of real legionary usefulness.
Therefore, those in charge of Legion activities will be chary of associating
the name of the Legion with ends which, though good in themselves, presuppose
methods which have little in common with those of the Legion. Special organisations
exist for the purpose of combating the glaring abuses of the day. Let the
legionaries avail of them when the need arises, and lend their support
in their private capacities, but let the Legion itself continue to be true
to its own tradition and its own methods of work.
9. HOME TO HOME VISITATION DESIRABLE
The Legion visitation should be as far as possible from home to home,
irrespective of the people living there. Offence may be taken if persons
think they are being singled out for attention.
Even the homes of those discovered to be non-Catholics should not -
except strong reasons to the contrary exist - be passed by. These are not
to be approached in a spirit of religious aggression, but for the purpose
of establishing a footing of friendship. The explanation that all homes
are being visited to make the acquaintance of their tenants will lead to
a kindly reception in many non-Catholic homes, a circumstance which Divine
Providence may utilise as an instrument of grace to those "other sheep"
which it desires to have within the fold. A friendship towards Catholics
of the apostolic type will cause many prejudices to die; and a respect
for Catholics will unquestionably be followed by a respect for Catholicism.
Information may be sought, books asked for, and from all this still greater
things may come.
10. MATERIAL RELIEF PROHIBITED
Material relief must not be given - even in the smallest ways; and
experience shows that it is necessary to mention that old clothing belongs
to this category.
In ruling thus, the Legion does not slight the act of relief-giving
in itself. It simply declares that for the Legion it is impracticable.
To give to the poor is a good work. Done with a supernatural motive it
is a sublime one. The systems of many great societies rest upon this principle;
notably that of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul to whose example and
spirit the Legion rejoices to proclaim itself deeply indebted - so much,
in fact, as to make it possible to say that the roots of the Legion lay
in that Society. But to the Legion is assigned a different field of duty.
Its system is built upon the principle of bringing spiritual good to every
individual in the population. This programme and one of relief-giving are
not compatible in practice because:-
(a) The visits of an organisation which gives relief will seldom be
welcomed by persons who do not need relief. They will fear lest such a
visitation would label them in the eyes of their neighbours as benefiting
in some material way. So the praesidium which earns the name of relief-giving
will quickly find its field of work narrowed exceedingly. Material relief
may be to other societies a key which opens. It is the key with which the
Legion locks itself out.
(b) Those who expect to receive, and are disappointed, become aggrieved
and hence impervious to legionary influence.
(c) Even among those who are subjects for relief, the Legion will not
accomplish spiritual good by giving. Let the Legion leave this to those
other agencies whose special work it is, and which have a special grace
for it. Certainly, legionaries will have no grace for it, because thereby
they break their rule. The praesidium which errs in this way will find
itself involved in grievous complications, and will never bring anything
but sorrow to the Legion.
Individual legionaries may plead the duty of giving charity according
to one's means, and may urge that they do not desire to give relief as
legionaries, but in their private capacities. Analysis of this contention
will indicate what complications must inevitably arise. Take the case -
and it is the usual one - of someone who did not indulge in such personal
relief-giving prior to joining the Legion. In his rounds, he comes across
persons whom he deems to be in need in some way or another. He refrains
from giving anything on the day of the official Legion visit, but goes
some other day "as a private individual" and gives. Surely he is breaking
the Legion rule as to the giving of material relief, and surely the double
visitation only covers a quibble? He visited in the first instance as a
legionary. The cases came to his knowledge as a legionary. The recipients
know him as a legionary; and certainly they do not enter into the quibble.
To them, the transaction is simply one of Legion relief-giving, and the
Legion agrees that they judge rightly.
Be it remembered that the disobedience or the indiscretion of a single
member in this direction may compromise the whole praesidium. The name
of relief-giving is easily won. It does not require a hundred instances.
A couple suffice.
If a legionary, for some reason, wishes to help in a particular case,
why not save the Legion from all complications by giving anonymously through
a friend, or through some appropriate agency? Reluctance to do this, in
the circumstances, would seem to indicate that the legionary is seeking
an earthly rather than a heavenly reward for the act of charity.
Legionaries must not, however, be indifferent to the cases of poverty
and want which they will inevitably find in their visitation, and they
should bring them to the notice of other organisations suited to the type
of need which is in question. But should all efforts by the Legion fail
to secure the desired help, the Legion is not itself to step into the gap.
That is not its work, and it is impossible to conceive that in any modern
community no other individuals or agency can be found which will look to
the relief of a deserving case.
"Unquestionably, the pity which we show to the poor by relieving their
needs is highly commended by God. But who will deny that a far higher place
is held by that zeal and effort which applies itself to the work of instruction
and persuasion, and thereby bestows on souls not the passing benefits of
earth but the goods that last forever." (AN)
As many instances have shown that this rule can be interpreted too narrowly,
it is necessary to state that works of service do not constitute material
relief. On the contrary they are recommended. They turn aside the accusation
that legionaries confine themselves to talking religion and are indifferent
about people's needs. Legionaries should prove the sincerity of their words
by pouring out their love and service in every permitted form.
11. THE COLLECTING OF MONEY
Much in the same category as relief-giving, and coming under the same
ban, would lie the regular utilisation of the legionary visitation for
the purpose of collecting money.
Such might secure the money, but never the atmosphere for the accomplishment
of spiritual good and would represent a supreme example of the policy known
as "penny-wise, pound foolish."
12. NO POLITICS IN THE LEGION
No legionary body shall allow its influence or its premises to be used
for any political purpose or to aid any political party.
13. SEEK OUT AND TALK TO EVERY SOUL
The essence of religious work is its desire to reach every individual,
to take into the sphere of its apostolate not merely the neglectful, not
alone the household of the Faith, not only the poor or the degraded, but
ALL.
Especially the most repulsive forms of religious neglect must not intimidate
the legionary. There is no person, however abandoned and hopeless to all
appearance, in whom the faith and courage and perseverance of the legionary
will not produce results. On the other hand, it would be an intolerable
limitation of the mission of the Legion to confine attention to the graver
evils. The special attractiveness of the search for the sheep that is straying
or in the hands of the thief, should not blind the legionary to the fact
that a wider field lies to hand in the urging on of that vast multitude
who, though called by God to sanctity, are contenting themselves with a
life of mere performance of the essential duties. Now, to induce persons,
who have been content with merely satisfying their obligations, to take
on works of zeal or devotion will only be accomplished by a long-continued
visitation, requiring much patience. But if, as Father Faber says, one
saint is worth a million ordinary Catholics; and if, as St. Teresa of Avila
tells us, one soul, not a saint but seeking sanctity, is more precious
to God than thousands living common lives, how delightful, then, the achievement
of setting the first steps of many in the path that turns aside from the
ordinary rut.
14. NO ONE IS TOO BAD TO BE UPLIFTED; NO ONE TOO GOOD
Not a single one of those encountered in visitation should be left
on the same level as when found. There is no one so good that he may not
be brought a great deal nearer to God. Frequently will legionaries find
themselves approaching persons who are holier far than they, but even then
it is not for them to doubt their capacity to do great good. They will
impart new ideas, new devotions. They may enliven a routine. Certainly,
they cannot fail to edify by their cheerful practice of the apostolic life.
So, whether the legionaries are dealing with the saint or the sinner, let
them proceed, confident in the knowledge that they are not there in their
own spiritual poverty but as the representatives of Mary's Legion, "united
with their pastors and their bishops, with the Holy See and with Christ."
(UAD)
15. A VAGUE APOSTOLATE IS OF LITTLE VALUE
In each case the purpose must be the effecting of considerable and
definite good. Great good must be done to a great number, if possible;
if not, then great good to a smaller number; never be content to do a little
good to a great number. The legionary who is treading the latter path may
do a disservice in that he is labelling as done, work which is, according
to Legion ideas, little more than begun, thus preventing others from entering
upon it. But another danger lies in the fact that the moment of discouragement
will represent the little good done to the many as being in reality no
good done to anyone. This feeling of ineffective membership places membership
itself in peril.
16. THE SECRET OF INFLUENCE IS LOVE
It is to be emphasised that real and extensive good can only be effected
by the establishing of friendship between the legionaries and those to
whom they go. Good otherwise done will be only scanty or accidental. This
must especially be borne in mind in the case of visitation carried out
under the auspices of the Enthronement of the Sacred Heart. Though this
work is excellent in itself and the source of blessings, it is not to be
esteemed the principal aim. A visitation that quickly results in the enthronement,
and is then discontinued would in the eyes of the Legion have reaped but
little of the fruits intended. Many and extended visits to each family
mean slow progress by a pair of legionaries, and hence the need for many
legionaries and many praesidia.
17. IN EACH ONE WORKED FOR, THE LEGIONARY SEES AND SERVES CHRIST
Nowhere and in no case is visitation to be carried out in a spirit
of philanthropy or mere human pity for the unfortunate. "Just as you did
it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it
to me." (Mt 25:40) With these words written on his heart, the legionary
must see our Lord in his neighbour (who is all mankind without distinction)
and render service accordingly. The evil, the unthankful, the afflicted,
the despised, the outcast, the greatest objects of natural repulsion, all
are to be viewed in this new light. They are surely the least of Christ's
brethren and (mindful of Christ's words) to be rendered a princely and
reverential service.
Always will the legionary bear in mind that he is visiting not as a
superior to an inferior, not as one equal to another, but as an inferior
to his superior, as the servant to the Lord. It is the absence of this
spirit that produces the patronising manner. The visitor, possessed of
the latter, will accomplish neither supernatural nor natural good. His
presence will be tolerated only when he is the bearer of gifts. On the
other hand, the gentle, sympathetic visitor, humbly asking admission to
the homes at which he knocks, will be joyfully received though his gifts
are not material; and he will quickly establish himself on a footing of
true friendship. Legionaries should bear in mind that a want of simplicity
in dress or accent will raise a barrier between them and those they visit.
18. THROUGH THE LEGIONARY, MARY LOVES AND TENDS HER SON
The words of a legionary explaining the successful outcome of a very
unpleasant and difficult visitation: "We got them to like us," admirably
summarise legionary methods. To awaken this affection it is first necessary
to show it: to love those visited. There is no other way, no other diplomacy,
no other key to real influence. St. Augustine puts the same idea in another
form when he declares "Love and do what you will."
In a masterly paragraph of his life of St. Francis of Assisi, Chesterton
asserts that distinctive Christian principle: "St. Francis only saw the
image of God multiplied but never monotonous. To him a man was always a
man, and did not disappear in a dense crowd any more than in a desert.
He honoured all men; that is he not only loved but respected them all.
What gave him his extraordinary personal power was this: that from the
Pope to the beggar, from the Sultan of Syria in his pavilion to the ragged
robbers crawling out of the wood, there was never a man who looked into
those brown, burning eyes without being certain that Francis Bernardone
was really interested in him, in his own inner individual life from the
cradle to the grave; that he himself was valued and taken seriously."
But can one love to order in this way? Yes, by seeing in all of those
met the person of our Blessed Lord. Love is enkindled at the very thought.
Again, it is most certain that Mary wills that there be shown to the Mystical
Body of her Beloved Son just such another love as she lavished on his actual
body. In this she will help her legionaries. Where she finds in them the
gleam, the readiness to love, she will fan it to a consuming flame.
19. EVERY DOOR OPENS TO THE HUMBLE AND RESPECTFUL LEGIONARY
Inexperience is apprehensive of the "First Visit," but the legionary,
whether new or tried, who has taken to heart the lesson of the preceding
clause, possesses the passport to every home.
It is insisted that one does not enter by any form of right, but solely
by the courtesy of the occupants. Approach must be made cap-in-hand, so
to speak, one's whole demeanour showing the respect with which one would
enter the palaces of the great. A statement of one's mission, accompanied
by a humble request to be permitted to enter, will usually open wide the
door and bring an invitation to be seated. Then the legionaries must remember
that they are not there to lecture, or to ask a multitude of questions,
but to sow the seeds of that eventual intimacy which will open the floodgates
of knowledge and influence.
It has been said that the special glory of charity is to understand
others. There is no greater need in this sad world than such a gift. For
"the majority of people seem to suffer from a sense of neglect. They are
unhappy because nobody takes them in hand, because nobody is ready to accept
the confidences they offer." (Duhamel)
Initial difficulties must not be taken too seriously. Even where deliberate
rudeness is at work, a meek submission will turn it to shame and produce
its harvest at a later stage.
Interest in the children provides opportunity for conversation. Questions
as to their religious knowledge and reception of the sacraments may be
asked, which at this early stage might be resented by the elders if asked
about themselves; and through the children, efficacious lessons may be
addressed to the parents.
Departing, the way must be left open for another call. The simple intimation
that one has enjoyed the visit, and hopes to see the family again, provides
both a natural leavetaking and an effective preparation for the return
visit.
20. ATTITUDE IN AN INSTITUTION
Legionaries visiting an institution must remember that they are there
simply on tolerance, as much guests as if in a private house. The officials
there always look somewhat doubtfully upon the charitable visitor who,
coming in to visit the patients, is apt to forget that deference is also
due to the staff and to rules and regulations. The legionary must never
be found wanting in this way. Visiting should never be done at inconvenient
hours, nor should medicine or other prohibited articles be brought to the
patients; nor should sides be taken in any of the internal disputes of
the place. Persons will profess to be the victims of ill-treatment by the
staff or by other patients, but it is not the function of the legionaries
to redress these grievances, even if they really exist. They will, of course,
listen sympathetically to the woes narrated, and endeavour to instil feelings
of resignation, but ordinarily the matter should finish there. Should strong
feelings of indignation be aroused in the legionary, it will serve as a
safety-valve to discuss the matter at the praesidium. The latter will see
the circumstances in full perspective and will counsel appropriate action
if desirable.
21. THE LEGIONARY MUST NOT SIT IN JUDGEMENT
Not alone the legionary manner, but-still more important - the legionary
mind, must be stamped with this delicate respect. It is inconsistent with
the mission of the legionary for him to sit in judgment on his neighbour,
or to set up his own standards of thought and conduct as standards which
must be conformed to by all. He must not assume that those who differ from
him in various ways, who refuse to receive him or even oppose him, are
necessarily unworthy persons.
There are many people whose actions seem open to criticism, but the
legionary is not to be the critic. Too often such persons are like the
saints who were wrongly accused. Again, the lives of many are unsightly
with grave abuses. But God alone sees the heart and can judge as to the
real position. For, as Gratry says: "Many lack the benefit of primitive
education. They are born without moral patrimony, and perhaps as food for
their journey through this difficult life have received only perverted
maxims and examples. But likewise, nothing will be asked of anyone but
that which has been given to him."
There are many, too, who parade their riches and whose lives are far
from mortified. Of these it is the spirit of the day to speak in bitter
words. But here again the legionary must reflect. There is always the possibility
that such persons may resemble Nicodemus, who came to our Lord secretly
by night, and who did much for him, won him many friends, loved him truly,
and in the end had the unique privilege of assisting at his burial.
The role of legionaries is never to be that of judge or critic. They
must always consider how Mary's soft eyes would look on all those circumstances
and persons. Then let them try to act as she would act.
It was one of Edel Quinn's practices never to find fault without referring
the matter to the Blessed Virgin.
22. OUTLOOK ON ADVERSE CRITICISM
Frequently in these pages, reference is made to the paralysing effect
exercised upon even the best-intentioned by the fear of hostile criticism.
Hence, it will be helpful to consider the following principle. A main object
of the Legion-that by which it will win its widest results-is the creation
of high standards of thought and practice. The members set themselves to
live the apostolic life, and thereby hold up a lofty headline of lay life.
By virtue of the strange instinct which leads men to imitate, even in spite
of themselves, those things which impress them, all will be impelled in
varying degrees to approximate to that headline. One sign that an effective
headline has been set is that many will openly and with good heart seek
to follow it. Another, and more common, sign will be that symptoms of dissent
will be evoked. For such a headline is a protest against the lower standards.
It is a sting to the popular conscience, and like every other sting, it
will provoke the healthy reaction of discomfort and protest, soon to be
followed by the upward urge. But if there is no reaction of any kind, it
proves that no effective headline has been set.
Therefore, there is no need to be unduly disconcerted should legionary
activities stir up some little criticism; provided always that defective
methods are not responsible for that criticism. Bear always in mind another
great principle which must govern apostolic effort: "Men are conquered
only by love and kindness, by quiet discreet example which does not humiliate
them and does not constrain them to give in. They dislike to be attacked
by the man who has no other idea but to overcome them." (Giosue Borsi)
23. THERE NEED NEVER BE DISCOURAGEMENT
Sometimes the most devoted labours, heroically prolonged, show little
fruit. Legionaries do not set their hearts on visible results, but nevertheless
it would not be for their good to work with a sense of frustration. It
will console them, and it will nerve them to still more strenuous efforts,
if they reflect that even a single sin prevented represents an infinite
gain. For that sin would be an immeasurable evil, dragging in its train
an endless series of calamitous consequences. "However tiny the mass, it
plays its part in the balance of the stars. Thus, in a way that only Thy
mind, O Lord, can perceive and measure, the slightest movement of my little
pen running across the paper is connected with the motions of the spheres,
and contributes to, and is a part thereof. The same takes place in the
world of intellect. Ideas live and have their most complex adventures in
that world of intellect, a world immeasurably superior to the material
world; a world united and compact also in its vast, plenteous, and most
varied complexity. As in the material and intellectual worlds, so it is
in the infinitely greater moral world." (Giosue Borsi) Each sin shakes
that world. It inflicts hurt on the soul of every man. Sometimes the first
link in this process is visible, when one person leads another to sin.
But visible or unseen, sin leads to sin; and likewise one sin prevented
wards off another. And similarly does not the averting of that second sin
prevent a third, and so on unendingly until that chain gathers in the whole
world and stretches throughout all time? Is it, therefore, too much to
say that each sinner converted to a good life, will eventually represent
a goodly host marching behind him into heaven?
Accordingly, to prevent a grave sin would justify most arduous labours
- even the effort of a lifetime - for thereby every soul will feel the
glow of extra grace. It may be that the saving of that sin will be a moment
of destiny, the inauguration of a process of uplift, which will in time
transfer a whole people from a godless life to one of virtue.
24. THE MARK OF THE CROSS IS A SIGN OF HOPE
But the chief danger of discouragement does not lie in the resistance
- however strong - of the forces against which the Legion finds itself
arrayed. It lies in the distress which the legionary cannot but feel when
aids and circumstances, on which he feels entitled to rely, are found wanting.
Friends fail, good people fail, one's instruments fail; and all whereon
we lean is traitor to our peace. O what a harvest of good could be reaped
- it seems - but for the bluntness of the sickle, but for the deficiencies
in one's own camp, but for that cross which crushes one!
This impatience at the narrowing down of the possible good to souls
may be a danger. It may bring the discouragement which the hostile forces
had not been able to create.
It must always be remembered that the work of the Lord will bear the
Lord's own mark, the mark of the cross. Without that imprint, the supernatural
character of a work may be doubted: true results will not be forthcoming.
Janet Erskine Stuart states this principle in another way. "If you look,"
she says, "to Sacred History, Church History, and even to your own experience
which each year must add to, you will see that God's work is never done
in ideal conditions, never as we should have imagined or chosen." That
is to say - amazing thought! - that the very circumstance which to the
limited human vision seems to prevent those conditions from being ideal
and to spoil the prospects of the work, is not an obstacle to success but
the requisite for success; not a flaw but a hall-mark; not a deadweight
on effort but fuel which feeds that effort and aids it to achieve its purpose.
For it is ever God's pleasure to show his power by extracting success from
unpromising conditions and by accomplishing his greatest projects with
inadequate instruments.
But the legionaries must note this important proviso: If those difficulties
are to be salutary, they must not proceed from legionary neglect. The Legion
cannot expect to derive grace from its own faults of omission or commission.
25. SUCCESS A JOY. FAILURE ONLY A POSTPONED SUCCESS
Viewed aright, the work should be an endless source of joy. Success
is a joy. Failure is a penance and an exercise of faith-a higher joy to
the thoughtful legionary, who sees therein merely a postponed and greater
success. Again, it is a natural pleasure to be received with the grateful
smiles of the many who value intensely the visit. But the doubtful looks
of others should bring a deeper consolation, for here is something seriously
amiss which has been escaping attention. It is the legionary experience
that true Catholic feeling - even when complicated by some religious neglect
- is responsive to the friendly, sympathetic visitor, so that the contrary
not infrequently marks a soul in peril.
26. ATTITUDE TOWARDS DEFECTS OF PRAESIDIA AND LEGIONARIES
There must be patience with the defects of praesidia or individual
legionaries. The fact that zeal is so sluggish, that improvement seems
negligible, and that worldly failings are sadly in evidence should not
bring discouragement. The following line of thought will help in such circumstances.
If those legionaries, with the drive of their system behind them and
unquestionably influenced by its prayer and devotion, are nevertheless
found wanting, what would their standards be without the Legion altogether?
Again, what are the spiritual levels of the community which cannot produce
the few worthy workers required to make a good praesidium?
Plainly, the logic is that those spiritual levels must be raised at
all costs. The best, in fact the only, means of doing this lies in the
infusion of an apostolic leaven which will work in the population until
the whole be leavened. (Mt 13:33) Therefore, the apostolic material available
must be cultivated with invincible patience and sweetness. Ordinary Catholic
spirit itself is a thing of slow growth. Why, therefore, expect the apostolic
spirit to be an instantaneous product? If heart be lost, the only remedy
is gone.
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27. NO SEEKING OF SELF
The Legion shall not permit itself to be made an instrument for the
personal material benefit of any of its members. But, indeed, no legionary
should have to be admonished against the unworthy exploitation, either
inside or outside the Legion, of his membership.
28. NO PRESENTATIONS TO MEMBERS
The giving of money or equivalent presentations by branches of the
Legion to their members is prohibited. The number of such presentations,
if tolerated, would tend to be large and to constitute a financial burden.
This must be guarded against, especially in view of the great number of
persons of small means whom the Legion is happy to have in membership.
Therefore, if praesidia or other legionary bodies want to signalise
some special event in the life of a member, let them do it by presenting
a spiritual bouquet.
29. NO DISTINCTIONS IN THE LEGION
Generally, the Legion is opposed to the formation of praesidia whose
membership is restricted to a particular class or section of the community.
Some reasons are:- (a) Too often restrictive will mean exclusive, with
consequent injury to fraternity. (b) The best method of recruitment is
normally that by the members amongst their friends, and these might not
be entitled to join a particular sectional praesidium. (c) It will almost
invariably be the case that praesidia with a membership representative
of various walks of life will prove the most efficient.
30. TO BRIDGE MUST BE THE AIM
Of set purpose the Legion should aim to combat the divisions and the
innumerable antagonisms of the world. This process must begin in the Legion's
unit of organisation, the praesidium itself. It would be sheer futility
for the Legion to talk of bridging differences if at the same time the
spirit of disunity were evident in its own ranks. So let the Legion think
in terms of the unity and charity of the Mystical Body, and try to organise
accordingly. When it has brought together, as fellow-members of the one
praesidium, persons whom the world was keeping apart, it has accomplished
something really great. The contact of charity has been made, and out will
go the sacred contagion which may seize on and kill the turbulence of the
world around.
31. SOONER OR LATER THE LEGIONARIES MUST ATTACK THE MOST DIFFICULT
WORK
The choice of work may create a doubt. Sinister problems may exist,
but perhaps the priest may fear to entrust them to an infant praesidium.
Motives of timidity should generally not prevail, lest to ourselves be
applicable the saying of St. Pius X that the greatest obstacle to the apostolate
lies in the timorousness, or rather cowardliness, of the good. Still, if
doubts persist, let the beginning be along lines of caution and let the
praesidium feel its way on simpler work. As meeting follows meeting, and
experience is gained, certain of the members will emerge as manifestly
capable of the most difficult work. Let these be assigned to the work of
early doubt: then others as the work requires, and as the members prove
themselves. Even if only a couple of legionaries are engaged on difficult
work, it exerts a tonic effect upon the work of the remainder.
32. THE OUTLOOK ON DANGER
The system will reduce unfavourable possibilities to an absolute minimum,
but perhaps the element of risk may attach to some important work. Should
calm consideration show (a) that otherwise a work, on which depends the
salvation of souls, will in whole or part remain undone, and (b) that everything
possible has been done in the interests of safety; then let the attack
go on with picked material. It would be an intolerable thing for legionaries
to look on impassively while their neighbours were going to ruin. "God
keep from us the serenity of the ignorant. God keep from us the peace of
cowards." (De Gasparin)
33. THE LEGION MUST BE IN THE FOREFRONT OF THE CHURCH'S BATTLE
Legionaries share in Mary's faith in the victory of her Son - her faith
that through his death and resurrection all the power of sin in the world
has been conquered. According to the measure of our union with Our Lady
the Holy Spirit puts this victory at our disposal in all the battles of
the Church. With this in mind legionaries should be an inspiration to the
whole Church by the trust and courage with which they take in hand the
great problems and evils of the day.
"We must understand what the warfare is. It is being fought not simply
to enlarge the Church, but to bring souls into union with Christ. It is
that strangest of wars which is fought for the enemy, not against him.
Even the term 'enemy' must not be allowed to mislead.
Every unbeliever is, as every Catholic is, a being
with an immortal spirit, made in the image of God, for whom Christ died.
However violently hostile to the Church or to Christ he may be, our aim
is to convert him, not simply to defeat him. We must never forget that
the devil wants his soul in hell as he wants ours, and we must fight the
devil for him. We may be forced to oppose a man to prevent his endangering
souls; but always we want to win him for his own soul's salvation. It is
in the power of the Holy Spirit (sic) that we must fight, and he is the
Love of the Father and the Son; in so far as the Church's soldiers fight
in hatred, they are fighting against him." (F. J. Sheed: Theology for Beginners)
34. THE LEGIONARY MUST PROPAGATE EVERYTHING CATHOLIC
Legionaries will not neglect the use of the scapulars, medals, and
badges approved by the Church. In distributing these and spreading devotion
to them, channels are set up, along which - as a million instances have
shown - it is the will of God that grace will copiously flow.
Particularly they should think in terms of the brown scapular which
is the very livery of Mary. "Some interpret literally the text: 'He who
dies wearing this habit will not be lost.' St. Claude de la Colombi?re
would brook no restriction: 'One may lose one's scapular, but one who wears
it at the hour of death is saved.' " (P?re Raoul Plus)
Likewise, they will promote piety in the homes of the people by encouraging
them to have crucifixes and statues, to hang upon their walls religious
prints and pictures, to keep holy water in the house, and beads properly
blessed for the Indulgences. The home wherein the sacramentals of the Church
are despised runs great risk of gradually forsaking her sacraments. Children
are especially receptive of external aids to devotion, and in a house which
lacks a statue or a holy picture they will find it hard to acquire the
true and intimate character of the Faith.
35. VIRGO PRAEDICANDA: THE VIRGIN MUST BE BROUGHT AND TAUGHT TO
ALL MEN, FOR SHE IS THEIR MOTHER
A theme dear to Pope Leo XIII was that Mary is the Mother of all people,
and that God has implanted the germ of love for her in every heart, even
in those who hate her or do not know her. This germ is meant to grow, and
like any capacity it can be fostered by giving it proper conditions. Souls
must be approached and informed as to the maternal role of Mary.
The Second Vatican Council has proclaimed that universal motherhood
of Mary (LG 53, 65), and has declared that she is so much the source and
model of apostleship that the Church must depend on her in its efforts
to save all people. (LG 65)
Pope Paul VI requires that everywhere, and especially where there are
many non-Catholics, the faithful shall be fully instructed in the maternal
office of Mary so that they may share that treasure of knowledge. Moreover
he commends to her loving heart the entire human race that she may fulfil
her mission of orientating all souls towards Christ. Finally, in order
to set in a revealing light her maternal and unifying duty towards all
the members of the human family, His Holiness confers on Mary the significant
title: "Mother of Unity."
Therefore they err sadly who regard the Blessed Virgin as a barrier
to conversion which should be lowered. She is the Mother of grace and unity
so that, without her, souls will not find their way. Legionaries must consistently
apply this principle to their efforts to convert, that is by explaining
to all what is sometimes, but incorrectly, called the legionary devotion
to Mary. It is no property of the Legion which has only learned it from
the Church.
"The Virgin Mary has always been proposed to the faithful
by the Church as an example to be imitated not precisely in the type of
life she led, and much less for the socio-cultural background in which
she lived and which today scarcely exists anywhere. She is held up as an
example to the faithful rather for the way in which, in her own particular
life, she fully and responsibly accepted the will of God (cf Lk 1:38),
because she heard the word of God and acted on it and because charity and
a spirit of service were the driving force of her actions. She is worthy
of imitation because she was the first and the most perfect of Christ's
disciples. All of this has a permanent and universal exemplary value."
(MCul 35)
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