April 01, 2017

Think of Mary. Call on Mary

“MARIAM COGITA, MARIAM INVOCA”  Think of Mary. Call on Mary.

Two centuries ago, Venerable Pio Bruno Lanteri (1759-1830) served the Church in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy. It was a turbulent era in secular society and there was an anti-Christian spirit of the French Revolution. Heresies obscured the truth of God’s love and undermined the authority of the Pope.

The young Lanteri met a Jesuit priest, Father Nikolaus von Diessbach. Under his guidance, Lanteri made the Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius and had a profound experience of the infinite mercy of God. He became an ardent witness to God’s mercy through intense and varied apostolates as a diocesan priest in Turin. He preached the Spiritual Exercises and popular missions, offered spiritual direction and confession, circulated Catholic books, supported lay and priestly associations, and provided real care for the needy. In all this, he was always careful to guide people “to the truth in love,” showing the utmost goodness to all and trying to help everyone to seek genuine holiness. Father Lanteri always pointed to fidelity to the Church and fidelity to Mary as the certain guiding lights along the path of the Christian life.

In 1814, three zealous priests came to Father Lanteri for guidance in forming a fraternity dedicated to preaching retreats and reviving the Church in the wake of the spiritual ravages of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic era. Father Lanteri entrusted the group to the Virgin Mary, whom he always called their Foundress and teacher. Despite some initial setbacks, the Oblates of the Virgin Mary were approved by Pope Leo XII on September 1, 1826. Father Lanteri died four years later August 5, 1830.

The Oblates of the Virgin Mary quickly expanded throughout Italy and into France and Austria. Following the missionary spirit of the Founder, the Oblates eventually established foreign missions in Brazil and Argentina, Nigeria and the Philippines. After a surge in the number of vocations from North America in the 1970′s, the Oblates came to the United States and Canada. They established the community in Boston on September 12, 1976, and opened the doors to Our Lady of Grace Seminary two years later. The U.S. Province has foundations today in Massachusetts, Illinois, California, and Colorado.  Excerpts taken from the writings of the Mission of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

As we pray for these intentions, let us always "Think of Mary and Call on Mary" to intercede for us on their behalf.


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