St. Josemaría Escrivá |
Today, 26 June 2012,
is the Feast Day of St. Josemaría Escrivá, the founder of Opus Dei. St. Josemaría
Escrivá de Balaguer was born in Barbastro, Spain, on January 9, 1902, the
second of six children of Jose and Dolores Escrivá. Growing up in a devout
family and attending Catholic schools, he learned the basic truths of the faith
and practices such as frequent confession and communion, the rosary, and
almsgiving.
St. Josemaría Escrivá |
The death of three younger sisters, and his father's bankruptcy
after business reverses, taught him the meaning of suffering and brought
maturity to his outgoing and cheerful temperament. In 1915, the family moved to
Logrono, where his father had found new employment.
Beginning in
1918, Josemaría sensed that God was asking something of him, although he didn't
know exactly what it was. He decided to become a priest, in order to be
available for whatever God wanted of him. He began studying for the priesthood,
first in Logrono and later in Saragossa. At his father's suggestion and with
the permission of his superiors at the seminary he also began to study civil
law. He was ordained a priest and began his pastoral ministry in 1925.
St. Josemaría Escrivá |
In 1927, Fr. Josemaría
moved to Madrid to study for a graduate degree in law. His mother, sister, and
brother accompanied him, as his father had died in 1924 and he was now head of
the family. They were not well off, and he had to tutor law students to support
them. At the same time he carried out a demanding pastoral work, especially
among the poor and sick in Madrid, and with young children. He also undertook
an apostolate with manual workers, professional people and university students
who, by coming into contact with the poor and sick to whom Fr. Josemaría was
ministering, learned the practical meaning of charity and their Christian
responsibility to help out in the betterment of society.
St. Josemaría Escrivá |
On October 2,
1928, while making a retreat in Madrid, God showed him his specific mission: he
was to found Opus Dei, an institution within the Catholic Church dedicated to
helping people in all walks of life to follow Christ, to seek holiness in their
daily life and grow in love for God and their fellow men and women. From that
moment on, he dedicated all his strength to fulfilling this mission, certain
that God had raised up Opus Dei to serve the Church. In 1930, responding to a
new illumination from God, he started Opus Dei's apostolic work with women,
making clear that they had the same responsibility as men to serve society and
the Church.
St. Josemaría Escrivá |
The first
edition of The Way, his most widely read work, was published in 1934 under the
title Spiritual Considerations. Expanded and revised, it has gone through many
editions since then; more than four million copies in many different languages
are now in print. His other spiritual writings include Holy Rosary; The Way of
the Cross; two collections of homilies, Christ Is Passing By and Friends of
God; and Furrow and The Forge, which like The Way are made up of short points
for prayer and reflection.
St. Josemaría Escrivá |
The development
of Opus Dei began among the young people with whom Fr. Josemaría had already
been in contact before 1928. Its growth, however, was seriously impeded by the
religious persecution inflicted on the Catholic Church during the Spanish Civil
War (1936-1939). The founder himself suffered severe hardships under this
persecution but, unlike many other priests, he came out of the war alive. After
the war, he travelled throughout the country giving retreats to hundreds of
priests at the request of their bishops. Meanwhile Opus Dei spread from Madrid
to several other Spanish cities, and as soon as World War II ended in 1945,
began starting in other countries. This growth was not without pain; though the
Work always had the approval of the local bishops, its then-unfamiliar message
of sanctity in the world met with some misunderstandings and suspicions-which
the founder bore with great patience and charity.
While
celebrating Mass in 1943, Fr. Josemaría received a new foundational grace to
establish the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross, which made it possible for
some of Opus Dei's lay faithful to be ordained as priests. The full
incorporation of both lay faithful and priests in Opus Dei, which makes a
seamless cooperation in the apostolic work possible, is an essential feature of
the foundational charism of Opus Dei, affirmed by the Church in granting Opus
Dei the canonical status of a personal Prelature. In addition, the Priestly
Society conducts activities, in full harmony with the bishops of the local
churches, for the spiritual development of diocesan priests and seminarians.
Diocesan priests can also be part of the Priestly Society, while at the same
time remaining clergy of their own dioceses.
St. Josemaría Escrivá |
Aware that God
meant Opus Dei to be part of the mission of the universal Church, the founder
moved to Rome in 1946 so as to be close to the Holy See. By 1950 the Work had
received pontifical approvals affirming its main foundational
features-spreading the message of holiness in daily life; service to the Pope,
the universal church, and the particular churches; secularity and naturalness;
fostering personal freedom and responsibility, and a pluralism consistent with
Catholic moral, political, and social teachings.
Beginning in
1948, full membership in Opus Dei was open to married people. In 1950 the Holy
See approved the idea of accepting non-Catholics and even non-Christians as co-operators-persons
who assist Opus Dei in its projects and programs without being members. The
next decade saw the launching of a wide range of undertakings: professional
schools, agricultural training centres, universities, primary and secondary
schools, hospitals and clinics, and other initiatives, open to people of all
races, religions, and social backgrounds but of manifestly Christian inspiration.
St. Josemaría Escrivá |
During Vatican
Council II (1962-1965), Monsignor Escrivá worked closely with many of the
council fathers, discussing key Council themes such as the universal call to
holiness and the importance of laypersons in the mission of the Church. Deeply
grateful for the Council's teachings, he did everything possible to implement
them in the formative activities offered by Opus Dei throughout the world.
Between 1970 and
1975 the founder undertook catechetical trips throughout Europe and Latin
America, speaking with many people, at times in large gatherings, about love of
God, the sacraments, Christian dedication, and the need to sanctify work and
family life. By the time of the founder's death, Opus Dei had spread to thirty
nations on six continents. It now (2002) has more than 84,000 members in sixty
countries.
Monsignor Escrivá
death in Rome came suddenly on June 26, 1975, when he was 73. Large numbers of
bishops and ordinary faithful petitioned the Vatican to begin the process for
his beatification and canonization. On May 17, 1992, Pope John Paul II declared
him Blessed before a huge crowd in St. Peter's Square. He was canonized on
October 6, 2002.
St. Josemaría Escrivá |
Saint Josemaría
Escrivá
Founder of Opus Dei
PRAYER
O God, through the mediation of Mary our
Mother, you granted your priest St.
Josemaría countless
graces, choosing him as a most faithful
instrument
to found Opus Dei, a way of
sanctification in
daily work and in the fulfillment of the
Christian's
ordinary duties. Grant that I too may
learn to turn all
the circumstances and events of my life
into occasions
of loving You and serving the Church,
the Pope
and all souls with joy and simplicity,
lighting up the
pathways of this earth with faith and
love.
Deign to grant me, through the
intercession of St.
Josemaría, the favour of ... (make your
request). Amen.
Our Father, Hail Mary, Glory be to the
Father.
____________
Extracted from
the website of St. Josemaría Escrivá
on June 25, 2012
Many thanks for this interesting post.
ReplyDeleteYou may be interested to read about how the simple mortifications of the Irish Jesuit Fr Willie Doyle inspired St Josemaria:
http://fatherdoyle.com/2012/06/26/thoughts-about-fr-doyle-from-st-josemaria-escriva/