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"The more we
belong to the Immaculate Virgin, the better we will
understand and love the Heart of Jesus, God the
Father, the Holy Trinity"
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OUR LIFE AND CHARISM
A community of prayer, of poverty, of penance,
in the spirit of total consecration to the Immaculate Virgin in the manner of St.
Maximilian Mary, so that She may transform us, like St. Francis, into Jesus Crucified, and
may let us be consumed in the conquest of all souls for God.
Thus do we love to formulate the manner of Franciscan life of a Casa Mariana (or Marian
Friary), in which observance prevails of the Rule and Constitutions according to the model
of primitive Franciscan communities and after the recent example offered us by St.
Maximilian Mary Kolbe.
It is the Holy Father, Pope Paul VI, who guided us along this course with his inspired and
enlightened word. It is he who recommended that we be completely faithful to the Holy Rule
of our father St. Francis according to the spirit and the letter: "Do not relax
the spirit of the ancient Rule nor contradict the letter of it." It is he who
urged "the faithful, continued embodiment of the example and teaching of our
Seraphic Father" as we see it in St. Maximilian's life.
Like our father St. Francis, we must perceive that we are called to become like Jesus ("to
be conformed to the image of His Son" - ROMANS 8:29), crucified with Him ("I
have been crucified with Christ" - GALATIANS 2:19), configured, patterned,
according to His death ("grown into union with Him through a death like His"
- ROMANS 6:5), transformed into Him, identified with Him ("I live, no longer I,
but Christ lives in me" - GALATIANS 2:20).
Like our father St. Francis, in total devotion to the divine mysteries if the Incarnation
and Redemption, we must constantly seek to reproduce in ourselves Jesus' conditions of
immolation. At Bethlehem it was a condition of poverty; at Nazareth, a hidden life of
toil; in the wilderness it was a condition of seclusion, penance and contemplation; during
His public life He gave Himself over to works of zeal, at the same time suffering
persecution; in His Passion and Death He suffered contempt, pain, and defeat; in the
Eucharist He offers Himself as an example of silence and abasement.
Like our father St. Francis, we want to live a condition of brotherhood in the love of our
divine Brother, Jesus, and of our Immaculate Mother, Mary, so as to succeed in becoming
true friars ("brothers") on the supernatural level of perfect theological
charity.
Like our seraphic father St. Francis, we ought to achieve a love for Jesus which would be
utmost, which would be passionate, and thus a love in Jesus for our brothers in our common
life of prayer, poverty, and penance.
These should make up the distinctive features of our religious life according to the
thought of Pope Paul VI, who recommended that we be faithful to the spirit of St. Francis,
"which is a spirit of prayer, of austere living, of poverty, and especially of
burning love for Jesus Christ and the brethren" (from the address of Pope Paul VI
to the Order of Friars Minor Conventual, June 25, 1969).
And in order that all this may be achieved in the "shortest, safest, easiest"
way, as St. Maximilian says, we want to be "instruments,"
"materials," unobtrusive "nobodies" in the hands of the
Immaculate Virgin, our Mother and Queen, consecrated to Her unconditionally, irrevocably,
with no limit set, until we reach a perfect union with Jesus.
These are St. Maximilian's words:
"Our life must be an extension on this
earth of Jesus' life by means of Mary" (from a conference on July 5, 1936).
"The more we belong to the Immaculate Virgin, the better we will understand and
love the Heart of Jesus, God the Father, the Holy Trinity" (from a letter written
after November 10, 1934).
"One who is consecrated knows that in the Immaculate Virgin and through the
Immaculate Virgin one will, in the quickest and easiest possible way, become one with
Jesus, on with God. He knows that in and through him She will love Jesus in a matchless,
perfect manner, in whatever one may seek to do, whatever be the way... He knows that this
is the only way to that sanctity which is the easiest and most sublime, tending to God's
greatest glory" (from "Material for A Book").
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