The fact that Marcellin Champagnat is
to be raised to the altars on April 18th this year is due
in no small part to Br Gabriele Andreucci - to his conviction
that Marcellin was a Saint, to his tenacity, to his hard work.
The key point has been the recognition, after very hard work
on the part of the doctors and of the Congregation for the
Causes of Saints, that Br Heriberto Weber’s cure was
indeed a miracle. Br Gabriele tells us that the miracle was
recognized because Br Heriberto, on the point of death, recovered
his health in some way that science cannot explain.
Lluis Serra, Rome
Eight years ago, the Marist Superiors
had sufficient confidence in Br Gabriele to give him the responsibility
of giving the final push to the canonization process and raise
Marcellin Champagnat to the altars.
Lluis Serra: Has this task been the most important
one in your life?
Gabriele Andreucci: The
most important task of my life has been to follow Jesus in
the footsteps of Marcellin.
I found that I was going along a road already
opened by one of my predecessors, Br Carazo, but the process
had been abandoned because the short judgements given by the
medical experts had advised against it, on the grounds that
the diagnosis was not clear enough.
Then, one fine day I had a message from the
Sacred Congregation: “You have a process which has been
granted a certificate of juridical validity. Do you want to
continue with it?” I heard the voice of the Lord telling
me to carry on, and I presented the Positio, knowing that
the recognition of the miracle would be difficult, but we
must not lose heart in the face of adversity. Now what is
important is that Marcellin will be declared Saint on April
18th. The outcome has been worth all the trouble, and the
joy that we have in having collaborated in this process is
ample recompense for all our work.
A gift from God
LS Why is there so much interest
in the canonization?
GA: For any religious institution,
to have a Saint among its members is a great occasion. To
have a Saint is a gift which God gives to a religious family.
And again, religious institutes have a moral duty to ask that
their founder be put forward as a model for the whole Church.
It is one way of helping many Christians along the road to
their own sanctification.
A teacher for our own lives
LS: What does the canonization of
their Founder mean for the Marist Congregation?
GA: The official recognition
of the Church that our Founder was a Man of God, raised up
by the Holy Spirit to help all those following in his footsteps
to walk the road to sanctity. Also, he can be proposed as
a reference point for our own lives, as a certain intercessor
with God, and also, naturally, as a teacher, given that not
only did he live, but he also taught a doctrine based on his
charism and his spirituality. This doctrine, this teaching,
is recognized by the Church as valid and sure.
In the case of our Founder, we do not possess a very extensive
body of doctrine, but we do have the essential. We can be
certain that all that he taught us about the religious life
is in accord with the teaching of the Gospels. All that he
taught us about Marian spirituality, summed up in his words
“All to Jesus through Mary; all to Mary for Jesus,”
is an evangelical road to holiness. All that he taught us
about the education of the young is in accord with the teaching
of the Church.
The Holy Spirit does not grow old
LS: What relevance has a Saint from
yesterday for the young of today?
GA: I don’t like this
phrase, “a Saint from yesterday”. The Holy Spirit
does not grow old, and all the saints are under the influence
of this same Spirit. The Holy Spirit is always young.
We have a duty to see and respond to the challenges which
our Saints present to us. Our replies must be here and today,
for in holiness there is no today and no tomorrow. Our Founder’s
“up-to-date-ness” is seen in his language, just
as valid for young people and religious of today as in his
own time. The realities of today are found in those of yesterday,
with their different manifestations and ways and means, and
each of us must give our answer for our own time.
His humanity
LS: Which of Marcellin’s qualities
would you draw attention to?
GA: Humanly speaking, he
is psychologically well-balanced, and he demands the same
quality from his followers - this is the first quality. In
the second place, he is a man of great prudence, not only
humanly speaking, but from the supernatural point of view
also. And above all, his supreme goal is God, and the good
of souls. In his biography they took out all that did not
fit with the ideas of his time, and left us with a moral silhouette
of a rigid sanctity, which overlays and almost hides all his
human side.
LS: What does it cost to canonize
someone?
GA: The biggest expense
is the diocesan process, where the judges have to be paid.
The witnesses, naturally, give their services gratis. The
costs of printing the documentation must be covered. For the
Positio, this cost almost 20,000$US. For the meetings of the
theologians, we had to pay about 6,000$US, and for the medical
experts, a total of 32,000$US. Then we will have to pay the
various expenses connected with the ceremonies of the canonization.
Joy shared with others
LS: What will be the feeling on April
18th in St Peter’s Square when John Paul II declares
Marcellin Champagnat a Saint?
GA: Great joy. The joy of
knowing and feeling that we have a father who is pleasing
to God, identified with Christ, put forward by the Church
to be imitated by me personally and by all Christians.
I lived through the beatification of Marcellin
Champagnat in school, with my pupils and their families, and,
if God grants it, I will live through the canonization with
my Brothers and with the whole Marist Family assembled in
Rome.
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