St.Anthony Mary Claret

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Born: December 23, 1807 Sallent, Barcelona, Spain

Died: October 24, 1870 (aged 62) Fontfroide, Narbonne, France

Venerated: in Roman Catholic Church

Beatified: February 25, 1934, Rome by Pope Pius XI

Canonized: May 7, 1950, Rome by Pope Pius XII

Major shrine: Vic, Barcelona, Spain

Feast: October 24 October 23 (local calendars and among Traditional Roman Catholics)

Attributes: Bishop’s robe, crozier, an open book, catechism, 2 students beside him at his side and having his bent arm pointing to the sky

Patronage: Textile merchants, weavers, savings (taught the poor the importance of savings), Catholic press, Claretians, Dioceses of the Canary Islands, Claretian students, Claretian educators and Claretian educational institutions, Foundations

Saint Anthony Mary Claret, C.M.F. (Catalan: Antoni Maria Claret i Clarà; Spanish: Antonio María Claret y Clarà; December 23, 1807 – October 24, 1870) was a Spanish Roman Catholic archbishop and missionary, and was confessor of Isabella II of Spain. He founded the congregation of Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, commonly called the Claretians.

Life

Anthony Maria Claret i Clarà was born in Sallent, in the county of Bages in the Province of Barcelona, on December 23, 1807, the fifth of the eleven children of Juan and Josefa Claret. His father was a woollen manufacturer. As a child he enjoyed pilgrimages to the nearby Shrine of Our Lady of Fussimanya.

Claret received an elementary education in his native village, and at the age of twelve became a weaver. At the age of eighteen, he went to Barcelona to specialize in his trade, and remained there until he was 20 years old. Meanwhile, he devoted his spare time to study and became proficient in Latin, French and engraving.

Recognizing a call to religious life, he left Barcelona. He wished to become a Carthusian monk but finally entered the diocesan seminary at Vic in 1829, and was ordained on June 13, 1835, on the feast of St. Anthony of Padua. He received a benefice in his native parish, where he continued to study theology until 1839; but as missionary work strongly appealed to him, he proceeded to Rome. There he entered the Jesuit novitiate but had to leave due to ill health. He then returned to Spain and exercised his pastoral ministry in Viladrau and Girona, attracting notice through his efforts on behalf of the poor. In an area despoiled by the Carlist civil war, he added the practice of rustic medicine to his other endeavors.

Recalled by his superiors to Vic, Claret was sent as Apostolic Missionary throughout Catalonia which had suffered from French invasions. He travelled from one mission to the next on foot. An eloquent preacher fluent in the Catalan language, people came from miles around to hear. After a lengthy time in the pulpit, he would spend long hours in the confessional. He was said to have had the gift of discernment of consciences. In 1848 Claret’s life was threatened by anti-clerical enemies and he was sent to the Canary Islands where he gave retreats for 15 months. His missions were so well attended that he often preached from an improvised pulpit in the plaza before the church.

Claretians

Coat of arms of Anthony Mary Claret as archbishop of Santiago de Cuba. On his return to Spain, he established the Congregation of the Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary (The Claretians) on the feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel (July 16, 1849), and founded the great religious library at Barcelona which was called “Librería Religiosa” (now “Llibreria Claret”). Pope Pius IX gave approval to the congregation on December 22, 1865.

Archbishop

Pope Pius IX, at the request of the Spanish crown (Queen-regnant Isabella II of Spain), appointed him archbishop of Santiago, Cuba, in 1849. He was consecrated at Vic in October 1850. Before he embarked, he made three separate pilgrimages: to Our Lady of the Pillar, patroness of Spain; to the Virgin of Montserrat, patroness of Catalonia; and to Our Lady of Fussimanya, near his home village.

The Santiago seminary was reorganized, clerical discipline strengthened, and over 9,000 marriages validated within the first two years of his arrival. He erected a hospital and numerous schools. Three times he made a visitation of the entire diocese, giving local missions incessantly. Among his great initiatives were trade or vocational schools for disadvantaged children and credit unions for the use of the poor. He wrote books about rural spirituality and agricultural methods, which he himself tested first. In August 25, 1855, he founded the Religious of Mary Immaculate together with Venerable Mother Antonia Paris. The congregation was considered as the first women religious institute in Cuba. He also visited jails and hospitals, defended the oppressed and denounced racism. His work stirred up opposition and at Holguín his cheek was stabbed by a would-be assassin. Claret obtained a commutation of the assailant’s death sentence to a term in prison.

In February 1857, Claret was recalled to Spain by Queen Isabella II, who made him her confessor. He obtained permission to resign his Cuban see and was appointed to the titular see of Trajanopolis. His influence was now directed solely to help the poor and to propagate learning; he lived frugally and took up his residence in an Italian hospice. For nine years he was rector of the Escorial monastic school, where he established a scientific laboratory, a museum of natural history, a library, college and schools of music and languages. In 1868, a new revolution dethroned the queen and sent her with her family into exile. Claret’s life was also in danger, so he accompanied her to France. This gave him the opportunity to preach the Gospel in Paris. He stayed with them for a while, then went to Rome where he was received by Pope Pius IX.

He continued his popular missions and distribution of books wherever he went in accompanying the Spanish Court. When Isabella recognized the new, secular government of a united Italy, he left the Court and hastened to take his place by the side of the pope. At the latter’s command, however, he returned to Madrid with faculties for absolving the queen from the censures she had incurred.

Last years

In 1869 he went to Rome to prepare for the First Vatican Council. Owing to failing health he withdrew to Prada de Conflent in the French Pyrenees, where he was still harassed by his Spanish enemies; shortly afterwards he retired to the Cistercian abbey at Fontfroide, Narbonne, southern France, where he died on October 24, 1870, aged 62. His remains were buried in the Catalan city of Vic, in the County of Osona.

Works

Anthony Mary Claret wrote 144 books. By his sermons and writings he contributed greatly to bring about the revival of the Catalan language, although most of his works were published in Spanish, especially during his stay in Cuba and Madrid. His printed works number more than one hundred, including “La escala de Jacob”; “Máximas de moral la más pura”; “Avisos”; “Catecismo explicado con láminas”; “La llave de oro”; “Selectos panegíricos” (11 volumes); “Sermones de misión” (3 volumes); “Misión de la mujer”; “Vida de Sta. Mónica”; “La Virgen del Pilar y los Francmasones.”

In addition to the Claretians, which in the early 21st century had over 450 houses and 3100 members, with missions in five continents, Archbishop Claret founded or drew up the rules of several communities of religious sisters.

Veneration

His zealous life and the wonders he wrought, both before and after his death, testified to his sanctity. Information was sought in 1887 and he was declared venerable by Pope Leo XIII in 1899. His relics were transferred to the mission house at Vic in 1897, at which time his heart was found incorrupt. His grave is visited by many pilgrims.

Anthony Mary Claret was beatified in Rome by Pope Pius XI on February 24, 1934. He was canonized 16 years later by Pope Pius XII on May 7, 1950. Pope John XXIII included him in the General Roman Calendar in 1960, and fixed his feast on October 23, where it remained for nine years until the 1969 revision of the calendar moved it to the day of his death, October 24, which had been the feast of Saint Raphael the Archangel since 1921.

Anthony Mary Claret is the patron saint of weavers.

Prayers of St.Anthony Mary Claret

Apostolic Prayer

O my God and my Father, may I know you and make you known; may I love you and make you loved; may I serve you and make you served; may I praise you and make all creatures praise you. My Father, grant that all sinners may be converted, all the just persevere in grace, and all of us attain eternal glory. Amen.

Nothing More than to Love You

Because you are so good, my Father, I want nothing more than to know your holy will, so that I may do it; nothing more than to love you with all my heart and serve you with all fidelity. Father, give me the constant grace to know what pleases you, and the strength of will to do it. Amen.

Here I am, Lord

If you want, make me an instrument to proclaim your kingdom. Lord, let me eat in order to gain energy and serve you better; let me use the things of this world as needs require, let me study to know and serve you better and to help my brothers and sisters; let me rest to regain the strength I have used up and serve you better.

You are More than Enough for Me

Lord, you are my love, my honor, my hope, my refuge. You are my glory and my goal. My Master, my Father. Help me to seek nothing more than you nor to know anything but your holy will and how to fulfill it. I want you alone, and in you, by you and for you all other things. You are more than enough for me. Make me love you as you love me and as you would have me love you.

Fire that Forever Blazes

Fire that forever blazes and never goes out, love that forever burns and never grows cold, embrace me that I may love you. I love you, Jesus, with all my heart, with all my sou l, with all my strength. O that I m ay love you more and that all may love you. O that you might be loved by me and by all your creatures. Most Holy Virgin, grant me the favor that all may be saved and no one condemned.

Father, Teach Me Goodness

I believe, Lord, but let me believe more firmly. I hope, Lord, but let me hope more surely. I love, Lord, but let me love more ardently. I repent, Lord, but let me repent more deeply. I beg you, Lord, what do you want me to do? Teach me to fulfill your will, for you are my God. Give me an understanding heart to distinguish right from wrong. Father, give me humility, meekness, chastity, patience and charity. Father, teach me goodness, knowledge and discipline. Father, give me your love, together with your grace, and I will be rich enough.

My God, My Jesus, My All

My God, my Jesus, my All. On the cross I have lived and on the cross I wish to die, and from the cross I hope to come down, not by my own hands, but by the hands of others, after my sacrifice has been consumed. God forbid that I should glory save in the cross of our Lord, Jesus Christ, through which the world is crucified to me and I to the world. Amen.

Exercise on the Love of God

My God, be the God you are and have always been: I find joy in whatever you are. You have infinite power: be the all – powerful God you are. You have infinite wisdom: may you be praised, be the infinite wisdom you are. You have infinite goodness, infinite charity, and infinite forgiveness. Lord, be the infinite goodness, charity and forgiveness you are. Lord, be the infinite mercy, providence and generosity you are. 3 Lord, you are glorious and blessed without end; be as glorious and blessed as you are. You, Lord, are Three and One, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, three distinct persons and one true God; be three and one as you are. You are our Savior and Glorifier and that of all creatures, may you be praised. You, Lord are universal Lord, who are loved, praised and served by the angels, and the blessed in heaven and by the people on earth; be Lord of all, and may all in heaven and on earth love, praise, and serve you without end. Heart of Jesus, love God for me. Heart of Mary, love God for me. Heart of all the saints, love God for me. All you, choirs of angels, love God f or me. All creatures, love God for me. Divine Fire that always burns and is never extinguished, Heart of Jesus, that always burns and never grows cold, make my heart always burn with the fire of divine love. Amen.

Novena to St.Anthony Mary Claret

St. Anthony Mary Claret, during your life on earth you often comforted the afflicted and showed such tender love and compassion for the sick and sinful. Intercede for me now that you rejoice in the reward of your virtues in heavenly glory. Look with pity on me…

(or on the person afflicted or whose conversion is desired)

and grant my prayer, if such be the will of God. Make my troubles your own. Speak a word for me to the Immaculate Heart of Mary to obtain by her powerful intercession the grace I yearn for so ardently, and a blessing to strengthen me during life, assist me at the hour of death, and lead me to a happy eternity. Amen.

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Categories: A, Saints