|
Issue 3: July 2006
Table of Contents:
What
is a Congress? (Chelyse Miller)
At the Curia level of the
Legion of Mary, a Congress is supposed to be held every two
years. A Congress should not be viewed as a Retreat or
Workshop, but rather a time for the members of the Curia to come
together to discuss and grow in the Legion System. During a
Retreat or Workshop there is usually someone who leads the retreat of
workshop and participants are quiet. In a Congress, it is
different because while someone gives a short talk to spurn discussion,
the bulk of the day is spent in discussion with contributions from ALL
legionaries, experienced and inexperienced, officers and non-officers,
courageous and shy. The fruits of the Congress come with the
active participation of all. The phrase, “you will
get out of it, what you put into it” comes to mind.
Questions may be raised, but one must attempt to answer their own
question before turning it over to be answered. The Spiritual
Director at the end of the discussion can right any wrongs said and
also answers any unanswered questions as well as ties up the loose ends.
The Congress
helps Legionaries become better Legionaries through the four aspects of
Legionary service. “The devotional system of the
Legion…The legionary qualities, and how they are to be
developed….The methodical system of the Legion, including
the conducting of the meetings and the vital matter of the members'
reports…The Legion works, including the improvement of
methods and the planning of those new works which will enable the
Legion to reach out to every person.” (taken from the
handbook). The Congress of the Tidewater Curia will look at
each of these aspects.
The devotional
system of the Legion will be looked at through “The Prayerful
Legionary: The Essesnce of Spirituality.” This
discussion period will focus on the importance of prayer in the Legion
from the Daily Recitation of the Catena and attending the weekly
meetings, to achieving Praetorian status (recitation of the daily
office, attendance at daily Mass, praying all the prayers of the
Tessera daily).
The Legionary
qualities and how they are developed will be handed through
“The Difficult Road: When works and prayers become
hard.” This discussion period will focus on some of
the virtues of Legionaries including Persistence, Humility, Courage,
and Charity among others. It will focus on reliance on Our
Lady and imitation of her in our works and in our daily lives.
The methodical
system of the Legion will be handled by the discussion on
“Report Furnishing: Being Adequate and
Audible.” The first meeting of every month we hear
in the Standing Instructions that one of our duties is to furnish an
adequate and audible report on the work done. What is an
adequate report? How do we make sure we include all that we
need to include? Doesn’t reporting go against
humility? Hopefully, we will be able to discuss and answer
some of these questions so the work reports throughout the Curia from
the weekly meetings to our Annual Report to Curia will become more
adequate.
Finally, the
Legion Works will be covered through “Home Visitation: The
Preferred Work of the Legion.” The Congress is
supposed to help us in works we already do, but also in giving us
knowledge to begin new works. This discussion will focus on
Door to Door but will include other types of Visitation as
well. For many these may help to rejuvenate Door to Door in
our Praesidium. For others it will help improve works already
being completed.
Again, the
Congress is meant to help improve ourselves as soldiers and as a Legion
so that we can go out in the world and become more effective in our
works and lives. The Congress should be viewed as a day that
enables us in a safe environment with fellow Legionaries to grow in our
service to the Holy Spirit and to Mary, our Mother.
The Tidewater
Curia Congress is taking place this year on July 29th from 9AM until
4PM at Saint Gregory Catholic Church.
Our
Lady of the Rosary Spiritual Director, Rev Fr. Damian A. Abbaticchi,
O.S.B. Passed Away June 19, 2006 (Chris
Miller)
Father Damian was born February 3, 1917; died June
19, 2006; and was ordained a priest November 4, 1945. He
served as spiritual director for Our Lady of the Rosary Praesidium, as
pastor of St. Gregory's, and served at Saint Benedicts's Chapel.
For his obituary, see
http://benedictine.stvincent.edu/Archabbey/People/Obituaries/damianabbaticchio.html.
The Legion of Mary
Rosary (Chris Miller)
In the first
section of the first chapter of the Handbook, it describes the very
start of the Legion of Mary, saying:
The first
corporate act of those legionaries was to go on their knees. The
earnest young heads were bent down. The invocation and prayer of the
Holy Spirit were said; and then through the fingers which had, during
the day, been toilsomely employed, slipped the beads of the simplest of
all devotions. When the final ejaculations died away, they sat up, and
under the auspices of Mary (as represented by her statue), they set
themselves to the consideration of how they could best please God and
make him loved in his world. From that discussion came forth the Legion
of Mary, as it is today, in all its features.
Every meeting of the Legion of Mary starts in the same way.
The members kneel down, pray the opening prayers of the
Legion of Mary, including the Most Holy Rosary. The Legion of
Mary prays the Rosary in accordance with Pope John Paul II's encyclical
Rosarium Virginis Mariae.
The Legion of Mary does not modify the Rosary to include
prayers according to the local US cutom, but rather prays the prayers
the same way in all places accross the world, as a sigh of our unity
throught the world. For this reason, the inclusion of the
Fatima prayes (O my Jesus forgive us our sins. Save us from
the fires of hell. Lead all souls into heaven, especially
those in most need of your mercy) is forbidden as part of the Legion
meeting. While local prayers, like the fatima prayer, may be
prayed on Legion of Mary work assignments, and in our own devotional
prayers, they cannot be added into the prayers of the meeting.
Of the Rosary, the Legion Handbook also says this:
"The same
measure of dignity and respect should be imparted to its recitation as
if the gracious personage to whom it is addressed were visibly present
in the place of the statue representing her. The proper recitation of
the Ave requires that the second part should not begin until the first
has been finished, and the Holy Name of Jesus reverently pronounced.
The rosary, playing, both by rule and by recommendation, such an
important part in the life of the legionary, each one is urged to
register in the Rosary Confraternity. (see appendix 7) Pope Paul VI
insists that the rosary must be preserved. It is pure prayer. Its
contents are eminently biblical. It effectively summarises the whole
history of salvation, and it fulfils the essential purpose of
exhibiting Mary in all her various roles in that history.
”For
Christians, the first of books is the Gospel and the Rosary is
actually the
abridgement of the Gospel.” (Lacordaire)
|