† Saint of the Day †
(October 24)
✠ St. Anthony Mary Claret ✠
Archbishop and Founder of the
Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary:
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
Pope Pius XI
Canonized: May 7, 1950
Pope Pius XII
Major shrine: Vic, Barcelona, Spain
Feast: October 24
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 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.
Comments:
A long time ago the Claretian
Priests of the city of Rio Claro [in the State of Sao Paulo, Brazil] invited me
to give a talk on their founder. I bought a small biography of him and read it
on the trip. Many things can be said about this great Saint. He was one of
these men who, aside from having founded a religious congregation, dominated
his epoch by the mere fact of his existence.
He was a short, energetic Spaniard,
a peppery Catalonian. At age 17 he traveled to the lively trade center of
Barcelona to further himself in the weaving profession of his father. He became
so involved in the technology and business that he could think of almost
nothing else.
During this period of his life, he
was a mediocre Catholic even though he maintained a devotion to Our Lady. One
hot day in the summer of 1826, Anthony was wading in the sea when a huge wave
engulfed him and carried him out into the deep. He could not swim, but called
out to the Blessed Virgin for help, and found himself carried back to the
shore, half-drowned and semi-conscious. When he came to himself he realized how
close he had come to dying. He began to consider the mediocrity of his life and
he converted.
He has ordained a priest and became
a missionary. He revealed himself an orator with eminent qualities who appealed
to the simple people. He had a very powerful voice that could be heard in the
far corners of the public squares where he used to preach to the multitudes
that gathered to hear him. The churches could not contain all those people, and
at times even the squares overflowed. He used to go from city to city
preaching, and many times the inhabitants of one city followed him along the
road to the halfway point, where he was met by inhabitants of the next city who
had come to welcome him and accompany him to their city.
The preaching of St. Anthony Mary
Claret attracted and held the people. His words were zealous, rich with
learning and natural eloquence, and filled with extraordinary charisma. Very
often he would move his audience to tears. At times he would prophesize,
interrupting a sermon, for example, to tell a lady: “You think that you still
have a long time to live, but you are mistaken. You will die in six months.” At
other times he would exorcise demons, saying, for instance, “I will expel the
Devil that hovers over this audience.” As he pronounced the words of the
exorcism, strange noises, lightning, and other phenomena were heard and seen by
the multitude. Of course, these charismas impressed and attracted the people.
He realized that he was called to
preach the truths of the Faith to the simple people. Doing this, he gave an
edifying example to other religious Orders that were influenced by Liberalism
and rejecting the Church’s traditional preaching methods in order to adapt
themselves to the modern world. St. Anthony Mary Claret achieved a fabulous
result using traditional methods. His implicit reply to those who attacked the
traditional methods was simple: the people don’t come to you because of the old
methods, but because you are liberals.
He also understood that he was
called to increase the zeal of the people, not to organize or direct it. He
would pass through the provinces planting the seed of the love of God, leaving
the job of watering that seed and making it grow to others.
Only weeks after founding his
missionary congregation of the Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, a notice
arrived from Rome that he had been nominated to become Archbishop of Santiago,
the primatial see of Cuba. He was consecrated Bishop, made an Archbishop, and
sent to Cuba. As soon as he arrived, he started to correct the bad customs and
indifferent morals of the people and began a real conversion of the Island.
The Freemasonry that was deeply
entrenched in Cuba could not tolerate this, and intensely attacked St. Anthony
Mary Claret. He suffered all kinds of persecutions, including several attempts
on his life. The opposition of the enemies of the Church was so strong that
finally, the Queen of Spain decided it would be more prudent to remove him from
the Island and return him to Spain. At her request, he was offered the
appointment of Patriarch of India, which would make him confessor and spiritual
director of the Royal Court of Madrid.
As his ship left the shore of Cuba,
St. Anthony Mary Claret cursed the Island whose inhabitants had refused God. It
was not long before this curse took effect. With its independence, Cuba
rejected the life-giving spiritual sap it had received from Spain and quickly
became a center of corruption and immorality, a tourist site for Americans
seeking dissolute vacations. This was the case until Communism took over the
Cuban government and implanted its regime. You can see that the curse launched
by St. Anthony Mary Claret was realized quite impressively.
The chaplain of the Spanish Court
had the title of Patriarch of India, but it was just an honorific title with
nothing to do with India. Queen Isabella II was supporting the liberal side of
the Spanish Royal House that was fighting against the good Carlist movement. As
so often happens with liberals, they play the game of Freemasonry, and if they
stop, Masonry takes them out of the game. Even though she was liberal, the Queen
began to be influenced by St. Anthony Claret and gradually took a different
position. When her policies started to become anti-liberal, the Masons removed
her from power and sent her out of Spain in exile. It was St. Anthony Claret
who provoked this political earthquake.
It was also during that time in
Spain he exercised a very successful missionary apostolate and more firmly
established the Congregation of the Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
The deposing of Isabella II was in
part a victory for the good cause. The Masonry knew that Spain was not yet
ready to accept a Republic, and wanted to establish a Constitutional Monarchy
first in order to prepare the way for a stable Republic. Because it was forced
to depose the Queen, it was obliged to make the Republic prematurely. This
caused a deep crystallization in public opinion against the Republic, which led
to the restoration of the Monarchy sometime later. The Republic would have
triumphed earlier in Spain without the action of St. Anthony Mary Claret.
Even as he grew old and suffered
sicknesses, his incredible energy, and gifts to move the people with his words
continued. He was also granted many special graces, in particular, the grace of
conserving the Sacramental Species within his heart. From one Communion to
another, the Eucharistic Species were preserved incorrupt in his body so that
he always had the Blessed Sacrament in his heart.
In his last days, he participated in
Vatican Council I, which the Pope had convened at the Vatican in December of
1869. Seeing many liberal Bishops opposing the matter of Papal Infallibility
that was being discussed, he became indignant and strongly censured them in a
speech. Hearing the errors being spoken on this topic, he was so overcome with
indignation that the blood rushed to his head and he suffered a stroke from
which he never recovered. He died some months later.
St. Anthony Mary Claret is our
patron Saint under many different titles:
# The patron of those who are
leading mediocre lives and needs to convert to serve the Catholic cause:
# The patron of the faithful who
promotes devotion to Our Lady;
# The patron of
counter-revolutionaries because of his action in Cuba and Spain;
# The patron of those who follows
the traditional methods of Catholic apostolate with the simple people and spurn
the liberal novelties;
# The patron of those who fights for
the Papacy against liberal Bishops.
Since it was this same current of
Bishops that endured and took power in the Catholic Church at Vatican Council
II, St. Anthony Mary Claret is also a great protector and intercessor of those
who are called to fight the errors of Vatican II and its consequences.
We should call on St. Anthony Mary
Claret for his help under these different titles.
~ Late Prof. Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira
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