 St. Michael Garicoits Name: St. Michael Garicoits Date: 14 May
Saint Michael Garicoits was born in 1797 on a small farm in the south of France, near thetown of Ibarre, not far from Lourdes and from Betharram, an ancient pilgrimage site. Later the mother house of the Congregation which he founded, the Priests of the SacredHeart of Betharram, was established at that site. He was ordained a priest at Bayonne in 1823, and spent two years as Assistant in theparish of Cambo, where he established the devotion and confraternity of the SacredHeart. He was summoned to the Major Seminary of Betharram to serve as a professor ofphilosophy and theology in 1825, and he became Superior there in 1831. In 1832 he made a retreat based on the Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius, whichstrengthened in him his desire to found a new Society of Priests, a desire confirmed byhis superiors’ approbation. He had been greatly impressed by the poverty he had seenpracticed by a holy Foundress of a Congregation of Sisters, herself compared to SaintTeresa of Avila, who during her lifetime saw 99 houses of her Congregation establishedin several countries. Saint Michael desired the same practice of poverty for his priests, ashe had seen instituted under the direction of Saint Elizabeth Bichier des Ages, whofounded the Daughters of the Cross, or Sisters of Saint Andrew. Saint Elizabeth was, bya singular disposition of Providence, later canonized the same day as Saint Michael. Both Saints taught the importance of the interior life as the unique and irreplaceablesource of any serious apostolate. In his early efforts as founder, the fervent priest was faced with the opposition of hisbishop, who desired that the new Institute be placed more specifically under diocesanauthority than under that of its religious Superiors. Saint Michael, devoted to the Will ofGod, the point of departure to attain sanctity, remained in submission for long years. In1875, after a wholly supernatural intervention which occurred in the nearby Convent ofPau through the intermediary of the Arab Carmelite, Blessed Mary of Jesus Crucified, theInstitute as he conceived it was approved in Rome under Leo XIII. This occurred afterthe holy Founder had already been called to his reward in 1863. Miracles by the dozens had followed his death, and the Priests of the Sacred Heart ofBetharram spread in the lands of South America, as well as in France, England and Italy,where they direct teaching activities. At the canonization, Pius XII exhorted the religious of the Institute of the Sacred Heartand the Daughters of the Cross, present at the canonization of their respective Founders,to maintain the primitive spirit of their Congregations, saying: “Be deaf to the temptationto sacrifice your religious life and personal sanctification to the apostolate. That wouldbe similar to gathering beautiful flowers from a tree to form a bouquet, and afterwardswanting to find fruit on barren branches.” |