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MARIST SPIRIT
When
Jean-Claude Colin told Marist priests that “simply bearing he name of Mary
was not enough”, he was pushing them to realise how deep the bond was
between Mary and those who carry her name, and how great the responsibility
is for Marists who have been given her name. The first generation of Marists
looked on the name they bore as the result of Mary’s choice of them. A
favour like this implied a very special relationship between Mary and
Marists, and this obviously led to consequences, chief of which was for
Marists to imbue themselves as far as possible with what they understood to
be the ”spirit” of Mary.
It is
hard to explain exactly what is meant by “spirit”, and Colin himself had
great difficulty in trying to capture it in words. The “spirit” of a person
is that way of looking at life, that unique way of doing things which
belongs to each individual person.
The
“spirit” of Mary then, is Mary’s way of judging reality, of making decisions
and acting on them. The spirit of Mary should be the spirit of Marists
because of the special relationship which exists between Mary and Marists, a
relationship established on Mary’s part, by her free choice of them, and on
the part of Marists, by the way they look on her as Mother, model and
superior.
Marist
writer Jean Coste suggests three ways in which Marists can absorb the spirit
of Mary. In the first place, by deepening the sense of Mary’s presence and
place in their lives. This they do by meditation on her life and
personality, and reflection on the virtues most typical of her. Marists
also absorb her spirit by direct prayer to her, establishing a real and
personal relationship with her; and at the same time by getting in touch
with the spiritual inspiration of each of the Founding figures: Colin,
Chavoin, Champagnat, and the Pioneers, and by learning from them how they
lived the Marist life.
The
life of Mary, the disciple of Jesus, is filtered through the life experience
of different Marist personalities – something like a prism reflecting the
sun’s light. Finally, Marists will absorb their Marist sprit by keeping in
touch with the body of people today who are trying to live the Marist spirit
and interpret it for our times. A spirit cannot be separated from a body:
the Marist spirit is embodied today in those men and women, priests,
brothers, sisters and lay people, who live it out. Each founding person in
the Marist story shaped a body which would incarnate some aspect of the
Marist spirit.
A
Marist will keep these features alive to the extent to which he or she
remains connected to the men and women who belong to the body of Marists.

1845 Mayet Memoirs
Father
Colin said: ”It is useful to repeat what has already been said, to preserve
the spirit of the Society. Otherwise each one seeks to put his own spirit
into it; and that interferes with the harmony and puts us on a false path. A
society is like an individual. Each individual has his own genius, his own
character, his own temper of spirit, a certain breadth of judgement. Well
then, to expect an individual not to follow his own spirit, his own
character, is to expect the impossible. It is God who has given him that
spirit that character. He has to make the best of it and not worry about the
rest. A society too has its own spirit. Who gave it to it? If that spirit is
enshrined in the rule, it is obvious that it is God who gave it to it. Well
then we shall not do any good except by following that spirit. If we do not
follow it, we may make noise and win the esteem of men, but we shall not do
all the good that God expects of us.
A liveable spirit
It’s
basically a very liveable and ordinary spirit. We are called to live our
Christian lives as Mary lived her Christian life. This cannot be threatening
to anyone, as Mary could not have threatened anyone. It is a spirituality
which accepts the ordinary realities of any life but seeks to make God the
centre of that life just as Mary the “perfect disciple” did. Its simplicity
is that of Mary. All this will mean a radical but simple following: as Mary
did at Nazareth without fuss or show; brave and suffering as Mary was at
Calvary; joyful, generous and loving as Mary was in the infant Church after
Pentecost.
Being ordinary
It is
sometimes referred to as “being ordinary”. But when you come to think of it,
in the present day – or at any time for that matter – “being ordinary” does
not mean “being like everyone else”, for the simple reason that 2everyone
else” is not “being ordinary”.
Most
of us are acting a part or many parts, trying to “prepare a face to meet the
faces that you meet”. All of us could make our won the beautiful prayer of
St Augustine: “Lord let me know myself, let me know you”.
In a
special way the “spirit of Mary” is precisely the knowing of these two
people, myself and God.
I
suppose this attitude, to ourselves, to others, and to God, has always been
attractive, because it is unobtrusive, sincere, and empty of self-seeking,
and perhaps because in any age it is always rare, But there is no doubt it
is particularly attractive today.
Kevin
Maher SM
Unifying principle
Should
we go ….. in search of a unifying principle for the Marist spirit, we can
find it only in fidelity to the Holy Spirit. It was the Holy Spirit who
guided Mary and fashioned her soul; it was the Holy Spirit who inspired and
helped Fr Colin to understand the mystery of Mary; it is the Holy Spirit
who, working in the Church and in the Society which forms part of it,
enables Marists discover today how they can follow in the footsteps of Mary
and of their Founder. In this sense, to live the Marist spirit is to listen
to the Holy Spirit who speaks to us through our position in the Society of
Mary. The Society is completely defined by its belonging to Mary, whose life
it wishes to live; it was moded by the spiritual intuitions of a founder
who, more than any other, realised the religious and apostolic value of
effacement; it strives to bring that Marian and Marist life into the Church
today. It is in so far as they take all these elements of their vocation
together that Marists are faithful to the Holy Spirit, and it is this
fidelity to the Holy Spirit on the part of all Marists in their common
vocation which constitutes the Marist spirit.
Jean
Coste SM
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