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Catherine's Canonisation Cause

The Spirituality of Catherine - Anne Hannon rsm

(This paper is the text of reflections presented by Anne Hannon rsm at the Annual General Meeting in Sunderland of the English Federation of Sisters of Mercy, 27 November 2003)

Angela Bolster calls Catherine an evangeliser and identifies three main themes around which her spiritual teachings revolved:

  • Trust in the Father's Providence
  • Identification with Jesus in his mission
  • Heartfelt gratitude for the Mercy of God

Trust in the Father's Providence

If I were looking for a Gospel story to illustrate Catherine's great trust in the Father's Providence it would be the piece from the gospel of Luke 12:22-30. 'Do not be concerned for your life, what you are to eat, or for your body, what you are to wear. Life is more important than food and the body more than clothing. Consider the ravens: they do not sow, they do not reap; they have neither cellar nor barn - yet God feeds them. How much more important you are than the birds. Or take the lilies: they do not spin, they do not weave; but I tell you, Solomon in all his splendour was not arrayed like any one of them. If God clothes in such splendour the grass of the field, which grows today and is thrown on the fire tomorrow, how much more will he provide for you, O weak in faith... . .. Stop worrying... Your father knows that you need such things.'

Catherine was the exponent par excellence of implicit trust in the providence of God, because she believed in Him. Her faith was a radical faith, which was dynamic, affective and expressive of the reliance on God which is the immediate characteristic virtue with which we associate her and which reveals a quite extraordinary relationship with God. That she understood well that confidence in the providence of God entailed effort, is clear from her words 'While we place our whole confidence in God, we must act as if all depended on our exertions'. Her sense of balance between this personal effort and reliance on God is demonstrated over and over again in some of her letters. She writes about the Charleville foundation, which was in danger of breaking down: 'My heart felt sorrowful when I thought of the poor being deprived of the comfort that God intended for them. I made every effort and, praise be to God, all came round'. She never lost sight of the fact that while she might be the instrument of planting and watering, only God could bring the increase. Her letters show that she judged all the events of her life from a standpoint of faith, of her vision of God: 'I will confide in the generous bounty and never-ceasing kindness of our beloved Saviour Put your whole confidence in God. He will never let you want necessities for yourself or children... I hope that God will grant the spiritual assistance required... You have given all to God without reserve. Nothing can happen to you, which he does not appoint... God will support you in this great affliction... The Lord and Master of our House and Home is a faithful provider. Let us never desire more than enough. He will give us that, and a blessing... We have ever confided largely in Divine Providence and shall continue to do so.'

CatherineCatherine's confidence in her 'faithful provider' continued to be a source of serenity and hope throughout her life. For example, like so many of the early foundations, the beginnings of Tullamore were fragile from a financial perspective. Nevertheless, Catherine encouraged Mary Anne Doyle, the first superior, 'to have the most strong and lively confidence that your convent will be firmly established for it certainly will'. She went on to urge her to offer the Sisters' services 'most freely, and relying with unhesitating confidence on the Providence of God'. Even on her final day on earth she trusted her 'faithful provider.' When Frances Gibson, later the founding sister in Liverpool, begged Catherine not to leave them lest the Congregation die, she replied, 'If the order be my work, the sooner it falls to the ground the better. If it is God's work, it needs no one'.

TASK

Take time to consider the ordinary circumstances of your life that might reveal the guidance of a providential God.
Choose one person with whom to share this.
Compose a litany of the providential care of God.

Catherine Identified with Jesus in His Mission

The asceticism of her spirituality may be condensed into three words Imitation of Christ. Jesus occupied a central place in her spirituality; to lead her sisters to imitate him in charity, humility, meekness and simplicity was the aim of her conferences. Among her counsels, Catherine told her Sisters that: the life and maxims of Jesus Christ should be as a book always open before us, from which we are to learn all that is necessary to know; as a glass in which we clearly see our defects, and as a seal whose image we are to impress on our hearts. According to Fr. Burke-Savage, 'Catherine could never have spoken so easily and so beautifully of the changing scenes of Our Lord's earthly life without constant meditation on them.

Catherine taught that the grace of vocation carries with it the serious obligation of putting on Christ: 'When God bestows on us the special grace of vocation to the religious life, He requires us to form our entire conduct on the example given by Jesus Christ. The grace of vocation was unmerited on our part ... Give Him your heart with its affection and commence in earnest to form yourselves according to the image of your divine Model'.

Of course integral to the imitation of Christ was a deep understanding of His thirst for justice, hence, her emphasis on the importance of a social conscience. She, by word and deed, led her sisters to live his way of mercy, his courageous service in truth and justice and his gentle but strong insistence on the dignity of every member of the human family.

Catherine had an especially clear insight into the fact that devotion to the Passion of Christ is transformative of our lives and daily self-denial constituted our most transformative imitation of Christ. Suffering marked Catherine McAuley' s life; the early death of her beloved parents; her financial dependence on those who mocked her religion; the grave never closed to her; opposition to her works for the poor and separation from those she loved. Catherine considered these the ordinary fare of life 'extensively divided and equally the affliction of many' . She knew well that imitating Christ's love demands self-denial, humility of heart, sweetness of manner and patience in the face of contradictions.

TASK

Think of a story from your own life that reflects your understanding of participating in the Passion of Jesus Christ. Write a letter to Jesus about his passion and yours.

Heartfelt gratitude for the Mercy of God

Catherine saw herself before God as one who received everything from His divine bounty; who benefited from his redemptive love. She felt obliged to be a channel of Mercy towards others. In a very real sense, she endeavoured to share her own experience of God's Mercy. She threw her heart open to the Father and her hands open to the poor as she joyfully spread the good news of God's steadfast love for his people. She felt compelled to guide her spiritual daughters - the Sisters of Mercy, towards the compassionate and redemptive love of God. She declared that the principal reason they were called Sisters of Mercy was 'to serve God in the person of the poor and to walk in the very same path which he trod'. She wanted them to be merciful as the Heavenly Father is merciful. As usual she led by example. One of her early companions, Sr. M. Clare Moore said of her, 'Mercy was a word of predilection for our dear Rev. Mother'. She would say, 'It not only bestows benefits, but it receives and pardons again and again, even the ungrateful. The Mercy of God comes to our assistance and renders practical His love in our regard'. In her Mercy Magnificat we see that Catherine had a clear Biblical understanding of Mercy. It grew out of her devotion to prayer. The Magnificat is very familiar to all of you but I think it is worth quoting it here.

Sweet Mercy - soothing, patient, kind -
softens the high and rears the fallen mind:
Knows with just rein and even hand to guide
between false fear and arbitrary pride.

Not easily provoked, she soon forgives:
feels love for all, and by a look, relieves.

Soft peace she brings wherever she arrives,
removes out anguish and reforms our lives;
Makes the rough paths of peevish nature even,
and opens in each heart a little Heaven.

This poem shows that Catherine had a well-deserved reputation for familiarity with the Scriptures. The Mercy Magnificat holds overtones of Psalms 103 and 145, as of the Mercy parables in Luke. Her biblical understanding grew out of her devotion to prayer as I said already. She also allowed her contemplation of the compassionate Christ to transform her life to the degree that she was ever ready to respond in loving kindness to perceived needs. This led her along the path of Mercy to found her Congregation of Sisters, whom she exhorted 'Oh! how tender, how compassionate, how merciful ought not we, Sisters of Mercy, to be ... Sisters of Mercy should be ... the kindest people in the world. In response to people who said the Sisters should devote less time to work and more to prayer she responded, 'The Spiritual and Corporal works of Mercy which draw religious from a life of contemplation, so far from separating them from God, unite them more closely to Him, and render them more valuable in His holy service'.

Her vision of Mercy embraced Justice and she was constantly exhorting her sisters to read the signs of the times, to change social structures through the education of girls and young women, to have a discerning heart characterized by an effective quality of presence. And in all the changing circumstances of her life she preserved an unshakeable optimism based on her experience of the infinite goodness, mercy and power of God. She strove to make the rich conscious of their obligation to help the poor; to make the healthy aware of the sick; to make the literate help the illiterate~ to make the housed help the homeless. In fact while she had a hands-on approach to helping the needy she had a huge awareness of the need for systemic change.

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Mercy Facts "Let us never think any one individual necessary for carrying on the work of God…we can all be done without." Catherine McAuley
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