Saint Louis Marie de Montfort
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Feast Day: April 28th

Saint Louis Marie de Montfort
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Profile
Missionary in Brittany and Vendee; born at Montfort, 31 January, 1673; died at Saint Laurent sur Sevre, 28 April, 1716.
From his childhood, he was indefatigably devoted to prayer before the Blessed Sacrament, and, when from his twelfth year he was sent as a day pupil to the Jesuit college at Rennes, he never failed to visit the church before and after class. He joined a society of young men who during holidays ministered to the poor and to the incurables in the hospitals, and read for them edifying books during their meals. At the age of nineteen, he went on foot to Paris to follow the course in theology, gave away on the journey all his money to the poor, exchanged clothing with them, and made a vow to subsist thenceforth only on alms. He was ordained priest at the age of twenty-seven, and for some time fulfilled the duties of chaplain in a hospital. In 1705, when he was thirty-two, he found his true vocation, and thereafter devoted himself to preaching to the people. During seventeen years he preached the Gospel in countless towns and villages. As an orator he was highly gifted, his language being simple but replete with fire and divine love. His whole life was conspicuous for virtues difficult for modern degeneracy to comprehend: constant prayer, love of the poor, poverty carried to an unheard-of degree, joy in humiliations and persecutions.
The following two instances will illustrate his success. He once gave a mission for the soldiers of the garrison at La Rochelle, and moved by his words, the men wept, and cried aloud for the forgiveness of their sins. In the procession which terminated this mission, an officer walked at the head, barefooted and carrying a banner, and the soldiers, also barefooted, followed, carrying in one hand a crucifix, in the other a rosary, and singing hymns.
Grignion's extraordinary influence was especially apparent in the matter of the calvary at Pontchateau. When he announced his determination of building a monumental calvary on a neighbouring hill, the idea was enthusiastically received by the inhabitants. For fifteen months between two and four hundred peasants worked daily without recompense, and the task had just been completed, when the king commanded that the whole should be demolished, and the land restored to its former condition. The Jansenists had convinced the Governor of Brittany that a fortress capable of affording aid to persons in revolt was being erected, and for several months five hundred peasants, watched by a company of soldiers, were compelled to carry out the work of destruction. Father de Montfort was not disturbed on receiving this humiliating news, exclaiming only: "Blessed be God!"
This was by no means the only trial to which Grignion was subjected. It often happened that the Jansenists, irritated by his success, secure by their intrigues his banishment form the district, in which he was giving a mission. At La Rochelle some wretches put poison into his cup of broth, and, despite the antidote which he swallowed, his health was always impaired. On another occasion, some malefactors hid in a narrow street with the intention of assassinating him, but he had a presentiment of danger and escaped by going by another street. A year before his death, Father de Montfort founded two congregations -- the Sisters of Wisdom, who were to devote themselves to hospital work and the instruction of poor girls, and the Company of Mary, composed of missionaries. He had long cherished these projects but circumstances had hindered their execution, and, humanly speaking, the work appeared to have failed at his death, since these congregations numbered respectively only four sisters and two priests with a few brothers. But the blessed founder, who had on several occasions shown himself possessed of the gift of prophecy, knew that the tree would grow. At the beginning of the twentieth century the Sisters of Wisdom numbered five thousand, and were spread throughout every country; they possessed forty-four houses, and gave instruction to 60,000 children. After the death of its founder, the Company of Mary was governed for 39 years by Father Mulot. He had at first refused to join de Montfort in his missionary labours. "I cannot become a missionary", said he, "for I have been paralysed on one side for years; I have an affection of the lungs which scarcely allows me to breathe, and am indeed so ill that I have no rest day or night." But the holy man, impelled by a sudden inspiration, replied, "As soon as you begin to preach you will be completely cured." And the event justified the prediction. Grignion de Montfort was beatified by Leo XIII in 1888.
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CRUIKSHANK, Blessed Grignion, etc. (London, 1892); JAC, Vie, etc. (Paris, 1903); LAVEILLE, Vic, etc. (Paris, 1907).
The Catholic
Encyclopedia, Volume IX
Nihil Obstat, October 1, 1910, Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
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Prayer to
St. Louis De Montfort
Great Apostle and Lover of our Blessed Lady, St. Louis De Montfort, whose one
desire is to set the world aflame with love for Jesus through Mary, we entreat
you to obtain for us childlike, persevering, perfect devotion to Mary, so as to
share in Mary's faith, hope and charity, and to to receive the favor we beseech
you to obtain for us.
St. Louis De Montfort, pray for us.
(Three Times)
Nihil
Obstat:
Martinus I. Healy, S.T.D.
Censor Librorum
Imprimatur:
Thomas Edmundus Molloy, S.T.D.
Episcopus Brooklyniensis
October 1,1947
Litany to St. Louis de Montfort
Lord, have mercy on us.
Christ, have mercy on us.
Lord, have mercy on us. Christ, hear us.
Christ, graciously hear us.
God the Father of Heaven,
Have mercy on us.
God the Son, Redeemer of the world,
Have mercy on us.
God the Holy Ghost,
Have mercy on us.
Holy Trinity, One God,
Have mercy on us.
Hail Mary
pray for us!
Saint Louis-Marie de Montfort
pray for us!
Ardent disciple of Jesus Christ the Incarnate Wisdom,
pray for us!
Eloquent preacher of the Cross,
pray for us!
Singer of the praises of the Sacred Heart,
pray for us!
Loving slave of Jesus in Mary,
pray for us!
Faithful son of the handmaid of the Lord,
pray for us!
Apostle of the Most Holy Rosary,
pray for us!
Preacher of the Mother of the Redeemer,
pray for us!
Servant of the poor and the afflicted,
pray for us!
Man of solitude and prayer,
pray for us!
Wonder of mortification,
pray for us!
Model of priests and missionaries,
pray for us!
Fervent minister of the Holy Eucharist,
pray for us!
Fearless champion of truth,
pray for us!
Restorer of devotion to the Blessed Sacrament,
pray for us!
Marvel of poverty and abandonment to Divine Providence,
pray for us!
Teacher of the people of God,
pray for us!
Founder of Religious congregations,
pray for us!
Apostle of the end times,
pray for us!
Obedient collaborator with the Pope and Bishops,
pray for us!
Thou seest the Face of God:
obtain for us perseverance in the faith.
Thou shinest within Infinite Charity:
obtain for us the gift of pure love.
Thou livest in the New Jerusalem:
obtain for us the spirit of prayer.
Thou standst before the throne of the Lamb:
obtain for us the wisdom of the Cross.
Thou contemplate the Mother of the Lord:
obtain for us true devotion to Mary.
Thou dwellst with the Apostles of Christ:
obtain for us missionary zeal.
Thou sharest in the communion of Saints:
obtain for us love for the Church.
Thou art seated at the Table of the Kingdom:
obtain for us the crown of glory.
Thou art a powerful intercessor before the Throne of God:
hear our prayers.
(Here make your intentions in silence).
Let us pray.
O God, Who in the power of the Holy Spirit hast made Saint Louis-Marie an ardent
apostle of Christ Crucified and a faithful son of the Virgin Mary; Grant that
through his example and intercession we may be renewed in the spirit of our
baptism and be always faithful to Our Lord Jesus Christ, Who liveth and reigneth
with Thee and the Holy Spirit. One God, forever and ever.
Amen.
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Feast Day: August 25th
![26kb jpg detail from the painting 'Saint Louis of France' by El Greco; thanks to Bob St.G; please do not write to ask about the image [painting of Saint Louis]](saintl07.jpg)
King Saint Louis IX
Profile
Louis, the quintessential
Christian Prince, was born in Poissy, France on 25 April 1215 to King Louis VIII
and Blanche of Castile. His father died when he was just eleven years old, and
he was crowned -- at Rheims, like almost all French Kings -- on the First Sunday
of Advent in 1226. His very strong and pious mother acted as his regent,
supressing various revolts to secure her son's place. She acted as regent even
after he reached the age of majority, and guided his career with strong
Christian advice, forming his character in holiness. She would say to him,
"Never forget that sin is the only great evil in the world. No mother could love
her son more than I love you. But I would rather see you lying dead at my feet
than know that you had offended God by one mortal sin" -- sentiments that he
took to heart and would later pass on to his own successor (see below).
In 1230, he outlawed all forms of usury and compelled usurers
to contribute toward the Crusades when their debtors could not be found to be
compensated (later under his reign, in 1240, would come the famous disputation
of the Talmud in Paris, after rulers and churchmen discovered what blasphemies
the Talmud taught. Copies of the Talmud were burned in great fires in the
streets of Paris).
Louis married at age nineteen, in 1234, taking to wife
Marguerite of Provence, with whom he had eleven children -- five sons and six
daughters. He went on a Crusade in 1248, and fought nobly and with great honor,
forbidding his men to kill prisoners and always expecting them to act as
Christians. But he lost the battle and, weakened by dystentery, was captured in
Mansoura, Egypt. During his captivity, he sang the Divine Office every day with
two chaplains and conducted himself with such honor as to impress his captors.
When the Sultan was killed by his own emirs, he was set free, but didn't
immediately return to Europe; instead, he went to the Holy Land, and remained
there in order to help fortify the Christian colonies, not returning until 1254,
during which time his mother died.
Very dedicated to the cause of peace, he not only arbitrated
and made treaties with Henry VIII and James I of Aragon, but did much to curb a
lot of the petty, feudal warfare that caused so much harm. He was a great patron
of learning, the arts, and architecture, and under his patronage, the Sorbonne
was founded; abbeys built; the choir, apse, and nave of St. Denis Basilica --
which contains the tombs of almost all French Kings -- were refurbished, etc.
His crowning architectural glory, though, is Ste. Chapelle, the beautiful chapel
with the walls of stained glass that sits on the tiny Ile de la Cité right in
the middle of Paris, in the Seine River (the same island where Notre Dame
Cathedral is found). This chapel was built to house a part of the Crown of
Thorns and a piece of the True Cross which he purchased from Emperor Baldwin II
in Constantinople, and it became St. Louis's personal royal chapel. To stand in
it is to seem to stand inside a luminous jewel box:
Glorious and fruitful was his reign! Indeed, having dealt
with economic woes by expelling the usurers from France, King St. Louis ruled
over a time that became known as "the golden century of Saint Louis." He was
most famous, though, for his charity, humility, and concern for the poor. He
built many hospitals, among them the hospital known as "Quinze-vingt"
("Fifteen-Twenty") -- a hospital for the blind and whose name comes from the
fact that it could care for 300 patients. He built homes for reformed
prostitutes. Every day, he met with the poor personally and saw to it that they
were fed, inviting them to dine with him, and washing their feet in imitation of
Christ at the Last Supper. He gave special attention to the indigent during
Advent and Lent. All who knew him admired him; no one spoke ill of him and he
spoke ill of no one else. His biographer, Joinville, wrote, "I was a good
twenty-two years in the King's company and never once did I hear him swear,
either by God, or His Mother, or His saints. I did not even hear him name the
Devil, except if he met the word when reading aloud, or when discussing what had
been read."
He was also very devoted to the cause of Justice, and
eliminated the feudal method of conflict resolution through combat, replacing it
with arbitration and judicial process. He eradicated his ancestors' "King's
Court" and established popular courts in which he, himself, would hear his
subjects' grievances.
In 1270, he went off on another Crusade, this time in an
attempt to convert the Emir of Tunis after being inspired by acting as godfather
to a Jewish convert. Again, his Crusade failed, and again he became sick with
dysentery. This time, though, he did not recover. He died at three in the
afternoon on 25 August 1270. His last words were those of Christ: "Into Thy
hands I commend my spirit." He was canonized in 1297, 27 years after his death,
and was succeeded by his son, Philip III (see Louis's letter to him below). His
line continued after him until the French Revolution, when King Louis XVI was
guillotined on 21 January 1703. At this act of regicide, the Abbe Edgeworth
said, "Son of St. Louis, ascend to Heaven!"
King Louis's remains were laid to rest, like those of almost
all French Kings, in the Basilica of St. Denis (now a northern suburb of Paris).
The Basilica was sacked during the infamous Revolution and its royal tombs were
emptied into a mass grave -- with some of the tombs themselves being destroyed,
including that of St. Louis (the tomb-smashing was stopped when an archaeologist
of the time urged the revolutionaries to consider them "works of art"). In 1817,
the mass grave was opened and all of the bones were placed in a single ossuary,
with the names of the monarchs recorded.
St. Louis is the patron of builders, kings, large families,
and Crusaders (and, of course, St. Louis, Missouri). He is represented in art by
the Crown of Thorns, crown, scepter, and the fleur-de-lis (the symbol of French
monarchy, most likely a stylized depiction of the Yellow Flag Iris -- Iris
pseudocorus. See picture at right).

1. To his dear first-born son, Philip, greeting, and his father's love.
2. Dear son, since I desire with all my heart that you be well "instructed in
all things, it is in my thought to give you some advice this writing. For I have
heard you say, several times, that you remember my words better than those of
any one else.
3. Therefore, dear son, the first thing I advise is that you fix your whole
heart upon God, and love Him with all your strength, for without this no one can
be saved or be of any worth.
4. You should, with all your strength, shun everything which you believe to be
displeasing to Him. And you ought especially to be resolved not to commit mortal
sin, no matter what may happen and should permit all your limbs to be hewn off,
and suffer every manner of torment, rather than fall knowingly into mortal sin.
5. If our Lord send you any adversity, whether illness or other in good
patience, and thank Him for it, thing, you should receive it in good patience
and be thankful for it, for you ought to believe that He will cause everthing to
turn out for your good; and likewise you should think that you have well merited
it, and more also, should He will it, because you have loved Him but little, and
served Him but little, and have done many things contrary to His will.
6. If our Lord send you any prosperity, either health of body or other thing you
ought to thank Him humbly for it, and you ought to be careful that you are not
the worse for it, either through pride or anything else, for it is a very great
sin to fight against our Lord with His gifts.
7. Dear son, I advise you that you accustom yourself to frequent confession, and
that you choose always, as your confessors, men who are upright and sufficiently
learned, and who can teach you what you should do and what you should avoid. You
should so carry yourself that your confessors and other friends may dare
confidently to reprove you and show you your faults.
8. Dear son, I advise you that you listen willingly and devoutly the services of
Holy Church, and, when you are in church, avoid to frivolity and trifling, and
do not look here and there; but pray to God with lips and heart alike, while
entertaining sweet thoughts about Him, and especially at the mass, when the Body
and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ are consecrated, and for a little time
before.
9. Dear son, have a tender pitiful heart for the poor, and for all those whom
you believe to be in misery of heart or body, and, according to your ability,
comfort and aid them with some alms.
10. Maintain the good customs of your realm, and put down the bad ones. Do not
oppress your people and do not burden them with tolls or tailles, except under
very great necessity.
11. If you have any unrest of heart, of such a nature that it may be told, tell
it to your confessor, or to some upright man who can keep your secret; you will
be able to carry more easily the thought of your heart.
12. See to it that those of your household are upright and loyal, and remember
the Scripture, which says: "Elige viros timentes Deum in quibus sit justicia et
qui oderint avariciam"; that is to say, "Love those who serve God and who render
strict justice and hate covetousness"; and you will profit, and will govern your
kingdom well.
13. Dear son, see to it that all your associates are upright, whether clerics or
laymen, and have frequent good converse with them; and flee the society of the
bad. And listen willingly to the word of God, both in open and in secret; and
purchase freely prayers and pardons.
14. Love all good, and hate all evil, in whomsoever it may be.
15. Let no one be so bold as to say, in your presence, words which attract and
lead to sin, and do not permit words of detraction to be spoken of another
behind his back.
!6. Suffer it not that any ill be spoken of God or His saints in your presence,
without taking prompt vengeance. But if the offender be a clerk or so great a
person that you ought not to try him, report the matter to him who is entitled
to judge it.
17. Dear son, give thanks to God often for all the good things He has done for
you, so that you may be worthy to receive more, in such a manner that if it
please the Lord that you come to the burden and honor of governing the kingdom,
you may be worthy to receive the sacred unction wherewith the kings of France
are consecrated.
18. Dear son, if you come to the throne, strive to have that which befits a
king, that is to say, that in justice and rectitude you hold yourself steadfast
and loyal toward your subjects and your vassals, without turning either to the
right or to the left, but always straight, whatever may happen. And if a poor
man have a quarrel with a rich man, sustain the poor rather than the rich, until
the truth is made clear, and when you know the truth, do justice to them.
19. If any one have entered into a suit against you (for any injury or wrong
which he may believe that you have done to him), be always for him and against
yourself in the presence of your council, without showing that you think much of
your case (until the truth be made known concerning it); for those of your
council might be backward in speaking against you, and this you should not wish;
and command your judges that you be not in any way upheld more than any others,
for thus will your councillors judge more boldly according to right and truth.
20. If you have anything belonging to another, either of yourself or through
your predecessors, if the matter is certain, give it up without delay, however
great it may be, either in land or money or otherwise. If the matter is
doubtful, have it inquired into by wise men, promptly and diligently. And if the
affair is so obscure that you cannot know the truth, make such a settlement, by
the counsel of s of upright men, that your soul, and the soul your predecessors,
may be wholly freed from the affair. And even if you hear some one say that your
predecessors made restitution, make diligent inquiry to learn if anything
remains to be restored; and if you find that such is the case, cause it to be
delivered over at once, for the liberation of your soul and the souls of your
predecessors.
21. You should seek earnestly how your vassals and your subjects may live in
peace and rectitude beneath your sway; likewise, the good towns and the good
cities of your kingdom. And preserve them in the estate and the liberty in which
your predecessors kept them, redress it, and if there be anything to amend,
amend and preserve their favor and their love. For it is by the strength and the
riches of your good cities and your good towns that the native and the
foreigner, especially your peers and your barons, are deterred from doing ill to
you. I will remember that Paris and the good towns of my kingdom aided me
against the barons, when I was newly crowned.
22. Honor and love all the people of Holy Church, and be careful that no
violence be done to them, and that their gifts and alms, which your predecessors
have bestowed upon them, be not taken away or diminished. And I wish here to
tell you what is related concerning King Philip, my ancestor, as one of his
council, who said he heard it, told it to me. The king, one day, was with his
privy council, and he was there who told me these words. And one of the king's
councillors said to him how much wrong and loss he suffered from those of Holy
Church, in that they took away his rights and lessened the jurisdiction of his
court; and they marveled greatly how he endured it. And the good king answered:
"I am quite certain that they do me much wrong, but when I consider the
goodnesses and kindnesses which God has done me, I had rather that my rights
should go, than have a contention or awaken a quarrel with Holy Church." And
this I tell to you that you may not lightly believe anything against the people
of Holy Church; so love them and honor them and watch over them that they may in
peace do the service of our Lord.
23. Moreover, I advise you to love dearly the clergy, and, so far as you are
able, do good to them in their necessities, and likewise love those by whom God
is most honored and served, and by whom the Faith is preached and exalted.
24. Dear son, I advise that you love and reverence your father and your mother,
willingly remember and keep their commandments, and be inclined to believe their
good counsels.
25. Love your brothers, and always wish their well-being and their good
advancement, and also be to them in the place of a father, to instruct them in
all good. But be watchful lest, for the love which you bear to one, you turn
aside from right doing, and do to the others that which is not meet.
26. Dear son, I advise you to bestow the benefices of Holy Church which you have
to give, upon good persons, of good and clean life, and that you bestow them
with the high counsel of upright men. And I am of the opinion that it is
preferable to give them to those who hold nothing of Holy Church, rather than to
others. For, if you inquire diligently, you will find enough of those who have
nothing who will use wisely that entrusted to them.
27. Dear son, I advise you that you try with all your strength to avoid warring
against any Christian man, unless he have done you too much ill. And if wrong be
done you, try several ways to see if you can find how you can secure your
rights, before you make war; and act thus in order to avoid the sins which are
committed in warfare.
28. And if it fall out that it is needful that you should make war (either
because some one of your vassals has failed to plead his case in your court, or
because he has done wrong to some church or to some poor person, or to any other
person whatsoever, and is unwilling to make amends out of regard for you, or for
any other reasonable cause), whatever the reason for which it is necessary for
you to make war, give diligent command that the poor folk who have done no wrong
or crime be protected from damage to their vines, either through fire or
otherwise, for it were more fitting that you should constrain the wrongdoer by
taking his own property (either towns or castles, by force of siege), than that
you should devastate the property of poor people. And be careful not to start
the war before you have good counsel that the cause is most reasonable, and
before you have summoned the offender to make amends, and have waited as long as
you should. And if he ask mercy, you ought to pardon him, and accept his amende,
so that God may be pleased with you.
29. Dear son, I advise you to appease wars and contentions, whether they be
yours or those of your subjects, just as quickly as may be, for it is a thing
most pleasing to our Lord. And Monsignore Martin gave us a very great example of
this. For, one time, when our Lord made it known to him that he was about to
die, he set out to make peace between certain clerks of his archbishopric, and
he was of the opinion that in so doing he was giving a good end to life.
30. Seek diligently, most sweet son, to have good baillis and good prevots in
your land, and inquire frequently concerning their doings, and how they conduct
themselves, and if they administer justice well, and do no wrong to any one, nor
anything which they ought not do. Inquire more often concerning those of your
household if they be too covetous or too arrogant; for it is natural that the
members should seek to imitate their chief; that is, when the master is wise and
well-behaved, all those of his household follow his example and prefer it. For
however much you ought to hate evil in others, you shoud have more hatred for
the evil which comes from those who derive their power from you, than you bear
to the evil of others; and the more ought you to be on your guard and prevent
this from happening.
3!. Dear son, I advise you always to be devoted to the Church of Rome, and to
the sovereign pontiff, our father, and to bear him the the reverence and honor
which you owe to your spiritual father.
32. Dear son, freely give power to persons of good character, who know how to
use it well, and strive to have wickednesses expelled from your land, that is to
say, nasty oaths, and everything said or done against God or our Lady or the
saints. In a wise and proper manner put a stop, in your land, to bodily sins,
dicing, taverns, and other sins. Put down heresy so far as you can, and hold in
especial abhorrence Jews, and all sorts of people who are hostile to the Faith,
so that your land may be well purged of them, in such manner as, by the sage
counsel of good people, may appear to you advisable.
33. Further the right with all your strength. Moreover I admonish you you that
you strive most earnestly to show your gratitude for the benefits which our Lord
has bestowed upon you, and that you may know how to give Him thanks therefore
34. Dear son, take care that the expenses of your household are reasonable and
moderate, and that its moneys are justly obtained. And there is one opinion that
I deeply wish you to entertain, that is to say, that you keep yourself free from
foolish expenses and evil exactions, and that your money should be well expended
and well acquired. And this opinion, together with other opinions which are
suitable and profitable, I pray that our Lord may teach you.
35. Finally, most sweet son, I conjure and require you that, if it please our
Lord that I should die before you, you have my soul succored with masses and
orisons, and that you send through the congregations of the kingdom of France,
and demand their prayers for my soul, and that you grant me a special and full
part in all the good deeds which you perform.
36. In conclusion, dear son, I give you all the blessings which a good and
tender father can give to a son, and I pray our Lord Jesus Christ, by His mercy,
by the prayers and merits of His blessed Mother, the Virgin Mary, and of angels
and archangels and of all the saints, to guard and protect you from doing
anything contrary to His will, and to give you grace to do it always, so that He
may be honored and served by you. And this may He do to me as to you, by His
great bounty, so that after this mortal life we may be able to be together with
Him in the eternal life, and see Him, love Him, and praise Him without end.
Amen. And glory, honor, and praise be to Him who is one God with the Father and
the Holy Spirit; without beginning and without end. Amen.
Prayer in for the intercession King Saint Louis IX
Oh holy St. Louis IX, model of Catholic upbringing,
and tireless defender of the Kingship of Christ,
Despite your royal surroundings you were raised to love God and hate sin,
Your kingdom on earth was always ruled by the kingdom of heaven.
Glorious St. Louis IX, who did not hesitate to bring the poor to your own table,
Intercede for us that we may always strive to imitate our Savior as you so wisely did.
Keep us from the snares and allurements of the world, and help us to live truly Catholic lives at every moment. We ask this through Christ Our Lord. Amen
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