CAPG's Blog 

Saint Anthony Mary Claret, Bishop and Confessor

by VP


Posted on Tuesday October 24, 2023 at 12:00AM in Saints


Saint Anthony Mary Claret, Tabernacle and Purgatory, Benedictine Nuns  April 1959

Founder of the Congregation of the Missionary Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary

Quotes:

  • The faith I have when I am in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament is so strong that I find it impossible to express what I feel… When the time comes to leave I must force myself to overcome the inclination to prolong my stay with Jesus.
  • Although the sinner does not believe in Hell, he shall nevertheless go there if he has the misfortune to die in mortal sin.
  • A multitude of souls fall into the depths of Hell, and it is of the faith that all who die in mortal sin are condemned for ever and ever. According to statistics, approximately 80,000 persons die every day. How many of these will die in mortal sin, and how many will be condemned! For, as their lives have been, so also will be their end.


"In his studies at the seminary of Vich, Anthony Claret distinguished himself so notably by the steadfastness of his character that the bishop ordained him on his name-day, June 13, 1835, some time before his fellow-students. On the feast of St. Aloysius he celebrated his first Mass and began his first labors as assistant to the old pastor of his native town. He soon won the confidence of his neighbors. No one could resist the power of his words and in all the surrounding country he was venerated as a saint. But this field of activity was too small for the zeal of the young priest and he longed for the foreign missions. He went to Rome, made the Spiritual Exercises and applied for admission into the Society of Jesus. But he had hardly begun his novitiate when he was attacked by a disease of the foot, which forced him to leave the Order after a few months. Following the advice of his former superiors, he returned to Spain. After a brief employment in parish work, he devoted himself entirely to giving missions for the people, principally in Catalonia. What he accomplished there is almost incredible. He made his long journeys always on foot, preached three or four times a day, and was indefatigable in the confessional.

His activity brought upon him the hatred and persecutions of the impious, but it won at the same time the repute of a true apostle from the good. To have able co-laborers in his mission work, he founded in 1849 a Congregation called the Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, which developed into a flourishing establishment. In 1900 it numbered sixteen hundred and seventy members distributed among fifty-six residences.17 By command of the papal Nuncio at Madrid, Anthony Claret accepted, in 1850, his appointment as archbishop of Santiago de Cuba. Accompanied by several priests and religious women he set out for his distant diocese. On the voyage he preached every day and brought the whole crew of the vessel, without an exception, to confession.

Sad, indeed, was the decay of religion in Cuba. But the new bishop did not despair. He went from place to place through his diocese and gave missions everywhere. The results were truly wonderful. At the end of the mission in Santiago, which lasted during the whole of Lent, the distribution of Holy Communion covered six hours. During a mission in another city he brought to their duty about four hundred couples living in concubinage. He did not forget to take precautions that these beginnings might be lasting in effect. He erected schools, provided for religious houses, and opened a seminary for the training of priests. Pius IX, who had heard of this new Spring of spiritual regeneration in Cuba, sent a letter of special approbation to Archbishop Claret, praising him for his apostolic zeal.

The enemy, however, did not lay down his arms. It was especially Claret's successful effort against concubinage that excited the degenerate to make an attempt on the archbishop's life. A secret plot was concocted, and an attack was made upon him which resulted in his being dangerously wounded. Prevented from efficient activity by the constant peril to his life, he asked the Pope to remove him from his archbishopric. The honorable appointment of confessor to Queen Isabella was given to him in 1860. Obedience alone prevailed on him to accept this office, but he remained the same apostle as before, full of zeal for souls. He withdrew as much as possible from life at the court and instead gave missions in the churches of Madrid, soon becoming the most beloved confessor in the city. His influence with the queen, which was very great, he used only for the benefit of the poor. Whenever he was traveling with the court, he preached and taught the catechism wherever they stopped. Seeing the evil caused by bad literature, he wrote and distributed very many good pamphlets, and founded the academic society of St. Michael for the spreading of good books.

In 1869, he went to Rome to participate in the Vatican Council. After its adjournment, he intended to seek rest for a time in the Pyrenees, but he was taken with a serious illness, and on October 8, 1870, received the reward of his tireless labors in the vineyard of the Lord." The Holiness of the Church in the Nineteenth Century: Saintly Men and Women By Rev. Konstantin Kempf, S.J. 1916


"From the very beginning of his apostolate, St. Anthony Mary Claret was known throughout the whole countryside for the many cures he performed. Primarily, his apostolic zeal was expended in the cure of souls, as fitted his priestly vocation; but his compassionate and fatherly heart beat with tender pity at the sight of bodily infirmities as well, and his boundless charity moved him to pray with great fervor for the relief of the sufferers.

As a missionary, the saint was once asked his secret of obtaining the wonderful graces and cures granted to his prayers. He answered: “I pray to Our Lady and demand results of her.” The questioner continued, “But suppose she does not give them?”—“Then I take hold of the hem of her robe and refuse to let go until she has granted what I want,” the saint replied. St. Anthony Mary Claret loved Mary devotedly and put boundless trust in her intercession. Moreover, he was wont to put first things first, for his healing powers were first applied to the soul, by administration of the sacraments. Then he would concern himself with the needs of the afflicted body.

Those who call on St. Anthony Claret do well to follow this example and put things in their proper order, the soul before the body. And from him, too, may they learn to cling tenaciously to Mary, whose Immaculate Heart he so loved to honor.

Prayer to Saint Anthony Mary Claret

(For the cure of cancer or other serious ailments.)

O Saint Anthony Mary Claret, who during thy life on earth wert often a solace to the afflicted, and didst love and tenderly compassionate the sick: interecede for me, as thou rejoicest in the reward of thy virtues: cast a glance of pity on me and grant my petition (mention it) if such be the will of God. Make my troubles your own. Speak a word to the Immaculate Heart of Mary to obtain by her powerful intercession the grace I yearn for so ardently, and a blessing that may strengthen me during life, assist me at the hour of death, and lead me on to a happy eternity. Amen. (One Our Father, Hail Mary and Glory.)

 Saint Anthony Mary Claret, Tabernacle and Purgatory, Benedictine Nuns  April 1959



No one has commented yet.

Leave a Comment

HTML Syntax: Allowed