“Confess therefore your sins one to another: and pray one for another, that you may be saved. For the continual prayer of a just man availeth much.”
–St. James
“For the continual prayer of a just man availeth much...” This Scripture verse is going to be the underlying theme for our Parish Lenten Mission series this year. Our Mission is entitled “Frere André (Brother André): The Miracle Man of Montreal.” Who was Frere André?
Frere André Bessette was a religious Brother of the Congregation of Holy Cross, C.S.C. (Perhaps we know this Congregation best for its University of Notre Dame in Indiana.) He lived from August 9th, 1845, to January 6th, the Feast of the Epiphany, 1937. He was 91 years-old. He entered the religious life with Holy Cross in November, 1870, at the College Notre-Dame in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. As a novice he was put to work as a porter–that is, the brother who answers the door, greets all visitors, and conveys the messages. The simplest work. No special skill needed. A role that can be filled by a brother who is not considered fit for any other task. The novice brother Bessette was to retain this lowly office for the rest of his life.
It was with misgiving that Holy Cross accepted him into their community at all. His health was too poor. Moreover he had no education, no intellectual aptitude, no cultivation. In short, nothing to recommend him as an asset to a congregation dedicated to education as part of its fundamental mission.
What he had though was a simple, strong Catholic faith which he had received from the milieu of the farm people of Quebec. It was a Catholic faith tested by poverty, by ill-health, by hunger, by being orphaned as a young boy, by the toil of migrant work in the United States. At the age of 25 Alfred Bessette came to the Congregation of Holy Cross with a faith-life already deeply marked by the Cross. And within that Catholic faith-life so marked by the Cross he nurtured a special devotion and friendship with St. Joseph, the foster-father of Jesus Our Lord.
The love and friendship with St. Joseph was what he shared with the many visitors with whom he talked in his office as porter. People would tell him their problems, unburdening themselves to a sympathetic ear. They would ask for prayers. He would always tell them: Pray to St. Joseph (“Priez St. Joseph”).
Frere André also had the inspired dream that the College should build a chapel in honor of St. Joseph. At first, he was unable to convince his Superior. Finally, after six years, the Superior gave his permission and the Brother began trying to raise money for it. Two years later a modest chapel of St. Joseph was opened. This was the inauspicious beginning for the now magnificent Shrine in Montreal of St. Joseph’s Oratory (L’Oratoire St. Joseph). The Oratory is still a popular place of pilgrimage today: a stark contrast to the mass unbelief and repudiation of Catholicism which has taken hold in oncefervently Catholic French Quebec.
By the time of his taking perpetual vows in 1874, Frere André had begun to acquire an unsought reputation as a miracle-man for the power of his prayers of intercession for the sick. He always credited the power of St. Joseph’s prayers for any favors received or miraculous cures. But people trusted the prayers of St. Joseph and Frere André. They sought him out, in greater and greater numbers. Upon his death in January, 1937, over one million people turned out to pay their respects. It was a mass-mourning such as Canada had never seen. And it extended into the United States where Frere André’s was well-known. Special trains were put at the disposal of visitors from the states of Maine, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire and Vermont to bring them to Montreal for the funeral.
During the conferences of this Lenten Mission we shall focus on the person of Frere André, who is now a canonized Saint of the Church. But we shall also consider the background of the times in which he lived and look for insights into the unbelief of our own day with the aim of avoiding its traps. Let us ask Frere André to intercede with his friend St. Joseph that we may gain good spiritual fruit from our Mission.
+Saint André Bessette, C.S.C.
“Brother André” 1845-1931
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes is Newton and Needham Massachusetts' oldest Roman Catholic Parish. Founded as Saint Mary Parish in 1870, it was renamed "Mary Immaculate of Lourdes" when the new Church was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1910. In addition to being a regular territorial parish of the Archdiocese of Boston it is also a "Mission Parish" since 2007 with a special apostolate for the Traditional Latin Mass (1962 Missal).
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Newton, MA 02464
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