29 October
BLESSED
MICHAEL RUA
priest
Memorial
Michael Rua was born at Turin on 9 June 1837. While still a child he met Don Bosco who with a symbolic gesture foretold that they would ‘go halves’ together in their future life. In 1855 he made his first vows; while still a subdeacon he was chosen as spiritual director of the recently founded Congregation. When he became Don Bosco’s successor in 1888 it seemed that he had indeed ‘gone halves’ with him in everything. He displayed a creative fidelity to the apostolic aspirations and initiatives of the Founder; he reflected the same attractive fatherliness; he developed the Founder’s works and continued his apostolic ardor in favor of the young, adapting the works to changing social situations. During the 22 years he was Rector Major he made numerous journeys to support and consolidate the work of the confreres, whom he frequently encouraged by both circular and personal letters which constitute an authoritative interpretation of the spirit of the Founder. He died at Turin on 6 April 1910, and was beatified by Paul VI on 29 October 1972.
From
the Common of Pastors or from the Common of Men Saints, for
religious, with psalms of the day as in the psalter.
Office of Readings
SECOND READING
From
a circular letter of Blessed Michael Rua, 29 November 1899
The
practice of obedience and sacrifice
Among
all the virtues the one most difficult for human nature is obedience.
To have to renounce one’s own will and judgment, to have to depend
on others not only as regards action but also in thinking and judging
— in things great and small and even in what concerns the salvation
of the soul — are things much harder to bear than the practice of
the most severe penances. Obedience strikes at man in his most
intimate being, i.e. in his free will. But obedience cannot be
disjoined from the spirit of sacrifice, which is that virtue by which
when circumstances are most difficult a religious does not give way
to imagination or feelings or first reactions but, in the light of
reason strengthened by faith, comes to realize that whatever
unpleasant things may happen to him will redound to his spiritual
advantage. One who has the good fortune to possess the spirit of
sacrifice, far from being downcast and complaining, even amid the
most painful suffering, suppresses in his heart any natural
repugnance and looks up to heaven with generous resignation saying:
Lord, if this is how you want it, your will be done.
On this virtue is founded the beatitude of suffering which Jesus Christ made known to the world; and this was the path our Founder trod. His life could be described as a continual sacrifice, to such an extent that without a spirit of self-abnegation we could not call ourselves his sons. Furthermore, without sacrifice one could not hope to do good to the young, because at every step one would become impatient, angry or discouraged. It would be impossible to tolerate the defects of confreres or to obey Superiors. Without a spirit of sacrifice one would not have the strength to practice poverty, would run the risk of shipwreck as regards chastity, and would render perseverance in vocation very doubtful. Every morning in our prayer of consecration to Mary most Holy we ask that, as far as possible, by our words and conduct and good example we may be living representations of Jesus. But when is it, my dear sons, that we are most similar to the Divine Savior, when it is it that we represent him most closely in the eyes of those whose souls we have to save? It is especially when through our status as religious, through our priestly ministry, we have something to suffer. When we come to die, it will not be the pleasures we enjoyed, the honors we received, the riches we acquired that will be our consolation, but rather what we did through the sacrifices we suffered for Jesus.
RESPONSORY cf. Eph 4,1.3.4; Rom 15,5.6
Lead
a life worthy of the calling to which you have been called,
maintaining the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. * There
is one hope that belongs to your call.
May God grant
you to live in such harmony with one another, that together you may
with one voice glorify God. There is…
Or:
SECOND READING
From
a homily of Pope Paul VI, 29 October 1972.
Son, disciple, imitator
Let
us meditate for a moment, on the characteristic aspect of Don Rua,
the aspect which defines him, and which with one look tells us
everything and makes us understand.
Who
is Don Rua? He is the first successor of Don Bosco, the holy Founder
of the Salesians. And why is Don Rua now beatified, that is,
glorified? He is beatified and glorified precisely because he is his
successor, that is, continuer: son, disciple, imitator. He made the
example of the Saint a school, and his personal work an institution
extended, it may be said, all over the earth. He made his life a
history his rule a spirit, his holiness a type, a model. He made the
spring a stream, a river. The marvelous fruitfulness of the Salesian
family, one of the greatest and most significant phenomena of the
perennial vitality of the Church in the last century and in ours, had
in Don Bosco its origin, in Don Rua its continuation. It was this
follower of his that from the humble beginnings at Valdocco served
the Salesian work in its expansion, realized the felicity of the
formula, developed it according to the letter, but with ever inspired
newness. Don Rua was the most faithful, therefore the most humble and
at the same time the most valiant of the sons of Don Bosco.
What
does Don Rua teach us? How was he able to rise to the glory of
paradise and to the exaltation that the Church gives to him today?
Just by teaching us to be continuers; that is, followers, pupils,
teachers, if you like, provided we are disciples of a higher Teacher.
Let us amplify the lesson that we receive from him: he teaches the
Su1esians to remain Salesians, ever faithful sons of their Founder;
and then he teaches everyone reverence for the magisterium, which
presides over the thought and economy of Christian life.
The
dignity of the disciple depends on the wisdom of the Master.
Imitation in the disciple is no longer passiveness, or servility; it
is leaven, it is perfection (cf. 1 Cor 4,16). The capacity of the
pupil to develop his own personality is derived, in fact, from that
art of drawing out, the teacher’s art, which is called education,
an art that guides the logical but free and original, expansion of
the pupil’s virtual qualities. We mean that the virtues of which
Don Rua is a model and which the Church made the reason for his
beatification, are still the evangelical virtues of the humble who
adhere to the prophetic school of holiness; of the humble to whom the
highest mysteries of divinity and of mankind are revealed (cf. Mt
11,25).
If
Don Rua is really qualified as the first continuer of the example and
work of Don Bosco, we will always like to think of him again and
venerate him in this ascetical aspect of humility and dependence. But
we
will never be able to forget the operative aspect of this
small but great man, all the more so in that we, in the mentality of
our times which is inclined to measure the stature of a man by his
capacity for action, are aware we have before us an athlete of
apostolic activity which, still in the mould of Don Bosco but with,
growing dimensions of its own, confers on Don Rua the spiritual and
human proportions of greatness.
RESPONSORY
1 Cor 11, 1-2; Phil 4,1
Maintain
the traditions even as I have delivered them to you. * Stand firm
in the Lord.
Be imitators of me, as I am of Christ. Stand firm...
Concluding
prayer as at Morning Prayer.
Morning
Prayer
Benedictus ant. The Spirit of the Lord has consecrated me to proclaim a joyful message to the poor.
INTERCESSIONS
At
the beginning of this new day, the memorial of Blessed Michael Rua,
let us raise our prayers and supplications to God our Father
God
our Father, strengthen our fidelity.
Through
the grace that comes from you, Father, you enable the ministers of
your Church to work with patience in charity:
— grant courage
and perseverance to those you have called to work for the Kingdom.
In
Blessed Michael Rua you have given us a model of total availability
to your call:
— grant that by imitating his example we may
love and serve Christ in the young with whom we come in contact.
In
Blessed Michael you have given us an example of work and temperance:
— help us to bear witness to the values of evangelical
poverty by our way of life.
You
made of Blessed Michael the faithful collaborator of St John Bosco
and the continuer of his work:
— grant also to us a filial
spirit so that we may progress along the way of holiness.
You
constituted Blessed Michael Rua as the responsible leader of a
religious Family in rapid expansion:
— enlighten with your
Spirit of wisdom those whom you call to guide the Salesian
Congregation.
Our Father.
God
our Father, you have given to your priest, Blessed Michael Rua, the
spiritual heir of Saint John Bosco, the ability to form in the young
your divine image; grant also that we, who are called to educate
young people, may make known the true countenance of Christ, your
Son. He is God, and lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the
Holy Spirit, for ever and ever.
Evening
Prayer
Magnificat
ant. With the help of the Holy Spirit guard the legacy you have
received: be vigilant, endure pain and suffering, proclaim the
Gospel, fulfill your ministry.
INTERCESSIONS
As
evening falls we make our humble prayer to God our Father, who calls
all his children to holiness, and let us say:
Lord, sanctify your faithful people.
You
led Michael Rua, while still a boy, to give himself entirely to you
at the school of St John Bosco:
— grant that we too may be
always faithful to the charism of our Founder.
You
gave to Blessed Michael Rua the heart of a good and gentle shepherd:
— inspire all the members of the Salesian Family to serve you
in their brothers and sisters with a spirit of initiative.
You
enlightened him in the guidance of the work of missionary expansion
of the Salesian Family:
— increase our zeal for your Kingdom,
and prosper the labors of our missionaries.
In
every age you call men and women to follow the obedient, poor and
chaste Christ through complete self-donation:
— raise up
generous vocations for the Church and the Salesian Family.
Through
the merits and intercession of the Virgin Mary and of all the saints:
— grant that the faithful departed may live for ever with you
in the blessedness of your Kingdom.
Our
Father.
Concluding
prayer as at Morning Prayer.