SPIRITUALITY/MISSION
Trinity Icon

"The Congregation of Our Lady of the
Missions
owes its origin to the grace given to our Foundress
to understand that the Trinity itself
is the source of all missionary activity.
It was this insight that led her
under the impulse of the Spirit
to found a religious missionary congregation
whose members would live in communion with one another
by a profound union of contemplation and apostolic activity."
Constitutions Article 1
"The final goal of the Congregation's missionary
activity
is the glory of the Father
from whom the Son receives all
to whom he gives all back in praise
carrying with him to the bosom of the Trinity
the whole of creation redeemed by him."
Constitutions Article 6
The Congregation of Our Lady of the
Missions was founded by Euphrasie Barbier (1829-1893), a
native of Normandy, France. In religion she was called Marie du Couer de
Jesus. The Congregation dates its beginnings to 1861 in Lyon, France. Its work
was
the education of women and children, especially in "foreign missions".
Euphrasie felt the call to go to far
away lands to bring the Good News of the Gospel to those who had never heard it. At
the same time she felt herself drawn to contemplation of the Trinity and the divine
missions flowing therefrom for the salvation
of all.
In her first constitutions Euphrasie
explains the name of the Congregation: "By placing themselves under the title
of Our Lady of the Missions, the Sisters wish to honour in a very special way the divine
missions which were the sole object of Mary's deepest
orientation." When requesting the approval of the Constitutions in 1890,
Euphrasie was required to explain the term "divine missions" used in the
constitutions. She writes, "Regarding the expression 'divine missions', we do
not have in mind our own
poor missions but solely the mission of the Incarnate Word, sent by the Father to redeem
the human race, and the mission of the Holy Spirit, sent by the Father and the Son to
bring about the sanctification of Christ's Church. This is the raison d'etre of the
Institute and its special character both interior and exterior."
Euphrasie explained to the novices in
Lyon, that it is according to our capacity to receive within ourselves the outpouring of
love flowing from the Trinity that we in our turn can become "instruments of the
divine missions". More important than the works
we undertake, mission is essentially the witness of a soul that lives in God.
Because she centered her missionary spirituality on the divine missions, Euphrasie
understood that mission is everywhere. The Gospel is proclaimed in the first place
by life witness
- the personal witness of each missionary.
Mary occupies a central place in the
spirituality of the Congregation. Two episodes in Mary's life and mission attracted
Euphrasie, the Visitation and Pentecost. These she chose as the patron feasts of the
Congregation.
Mary, the Virgin of the Visitation, a
messenger of joy carrying out a humble, hidden service is an instrument of the divine
missions. Mary is the model of every missionary.
Elizabeth Schussler Fiorenza notes that "in Luke's account of the Visitation, the
unwed pregnant Mary does not remain alone with her anxieties but seeks support from
another woman, Elizabeth. Filled with the Holy Spirit who exalts the violated and
makes the fruit of illegitimacy holy, the two women rejoice in God's liberating
action. In the Magnificat, the pregnant Mary enunciates God's salvation and well
being to the humiliated and downtrodden. The future of God's well-being for all
without exception
is not to be awaited passively. It is being born among us today, from our flesh and
blood, from our commitments and struggles for justice. It becomes born as the hope
for those who are without hope."
Similarly, in the upper rooom, Mary
is there with the other disciples when the untamed, unpredictable spirit of God comes upon
them all. In this moment of wind and fire they are filled with courage and power
which enables them to lay aside their fears and
confusion. Even more, the outpouring of God's gracious love inspires boldness and
facility in preaching the gospel, and working together for the transformation of the
world. It is this mission, rooted in God and embracing the struggle for liberation
and
justice, that Euphrasie asks her sisters to undertake.
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