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Catherine's Canonisation Cause

Let Loose the Charism of Mercy - Anne Hannon rsm

(This is the text of a reflection given by Anne Hannon rsm at the celebration of 160 years of Sisters of Mercy in Sunderland, England, on November 26 2003.)

On her deathbed Catherine's bequest to all Sisters of Mercy was spelled out quite clearly, 'My legacy to the Institute is Charity'. That this was clearly understood, is vouched for, by Mother Austin Carroll, a charismatic foundress of the Sisters of Mercy in North America. 'The blessing of unity still dwells amongst us ...this is the Spirit of the order indeed - the true spirit of Mercy - flowing to US (1), All Sisters of Mercy know this to be true from personal experience, irrespective of the many times when we personally may have failed to allow love to flow through us to others. The Charism of Mercy is all about love, a commodity spoken about and sung about but never experienced in a lifetime by some people. Mercy is about 'bringing one's heart to misery, to wretchedness' (2). Action with and for those who suffer is the concrete expression of the compassionate life, and the final criterion of being a Christian. Acts of Mercy do not detract from moments of prayer, worship and contemplation but are themselves such moments. Why was this so for Catherine? Surely, it was because she modelled herself on a Christ, who did not cling to his divinity, but became one of us and could be found by choice where there were hungry, thirsty, marginalized, alienated, sick and imprisoned people. Catherine saw the works of mercy as a direct means of encountering and coming into union with God. She also saw that when we live in ongoing conversation with Christ, and allow His Spirit to guide our lives, we recognise Him in the poor, the oppressed and the downtrodden. Yes, we will hear His cry and respond to it wherever he reveals Himself. Thus, for Catherine and for us action and prayer are two aspects of the same discipline.

How did Catherine come to be such an apostle of love and Mercy?

Catherine grew up in a society where, thanks to the Penal Code, the poor were wretchedly poor; the sick were helplessly sick and the ignorant were hopelessly ignorant. The McAuleys were people of wealth and property who tended to be Anglo-Irish in their social life, attitudes and sympathies. 'If Catherine had a father other than James McAuley, she might have lived a graceful life in polite society, insulated from the sufferings of Ireland's poor and fed on false assumptions concerning them.' (3) James McAuley's Catholicism had survived the trials of penal deprivation and was all the stronger because of the hardships encountered and overcome. Catherine as a young child often witnessed his social concern when he brought the children of the poor into his own home and instructed them in the faith. From him she learned steadfast faith, integrity of character, practical love for the poor and sensitivity to their needs. Following her father's death Catherine endured a transition from wealth to poverty and suffered two decades of a siege on her religious convictions, from the sincere but misguided friends whose charity she was forced to accept. It was this personal experience of being the recipient of handouts which made her own giving so gracious and kindly. The casual and patronizing giving of alms was not for her. She was later to declare that 'there are things which the poor prize more highly than gold, though they cost the donor nothing. Among these are the kind word, the gentle compassionate look and the patient hearing of sorrows'. When Catherine joined the Callaghan household in 1803 she found scope for a ministry among the unlearned and deprived in the locality. While the Callaghans were opposed to Catholicism they consented to her good work on condition that there were no manifestations of popery in the house. But Catherine was practised in the art of finding God everywhere. She soon occupied in the hearts of the Callaghans the place of the daughter they had always wished for. Through her constant love for them and her unfailing witness to Gospel values they were both converted to Catholicism. Eventually, William Callaghan left her the bulk of his fortune, convinced that she would put it to good use. She now had the financial wherewithal to make her mission of mercy possible and to share her charism with a group of like-minded women. And so the Mercy Charism was let loose on an unsuspecting Dublin and on a world-wide scale.

CatherineCatherine was a woman for her time and for all times. She had her finger on the pulse of things and she was an expert at reading the signs of the times. Long before she was financially able to do so, she provided for the spiritual and temporal needs of the poor. For Christ she was ready to renounce comfort, and social position and to accept instead cold, hunger and want. 'God knows I would rather be cold and hungry than that the poor of Kingstown or elsewhere should be deprived of any consolation in our power to afford them'. No wonder then, when she became an heiress she saw her inherited wealth as a trust to be expended on others by providing services which were not then on offer. She became both an educator and a social worker, who initiated new services under the banner of mercy, which she declared to be 'the principal path marked out by Jesus Christ [which] has in all ages of the Church excited the faithful in a particular manner to instruct and comfort the sick and dying poor, as in them they regarded the person of our Divine Master'. She aimed to teach the poor so that they might help themselves and so become independent and earn their own living. She penetrated to the heart of poverty and was truly a 'Jesus person' who left herself constantly open and receptive to all, sympathising with the afflicted as Jesus did, and relieving distress after his example. Lack of resources never deterred her, because she put her whole confidence in God and her invariable answer to her less trusting companions was, 'Prayer will do more... than all the money in the Bank of Ireland'.

Catherine believed that 'No work of charity could be more productive of good in society or more conducive to the happiness of the poor than the careful instruction of women.' Side by side with this, she was determined to provide shelter for young unemployed girls for whom no adequate services were at that time available. How was she to see her dream fulfilled? Determined to place her house where the poor would be visible to the rich and where young women could find employment nearby, she bought a plot in Baggot Street, a highly fashionable part of residential Dublin. She planned a building that would include dormitories, schoolrooms, an oratory and living quarters for herself and for the associates she hoped to attract to her new enterprise. Remember Catherine McAuley was a lay person, the holder of a special charism and she hoped through this new building to let that charism loose on the world. When the house was built it was very conventual in style and it was in the building of this house that Catherine set out on the road to becoming a nun. She built the house to help the poor and the poor helped her to become a nun. Kitty's Folly, as the house became known, started out as a source of annoyance to the Baggot Street locality, which she was reputedly seen to be downgrading. On the positive side, at the same time two companions joined Catherine and they took up residence in Baggot Street on September 24, feast of Our Lady of Mercy.

Why did Catherine decide to become a nun?

We are told by one of her early companions that 'she was convinced that Almighty God required her to make some lasting efforts for the relief of the suffering and instruction of the ignorant, and she thought of establishing a society of pious secular ladies who would devote themselves to this service, with the liberty to return to their worldly life when they no longer felt inclined to discharge such duties She did not like the idea of religious vows and disapproved of conventual observances, having constantly heard them ridiculed and misrepresented by Protestants'. Meanwhile, the little group were living a conventual life, albeit without vows. Uniformity of dress was adopted, and a common timetable was drafted. The group took to occupying a separate section of the house for spiritual exercises and daily living, which became in effect a type of enclosure. The time-table specified a regular time for rising, for Mass, prayer, work and recreation. Neither Archbishop Murray nor Catherine had envisaged 'the idea of a convent starting up of itself in this manner'. But eventually the Archbishop delivered an ultimatum that she either become a religious or withdraw from the project. The choice presented to her was agonizing. On the one hand, she feared that her work would come to an end or that they would lose the freedom to carry it out in the manner she had planned. On the other hand, the idealism and potential of her now fourteen companions and the promise of the Archbishop that she could continue to pursue her work, and that her Institute would have a status of its own independent of other religious congregations, convinced her to agree. So to continue her work for the poor she became a nun, and she became a nun with her whole being. Her willingness to proceed along a way for which she had no burning desire - the way of religious life, is perhaps the greatest moment of her profound openness to the Spirit speaking to her through circumstances and the needs of the people whom she wished to serve and through the canonical regulations of the church she loved so deeply. That Catherine McAuley thus yielded to the circumstances of her day and established a religious community into which she incorporated the same goals of minimal religiosity and maximal service of God and man is a great tribute to her understanding of an integrated spirituality and a tremendous heritage to us. It challenges us to look at the signs of the times and to put her charism at work today for the salvation and sanctification of the world. Catherine's heart seemed to expand with the needs. The early Sisters and Catherine's daughters to this day are often called to accomplish work beyond what they judge their natural and supernatural resources to be. Yet they learned to give all and to trust in a provident God.

On December 12th 1831, Catherine, Anne Doyle and Elizabeth Harley were professed. The Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy assumed canonical status that day. As the late Cardinal Basil Hume said in Westminster at the Bi-Centenary celebration 'I have a suspicion that if Archbishop Murray had not told Catherine to become a novice at the age of fifty-two and, what is more, in another religious order, you dear Sisters, would probably have not been here today. The charism which comes from God often proves to be a fragile thing unless it is protected and sustained by the institution. The genius of the foundress only survived after death, because her work no longer depended on her alone. The Church gave it permanence and stability (4). Through her action in becoming a Sister Catherine let loose her Charism among her religious community, among the Church community and among the world community.

CatherineEight years after the foundation of the Institute Catherine wrote, 'We were joined so fast that it became a matter of general wonder'. Called by God to share life in the community of Mercy, these first Sisters of Mercy cherished the dignity of every human person. The poor they longed to serve were those in want, marginalised, powerless, victimized, struggling to live lives of dignity in justice and equity. In responding to this call of Mercy the lives of Catherine and her followers radiated compassion and love and invited such a great number of new members that Catherine said,' The fire that Christ cast upon them is kindling very fast'. Needs everywhere were so great that they challenged the limits of ability to respond. But respond they did, and, during Catherine's short ten years as a Sister of Mercy the works of Mercy spread over Ireland and England. Within a few years after her death, convents began in Newfoundland, the United States, Australia and New Zealand. In each foundation visitation of the poor began at once. As long as the poor were taken care of, Catherine urged her sisters to adapt to local circumstances because she did not want the limitations of one locality to hamper the work of another area. Catherine felt the pain of life and wept for it. She felt the joy too and rejoiced in it and she wanted to replace the pain with the joy.

Now that the Mercy Sisters are declining in number and our age profile is on the increase, the question is often asked, 'Will the Mercy Charism survive?

It will because it must. Mercy is needed as much in our time as it was in Catherine's. What is the unique face of God's Mercy needing to be revealed to the world today? As I see it there is an Ocean of God's Mercy. Within this ocean there are various groups called to carry out the Mercy of Jesus through the charism of Mercy. There is the diminishing group of consecrated Mercy women; there are associates; and there are colleagues in ministry who have appropriated the charism of mercy. All of us in our different ways are enriched by Catherine's charism. We are aware that Mercy is always mutual - there is no such thing as one way mercy. In giving we receive. We are essential for Mercy to each other and to all we meet in ministry. We are the face of God's Mercy to others. We are the listening ear to people. We have a legacy from Catherine and she has shown us how to use it. We have the same Spirit spurring us on - a force Who is energising us. Our life together is learning how to be Mercy to each other. We find Mercy where we are by being who we are, all instruments of Mercy. We are contemplatives in action. We each hold the charism but we can't hug it to ourselves. It is for others. Lets spread it far and wide. From Baggot Street came forth enterprises to help the poor, journeys to far-off lands, sanctity, and relevance to the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. How relevant we shall be to the twenty first century will depend on how clearly we see the signs of the times, how we imitate Catherine in listening to the Spirit and in hearing the voices of needy people who cry out for Mercy all over the world. So as we consecrated women of mercy become fewer we call on all active Catholics to share the Mercy Charism, to see the needs as Catherine saw them. In our day, in spite of energetic measures to alleviate the ills of society - poverty, sickness, ignorance and addiction abound; the alienated, the lonely, the deserted, and the physically abused abound. In our world of indifference concerning belief, the erosion of faith in God and in transcendent reality have spawned self-destructive greed, selfishness, and life-styles of out-manoeuvring one another. Out of consequent erosion of integrity in word and work, dishonesty, brutality and destructiveness abound. When was the flow of God's Mercy more needed? Catherine brought her heart to misery. By courageous, contagious concern for the spiritual and temporal welfare of the poor, the sick, and the ignorant, she broke through the impossibilities of her time. She animated many to walk with her... ... She connected the rich to the poor; the healthy to the sick; the educated and skilled to the uninstructed; the influential to those of no consequence; the powerful to the weak. She let loose the charism of Mercy. Can we do the same?

 

  1. Oral tradition of the Sisters of Mercy, Sister Austin Carroll's Life of Catherine McAuley (New York and Philadelphia: P.J. Kennedy & Sons, 1866), p.435
  2. Johanna Regan, Tender Courage, Gwynedd-Mercy College,(Gwynedd Valley, Pennsylvania) 1978
  3. Johanna Regan, Tender Courage
  4. Basil Hume on the occasion of Bi-Centenary of Catherine's birth, in Westminster Cathedral, September 24th,1981

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Mercy Facts "Catherine saw her congregation as a means of giving life to the local church." M. Carmel Bourke
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