Tuesday, 26 January 2021 11:56

Giving thanks for the lives of SVD saints

 

St Arnold Janssen for webDivine Word Missionary communities throughout the AUS Province and the world have had much to celebrate in January, with the commemoration of two SVD saints – St Arnold Janssen and St Joseph Freinademetz.

St Arnold’s feast day was on January 15, the date of his death in 1909 in Steyl, Holland. He was the founder of the Divine Word Missionaries, as well as two orders of Religious Women, the Servant Sisters of the Holy Spirit and the Servants of the Holy Spirit of Perpetual Adoration.

St Arnold began his priestly life as a diocesan priest in his home country of Germany, but these were difficult times for the Catholic Church in Germany. Bismark unleashed the ‘Kulturkampf’ with a series of anti-Catholic laws, which led to the expulsion of priests and religious and to the imprisonment of many bishops.

In this chaotic situation Arnold Janssen proposed that some of the expelled priests could go to the foreign missions or at least help in the preparation of missionaries. Slowly but surely, and with a little prodding from the Apostolic Vicar of Hong Kong, Arnold discovered that God was calling him to undertake this difficult task. Many people said that he was not the right man for the job, or that the times were not right for such a project. Arnold's answer was, “The Lord challenges our faith to do something new, precisely when so many things are collapsing in the Church.”

With the support of a number of bishops, Arnold inaugurated the mission house on September 8, 1875 in Steyl, Holland, and thus began the Divine Word Missionaries. On March 2, 1879 the first two missionaries set out for China. One of these was Joseph Freinademetz. 

St Joseph, who’s feast day is on January 29, stayed for many years in China, during turbulent political and cultural times, and he faced many challenges, but he came to know and love the Chinese people and was loved by them in return.

“I do not consider missionary life as a sacrifice I offer to God, but as the greatest grace that God could ever have lavished upon me,” he said. 

Meanwhile, back in Steyl, from practically the very beginning, a group of women, including Blessed Maria Helena Stollenwerk, served the mission house community as volunteers. But their wish was to serve the mission as Religious Sisters. The faithful, selfless service they freely offered, and a recognition of the important role women could play in missionary outreach, urged Arnold to found the mission congregation of the “Servants of the Holy Spirit,” SSpS, on December 8, 1889. The first Sisters left for Argentina in 1895.

St Joseph Freinademetz 350In 1896 Fr Arnold selected some of the Sisters to form a cloistered branch, to be known as “Servants of the Holy Spirit of Perpetual Adoration”, SSpSAP. Their service to mission would be to maintain an uninterrupted adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, praying day and night for the church and especially for the other two active missionary congregations.

Today, the members of the Society of the Divine Word, the Missionary Sisters and the Perpetual Adoration Sisters number about 10,000 and are present in 80 countries around the world. The Divine Word Missionaries are the largest international missionary congregation in the Catholic Church.

Celebrating the Eucharist at the SVD Marsfield community on St Arnold’s feast day, Fr Nick de Groot SVD said three things stood out about the life of Arnold Janssen: his prayer life, perseverance and trust in God, and his quiet suffering.

“Awareness of God’s abiding presence, which led him to be open to the Holy Spirit, is the most fundamental characteristic of his spirituality,” Fr Nick said.

“’The Word became flesh and dwelt among us’. That was his foundation and his life. God’s love is ever here present among us.

“Arnold’s love for the Sacred Heart sustained him in his priestly ministry, and drew him into the ever bigger picture of God’s unconditional love for all people. ‘Love alone widens the human heart’.”

The gospel that was read at the SVD Marsfield community on his feast day was the one that St Arnold grew up with in his youth – St John’s prologue (John1:1).

“It formed the core of his prayer life, it formed the foundation of his trust in a loving God, and it gave him the strength to endure the pain and humiliations that came his way,” Fr Nick said.

“I pray that he will bless this house and all the people who come here, may we be ever grateful for the life that he gave and shared with us.”