Holy Abandonment: The Fundamental Spirit of The Stigmatine Founder

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Holy Abandonment:

The Fundamental Spirit of the Stigmatine Founder

Rev. Joseph Charles Henchey, CSS

Table of Contents:

Subject
I. Charism in General

Page
2

A. Centered in Jesus Christ

B. Various Factors

II. A Gradual Formation of the Charism of St. Gaspar Bertoni

A. Centered on Jesus Christ

B. The Espousals of Mary and Joseph: a Mirror of Christ

C. The Views of Fr. Anthony Rosmini

Conclusion

10

About the Author

11

Holy Abandonment

I.

Rev. Joseph Henchey, CSS

2 / 11

Charisms in General
A.

Centered on Jesus Christ

The charism of a Founder, or Foundress, is a unity made up of a rather wide


variety of elements, inspired by the Holy Spirit, in accord with the human nature of the
individual and with the contemporary needs of the Church.
Among the Founders,
some of these following elements would be in common: a great faith in God, a
developed devotion for Jesus Christ and the Eucharist, to the Blessed Mother, to the
Saints - or, to one in particular, often chosen as a model [e.g., St. Ignatius of Loyola
chose St. Ignatius of Antioch, the name-sake, as his model; St. Gaspar Bertoni chose
St. Ignatius as his model].
Some of these elements might predominate in an individual to the extent that a
particular charism might be called Trinitarian, Christological, Pneumatological,
Mariological. The Founders of the Trinitarians and the Missionaries of the Most Holy
Trinity would have a Trinitarian charism; the Jesuits, the Redemptorists [even though
St. Alphonsus Liguori wrote so much and so beautifully about Mary], the Passionists,
the Resurrectionists and the Stigmatines - would have a Christological Charism. The
Missionaries of the Paraclete, or of the Holy Spirit, would have a Pneumatological
Charism. A good many Congregations and Orders are founded with a clearly Marian
Charism: the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, the Servites of Mary.
It would seem that the fundamental devotions of these various religious groups
would flow from whatsoever their basic charism is. In some ways, it would seem that
the main devotion of the Congregation would be inspired by its charism.
B.

Various Factors

The Charism of any Founder is a complex reality made up of a variety of


elements. This was brought out in one of the papers delivered during the Holy Year of
1975, for the second centenary of the death of St. Paul of the Cross, the Founder of
the Passionists. A Congress was held in Rome to commemorate both events, entitled:
The Wisdom of the Cross Today.
1.
Personality, Grace, History, Doctrine, Experience, Church: a Passionist Fathe r
developed the charism of his Founder, St. Paul of the Cross. In the course of his
study, he pointed out that according to many interpreters, these might be considered
as some of the basic elements comprising a charism of a Founder:
-

the personality of the Founder, with his qualities, or natural and supernatual
characteristics;
his historical background , or environment and times, as well as the society in
which any given foundation, or spirituality came to light;

Holy Abandonment

Rev. Joseph Henchey, CSS

3 / 11

the special grace from God, as the supernatural elements which moved and
accompanied the work of the foundation of a religious family, and therefore, of
its spirituality;
the preference for a certain truth of the faith, or at least, for a particular manner
of conceiving, emphasizing, and formulating that truth - this is the so-called
doctrinal factor.
a determined virtue , or several virtues, which a spirituality suggests to be
achieved in a particular manner, and this in imitation of Christ, in accord with
the teaching and experience of the Founder;
the end, and both the immediate and secondary specific scope, remembering
the traditional distinction from the primary end, which was understood as the
sanctification and salvation of the members - and which is common to all
religious. The sixth element here is more the Mission within the Church which
the initiator of a foundation and of a spirituality proposes. From this ultimate
1
element in some way, proceed many other aspects .

2.
A Basic Christian Experience: for the Passionists, the Passion of the Lord
Jesus Christ is the unifying center of a certain style of living Christianity. Christ is the
point of convergence and the living center for all Christians. The Christian experience
appears, therefore, as a series of relationships with Christ, the Savior: at times, in a
Pneumatological, or Mariological charism, achieved through the Holy Spirit, or
through the Blessed Virgin Mary. These multiple relationships are all posited by the
faith: each one of them incarnates an aspect of faith in Jesus Christ, realizing an
aspect of union with Christ, a manner of existing before God, and before His word,
which characterizes the Christian experience.
3.
Directly through Christ, Indirectly Through Mary: Christ asks His Apostles to
teach, to baptize, to govern - but, Jesus Himself remains the soul of all this, the
invisible power in the Holy Spirit, sustaining the entire Apostolic Mission. The
Christian experience appears therefore as a net of relationships all centered on
Jesus Christ: either directly, through some mystery f His life, or indirectly through the
Blessed Mother, or one of the saints. These relationships might be summed up in the
2
word of adherence to Christ, based on the data of divine revelation .
4.
The Church genuinely experiences Christ: the experience in the Church is
the baptismal, sacramental experience of Jesus Christ - in that the meditation f the
Church of each age is to render actual, in time, the mediation of Jesus Himself. Christ
is the Way, in that by means of Him, as presented through the Church, we accede to
the Father.

cf. Piergiorgio Nesti, CP, quoting A. Matanic, OFM, Pont. Athen. Anton. Rma 1971, p. 17; Fr. Nestis article
entitled, Principio biblico teologico della Spiritualita Passionista, in: La Sapienza della Croce oggi 2 1975,
Torino: LDC pp. 81, ff].
2
cf. J. Morroux, Lesperienza cristiana - Introduzione a una teologia. Brescia: Morcellilana 1956, pp. 117, ff.

Holy Abandonment

II.

Rev. Joseph Henchey, CSS

4 / 11

A Gradual Formation of the Charism of St. Gaspar Bertoni


A.

Centered on Jesus Christ

1.
Abandonment into the Hands of the Father: the spirituality of Fr. Bertoni
developed in an atmosphere of total abandonment into the hands of God, and total
availability to the Church. The fundamental example of his daily life was Jesus Christ.
Fr. Bertoni experienced this consciousness of his own nothingness resulting from the
concept of creation: all was in the hands of God, having originally flowed from the
Creator. From this basic attitude of faith, Fr. Bertoni gradually developed a very solid
spiritual life, totally imbued with a reverential fear, or profound respect, tender love and
confident hope.
a.
stated:

Follow God, not Precede Him: Fr. Marani, who was his first successor,

..We ought to follow God, and not go ahead of Him - my most beloved Founder
3
and Father repeated so often through his life... .
...Let us leave room for God to act - He knows what to do, and how to do it... Let us
leave it up to the Lord, He Who has disposed all things well!...
These are basic principles in the spirituality of Fr. Bertoni, found in his letters to
Mother Naudet.
b.
Fr. Bertonis experienced Stigmata: during the more critical moments
of his life, he remained within the serenity of abandonment into the hands of God. He
never received the stigmata, of course, as did St. Francis of Assisi, but perhaps
various painful moments of his life could be considered as the great wounds, or his
vivid experience of Jesus Christ. This would be the type lived Stigmata:
-

deaths that visited the Bertoni home during his formative years, from about 9
years of age until he was 14;
- the separation of his father and mother;
- the life-long illnesses that he endured - a veritable martyrdom;
- the slow development of the Congregation that he founded - on the day of Fr.
Bertonis Beatification, Pope Paul VI made reference to the second miracle
being the Congregation itself!
- his extreme apostolic limitations brought on by his confinement, always
adapting to do whatever he could - with some ministries perhaps, humanly
speaking, having failed.
These rather painful lived experiences of his routine existence continually
offered the matter for his daily holocaust, and, at the same time, they afforded the
opportunity of adapting his Apostolic Missionary response.

cf. Fr. Nello Dalle Vedove, Il Modello di S. Abbandono, p. 210.

Holy Abandonment

Rev. Joseph Henchey, CSS

5 / 11

2.
Heroic Faith, Hope and Charity in lived Events: these various elements formed
a specific spirit, an attitude of his life of heroic faith, hope and charity. Fr. Bertoni
received great hope from the spiritual direction and education that he received - but
the events of his life offered him the foundation for this life of Holy Abandonment.
3.
His Boy-hood Sonnet: Wounds of Love and the Nuptial Theme: Indications of
his charism which was taking shape may be found at various periods, dispersed
throughout his life of which we have some written record, often in his own hand - as
well as what others close to him said about him. There is an extraordinary sonnet
attributed to him about the time of his First Communion - which shows a level of Italian
which to any non-Italian might seem extraordinarily advanced. In this composition
there are fused the elements of the nuptials together with wounds of love, perhaps
taken from the Dominican-Carmelite Tradition noted above [cf. pages 22-26 of these
notes above]. There follows here an approximate translation of this poem:
...From that day in a hidden distinct valley,
Seated on the banks of a small lake reflecting like a mirror,
That I gave myself over to contemplating the beautiful visage of love itself;
4

I suffer from a wound that cannot be medicated ,


Since I no longer saw it again; all that remained was
The burning arrow which had penetrated my heart
O, my poor heart! Separated from my soul,
What kind of life could you ever expect to live in that state?
I groaned trying to hide my suffering from my soul
Which no one could ever heal, except for the One Who had wounded me.
Who could ever believe this?
To medicate my wound, it was sufficient t see that
Today, a long procession of pierced hearts,
5

Follows the love that triumphs .


4.
Parallels with St. John of the Cross and his Spiritual Canticle : the lamentations
of the Spouse in the Spiritual Canticle of St. John of the Cross seems to be
expressed in this Sonnet that has remained among the papers of Fr. Bertoni. It would
seem to those not familiar with the Italian education system of two centuries ago that
this was a later composition than the period of his First Holy Communion. He
expresses himself as languishing from the wound that cannot be medicated, from what
he was able to contemplate as in a mirror, the most beautiful visage of love. With his
heart seemingly separated from his soul, because of that flaming arrow that had
pierced it, he was unable to explain to anyone his suffering, because no one could
ever have medicated it, except the One Who had wounded him. This concept is fund
in a variety of places in Scripture:
4
5

cf. St. John of the Cross, Spiritual Canticle, Stanza l, n. 2


cf.Fr.Nello Dalle Vedove, La Giovenezza, p. 253, cf. also Ps 41:4; 38:3; Rm 12:15].

Holy Abandonment

Rev. Joseph Henchey, CSS

6 / 11

Pity me, Yahweh, I have no strength left, heal me! [cf. Ps 6:2]
Yahweh, the Restorer of Jerusalem. He brought back Israels exiles, healing their
broken hearts [cf. Ps 147:3].
He has torn us to pieces, but He will heal us... He will bandage our wounds.... [cf. Ho
6:2].
5.
Fr. Bertonis Jesuit Models: Indirect Imitation of Christ: in this same poem,
one can see a characteristic of the Stigmatine Founder: his repeated choices of
models to follow in life. In his early years, as a young man, his model was the Jesuit
saint, St. Aloysius Gonzaga. The concept of imitation was not reduced to an
imitation of exterior acts, but it was rather a consistent quest of this way of life which
governed his activities and attitudes. It was an indirect imitation of Christ. Therefore,
the Best Man, or Cupid, who arranges the marriage, as St. Paul [cf. 2 Co 11:2],
arranging the marriage between the Corinthians and Christ, from the heavenly star to
draw the soul to the most chaste embraces of the Chaste Spouse of the soul.
6.
A Kind of Apostolic, Missionary Marriage Attendant: from the almost physical
description of the gentle Spouse, the Best Man, or Cupid arranging the marriage,
takes the next step to issue the formal invitation to the marriage with the sole condition
of leaving everything else behind:
If you want to see Him, you will look for Him in vain,
If first you do not love Him.
Just remember this: that He speaks to the heart But, gently and slowly - Keep your ear attuned.
Therefore, if the noise of this world deafens you,
Go out from your land, leave your fatherland, your home And forget your own people and home [cf. Gn 12:1, ff.; Ps 45]:
The King loves you and He gives Himself to you;
Because that Love, that Beauty, that Breast,
All this is the reward and crown of outstanding virtue.
It seems clear from this Poem that the invitation to leave his own home took rot
in him from his deep desire for union with God, to listen to his own contemplation the
6
whispered voice of the Divine Master, far from the chaos of the world .
7.
The Gift of Fear brings Abandonment to its Height with Hope: developing the
spirit of abandonment into the hands of God, the Gift of the Holy Spirit of Filial Fear
pushes to its highest possible level the movement of ones hope in God. When one is
truly in the hands of God, one is in the best disposition to await with strength and
really to receive the help of God. This total abandonment to God, which Hope

cf. Fr. Nello Dalle Vedove, La giovenezza, pp. 253, ff.

Holy Abandonment

Rev. Joseph Henchey, CSS

7 / 11

accomplishes only little by little [a piccole gocce], and never perfectly, the Gift of Fear
7
brings t the highest level, under the direct impulse of the Holy Spirit .
8.
Meditation on First Kings: Wait for God!: in one of his Meditation on 1 K, Fr.
Bertoni stated:
...A man of prayer takes what comes as though from the hands of Providence. Such a
one does not precede God, nor anticipates Him: all is in order, he is at peace. He is
not hasty, not precipitous. He awaits the right time, and the proper circumstances. He
does all that waiting for God.
a.
Not knowing how to wait, impedes development: in these few words,
8
according to Fr. Dalle Vedove , it can be said that we have Fr. Bertonis essential
thought concerning Holy Abandonment. Holy Abandonment is certainly encountering
all that happens as disposed by Divine Providence is that of not knowing how to wait
when the divine plan is not all that clear. So often, one compromises the execution of
the Divine Will by an inordinate propensity to action.
b.
Hope helps One await the Lord: Fr. Bertoni had recourse to the state of
Abandonment as that which guaranteed the most tranquil, but yet the most sure state
of expectancy. Precisely speaking, it is hope that gives assurance to our waiting for
the future life, and for all that leads to final union with god. Hope is based on that
unshakable rock of divine omnipotence placed at our disposition for our assistance,
cooperation.
c.
For Fr. Bertoni, Holy Abandonment is the Supreme Exercise of Hope:
9
The classical authors who treated Holy Abandonment have left unsolved the matter
of its theological foundation. Fr. Bertoni seems to have placed abandonment as the
highest form of the virtue of hope. St. Francis de Sales and others saw Holy
10
Abandonment as a superior form of love - DeCaussade
states that the state of
abandonment is a living to the full of pure faith, pure hope and total love. Many
spiritual writers have made of Abandonment a synthesis of all the theological virtues,
and also of all the moral virtues: it is simply considered to be the height of the
Christian life.
9.
Abandonment as Hope does not eliminate Faith and Charity: in choosing hope
as the central point of the state of Abandonment, of course, the virtues of faith and
charity are not excluded. However, following Fr. Bertonis thought, one would remove
the indistinct, or imprecise conception which would result if it were considered as a
simple conformity to the Will of God.

7
8
9

cf. Fr. Nello Dalle Vedove, CSS, Modello di S. Abbandono, p. 76.


cf. l.c., pp. 199, ff.
cf. Dictionnaire de Spiritualite, Vol. I
cf. J ean-Pierre de Caussade, Abandonment to Divine Providence.

10

Doubleday: Image New York.

Holy Abandonment

Rev. Joseph Henchey, CSS

8 / 11

a.
Conformity with Christ is Christian Perfection: it is generally agreed that
conformity to Christ is the most direct way to reach perfection in the spiritual life which
does conform our will with that of God, whenever the Will of God is incorporated in
some specific precept: and that is then called obedience.
b.
[Fr. Feuillet]: Christ emphasized Union of Will: a modern exegete has
noted, however, that there are only two texts in all of St. Johns Gospel on love where
the Son of God explicitly states that He loves the Father - and both of these texts are
found in the discourse of the Last Supper, just before His Passion and Death:
...the world must be brought to know that I love the Father and that I am doing
exactly what the Father told me... [cf. Jn 14:31].
...If you keep My commandments, you will remain in My love, just as I have kept the
Fathers Commandments and remain in His love [cf. Jn 15:10].
In these texts, and in so many other texts from the Fourth Gospel [cf. 4:34; 5:1,
9, 30, 43; 6:38; 8:28; 10:18, f.; 12:49, f.; 15:10, 15], the love of Jesus for the Father
has as its synonym His unconditional attachment to the Fathers will - an attachment
11
that will lead to Calvary for the redemption of humanity .
c.
Abandonment is Particular Imitation of Jesus on the Cross: St. Francis
de Sales represents Christ as a Model of Holy Abandonment in the various stages of
12
His mortal life - but, especially, during all His sufferings .
d.
Sin is a rejection of the Divine Will:
whenever the Divine Will is
considered in itself, or, at least, as not expressed in some specific commandment, that
is quite clear, then conforming oneself to it still remains a general obligation, and being
in opposition to it is one of the generic elements that is included in the traditional
theology of sin.
e.
Conformity to the Divine Will is trust in His Mercy: such a dedication to
the Divine Will is based upon the conviction of the infinite power and mercy of God
which, in full accord with the divine promises, gives us security for the present as well
as for the unknown future, far ore than if any human being were to place full
confidence in his/her own resources.
f.
This Hope reinforced by Knowledge: this great knowledge of Divine
Providence is supplied by faith, leading toward charity. It enables one, with Gods
grace, to choose to accept these principles:
... Nothing ever happens that God has not foreseen, or willed, or at least permitted.

11
12

cf. A. Feuillet, Le mystere de lamour divin dans la theologie johannique. Paris: Gabalda 1972, pp. 69, ff.
cf. Love of God, Bk IX, c. 15 - cf. DS I, Col. 6].

Holy Abandonment

Rev. Joseph Henchey, CSS

9 / 11

God does not will anything, or permit anything, except for the manifestation of His
goodness and infinite perfections, for the glory of His Son, and the ultimate Good of
those who love Him.
St. Thomas Aquinas called this reinforced hope by the name of con-fidence.
Holy Abandonment is the traditional Christian spirituality, gives assurance even when
human supports are taken away.
B.

The Espousals of Mary and Joseph: A Mirror of Christ

These unique, but authentic nuptials, seem to mirror the abandonment, the
obsequium of Jesus to His heavenly Father. They exemplify the human nature of
Jesus serving as the instrument of the divine Person - and they seem to reflect this
total trust in God.
Fr. Bertoni has a spirituality of abandonment: on the personal, ascetical level,
as well as in the apostolic choices and, as a consequence, a type of geographic:
abandonment. It was the total commitment of an entire Congregation, and of every
member in it [abandonment of the personnel, or a personal abandonment], each
according to his talents, or ecclesial service, t any form of the Ministry of the Word of
God whatsoever [apostolic abandonment].
C.

The Views of Fr. Anthony Rosmini

He seems to have applied perhaps Ignatian Abandonment to his apostolic


choices:
...The sole principle, my dear brothers [i.e., those pronouncing their first vows], from
which are deduced all of our duties, is charity. Other Holy Founders have chosen as
the essential end of their Congregation, one or more determined external ministries,
useful to their neighbor and to the Church: as, for example, preaching, teaching, or
something else.
... However, our Congregation seeks to find in justice alone its sole essential
regulation, and its only essential scope; so much so that whoever makes profession in
this community, with the sole quest of a perfect justice, not stably tied to any
determined good work, obtains all that the Institute has proposed for itself, and fully
carries out its vocation ... The faithful followers of this Institute are not limited either
in the affections of their hearts, or in the work of their hands to any special ministry,
or to any special work of charity. The members of this Congrega tion, thus offer
themselves to the Divine Providence of their heavenly Father, and they must be
ready to assume all those ministries and those works in which grater acquisition of
13
justice and holiness might be a expected by divine grace. .

13

This was Fr. Rosminis homily for the Profession Ceremony of the Institute of Charity on the Feast of the
Annunciation on the Feast of the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary, at Sacro Monte Calvario, Domodossola, 1844.
cf. Discorsi sulla Crita. ed. Paoline. Ut innotscant, 48, Pescara 1963, pp. 55-57/

Holy Abandonment

Rev. Joseph Henchey, CSS

10 / 11

Well over seven years later [on October 10, 1851], Fr. Rosmini, in another
Profession Ceremony, described the four qualities of charity, as he saw them: breadth,
length, height, and depth. He went on to say that the depths of love could be seen in
the intensity of suffering that one would endure. He saw the Cross as an august sign
of this love, and stated:
...May this august sign, my beloved brothers, remain always impressed on the minds
and hearts of all of us, as a kind of brief formula which synthesizes the entire
sublime message of Charity; may it also be profoundly impressed in our hearts and
in all the faculties of our souls, with its strength, bring about those chaste and faithful
ones to Him Who has espoused us with His blood, and bring those tireless imitators
of the works of His Charity. And finally, may this most glorious sign of the Cross of
Jesus Christ, the instrument and symbol of such Charity, be also the authentic seal of
this, my oration, or marriage message: that the Cross is more than anything else, a
matrimonial poem for your happy nuptials, my beloved brothers - because truly with
the religious profession that today you make in the Institute of Charity unites your
virginal souls to the Divine Spouse with a new, perpetual, indissoluble, most happy
14
and fruitful bond...

Conclusion
Both St. Gaspar Bertoni and his spiritual son, Fr. Anthony Rosmini, offer a
rather broad program of service in their presentation of the Apostolic Mission. For St.
Gaspar, this is described in his first two Constitutions: the Stigmatines are Apostolic
Missionaries for the assistance of Bishops [CF 1]. The Latin word that Fr. Bertoni
used for assistance, is taken from St. Pauls Letter to the Romans 12:1: I beseech
you, therefore, by the mercy of God that your present your [lives] a living
sacrifice, holy, pleasing unto God, your reasonable service This is reminiscent
of the Eucharistic offertory, making a complete gift to God of ones life,. To be
consecrated in the Apostolic Mission, leading to an eternal Holy Communion.
St. Gaspar goes on to describe the Manner, just how the Apostolic
Missionaries are to do this in his second Constitution. In this ideal, the Saint presents
seven different words describing ecclesial obedience of Stigmatines:
work
under the direction of and dependence on Bishops totally submissive to them
they are to receive the [Bishops] permission along with the necessary
faculties, always observing the guide-lines set down by the [Bishops] [CF 2]
Part 9 [CF ## 158-186] of St. Gaspars Original Constitutions describe the
Principal duties of the Professed Apostolic Missionaries: work among the youth; any
ministry of the Word of God whatsoever, and developing vocations to the Priesthood
and Religious Life.
St. Gaspar Bertonis ideal is to live the Apostolic Life: through the intercession
of the Holy Spouses, Mary and Joseph, the Stigmatine to serve Jesus Christ as the
14

cf. o.c., pp. 181-183.

Holy Abandonment

Rev. Joseph Henchey, CSS

11 / 11

Apostles served Jesus Christ Who was sent into this world to carry out the Mission
the Father personally confided to Him in the Holy Spirit, which he revealed on Easter
night, breathing upon them, and showing His Sacred Stigmata; As the Father has
sent Me, I also send you [Jn 20:21].

The Author:
Rev.

Joseph

Charles

Henchey,

CSS

was

born

in

Woburn,

Massachusetts, USA, not far from Boston, in June 2, 1930. He entered the
Congregation of the Sacred Stigmata on January 6, 1946, and was ordained
a Stigmatine Priest in Rome, Italy, in July 1, 1956.
Fr. Henchey received the Doctorate in Sacred Theology from the
Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, the Angelicum, in Rome. He
served in Rome teaching at the Pontifical University for over 20 years and
also as Assistant Spiritual Director at the Pontifical North American
College for about six years.
He has also served as Formator at various Stigmatine Houses of
Formation, Provincial Superior and General Counselor of the Congregation
of the Sacred Stigmata, and has traveled widely giving retreats, courses
and lectures to priests, religious and the laity. From 2002 to 2006, Fr.
Henchey was Assistant Spiritual Director at Blessed Pope John XXIII
National Seminary in Weston, MA, and this fall 2006 he is moving to
Mundelein Seminary in Chicago, IL, as occupant of the Paluch Chair of
Theology.
For all his Stigmatine life he has been a student of St. Gaspar
Bertoni, the Founder of his Congregation, and recently published a
website honoring the Founder, at www.st-bertoni.com.

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