Traducción de la Novena dispuesta por el padre Edward James Devine McDonnell SJ, e impresa en Toronto por The Canadian Messenger. Imprími Potest por John Milway Filion SJ, Superior provincial de la Compañía de Jesús en Canadá. Imprimátur por Mons. Neil McNeil, Arzobispo de Toronto.
FIRST DAY Dedicated to Blessed John de Brebeuf, S.J. Martyred Mar. 16, 1649 BLESSED John de Brebeuf, known as the Apostle of the Hurons, spent thirteen years laboring among those pagan Indians. His apostolic career, rendered still more thrilling by the sufferings he had to undergo, has made his name venerable in our annals. Even before he quitted his native Normandy he had begun to reveal the sentiments which were uppermost in his soul. "I felt a strong desire to suffer something for Jesus Christ," he wrote, "and I said, 'Lord, make me a man according to Thine own Heart! Make Thy holy will known to me! Let nothing separate me from Thy love, neither nakedness, nor the sword, nor death itself!' "
God listened to these holy desires and gave His heroic servant ample opportunities to suffer during the thirteen years he spent among the Hurons. In the beginning of his ministry he was looked upon as a dangerous sorcerer and was held responsible for all the misfortunes which were visiting the tribe. The plagues which destroyed the Huron villages in 1637 were attributed to his evil influence, and more than once he was threatened with death; but he assured the Indians that death had no terrors for him, seeing that it would bring him eternal life. The confidence of the Blessed Martyr in God's goodness was boundless. His devotion to the Holy Eucharist, to Our Lady and St. Joseph, also sustained him during the long years he spent in the Canadian wilderness.
The heroism of this great servant of God displayed itself in all its grandeur when he fell into the hands of the Iroquois on the morning of March 16, 1649. Those monsters of cruelty tore off his scalp, poured boiling water over his head in derision of holy baptism, applied flaming torches to his naked flesh, encircled his shoulders with red-hot hatchets, and plucked out his eyes. When these tortures did not prevent him from praying to God and sounding His praises, they drove a burning torch down his throat. They completed their cruel work by cleaving open his breast, tearing out his heart and devouring it, hoping thereby to share in their victim's bravery. Blessed John de Brebeuf expired at Fort St. Ignace, near Waubaushene, Ont., on March 16, 1649. REFLECTION The example of this heroic martyr of God teaches me how to bear up under the trials of life. He was abused and calumniated by those whom he had come to save. He was threatened by them with torture and death. And yet these crosses were borne in a spirit of resignation, and only excited him to greater pity for the benighted spiritual state of the Huron Indians and to greater zeal for their salvation. On my journey through life, adversity often presses hard upon me; I too have often heavy crosses to bear. But are they as heavy as those borne by the Blessed Martyr, John de Brebeuf? Have I ever been called upon to shed my blood? A sharp pain, a prolonged illness, a physical infirmity comes to me and I complain bitterly, not realizing that God is sending me opportunities for much merit. How easily I become downcast, how quickly impatient, how rarely resigned! I will ask to holy martyr to obtain for me some of his resignation to God's will, so that after his example I may be able to meet my daily trials in a truly Christian spirit.
Blessed John de Brebeuf, to whom God gave the strength to do great things for the glory of His name and for the salvation of souls, obtain for me, through your intercession, courage to overcome all human respect, resignation in times of trial, confidence in God's power and goodness, and zeal for my spiritual welfare; so that, raised above the things of earth, I may lead a truly Christian life and gain merit for eternity. Amen.
PRAYER IN HONOR OF THE MARTYRS O God, Who by the preaching and the blood of Thy Blessed Martyrs, John and Isaac and their Companions, didst consecrate the first fruits of the faith in the vast regions of North America, graciously grant that by their intercession the flourishing harvest of Christians may be everywhere and always increased. Through our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son Who liveth and reigneth in union with the Holy Spirit, one God, world without end. Amen.
PRAYER OF PETITION O God, Who didst inflame the hearts of Thy Blessed Martyrs with an admirable zeal for the salvation of souls, grant me, I beseech Thee {here make your request), so that the favors obtained through their intercession may make manifest before men the power and the glory of Thy Name. Amen.
Our Father, Hail Mary. Glory be to the Father.
Blessed John de Brebeuf, intercede for me!
God listened to these holy desires and gave His heroic servant ample opportunities to suffer during the thirteen years he spent among the Hurons. In the beginning of his ministry he was looked upon as a dangerous sorcerer and was held responsible for all the misfortunes which were visiting the tribe. The plagues which destroyed the Huron villages in 1637 were attributed to his evil influence, and more than once he was threatened with death; but he assured the Indians that death had no terrors for him, seeing that it would bring him eternal life. The confidence of the Blessed Martyr in God's goodness was boundless. His devotion to the Holy Eucharist, to Our Lady and St. Joseph, also sustained him during the long years he spent in the Canadian wilderness.
The heroism of this great servant of God displayed itself in all its grandeur when he fell into the hands of the Iroquois on the morning of March 16, 1649. Those monsters of cruelty tore off his scalp, poured boiling water over his head in derision of holy baptism, applied flaming torches to his naked flesh, encircled his shoulders with red-hot hatchets, and plucked out his eyes. When these tortures did not prevent him from praying to God and sounding His praises, they drove a burning torch down his throat. They completed their cruel work by cleaving open his breast, tearing out his heart and devouring it, hoping thereby to share in their victim's bravery. Blessed John de Brebeuf expired at Fort St. Ignace, near Waubaushene, Ont., on March 16, 1649. REFLECTION The example of this heroic martyr of God teaches me how to bear up under the trials of life. He was abused and calumniated by those whom he had come to save. He was threatened by them with torture and death. And yet these crosses were borne in a spirit of resignation, and only excited him to greater pity for the benighted spiritual state of the Huron Indians and to greater zeal for their salvation. On my journey through life, adversity often presses hard upon me; I too have often heavy crosses to bear. But are they as heavy as those borne by the Blessed Martyr, John de Brebeuf? Have I ever been called upon to shed my blood? A sharp pain, a prolonged illness, a physical infirmity comes to me and I complain bitterly, not realizing that God is sending me opportunities for much merit. How easily I become downcast, how quickly impatient, how rarely resigned! I will ask to holy martyr to obtain for me some of his resignation to God's will, so that after his example I may be able to meet my daily trials in a truly Christian spirit.
Blessed John de Brebeuf, to whom God gave the strength to do great things for the glory of His name and for the salvation of souls, obtain for me, through your intercession, courage to overcome all human respect, resignation in times of trial, confidence in God's power and goodness, and zeal for my spiritual welfare; so that, raised above the things of earth, I may lead a truly Christian life and gain merit for eternity. Amen.
PRAYER IN HONOR OF THE MARTYRS O God, Who by the preaching and the blood of Thy Blessed Martyrs, John and Isaac and their Companions, didst consecrate the first fruits of the faith in the vast regions of North America, graciously grant that by their intercession the flourishing harvest of Christians may be everywhere and always increased. Through our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son Who liveth and reigneth in union with the Holy Spirit, one God, world without end. Amen.
PRAYER OF PETITION O God, Who didst inflame the hearts of Thy Blessed Martyrs with an admirable zeal for the salvation of souls, grant me, I beseech Thee {here make your request), so that the favors obtained through their intercession may make manifest before men the power and the glory of Thy Name. Amen.
Our Father, Hail Mary. Glory be to the Father.
Blessed John de Brebeuf, intercede for me!
SECOND DAY Dedicated to Blessed Isaac Jogues, S.J. Martyred Oct. 18, 1646 A DESIRE to labor in the foreign missions revealed itself early in the life of Blessed Isaac Jogues. He reached Canada in 1636 and set out at once for Georgian Bay. The crushing poverty of his surroundings and his own ill-health did not prevent him from exercising his ministry, going from village to village instructing and baptizing converts. It was this holy man who, in 1639, built Fort Ste. Marie, the fortified residence of the Jesuits in the Huron country.
In those years the Iroquois were growing troublesome; the Ottawa route was blockaded and starvation was facing the missionaries. In 1642 Blessed Isaac Jogues generously volunteered to carry the news to Quebec and bring back supplies. On the return journey, he was seized by a skulking band of Iroquois, beaten with clubs, tied with thongs, flung into a canoe and carried to the Mohawk country. There he suffered still greater torments. His nails were torn away, his fingers were cut off, a squaw chewed off his thumb, he was suspended by the wrists and tortured, little children enjoyed themselves by heaping coals of fire on his naked breast. He was then given to a Mohawk family as a slave. For thirteen months he endured a captivity worse than death, yet refused to escape lest some of his fellow prisoners who were Christians should need his services. When at last he freed himself, in 1643, his pitiable condition aroused the sympathies of the Calvinists of New Amsterdam who received him as a martyr of Jesus Christ and sent him back to France.
Pope Urban VIII. granted him permission to celebrate Mass notwithstanding his mutilated hands, and remarked at the same time that "a martyr of Christ should be allowed to drink the Blood of Christ."
In less than a year he was back in Montreal, laboring as zealously as ever. In 1646, because of his knowledge of the language, his superiors sent him to the Mohawk Valley in the interests of a treaty with the Iroquois. "His heart was seized with dread," he himself informs us, at the prospect of again falling into the hands of the enemy. However, he arranged for the founding of a mission in that "land of his crosses," and promised to return a few months later. Meanwhile the harvest of the Iroquois had become a failure. Those infuriated pagans, victims of their superstition, blamed the holy apostle' for this disaster, and awaited his return with impatience. When he appeared at Ossernenon, (now Auriesville, N.Y.) on October 17, 1646, he was seized and cruelly beaten. The following day a blow from a tomahawk gave Blessed Isaac Jogues the crown of martyrdom.
REFLECTION How seldom do we pause to reflect on the labors and the sufferings of our early missionaries! In this age, replete with ease and the comforts of life, we rarely take the time to recall the careers of the heroic men who sowed the seed of Christianity in this fair land of ours. And yet their heroic daring thrills us. Tortures had no terrors for them. The prospects of a cruel death at the hands of the savages did not prevent them from preaching Christ crucified. Blessed Isaac Jogues himself had premonitions of the fate that awaited him in the Mohawk Valley. Shortly before he set out on his final journey, he wrote to a friend, "I hope you will obtain for me this favor from Our Lord that after having led such a slothful life I may begin to serve Him better. My heart tells me that if I have the blessing of being sent on this mission, I will go but I shall not come back." These were the words of a holy apostle who endeavored to carry out the plans of God and whose zeal drew him to dangerous posts of duty. His humility made him think little of himself, but his confidence in God made him fearless, and enabled him to face the ferocious Iroquois, even though he realized that in doing so he would have to shed his blood.
Blessed Isaac Jogues, glorious martyr of Jesus Christ, how far does my pride and my weakness remove me from your brilliant example; how few are the sacrifices I have made in my life; how frail I am when called upon to shoulder a cross! You, who suffered imprisonment and torture and finally death, strengthen me in my resolutions; help me at least by your intercession to be patient in the trials that God may send me. Amen.
PRAYER IN HONOR OF THE MARTYRS O God, Who by the preaching and the blood of Thy Blessed Martyrs, John and Isaac and their Companions, didst consecrate the first fruits of the faith in the vast regions of North America, graciously grant that by their intercession the flourishing harvest of Christians may be everywhere and always increased. Through Our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son Who liveth and reigneth in union with the Holy Spirit, one God, world without end. Amen.
PRAYER OF PETITION O God, Who didst inflame the hearts of Thy Blessed Martyrs with an admirable zeal for the salvation of souls, grant me, I beseech Thee (here make your request), so that the favors obtained through their intercession may make manifest before men the power and the glory of Thy Name. Amen.
Our Father. Hail Mary. Glory be to the Father.
Blessed Isaac Jogues, intercede for me!
THIRD DAY
Dedicated to
Blessed Gabriel Lalemant, S.J.
Martyred Mar. 17, 1649
ON account of frail health, Blessed Gabriel
Lalemant's ambition to go and labor
for the conversion of pagan tribes was long
delayed. And yet from his earliest years
he had been ' 'asking God with tears and
sighs to be sent to the Canadian missions."
Meanwhile, we are told, he had consecrated
himself to Our Lord for the purpose of re-
ceiving from His hand a violent death, either
by exposing himself among the plague-stricken
in Old France or in seeking to save souls in
the New. He would have esteened it a
favor had he been allowed to die for God's
glory in the flower of his age.
"He was one of the most feeble and most
delicate men one could see," wrote one of
his contemporaries. Yet we know what
God's grace can do, no matter how frail an
instrument may be, when He chooses it for
His honor and glory.
When at last permission to cross the
Atlantic was granted to Blessed Gabriel, he
started off bravely, putting aside all consideration of family and friends. Not that
he was insensible to the ties of flesh and
blood, as is evident from his letters, but he did not allow kinship to stand between
himself and duty.
His first impulse on landing at Quebec
in 1646 was to begin at once to convert
some pagan tribe or other, but his enthusiasm
was curbed by his superiors, and he had to
spend two years in the French colony before
he set out for Georgian Bay. He arrived
there in September, 1648, where in the words
of Scripture this holy man was destined to
complete a long time in a short space. He
had been in the Huron country only seven
months, and was just beginning to speak
the native tongue, when he was seized with
Blessed John de Brebeuf and forced to
submit to torture, the recital of which makes
one shudder. Like his fellow-martyr, he
suffered the ordeal of boiling water poured
over his head and of flaming torches applied
to his naked body; he felt red-hot hatchets
encircling his bare shoulders; his eyes were
plucked out; his lips cut off; and after sixteen
hours of this barbarous treatment, his soul
took its flight to God. Blessed Gabriel
Lalemant was martyred at Fort St. Ignace,
near Waubaushene, Ont., on March 17, 1649.
REFLECTION
I will picture to myself the fearful agony
of those sixteen hours. I will count the
sighs sent to heaven from the lips of the
Blessed Martyr for strength and courage to bear up under the dreadful torture. Stripped
naked like his Divine Master, he had to
listen to the scoffs and jibes of his cruel
persecutors; like Him he saw his flesh torn
and bruised, and like Him he asked pardon
for his tormentors who knew not what a
fearful crime they were perpetrating.
Generosity was the outstanding trait of
this servant of God. "If it is reasonable,"
he wrote, "that one should, even at the cost
of a thousand lives, try to bring souls to
God, you will find no one more prompt than
I am. Silence, then, my soul! Lose thyself
in this holy work and give pleasure to the
Sacred Heart of Jesus. This is His due,
and thou canst not dispense thyself unless
thou wilt live and die an ingrate to His
love...." "Yes, my Jesus and my love,"
he wrote elsewhere, "Thy blood shed for
these poor barbarians must be applied for
their salvation. Thy name must be adored
and Thy kingdom spread over all the nations
of the world. I must spend my life for the
souls of the poor savages of New France."
Brave words, these, that reveal the in-
nermost sentiments of the martyr. I shall
not be called upon to suffer as did Blessed
Gabriel Lalemant, but if I only knew how
to profit by the pains and sufferings of this
life, how much I could do to atone for my
sins! I am weak and fear pain, but I should know that God is ever watching over me,
that His angels are counting my steps and
weighing the value of my daily actions, and
that if I bear my trials with resignation He
will be my exceeding great reward.
Blessed Gabriel Lalemant who, notwith-
stading weakness and ill-health and the
appeals of family and friends, generously
gave yourself to the work of saving souls,
and in so doing sacrificed your life by a cruel
death, intercede for me and obtain for me
detachment from the things of this world,
so that, strong in the freedom of the children
of God and following your example, I may
share your reward in heaven. Amen.
PRAYER IN HONOR OF THE
MARTYRS
O God, Who by the preaching and the
blood of Thy Blessed Martyrs, John and
Isaac and their Companions, didst con-
secrate the first fruits of the faith in the vast
regions of North America, graciously grant
that by their intercession the flourishing
harvest of Christians may be everywhere
and always increased. Through our Lord
Jesus Christ Thy Son Who liveth and reigneth
in union with the Holy Spirit, one God,
world without end. Amen. PRAYER OF PETITION
O God, Who didst inflame the hearts of
Thy Blessed Martyrs with an admirable zeal
for the salvation of souls, grant me, I beseech
Thee {here mafe your request), so that the
favors obtained through their intercession
may make manifest before men the power
and the glory of Thy Name. Amen.
Our Father. Hail Mary. Glory be to the
Father.
Blessed Gabriel Lalemant, intercede for
me!
FOURTH DAY
Dedicated to
Blessed Anthony Daniel, S.J.
Martyred July 4, 1648
EARLY in life the lure of worldly honors
and riches had enticed Blessed Anthony
Daniel, but yielding to a spiritual impulse,
he gave himself entirely to the service of God
in the Society of Jesus. After his ordination
to the priesthood, the call to the laborious
missions of Canada grew louder and more
imperious, and thither he sailed in the year
1632. He was one of the first Jesuit mission-
aries to reach Georgian Bay. "I never saw
one more resolute to start out than he,"
wrote Blessed John de Brebeuf, "even when
he was told that he might lose his life on
the way." Yet no one suffered more than
he did in that long canoe journey of over
seven hundred miles. Hunger, thirst, aban-
donment, Indian treachery, perils from the
waters, were his portion while on the Ottawa
route.
Father Daniel's talent soon gave him a
mastery over the Huron tongue and he had
hoped to put his knowledge to good use.
A pioneer teacher was this holy man, and he
dreamed of forming future catechists among
the Hurons who would instruct the other
members of their tribe. In 1636, he set out
for Quebec with a few Indian boys. When he reached Three Rivers, Father Lejeune
wrote: "Our hearts melted at the sight of
Father Daniel. His face was gay and happy,
but greatly emaciated. He was barefooted,
had a paddle in his hand, and was clad in
a wretched cassock, with his breviary sus-
pended from his neck and his shirt rotting
on his back."
The failure of his project, owing to the
inconstancy of the Indian character, brought
him back to Georgian Bay. Then, after
having labored in various Huron missions,
he was appointed to Teanaostaye, near Mount
St. Louis, a village exposed to Iroquois in-
cursions and the first to be invaded by the
merciless foe. He had completed his annual
retreat on July 2, 1648, at Fort Ste. Marie,
where he prepared himself for whatever God
had in store for him, and returned at once
to his flock. Two days later, an army of
Iroquois appeared before the palisades of his
village. Realizing that the end had come,
he encouraged his converts to meet death
as Christians should. He hastily baptized
his catechumens and then went out to face
the enemy. A few moments later his body
was riddled with bullets. The enraged
Iroquois rushed upon the prostrate form of
the missionary, "as if he alone were the
object of their hatred," and "smeared their
hands and faces with his blood," wrote
Bressani, "which flowed through so brave
a heart." They then set fire to his chapel and flung his body into the flames. Father
Daniel was martyred near Mount St. Louis,
on July 4, 1648.
REFLECTION
A new civilization has sprung up and
new conditions have arisen in this land since
the Blessed Martyrs trod its soil. We, who
pamper ourselves in the ease and luxury of
modern life and who chafe under the little
disappointments we meet daily, would find
it difficult to visualize the hardships those
heroic men underwent or the sufferings they
endured. The tiresome journey over the
Ottawa route, now travelled in a few hours,
took weeks in the seventeenth century — and
no one suffered more than Blessed Anthony
Daniel. Crouched barefooted in a bark
canoe, paddle in hand for many hours each
day, bending under his pack in the long
portaging over rocky trails, and sleeping
under the stars at night, were happenings
common in his career. When the Huron
mission along Georgian Bay was reached,
discomforts of every kind, insufficient cloth-
ing to wear, cold to endure during the long
winters, wretched cabins to live in, filthy
savages to live with, unhealthy food to eat,
hatred to placate, superstitions and vices to
combat, were the everyday experiences of
his life. But this holy man reckoned not
the cost in his quest for souls among the
poor Indians whom he had come to instruct and convert. The Relations tell us that
"Father Daniel seemed to have been born
for the salvation of his flock," and add that
"he had no greater desire than to die foi
them, and we hope that this country will
find in him a powerful intercessor before
God."
Blessed Anthony Daniel, cold and slothful
as I am in God's service and easily disturbed
at the hardships I meet in life, I realize that
I do little for my own soul and less for the
soul of my neighbor. Strengthen me with
your courage; inspire in me a lively interest
for all that makes for the glory of God and
the welfare of His Church; impart to my
soul some of your enthusiasm and zeal, so
that I may also share in the happiness you
are now enjoying in heaven. Amen.
PRAYER IN HONOR OF THE
MARTYRS
O God, Who by the preaching and the
blood of Thy Blessed Martyrs, John and
Isaac and their Companions, didst con-
secrate the first fruits of the faith in the
vast regions of North America, graciously
grant that by their intercession the flour-
ishing harvest of Christians may be every-
where and always increased. Through our
Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son Who liveth and
reigneth in union with the Holy Spirit, one
God, world without end. Amen. PRAYER OF PETITION
O God, Who didst inflame the hearts of
Thy Blessed Martyrs with an admirable zeal
for the conversion of souls, grant me, I
beseech Thee, {here make your request), so that
the favors obtained through their interces-
sion may make manifest before men the
power and the glory of Thy Name. Amen.
Our Father. Hail Mary. Glory be to the
Father.
Blessed Anthony Daniel, intercede for
me!
FIFTH DAY
Dedicated to
Blessed Charles Gamier, S.J.
Martyred Dec. 7, 1649
FROM his earliest childhood, Blessed
Charles Gamier was an angel of in-
nocence and purity. At first, his parents
opposed his design to enter the Society of
Jesus, but when they realized that their
beloved child was really in earnest, they
made the sacrifice nobly. When the moment
of separation came, the Superiors of the
Order were told that they were about to
receive one who from his birth had never
committed the least disobedience and had
never given his parents the least displeasure.
The young man himself, whose devotion to
our Lady was paramount, acknowledged in
after life that it was she who carried him
in her arms in his youthful years, and that
it was to her he owed his vocation to the
Society of her Divine Son.
The arduous missions of Canada attracted
the young priest and his only desire was to
begin as soon as possible the work of con-
version among the Indians along Goergian
Bay. He had hardly reached his mission,
when he was stricken down with fever and
was soon at the point of death. But God
was reserving him for other labors, and not-
withstanding the accompaniments of dire poverty, lack of medical aid and unwhole-
some food, he recovered slowly, acquired a
knowledge of the Huron tongue and started
out on an active apostolate of thirteen years,
Driven from the Petun country as a sorcerer,
he spent six years at Teanaostaye, where
he succeeded in winning many souls to God.
Replete with every gift of nature and of
grace, he was irresistible in his appeals to
the uncouth pagans. Converts were won to
the faith and moved to devotion at the
mere sight of his angelic face, and all who
came in contact with him took away a deep
impression of his virtue. But this interior
perfection of soul was, as in the case of all
holy men, sustained by a life of rigid penance.
Every time he returned from his mission
journeys, he sharpened the iron points of
the belt which he wore next to his flesh.
He mortified his tastes and inclinations in
every way; food, lodging, surroundings, all
gave him a foretaste of the martyrdom which
was soon to be his reward.
When he returned to the Petun nation,
whence he had once been driven as a sorcerer,
he found among those Indians a large outlet
for his devouring zeal. The Iroquois, prowling
around in bands, swooped down on the
defenceless inhabitants of the village of
Etharita on December 7, 1649, put many to
death and made prisoners of all who could
not escape. Father Gamier was one of the victims of
this merciless massacre. When implored to
save himself by flight, he resolutely refused,
exercising his charity to the end. Even
though mortally wounded and weltering in
his blood, he tried to assist a poor Huron
who had also received his death wound. A
few moments later, the blow of an Iroquois
tomahawk penetrated his brain, and his pure
soul took its flight to God. Blessed Charles
Gamier was martyred on December 7, 1649.
REFLECTION
The memory of this holy martyr is one
of the most highly cherished in our mis-
sionary annals, and many practical lessons
may be gleaned from the study of his life.
His innocence and purity of soul, the suffer-
ings he endured, coupled with the penances
he inflicted on his virginal body, have cast
a halo over his career. One of his com-
panions in the mission field wrote of this
lovable man, " During the four years that
I lived with him I never saw in him a single
fault that was directly against any virtue/'
Father Ragueneau, his spiritual adviser for
twelve years, could write immediately after
his glorious death, "His great desire for
holiness had grown with him from child-
hood. I can truly say that in those twelve
years I do not think that, save in sleep, he
spent a single hour without a vehement desire of advancing more and more in the
ways of God, and of urging on his fellow-
men in the same direction. Nothing in the
world turned him from these considerations,
neither relatives nor friends, neither rest nor
fatigue. God was his all. All else meant
nothing for him."
Blessed Charles Gamier, whose innocence
of life and burning zeal for souls have, during
three hundred years, given you a hallowed
place in our annals, help me to be generous
in the service of God. I fear pain, I shun
mortification, I lack generosity. Your ex-
ample is before me; your spotless purity,
your rigorous penances, your devotion to
Our Lady, all impress me. I now ask your
intercession whereby my resolutions may be
strengthened. Inspire in me a love of purity
and zeal. Give me courage to do something
for my soul, so that in the end I may share
your bliss in Paradise. Amen.
PRAYER IN HONOR OF THE
MARTYRS
O God, Who by the preaching and the
blood of Thy Blessed Martyrs, John and
Isaac and their Companions, didst con-
secrate the first fruits of the faith in the
vast regions of North America, graciously
grant that by their intercession the flourish-
ing harvest of Christians may be every-
where and always be increased. Through Our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son Who liveth and
reigneth in union with the Holy Spirit, one
God, world without end. Amen.
PRAYER OF PETITION
O God, Who didst inflame the hearts of
Thy Blessed Martyrs with an admirable zeal
for the salvation of souls, grant me, I be-
seech Thee {here make your request), so that
the favors obtained through their interces-
sion may make manifest before men the
power and the glory of Thy Name. Amen.
Our Father. Hail Mary. ' Glory to be the
Father.
Blessed Charles Gamier, intercede for
me!
SIXTH DAY
Dedicated to
Blessed Noel Chabanel, SJ.
Martyred Dec. 8, 1649
THE Spirit of God had spoken early to
the soul of Blessed Noel Chabanel, for
he was only seventeen when he took up the
obligations of the religious life. Meanwhile
the desire to consecrate himself to the arduous
Canadian missions was asserting itself. "God
gave him a strong vocation for those coun-
tries," wrote one of his contemporaries, and
he seized the earliest opportunity to cross
the Atlantic. Patiently bearing the hard-
ships of a three months' voyage, he reached
Quebec in August, 1643, and, full of zeal
and enthusiasm, lost no time in 'starting for
the Huron country. But the young mis-
sionary was quickly undeceived. The wild
aspect of Georgian Bay, with its half-naked
Indian population, their miserable cabins,
their poverty and squalor, their gross ways
and manners, all made a profound impression
on his sensitive soul. And, to add to his
sorrow, after months of serious study, he
made little or no progress in the barbarous
Huron tongue. Only then it dawned upon
him that his life was to be one unbroken
chain of disappointments, an ordeal that he
himself called a "bloodless martyrdom." The deep sense of his own uselessness
was so completely overpowering that the
temptation came to him to abandon the
Huron field and return to France where he
could find employment better suited to his
talents and his character. Why fritter away
his life fruitlessly among barbarians? But
Chabanel had put his hand to the plough
and he was resolved not to turn back till
he had reached the end of the furrow. In
order to bind himself irrevocably to the
Huron mission, he made a vow in 1647 to
remain there till death. For two years he
stood in the shadow of martyrdom and was
then slain secretly by an apostate Huron.
The assassin confessed his crime, and added
that he did it out of hatred of the Christian
faith. "Chabanel's death," wrote Charlevoix, "while it was less striking in the eyes
ol men, was not less striking in the eyes of
God, Who judges according to the disposition
of our hearts and Who keeps as strict account
of what we would like to have done as of
what we have done." Blessed Noel Chabanel
was martyred on the banks of the Notta-
wasaga, on December 8, 1649.
REFLECTION
What an illustrious example of persever-
ance in the midst of difficulties and of heroic
resignation to God's will Blessed Noel
Chabanel gives us! This holy Martyr had hoped to be a useful worker in the vineyard,
yet disappointment and ill-success met him
at every turn. Persuaded that his was an
unprofitable life, he lived for five years in
perpetual desolation, a species of torture
which for holy and sensitive souls like his
closely resembles its counterpart in blood.
In this extremity who would blame Noel
Chabanel if he sought somewhere a ray of
courage and consolation ? But the Relations
inform us that this saintly man carried his
cross bravely, and rather than consent to
be released from his burden, obliged him-
self by vow to carry it even unto death.
I often complain of the trials I have to
put up with, but how insignificant are mine
when compared with those of Blessed Noel!
I have never had to live in the shadow of
martyrdom, nor have I had occasion to
complain, as he did once, that the crown
had been snatched from him, a circumstance
he attributed to his own unworthiness.
Encouraged by his example, I will accept
the trials that God sends me. I will bear
the cross as long as He wills it. I will implore
this great servant of God to intercede for
me and obtain for me the grace to enable
me to do so.
Blessed Noel Chabanel, whose heart
burned with the desire to sacrifice all for
the glory and honor of God, obtain for me
a right appreciation of the trials and suffer-
ings of this life. Let not disappointments discourage me nor crosses weigh me down,
so that strengthened by the example of your
heroic constancy and perseverance in the
service of God on earth, I may some day
share your reward in heaven. Amen.
PRAYER IN HONOR OF THE
MARTYRS
O God, Who by the preaching and the
blood of Thy Blessed Martyrs, John and
Isaac and their Companions, didst consecrate
the first fruits of the faith in the vast regions
of North America, graciously grant that by
their intercession the flourishing harvest ot
Christians may be everywhere and always
increased. Through Our Lord Jesus Christ
Thy Son Who liveth and reigneth in union
with the Holy Spirit, one God, world with-
out end. Amen.
PRAYER OF PETITION
O God, Who didst inflame the hearts of
Thy Blessed Martyrs with an admirable zeal
for the salvation of souls, grant me, I beseech
Thee {here make your request), so that the
favors obtained through their intercession
may make manifest before men the power
and the glory of Thy Name. Amen.
Our Father. Hail Mary. Glory be to the
Father.
Blessed Noel Chabanel, intercede for me!
SEVENTH DAY
Dedicated to
Blessed Rene Goupil, S.J.
Martyred Sept. 29, 1642
BLESSED Rene Goupil was one of those
earnest men who wished to gain their
eternal crown by serving God in humble
employments. For this purpose he entered
the Jesuit Order in early life and gave edi-
fication by his strict observance of the rules.
His health failed him, however, and he had
to return to secular life, determined, not-
withstanding, to do something for God. The
perusal of the Relations had shown him that
if he could not work directly in the apostolate
of souls, he could at least help those who
were thus employed, and he sailed for Canada
about the year 1640 to serve the mission-
aries who labored there. During the follow-
ing two years his skill as a surgeon gave
him ample scope for activity among both
the French colonists and the native con-
verts, in whom he saw our Lord in His
suffering members and whom he treated with
sweet patience and charity.
While on his way to the Huron country
with Blessed Isaac Jogues, in 1642, he was
seized by the Iroquois and obliged to undergo
fearful tortures. His virtue revealed itself in
those crucial moments of his life. In an
act of sublime resignation, he turned to his priestly companion and exclaimed, "May God
be blessed! He has permitted this. May
His will be done! I accept this cross, I desire
it, I embrace it with all my heart." His
captors tore of his finger nails, crushed his
bleeding fingers between their teeth, and
showered blows upon him. Notwithstanding
the excruciating pains he was enduring, the
holy young man showed great fortitude and
presence of mind, and although suffering
himself, he succeeded in helping Father
Jogues to instruct a Huron who had not yet
been baptized and who was begging to
receive the sacrament.
Rene Goupil was taken prisoner to the
Mohawk country, where further tortures were
inflicted upon him. It was while on this
bitter journey that he begged Father Jogues
to receive his vows, asserting that God had
always given him a great desire to con-
secrate himself to His service in the Society
of Jesus. The Indians of Ossernenon, the
first Mohawk village, received him with a
shower of blows, so that when he entered
the gates of the palisade he sank to the
ground, bruised and disfigured and weltering
in his blood. He was not slain immediately,
as he expected, but a few weeks later he was
seen making the Sign of the Cross on the
forehead of a little Indian child. A super-
stitious pagan, becoming enraged at this act,
ordered one of the young warriors to kill
him. The wretch raised his tomahawk and split the martyr's skull open. Blessed Rene
Goupil was slain at Auriesville, in the Mohawk
Valley, on September 29, 1642.
REFLECTION
Holiness, coupled with a spirit of self-
sacrifice, is the picture presented to us in
the admirable life of this young martyr.
His virtue was vouched for by his companion
in captivity. "It was on the feast of St.
Michael," wrote Blessed Isaac Jogues, "that
this angel of innocence and martyr of Jesus
Christ gave His life for Him who had offered
up His for him. I kissed his relics very de-
voutly several times as those of a martyr.
I give him this title," added Father Jogues,
"not merely because he was slain by the ene-
mies of God and His Church, and in the
exercise of an ardent charity towards his
neighbor, by putting himself in evident peril
for the love of God, but especially because
he was slain on account of prayer and nota-
bly for the Sign of the Cross."
Hatred of the Cross of Christ was the
motive that inspired the savage Iroquois to
murder Rene Goupil. Father Bressani, him-
self a victim of their cruelty, wrote two
years later: "They particularly hate the Sign
of the Cross, which they have learned from
the Dutch to be a veritable superstition, and
on this account they killed the good Rene
Goupil, the companion of Father Jogues."
Blessed Rene Goupil, whose zeal for the
Cross of Christ merited the crown of martyr-
dom, give me the courage always to glory
in the Cross and never to be ashamed of it.
Help me to understand, what seems so hard
to my ungenerous soul, that the more wil-
lingly I carry my cross the lighter it becomes;
so that, following your example and that of
the saints, I may in patience and long-suffering carry my burdens bravely to the end.
Amen.
PRAYER IN HONOR OF THE
MARTYRS
O God, Who by the preaching and the
blood of Thy Blessed Martyrs, John and
Isaac and their Companions, didst con-
secrate the first fruits of the faith in the
vast regions of North America, graciously
grant that by their intercession the flourish-
ing harvest of Christians may be everywhere
and always increased. Through our Lord
Jesus Christ Thy Son Who liveth and reigneth
in union with the Holy Spirit, one God, world
without end. Amen.
PRAYER OF PETITION
O God, Who didst inflame the hearts of
Thy Blessed Martyrs with an admirable zeal
for the salvation of souls, grant me, I beseech Thee (here make your request), so that
the favors obtained through their interces-
sion may make manifest before men the
power and the glory of Thy Name. Amen.
Our Father. Hail Mary. Glory be to the
Father.
Blessed Rene Goupil, intercede for me!
EIGHT DAY
Dedicated to
Blessed John de la Lande
Martyred Oct. 19, 1646
THIS young layman and saintly com-
panion of Blessed Isaac Jogues was a
victim of the Iroquois who had learned to
hate the doctrines of Christ and to fear those
who taught them. He was chosen to ac-
company Father Jogues when the latter set
out in 1646 to found a mission among the
Iroquois in the Mohawk Valley. The dangers
of the journey were not hidden from him.
When told that he might have to suffer, he
gladly offered himself for the enterprise,
looking only to God to protect him and to
be his reward if the sacrifice of his life were
demanded. Or, as Father Ragueneau puts
it, "He belonged to a chosen few who were
only too happy to pour out their sweat and,
if need be, their blood, in order to contribute
as much as they could towards the con-
version of the barbarians." The brave youth
did not count the cost of the sacrifice he was
about to make. "Although he was aware
of the danger," wrote Father Bressani, "he
faced it courageously, without hope of any
reward but Paradise."
The hour had come at last when his
virtue was to be put to its first heroic test,
and when he was to taste the bitter cup which God presents to the lips of those for
whom He has reserved the princely crown
of martyrdom. With fiendish delight the
Iroquois threw themselves on John de la
Lande, stripped him naked and belabored
him with blows. Father Jogues had already
tasted the agony of Iroquois cruelty, but it
was a new and thrilling experience for the
young man, who notwithstanding his dreadful
sufferings possessed his soul in peace. "You
shall die tomorrow!" the chiefs exclaimed.
"Your head will fall under our tomahawks
and will be placed on our palisades to show
your brethren what fate awaits them."
Meanwhile pieces of his flesh were cut from
his arms and devoured before his eyes. Wild
threats of assassination were being echoed
in the village of Ossernenon. A few hours
later, the threat was executed upon Isaac
Jogues. On the following day it was the
turn of John de la Lande, at Auriesville, in
the Mohawk Valley, October 19, 1646.
REFLECTION
Here I pause to admire the hidden ways
of God. In after years the ferocious Iroquois
who had slain our martyrs, and who for
nearly half a century were the mortal enemies
of the Christian faith, had the Gospel preached
to them and became humble followers of
Christ. In the very land where Blessed
John de la Lande, Isaac Jogues and Rene Goupil had been slain for the faith, flourish-
ing missions were founded and flowers of
holiness blossomed forth. Under the divine
influence of the doctrines of Christ, preached
by the successors of those martyrs, wolves
became lambs, and glory was given to God
in a land where the enemy of men's souls
had so long held sway. The blood of martyrs
had become the seed of Christians in the
New World as in the Old; but in order to
bring this about, holy missionaries in their
sweat and blood blazed their way through
the dense growth of superstition which had
lor centuries gathered around the unhappy
Indian tribes. In the designs of God, ap-
parently, our heroic missionary age — the
second quarter of the seventeenth century
— had to be lived through and endured.
Surely the eight victims of that tragic era
who gave their blood so freely, and who
have been raised to the honors of the altar
by the Infallible Church, have still some
interest in the land where they won their
crowns of martyrdom and will listen to the
humble petitions of those who ask their
intercession. They were the friends of God
in those years; they are not less His friends
in the age in which we live.
Blessed John de la Lande, who conse-
crated your life to God in the service of His
missionaries, who served those holy men in
lowly employments, and who in the end
received the crown which is the reward of humble and devoted service, intercede for
me with the Divine Master, so that if my
petition be agreeable to His holy will I may
obtain what I ask. Amen.
PRAYER IN HONOR OF THE
MARTYRS
O God, Who by the preaching and the
blood of Thy Blessed Martyrs, John and Isaac
and their Companions, didst consecrate the
first fruits of the faith in the vast regions
of North America, graciously grant that by
their intercession the flourishing harvest of
Christians may be everywhere and always
increased. Through our Lord Jesus Christ
Thy Son Who liveth and reigneth in union
with the Holy Spirit, one God, world with-
out end. Amen.
PRAYER OF PETITION
O God Who didst inflame the hearts of
Thy Blessed Martyrs with an admirable zeal
for the salvation of souls, grant me, I be-
seech Thee {here make your request), so that
the favors obtained through their inter-
cession may make manifest before men the
power and the glory of Thy name. Amen.
Our Father. Hail Mary. Glory be to the
Father.
Blessed John de la Lande, intercede for
me!
NINTH DAY
Dedicated to
The Queen of Martyrs
-♦K
4
MARY lovingly watched over our
Martyrs during the years of their
labors and sufferings along Georgian Bay,
and those heroic men endeavored to repay
her for her motherly love and tenderness.
"The general and special obligations that we
are under to this great Princess of heaven
and earth," wrote a Huron missionary in
1638, "makes it one of our keenest disap-
pointments that we are not able to show
her sufficient gratitude. At least we can
claim the consolation that henceforth as
often as people shall speak of the chief
residence of the mission of the Hurons,
calling it by the name of Ste. Marie, it will
be so much homage rendered to her for
what we owe to her and hold from her, and
a pledge of what we wish to be to her forever."
Fort Ste. Marie will remain forever an
historic monument of the devotion of Blessed
John de Brebeuf and his Companions to
their incomparable Queen. It was built in
her honor and given her name. Thither
they went after their wanderings and fatigues
to rest and recuperate their strength for
other labors. Under Mary's roof, hidden
away in a forest near Georgian Bay, they gathered together at stated times to confer
on the interests of their missions. In that
home of peace, and under her protecting
mantle, they withdrew to commune with
God in their annual retreats. At Fort
Ste. Marie they assembled their Huron
neophytes for instruction and baptism. There
thousands of Indian pilgrims gathered yearly
to renew their pledge of perseverance in the
practices of the Christian faith. And when
the moment of disaster came in 1649, it was
there that the venerable victims of the
Iroquois, Blessed John de Brebeuf and
Gabriel Lalemant, were laid in their graves.
REFLECTION
Happily the memory of Mary and her
Canadian Martyrs has been revived at the
self-same spot. After three hundred years
the Shrine of Fort Ste. Marie has risen
from its ruins, and its two steeples, now
silhouetted against the sky, will recall not
merely the years when Mary reigned in the
hearts of her humble servants laboring along
Georgian Bay, but it will renew in our times
scenes often witnessed in that heroic age.
As in the seventeenth century, when thou-
sands of Huron Christians, urged by holy
men as yet uncrowned by martyrdom, went
to Fort Ste. Marie to implore the aid of Mary
in their trials and sorrows, so also in the
twentieth other thousands, attracted by the glory of Ste. Marie's beatified apostles, will
frequent the same venerable spot, there to
pour out their prayers and supplications.
And as they kneel and pray at a Shrine
teeming with so many historic and holy
souvenirs, they may confidently hope that
the Queen of Heaven and her heroic sons,
now ennobled by the Church, will listen to
their petitions and will generously grant
them what they ask for.
Glorious Queen of Martyrs, to whom the
early missionaries of this country were so
devoted and from whom they received so
many favors, graciously listen to my petition.
Ask Thy Divine Son to remember all they
did for His glory; remind Him that they
preached the Gospel and made His holy
Name known to thousands who had never
heard of Him, and then had their apostolic
labors crowned by shedding their blood for
Him. Exercise thy motherly influence as
thou didst at Cana, and implore Him to
grant me what I ask in this Novena if it
be conformable to His holy will.
PRAYER IN HONOR OF THE
MARTYRS
O God, Who by the preaching and the
blood of Thy Martyrs, Blessed John and
Isaac and their Companions, didst conse-
crate the first fruits of the faith in the vast
regions of North America, graciously grant
NINTH DAY 43
that by their intercession the flourishing
harvest of Christians may be everywhere
and always increased. Through Our Lord
Jesus Christ Thy Son who liveth and reigneth
in union with the Holy Spirit, one God,
world without end. Amen.
PRAYER OF PETITION
O God Who didst inflame the hearts of
Thy Blessed Martyrs with an admirable zeal
for the salvation of souls, grant me, I be-
seech Thee (here make your request), so that
the favors obtained through their inter-
cession may make manifest before men the
power and the glory of Thy name. Amen.
Our Father. Hail Mary. Glory be to the
Father.
Mary Queen of Martyrs, intercede for me!
LITANY In Honor of the Blessed Martyrs (For private use) LORD, have mercy on us. Christ, have mercy on us. Lord, have mercy on us. Christ, hear us. Christ, graciously hear us. God the Father of Heaven, have mercy on us. God the Son, Redeemer of the world, have mercy on us God the Holy Ghost, have mercy on us. Holy Trinity, one God, have mercy on us Holy Mary, Mother of God, ♦Blessed John de Brebeuf , noble apostle and martyr, *Blessed Isaac Jogues, doubly a martyr for Christ, *Blessed Gabriel Lalemant, hero of constancy in martyrdom, ♦Blessed Anthony Daniel, martyr of zeal and selfsacrifice, ♦Blessed Charles Gamier, angel of penance and martyr, •Blessed Noel Chabanel, martyred in desolation and abandonment, Blessed Rene Goupil, martyred for the sign of the Cross, Blessed John de la Lande, martyred in the service of martyrs, All ye Holy Martyrs of Christ, Pioneers of the Cross in a new world, Heroic apostles of the faith, Zealous promoters of God's glory, Men consumed with love for souls, Fruitful leaders of souls to God, Men of prayer and action, * Asterisks indicate the six martyrs who lived at Fort Ste. Marie (1639-1649). The ashes of Blessed John de Brebeuf and Gahrul Lahmant still lie buried there. Lovers of poverty, Models of purity, Faithful in obedience, Intrepid in dangers, Undaunted in hardships, Followers of Christ Crucified, Fearless in suffering for Christ, Enduring hunger and thirst for Christ, Stripped and scourged for Christ, Tortured by fire for Christ, Cruelly slain for Christ, Peerless athletes of God, Loving children of the Queen of Martyrs, Filial clients of St. Joseph, Worthy sons of St. Ignatius, Our intercessors in Heaven,
Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, spare us, Lord. Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, graciously hear us, Lord. Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, have mercy on us.
V. Pray for us, O Blessed Martyrs, R. That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.
LET US PRAY O God, Who by the preaching and the blood of Thy Blessed Martyrs, John and Isaac and their Companions, didst consecrate the first fruits of the faith in the vast regions of North America, graciously grant that by their intercession the flourishing harvest of Christians may be everywhere and always increased. Through Our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son Who liveth and reigneth in union with the Holy Spirit, one God, world without end. Amen.
«Soy un pecador, pero sé diferenciar entre un pastor y un mercenario. Creo que la gran mayoría de estos obispos son solo un grupo de mercenarios que “castigan” a los sacerdotes que siguen la ortodoxia. Y mi pregunta es ¿quién los tiene contratados? Yo no creo que sea Jesús. ¿Es Francisco? ¿Quién contrata a Francisco? ¿Es la Pachamama?». (MEL GIBSON).
LITANY In Honor of the Blessed Martyrs (For private use) LORD, have mercy on us. Christ, have mercy on us. Lord, have mercy on us. Christ, hear us. Christ, graciously hear us. God the Father of Heaven, have mercy on us. God the Son, Redeemer of the world, have mercy on us God the Holy Ghost, have mercy on us. Holy Trinity, one God, have mercy on us Holy Mary, Mother of God, ♦Blessed John de Brebeuf , noble apostle and martyr, *Blessed Isaac Jogues, doubly a martyr for Christ, *Blessed Gabriel Lalemant, hero of constancy in martyrdom, ♦Blessed Anthony Daniel, martyr of zeal and selfsacrifice, ♦Blessed Charles Gamier, angel of penance and martyr, •Blessed Noel Chabanel, martyred in desolation and abandonment, Blessed Rene Goupil, martyred for the sign of the Cross, Blessed John de la Lande, martyred in the service of martyrs, All ye Holy Martyrs of Christ, Pioneers of the Cross in a new world, Heroic apostles of the faith, Zealous promoters of God's glory, Men consumed with love for souls, Fruitful leaders of souls to God, Men of prayer and action, * Asterisks indicate the six martyrs who lived at Fort Ste. Marie (1639-1649). The ashes of Blessed John de Brebeuf and Gahrul Lahmant still lie buried there. Lovers of poverty, Models of purity, Faithful in obedience, Intrepid in dangers, Undaunted in hardships, Followers of Christ Crucified, Fearless in suffering for Christ, Enduring hunger and thirst for Christ, Stripped and scourged for Christ, Tortured by fire for Christ, Cruelly slain for Christ, Peerless athletes of God, Loving children of the Queen of Martyrs, Filial clients of St. Joseph, Worthy sons of St. Ignatius, Our intercessors in Heaven,
Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, spare us, Lord. Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, graciously hear us, Lord. Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, have mercy on us.
V. Pray for us, O Blessed Martyrs, R. That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.
LET US PRAY O God, Who by the preaching and the blood of Thy Blessed Martyrs, John and Isaac and their Companions, didst consecrate the first fruits of the faith in the vast regions of North America, graciously grant that by their intercession the flourishing harvest of Christians may be everywhere and always increased. Through Our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son Who liveth and reigneth in union with the Holy Spirit, one God, world without end. Amen.
«Soy un pecador, pero sé diferenciar entre un pastor y un mercenario. Creo que la gran mayoría de estos obispos son solo un grupo de mercenarios que “castigan” a los sacerdotes que siguen la ortodoxia. Y mi pregunta es ¿quién los tiene contratados? Yo no creo que sea Jesús. ¿Es Francisco? ¿Quién contrata a Francisco? ¿Es la Pachamama?». (MEL GIBSON).
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