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mail : englishspoken@clairval.com
March 9, 2003
First
Sunday of Lent
Dear Friend of Saint Joseph Abbey,
«I have read the lives of many
missionaries. One I've read is the life of Théophane Vénard,
which interested me and touched me more than I can say.» This
is how Saint Thérèse of Lisieux expressed herself on March
19, 1897. Shortly thereafter, she confided to her sisters the
reason for this preference: «I like Théophane Vénard even
more than Saint Louis de Gonzaga, because the life of Saint
Louis de Gonzaga was extraordinary and Théophane Vénard's
was quite ordinary.» She added, «My soul is like his. He is
the one who has best lived my way of spiritual childhood.»
Théophane was born on November 21, 1829, on the Feast of the
Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, in
Saint-Loup-sur-Thouet, in the diocese of Poitiers, France.
Baptized the same day, he received the first names
Jean-Théophane,
but kept only the latter, which means «manifestation of God.»
His parents were fervent Catholics. Two years before Théophane,
a little Mélanie had come to gladden the household. Two other
boys, Henri and Eusèbe, would complete the family.
Théophane became an altar boy, and looked with secret envy
upon the priest who had baptized him, officiating at the altar.
His mother had explained to him what the Mass and the
priesthood were. But Jesus Christ's call, «Follow me!» would
echo more strongly when he was 9, in the solitude of the
hillside in Bel-Air, where the boy led his father's goat to
graze while he read The Propagation of the Faith Review,
a magazine that recounted the deeds of missionaries. One day,
he finished the life of Father Cornay, a native of the diocese
of Poitiers who was decapitated for the faith in Tonkin (present-day
Vietnam) in 1837. Théophane exclaimed, «I want to go to
Tonkin, too! I want to die a martyr, too!» He had made his
decision.
Théophane kept his secret to himself and asked his father if
he could continue on to secondary school. In 1841, he entered
the school in Doué, 50 kilometers from Saint-Loup. Though
this separation from the family he loved dearly was
heartbreaking for him, he was soon among the best in his
class. When he was with his friends, he was sometimes given to
mockery, irascible and quick-tempered, losing his temper at
the slightest provocation. Like every boy his age, Théophane
experienced highs and lows, but at this time, reprimands were
more common than praise. Enlightened by the grace of God, he
guessed that nothing was obtained without suffering or prayer.
He also wrote to his sister Mélanie: «I have made a
resolution that I want to tell you about. It is to say my
Rosary every week.» Thanks to the help of this Marian prayer
within the means of all, he gradually succeeded in mending his
ways.
He made his First Communion on April 28, 1842, a heavenly day
for him. The truths of the faith strengthened his soul and
helped him to endure a very difficult trial without failing—that
of his mother's death on January 11, 1849. He could find
comfort only by throwing himself into the arms of the Blessed
Virgin.
«May nothing hold you back!»
At the beginning of August 1847, Théophane left Doué
for the Minor Seminary in Montmorillon. After completing his
philosophy studies there, he entered the Major Seminary in
Poitiers, where he wrote to his sister, «You will be happy to
learn that one of our confreres, a deacon, is leaving Thursday
for the Seminary for Foreign Missions in Paris. May God deign
to guide his steps, and may Venerable Cornay watch over him.»
Thus did he begin to prepare his family for his own plan to
leave on mission. Doing this took time, cleverness and tact. Mélanie
understood first. For her father, the sacrifice was more
difficult, but in the end, in a beautiful outburst of faith,
he gave his full permission. «If you see that God is calling
you, and I have no doubt that you do, don't hesitate to obey!
May nothing hold you back, not even the thought of leaving a
grieved father.» He was scheduled to leave on February 27,
1851, at 9 o'clock in the evening. After the last meal
together as a family and the recitation of the Rosary, Théophane
read a few passages from The Imitation of Christ that
were related to the situation, then recited the evening prayer,
which was interrupted by the family's tears. Lastly, he asked
for his father's blessing. Slightly trembling, the father
pronounced these words, one by one: «My dear son, receive
this blessing from your father, who is sacrificing you to the
Lord. Be blessed forever in the name of the Father, and of the
Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen!» When it was time to leave,
the future missionary, knowing that he would never see his
family again, kissed his family one last time, walked out of
the house and got into a carriage. The depth of his suffering
showed through to some extent in a letter he wrote later to a
priest friend: «God supported me in the last moments of my
family life, and even made them pleasant and agreeable for me.
However, it's good that they were short—my soul was brimming
over with emotion...»
In March 1851, Théophane entered the Seminary for Foreign
Missions in Paris. On April 26, a short letter went out to his
family. «Such news could not suffer a day's delay—I will be
a priest on Trinity Sunday!» But he soon fell ill with a
paratyphoid fever. After a novena to the Most Blessed Virgin,
danger was quickly averted. Nevertheless, his entire life
would be marked by periods of poor health.
On June 5, 1851, he was ordained a priest at the age of 22. He
celebrated his first Mass at Our Lady of Victories, but no one
came from Saint-Loup. The sacrifice had been made once and for
all. From then on, his most ardent desires were for Tonkin. «The
mission in Tonkin is the envied mission, since it offers the
shortest means to go to Heaven... Oh! If only one day I, too,
were called to offer my blood as a witness to the faith!» In
September 1852, Théophane celebrated his last Mass in France,
and left on mission for China, in accordance with the will of
his superiors.
«Let's not waste our time!»
After a voyage of several months, the Chinese coast
appeared on the horizon and, on March 19, 1853, the
missionaries landed on the island of Hong Kong. Théophane did
not yet know his final destination but, since he had been sent
to China, he began to learn Chinese. This difficult task, the
climate, and the heat seriously weakened his health, and he
needed to rest. «Little Father Vénard,» as he was called,
was always very cheerful! He was loved by everyone in this
home, where everyone was close, but evangelization remained
the primary concern of these apostles of Christ. China was
there before them, and souls were waiting for the light of the
Catholic faith. Théophane was animated by the same apostolic
flame for the salvation of souls as Saint Thérèse of the
Child Jesus, who wrote to her sister Céline on July 14, 1889:
«Céline, during the short moments that we have left, let's
not waste our time... let's save souls—they are being lost
like snowflakes, and Jesus is weeping.»
Théophane expressed this great concern to his friend, Father
Dallet: «Mother China and her daughters Korea, Japan and
Cochin-China [modern Vietnam] must bend the knee before
Christ.» However, he was not deluded. «The burden of the
missions seems heavy to me, now that I am seeing it up
close... I hope that at the moment that I must go, God's
strength will help my weakness, and the light of His grace
will help my inexperience.»
While he was getting ready to leave for China, a letter
arrived for him from Paris, announcing, «You have been given
Tonkin.» This was for him an inexpressible joy. «I have
received my travel order for Tonkin... I am going to a part
they call West Tonkin. It is there that Venerable Charles
Cornay was martyred... In this Annamese land, where the
persecution is the most active, a price has been put on every
missionary's head, and when someone can seize one, he is
decapitated without further ado.»
On May 26, 1854, Théophane left Hong Kong and arrived on July
13 in Vinh-Tri, the center of the vicariate of West Tonkin. He
threw himself into the arms of the Apostolic Vicar, Bishop
Retord. Approximately twenty-two months after having left
Paris, his missionary apostolate began. Vinh-Tri was a village
that had been entirely Christian for a century. Missionaries
were openly received there, thanks to the benevolence of
Viceroy Hung. This governor, father-in-law of the emperor
Tu-Duc, had been cured of an eye disease by a Tonkinese
seminarian, and consequently protected the Christians in his
province. A seminary and various institutions lived and
developed without being disturbed.
«Three cheers for joy anyway!»
Bishop Retord had, by means of his eminent qualities
and his virtue, gained the respect of many Mandarin
subofficers. Having arrived in Tonkin during a period of
violent persecution, he had lived in hiding places for months
at a time, without losing his legendary good spirits. When he
became a bishop, he communicated his apostolic zeal to his
entire diocese. His official episcopal motto, «Intoxicate me
with the Cross,» was balanced by another familiar motto that
he used to boost his missionaries' morale in difficult times—«Three
cheers for joy anyway!» He had seen many of his priests die
of affliction or under torture, but had not been captured
himself. «I am sad that I have not joined them,» he wrote.
The bishop soon determined how valuable «Little Father Vénard»
was. The liveliness of this newcomer, who most gladly laughed
and sang, corresponded to his own mentality. Théophane, who
had to learn the local language, worked with such a tenacious
will that he could soon preach in Vietnamese. He liked
everything in Tonkin, which made it easier for him to adapt.
However, the food did not sit well with his stomach, and
caused him a great deal of suffering. What did it matter? He
was the first to laugh about it. Nevertheless, his health was
again a cause of concern. He became weaker, in spite of the
care lavished on him, and soon he had to be given Extreme
Unction. They began a novena to obtain a cure for him; from
the first invocations, the sick man felt well again. Without
delay, he got down to business—baptisms, preaching,
confessions.
«The missionary is a person of the Beatitudes,» Pope John
Paul II reminds us. «Before sending out the Twelve to
evangelize, Jesus, in his 'missionary discourse' (cf. Mt. 10),
teaches them the paths of mission: poverty, meekness,
acceptance of suffering and persecution, the desire for
justice and peace, charity—in other words, the Beatitudes,
lived out in the apostolic life (cf. Mt 5:1-12). By living the
Beatitudes, the missionary experiences and shows concretely
that the kingdom of God has already come, and that he has
accepted it. The characteristic of every authentic missionary
life is the inner joy that comes from faith» (Encyclical Redemptoris
missio, December 7, 1990, no. 91).
The relative peace of the Tonkin mission did not last. The
central government badgered mandarins (local functionaries) to
track down priests. Fathers Castex and Vénard hid in the
village of But-Dong, where they were received by a small
community of Vietnamese nuns, the «Lovers of the Cross,» who
until that time had never been worried. There, he could at
least celebrate Mass and continue his missionary activity
through prayer.
The nuns in But-Dong, who did not wear distinctive dress,
worked in the fields or went from village to village selling
remedies, which allowed them a way into pagan homes. They were
trustworthy messengers among the various Christians, but their
life was difficult and dangerous. To escape the mandarins'
searches, the two Fathers hid between two partitions, waiting
for the danger to pass. After several days, they left But-Dong.
In a matter of weeks, they would change hiding places six
times. In these travels on foot, Théophane fell ill again. He
dragged himself along with great difficulty. Terrible asthma
attacks weakened him so that his companion feared seeing him
die of asphyxiation in an airless nook. But Bishop Retord was
in Vinh-Tri—there, Théophane could be cared for. They
stretched him out, almost dead, in the bottom of a boat where,
panting and trying to breathe, he never lost his smile. He
received last rites again, but did not delude himself. «I am
holding on to life by just a thread. Three cheers for joy
anyway!» Nevertheless, the cool of autumn revived him to some
degree.
Only suffering gives birth to
souls
Théophane offered his suffering and his seeming
inactivity for the eternal salvation of souls, since this was
God's will. «Only suffering can give birth to souls for Jesus,»
wrote Saint Thérèse to her sister Céline on July 8, 1891.
We can thus understand the saint of Lisieux's mysterious
liking for the missionary of Tonkin.
With the winter months, his strength returned enough that
Bishop Retord decided to take Théophane with him on his
pastoral rounds. They visited one parish after another. The
missionaries preached, heard confessions, administered the
sacraments, reconciled with God those who had fallen, and
encouraged all the faithful to improve. «He was never more
fervent or more eloquent than when he was talking about the
Blessed Virgin Mary, whom he loved, it was plain to see, with
filial love,» attested Father Thinh during the process of
beatification.
But the rainy season of 1856 was the occasion of a new illness—this
time it was consumption, or tuberculosis, that made him
consider imminent death. The bishop, upset, no longer knowing
what to do, allowed Théophane to undergo a very painful
Chinese medical intervention in which various well-determined
parts of the patient's body were burned with little balls of
an herbal medicine. During this painful procedure, Théophane
held his crucifix with both hands, and did not let out a
single groan. Before long, the illness lost ground. His
immediate prayer, «to have enough strength to preach the
Gospel,» was heard. He was going to be able to return to the
active missionary life that he would lead for about three
years until his arrest. His bishop testified to this: «I said
that he had tremendous zeal. Even though he had the poorest
health of all the missionaries in the vicariate, he did as
much as all the others, often spending half the night in the
confessional, sometimes even whole nights. His confidence in
God was limitless and made him bold in his endeavors.»
A year of graces
After a relative lull, the persecution was vigorously
started again in 1859 by the emperor Tu-Duc, who was
determined to put an end to «Jesus' religion.» The newly
proclaimed edict gave the death penalty to priests, promised a
reward to informants, and set out penalties for mandarins who
were kind to Christians. Théophane was thoroughly convinced
that the year 1860 that was beginning would be that of his
arrest and that God would grant him the grace of martyrdom.
His bishop gave him permission to offer himself to God as a
victim for the Church of Tonkin. Out of filial love for the
Blessed Virgin, he consecrated himself to her, using Saint
Louis-Marie Grignion de Montfort's prayer, placing himself
entirely in her hands.
Thus was he armed for the final battles. He took refuge in the
home of the widow Can, but a cousin of hers informed the
police, and he was arrested on November 30, 1860. His
vestments were taken away, and he was led away, tied up, while
he continued to pray and prepare himself for martyrdom. Locked
in a narrow wooden cage, he was transferred to the citadel in
Hanoi. There, the viceroy himself came to interrogate him.
Then, he gave orders—to build a more spacious bamboo cage,
put a mosquito net around it, place a mat on the floor, forge
as light a chain as possible for the priest, and see to it
that the prisoner was decently fed. During the interrogation,
Father Théophane had, in fact, made the best impression, and
it was because of this that these relative comforts were
granted him.
The catechist Kang who had been captured with the Father was
not separated from his teacher. Thanks to a soldier's
complicity, Théophane obtained some paper, ink and a brush.
He wrote to his confreres and his family: «If I obtain the
grace of martyrdom, I will remember you especially. Let us
meet in Heaven! We will see each other above!» He did not
know that his father had passed away fifteen months before.
His final judgment took place in Hanoi. He entered the
courtroom and was given the honor of not being whipped. In
their questionings, the various judges, mixing religion and
politics, tried to make the missionary responsible for the
bombing of Annamese coasts by a French-Spanish squadron, or
even for riots generated by the emperor Tu-Duc's actions. Théophane
calmly refuted these slanders to bring the debate back to its
real basis—he had come to Tonkin only to preach Jesus'
religion. They placed a crucifix in his hands. «Trample the
Cross underfoot,» the viceroy told him, «and you will not be
put to death!» At that, the missionary raised the crucifix in
his hands with respect, placed his lips upon it for a long
time, then exclaimed in a loud voice, «What! I have preached
the faith of the Cross till this day, and now you want me to
renounce it? I do not value life in this world so much that I
wish to preserve it at the cost of an apostasy!» The viceroy
uttered the following sentence: «The European priest Vin,
whose real name is «Véna,» is condemned, on account of his
blindness of heart and obstinacy of spirit, all other cause
being dismissed, to having his head severed, then displayed
for three days, and then thrown into the river.»
The execution of the verdict required Tu-Duc's signature. On
Monday, December 17, 1860, a courier set out for Huê to carry
a copy of the decision there. But the condemned did not
officially know his fate until a few hours before the
execution of the sentence, on February 2. Théophane's new
cage, two meters long and a meter high, was beautiful and
ornate. But what torment to stay in this narrow space! The
guards themselves, won over by the captive's affability,
allowed him to go out of it from time to time. He had other
friends as well—Paul Muïn, a fearless Christian who had
slipped into the police, could see Father Théophane four or
five times a day.
A calm lake
«Although the majority are kind to me,» wrote Father
Théophane in a letter to his family on January 2, 1861, «there
are people who insult and mock me.» Fortunately, visitors
became rare, and he could write to his bishop, «My heart is
like a calm lake.» Up until the end, he prayed his breviary,
the only book that remained in his possession. Théophane
expressed his happiness by singing his desire for Heaven, and
hoped to receive the Eucharist. The deacon Men succeeded in
having Holy Communion brought to him by devout Christians who
passed unnoticed. The priest Thinh, sent by the bishop,
managed to hear Father Théophane's confession.
The morning of February 2, Father Théophane learned that he
was going to be executed that very day. He thanked God, asked
the Blessed Virgin to help him until the end, then, dressed in
a feast day habit, walked joyfully to be executed, singing the
Magnificat. The executioner, who had had a drink to give
himself courage, had to make five attempts to detach the
martyr's head with a saber. It seemed that with the third blow,
Théophane was already in Heaven, in a joy without end... This
was what he wanted with all his soul. He was happy beyond all
measure.
Théophane Vénard's example, particularly his way of
accepting his martyrdom, was a valuable aid to Saint Thérèse
of the Child Jesus. The future Doctor of the Church drew light
and strength from it.
The day after Théophane Vénard's canonization (June 19,
1988), Pope John Paul II, speaking to French pilgrims, said,
«Saint Thérèse of the Child Jesus was on intimate terms
with Saint Théophane Vénard, whose picture never left her as
she suffered the pangs of death. She had recognized her own
spiritual experience in a farewell letter by Théophane: 'I do
not rely on my own strength, but on the strength of Him who
defeated the power of Hell and of the world through the
Cross.'»
We entrust to these two great figures of recent Church history
all your intentions, including your deceased.
Dom Antoine Marie osb
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