O.Carm
European Leadership Meets on Variety of Issues
An Assembly of the leaders of the European Area (made up of the provincials, commissaries general, delegates general and their delegates) took place at St Albert’s International Centre in Rome on 15th and 16th January 2024.
The Eucharist to open the Assembly was celebrated by Benny Phang (Vice Prior General) in the chapel of St Albert’s during which he spoke about the need to work in the ministry of vocations. The large variety of cultures and nationalities present at the Assembly were acknowledged by the participants saying the Adsumus, Sancte Spiritus prayer in the various languages of European Area at the beginning of each of the working sessions.
Richard Byrne, General Councillor for Europe, gave a short report regarding forthcoming chapters and visitations, the ongoing formation course on St Thérèse of Lisieux, the retreat for those in simple vows in 2024, and the planned gathering of young adults in Rome for the Jubilee Year at the end of July 2025.
The European Area is divided into three (sub) regions: Italy-Malta, Iberia and North-Europe. Each of the presidents of these regions (Joseph Saliba, David del Carpio Horcajo and Brendan Grady) presented a report on the activities of their region and on any relevant unification or collaboration processes. They also reported on the two meetings of vocational personnel which were held during the last year. At both of these meetings, the Prior General, Míceál O’Neill, had delivered a presentation on vocations.
In September 2023, the North-European Region had held its two-day ‘in person’ course in Dublin (Ireland) in order to promote the prioritisation of the ministry of vocations within the region. Together with a facilitator (Mr Danny Curtin), sixteen participants spent two-days exploring and learning from one another about ways to nurture a culture for Carmelite vocations today.
In December 2023, the Italy-Malta and Iberian Regions had held their meeting online over two afternoons. Twenty-one participants took part in this meeting, sharing with one another their enthusiasm for this ministry and how strongly they believed that the Holy Spirit is still calling people to Carmel.
Overall, it was reported to this Assembly in January 2024 that those who attended both of the meetings for vocation personnel considered them to have been an important support towards those working in this ministry. Most wanted further meetings. After hearing these reports, each European region committed itself to holding further meetings over the coming year for all those involved in the ministry of vocations.
After this, each leader reported to the Assembly regarding four topics for their own reality: (1) the practical steps that had been taken regarding the implementation of the proposals of the encyclical Laudato si’; (2) ongoing formation for the friars; (3) the reality of how community meetings are held; and (4) any other important news or updates regarding the entity.
Eduardo Agosta Scarel OCarm gave a commentary on the leaders’ reports regarding Laudato si’ and on the message from the United Nations Climate Change Conference that took place in Dubai in 2023 (COP 28). Subsequently, each Region agreed a specific goal that could be realistically implemented by January 2025 so as to further implement the Order’s commitment to the proposals of Laudato si’. In addition, each Region and each reality committed itself to considering the issue over the next year.
Tadeusz Popiela, Prior of St. Albert’s, celebrated the Eucharist to begin the second day’s discussions and reflections. Afterwards, the Assembly heard a report from Alejandro López-Lapuente (the director of novices) regarding the European Novitiate in Salamanca. Seven novices had begun this year’s novitiate and were accompanied by another seven brothers in solemn vows within this formation community. Since its establishment, eighty-eight novices had started their novitiate in Salamanca. This was followed by various additional reports regarding the other formation houses within the European Area. The Assembly spent some time preparing for a retreat for those in simple vows in Europe this coming summer in the Italian Province’s retreat house in Nocera Umbra (Italy).
After that, the Assembly then turned its attention to the way in which the European realities of the Order connects with those sections outside of their realities in Africa and South America. Two speakers gave presentations regarding provincial commissariats and provincial delegates and this gave rise to a constructive discussion among the members of the Assembly.
Finally, the assembly discussed the Carmelite Family noting the Constitutions which state that “all individuals and groups, whether institutional or not, which draw their inspiration from the Rule of St Albert, from its tradition and from the values expressed in Carmelite spirituality, constitute the Carmelite Family within the Church today.”[1] It was noted that in a synodal Church, which announces the Gospel, everyone “walks together”. Therefore, the members explored how this “walking together” is carried out today in our own Order noting the experience of the extended Carmelite Family attending some provincial chapters. The members of the Assembly then explored what steps the Spirit invites them to take in order to grow in our “walking together” so that our realities (in their chapters or otherwise) would be more synodal. The members of the European Area agreed to hold another two-day Assembly in January 2025 and concluded with the singing of the Flos Carmeli.
Celebrating At Home - 3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time
Partners with Christ
(Mark 1:14-20)
The Gospel today begins with the foundational cry of Jesus’ ministry: The Kingdom of God has drawn near; repent and believe the Good News. The call of the disciples follows immediately. This Gospel builds on last Sunday’s readings about vocation, and specifically, about how becoming a follower of Christ leads to transformation and the proclamation of the Good News.
The idea of repentance here is not about turning away from sinfulness, but about leaving a known way of life behind and turning around to face in a totally new direction as a follower of Christ.
We see that played out in the call of the fishermen called away from everything they know and even from their family to set off in a new direction, following Christ.
The fact that Jesus called (and still calls) disciples is not about creating a flock of ‘blind followers’ but a people who live and work in active partnership with Christ to establish the Kingdom and preach the Good News. Becoming ‘fishers of people’ they draw others into the circle of God’s life.
Using the proclamation at the beginning of Jesus’ ministry and the story of the call of the first four disciples, the Gospel invites us to think about our own vocation, our own call, as followers of Jesus and what might need to be left behind in order to enter more fully into the mystery of God’s Kingdom; how we might work in partnership with the Spirit of Jesus in making the Kingdom a living reality in the world.
Note that the Kingdom does not exist apart from human beings – it is to be incarnated (enfleshed) in the new people of God, the disciples of Christ.
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- pdf Celebrando en Familia - III Domingo del Tiempo Ordinario (716 KB)
- pdf Celebrando in Casa - III Domenica del Tempo Ordinario (707 KB)
- pdf Celebrando em familia - III Domingo Do Tempo Comum (705 KB)
Memorial of Bl. Angelo Paoli, “Father Charity”
January 20 Optional Memorial (Obligatory Memorial in the Italian Provinces)
In a world known for its callous disregard for the poor and downtrodden, the example of Angelo Paoli is a refreshing breath of air. Angelo cared so well for his unfortunate brothers and sisters that he was known as “Father Charity” or “Father of the Poor.” Fortunately, he did more than just act as one kind individual he was an excellent motivator, who set many wheels of benevolence in motion at the dawn of the 18th century.
Humanity was an assumed way of life for young Paoli. He was born September 1, 1642, in the humble Tuscan town of Argigliano, not far north from the stone quarries of Massa Carrara. His parents, Angelo Paoli and Santa Morelli, decided to baptize their son Francesco, in honor of the benevolent saint of Assisi. They were devout peasants who provided a loving home for their seven children, where care for others was the essential element of life. As a young man, Paoli frequently looked for times when he could go off to remote and beautiful places to be alone in prayer. But he was equally zealous in teaching the Christian beliefs and virtues to the young people of his village. It was no surprise to his parents or anyone else when his devotion to Mary led him at age 18 to join the Carmelites at nearby Fivizzano.
He was sent to Siena for his novitiate year, and professed his vows in 1661, taking the religious name of Angelo to honor his father. After studying philosophy and theology in Pisa and Florence, he was ordained a priest in 1667. The first 20 years of his ministry were spent in the ordinary busy tasks of his Tuscan province. As a versatile and reliable friar, he worked in the communities of his native Argigliano, in Pistoia, and in Siena. He served as novice master in Florence, as pastor in Carniola, taught grammar to young students in Montecatini, and served as organist and sacristan in Fivizzano. Throughout this busy period, he continued his regular prayer in remote and beautiful places, and never lost sight of the poorest people who might need his help. He developed a special devotion to the suffering and death of Jesus on the cross. He dramatized his devotion to the Cross by setting up several large wooden crosses in his favorite prayer settings, often on beautiful mountain tops. He would later place a large cross in Rome’s ruined Coliseum in memory of the martyrs who died there.
In 1687, his life changed dramatically when the Prior General, Paul of St. Ignatius, called him to Rome to join the community of San Martino ai Monti. The Prior General’s original plan was simply to have Angelo give good example to the community by his fervent observance of the religious life. But once he arrived, he was put in charge of the community’s finances. He immediately began to care for the teeming beggars and poor street people who filled Rome, amid the splendors of the glittering Baroque age. Angelo soon amazed his community members with the vast numbers of poor and hungry people who came to the monastery’s courtyard for their daily food. Some days there were as many as 300 people lining up to be fed. Even more remarkable was how Angelo found enough food, money and clothing to care for everyone who came he shyly claimed that there was always something in his pantry. Some Romans compared his largess with Jesus’ loaves and fish; others simply concluded that he had found secret patrons who wanted to remain nameless.
Angelo also found himself rapidly drawn to care for the sick. Not far from San Martino, there was a busy hospital at St. John Lateran, Rome’s cathedral. According to the custom of the time, the hospital cared primarily for the health and basic feeding of the patient, but such things as additional food, blankets, and clothing were often left to family members of the sick. For the poorest people, there was often no one to supply these needs. So, Angelo began to visit the twin wings of the hospital, one for men, and the other for women. He fed the hungriest patients, comforted, and counseled those in need, emptied bedpans, and saw to the most menial services. His visits increased to twice a day, especially when he was able to find other patrons and donors to support his efforts. He eventually found a location near the Coliseum where he organized and ran Rome’s first convalescent home for those discharged from the hospital, but still unable to care for themselves.
Part of Angelo’ s practical genius flowed from the fact that his strong spiritual life attracted many others to help his charitable works. He was a popular confessor and spiritual advisor to the illustrious members of Roman society. He was eagerly sought by cardinals, ambassadors, Roman officials, including the Pope’s own doctor, and countless members of Europe’s noble families. Sometimes the only way that the rich and powerful could get a word with Angelo was to follow him through a hospital ward with a basket of food or help him as he distributed bread at San Martino. Beyond any doubt, these well-fed patricians were also generous in helping his efforts to feed others.
To reward his lavish care for the poor, Pope Innocent XII wanted to make Angelo a cardinal, but he refused on the grounds that he could not maintain his level of charity with such an encumbrance. Another offer of a red hat by Pope Clement XI was also refused. Angelo had no wish to be a prince of the Church, since he was busy enough just being a good friar. He did, however, convince the Popes to halt the pilfering of stone from the ruined Coliseum, and to erect a large cross there in memory of the martyrs. One of the high points of Angelo’s impact occurred in 1708. He raised three wooden crosses on Mount Testaccio, an artificial hill created by a huge quantity of ancient rubble from broken pottery. He celebrated the Way of the Cross with a sermon on Jesus’ passion and death, as a sign of his love for all people. Then he distributed bread and sausage to all present to continue the celebration.
Angelo Paoli died peacefully in 1720 and was buried in the church of San Martino. Many people spoke of his ability to foretell future events, and to cure the sick. But his simple works of mercy spoke even more eloquently of his solid spirituality, and his love of God. He had told his rich patrons, Whoever wants to love God must search for him among the poor. Truly, a fitting epitaph! (by Leopold Gluckert, O. Carm.)
* Burial of Blessed Angelo Paoli, Father of the poor, in the Basilica of Santi Silvestro e Martino ai Monti in RomePivari.com, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons
Causa Nostrae Laetitiae
INITIUM NOVITIATUS
06-01-24 Iuliana Ciceu (CAR) Carpinento Romano, Italia
07-01-24 Any Marcela de la Sagrada Familia Gómez Cárdenas (COR) Córdoba, ES
07-01-24. Ma Alejandra del Amor Crucificado Ocampo Murcia (COR) Córdoba, ES
PROFESSIO TEMPORANEA
21-11-23 Mary Josephine of Nativity (MAC) Machakos, Kenya
21-11-23 Mary Neema of St. John of the Cross (MAC) Machakos, Kenya
21-11-23 Mary Margaret of Our Lady of Mount Carmel (MAC) Machakos, Kenya
14-12-23 Mary Agnes Ndinda Mutie (JUJ) Juja, Kenya
04-01-24. Frayman Quiroga (Ita-Col) Lurín, Perú
04-01-24. Ronal Álvarez (Ita-Col) Lurín, Perú
04-01-24 Luis Fernando Lainez Palacio (PCM) Lurín, Perú
04-01-24 Raul Sharley Chafloque Orozco (PCM-Perú) Lurín, Perú
04-01-24 Bernardo Soriano Rosales (PCM) Lurín, Perú
04-01-24. Rafael Flórez (Ita-Col). Lurín, Perú
04-01-24. Jorge Salazar (Ita-Col) Lurín, Perú
04-01-24 Salomón Santana (Ita-Col) Lurín, Perú
ORDINATIO DIACONALIS
15-12-23 Roberto Reyes (PCM) Washington, DC, USA
30-12-23 Itamar dos Santos Neri (Pern) Jaboatão dos Guararapes, Brasil
Presentation of a book on Fr. Serafino Maria Potenza
On Thursday, January 18, 2024, at 6 p.m., at the Centro Internazionale Sant'Alberto (Rome), the volume L'attività di padre Serafino Maria Potenza (1697-1763) attraverso i documenti d'Archivio, by Simona Durante, published by Edizioni Carmelitane, will be presented.
Father Serafino Maria Potenza's importance to the Carmelite Order is particularly reflected during his work as postulator general and in having dedicated his life to collecting documents related to the history of the Order.
Fr. Vincenzo Criscuolo, ofmcap, Relator General, dicastery of the Causes of Saints, and Prof. Luca Carboni, archivist, from the Vatican Apostolic Archives, will speak at the presentation.
The author, Dr. Simona Durante, will also intervene.
For further study and purchase of the publication, see the Edizioni Carmelitane website.
Celebrating At Home - 2nd Sunday in Ordinary Time
Called to be a living Gospel
(John 1:35-42)
This Sunday could very well be called ‘Vocation Sunday’. Both the first reading and the Gospel are stories of call and response.
The episode we read in the first reading is well described as ‘Samuel’s Call’. Three times he hears God calling but thinks it is Eli (a Temple priest) and goes to him. Eli finally understands that it is God calling Samuel and tells him that next time he hears the voice to say, “Speak, Lord, your servant is listening”.
The reading concludes with the thought that God was with (dwelt with) Samuel and that Samuel spoke in God’s name.
Taken together with the Gospel, it’s hard to escape the thought that this Sunday is Vocation Sunday for all disciples. Just as God calls Samuel and Eli points the way, Jesus calls Andrew and the other disciple and John the Baptist points the way. Andrew responds (follows) and goes to ‘see’ and ‘dwell with’ Jesus. Next day, he calls Peter and both go to ‘see’ and ‘dwell with’ Jesus.
Andrew’s meeting with Jesus transforms him into both a follower and an evangeliser. Peter’s meeting with Jesus (coming to ‘see’ Jesus) transforms him into the ‘rock’, the ‘foundation’ and the ‘shepherd’ (in John’s Gospel) of the flock.
Using both these readings the church returns to Ordinary Times calling us to reflect on our vocation, our call, to be disciples – to ‘come and see’ Jesus, to ‘dwell with him’ and to become evangelisers and shepherds in our own day.
Spending time in the company of Jesus (dwelling with him) we come to see who Jesus and God really are – often very different from the images we have grown up with.
Christians are called to a ‘mature’ faith in Jesus, a living relationship which is not dependent on rules, threats and fear, and is motivated only by love.
We learn to live in faithful relationship with Jesus.
Eventually, we become the living ‘voice’ of Christ in our thoughts, words and actions.
It is not a passive following to which we are called.
This is not about simply putting our feet in the footprints of Jesus. This is about dwelling with him, making his home ours, making our home his. It’s about making room for him in our hearts and our lives, becoming the dwelling place of God and the voice of Christ – to become a living Gospel of God’s love.
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- pdf Celebrando en Familia - II Domingo del Tiempo Ordinario (429 KB)
- pdf Celebrando in Casa - II Domenica del Tempo Ordinario (432 KB)
- pdf Celebrando em familia - II Domingo Do Tempo Comum (429 KB)
Vitam Coelo Reddiderunt
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Feast of St. Andrew Corsini, Bishop
January 9 Feast
The Generous Life of St. Andrew Corsini
"He administered the office entrusted to him like a saint. He is rightly held up to all the pastors of the Church as a model of an outstanding bishop... He was so kind and helpful to the poor and needy that he could only think of them in tears. It is well-known that no poor person ever left him sad." These words of Bishop Francis Venturi (Rome 1629) refer to St. Andrew Corsini. He lived the words of Jesus in an exemplary way: "Inasmuch as you did it to the least of my brothers, you did it to me."
St. Andrew was born in Florence around 1300 as one of twelve children of Niccolò Corsini and his wife Gemma. He was probably of noble birth and as a young man, like his peers, is said to have cultivated a very worldly lifestyle.
However, the warnings of his pious mother caused him to change his mind and Andrea entered the Carmel of his hometown. The date of his profession is unknown, as is the date of his ordination as a priest. In 1338, he is mentioned as a member of the convent in Florence, which at the time comprised fifty-two religious. In 1348, the year of the plague, the General Chapter of the Order in Metz elected him the first provincial of Tuscany.
On October 13 of the following year, Pope Clement VI appointed him Bishop of Fiesole near Florence. According to legend, the Mother of God appeared to Andrew and made him promise to accept the office of bishop. During his first holy mass, the young Carmelite is also said to have had a vision of the Madonna, as indicated by a marble relief in the Corsini Chapel of the Carmelite Church in Florence by G. B. Foggini from the 17th century.
He led his diocese with prudence and zeal. He was a true shepherd of his flock, which flourished under him. He had churches and monasteries renovated, endeavored to restore and embellish the cathedral, which was threatened by collapse, built apartments for the canons and repaired the bishop's house.
But he was not only concerned with external renewal. He strove to settle disputes between the citizens and often pointed out in his sermons the need for good neighborly coexistence and the obligation to Christian charity. People from near and far flocked to hear his words, not only because he was a good preacher, but also because he had a reputation for holiness. He admonished the clergy of his diocese to carry out their official duties, for there was much that was amiss. Andrew was not afraid to remove those unworthy of their office.
He also set himself this strict standard for an exemplary lifestyle: extreme frugality and modesty were a matter of course for him, and even in old age he practiced an ascetic lifestyle despite his sickliness. He was particularly fond of the poor, none of whom ever went away without a gift. The bishop often sat at the gate of his house and handed out bread himself. Not only the people in his diocese experienced his willingness to help, but also the inhabitants of his hometown and its surroundings, where he provided the needy with grain and clothing in particular. Andrew thus embodied the ideal of Christian poverty and testified to a deep faith that was not exhausted in words, but came alive in good deeds.
Andrea Corsini died on January 6, 1374, and was buried in the Basilica of Santa Maria del Carmine, the Carmelite church in Florence, in the so-called Corsini Chapel. His corpse has still not yet been buried.
Pope Eugene IV permitted his public veneration as early as 1440, following the victory of the Florentines at Angiari. Andrew is said to have appeared to the Florentine troops at the time and promised them victory. Corsini has been listed in the Carmelite Breviary since 1462. He was canonized on 29 April 1629.
In 1734, Pope Clement XII (Corsini) built a chapel in S. Giovanni in the Lateran in Rome in honor of the saint, which has since become world-famous. Scenes from the life of the saint are reproduced in marble.
The Carmelite bishop is usually depicted with a wolf or lamb or both, which probably goes back to a legend according to which Andrew was once in danger of being attacked by a wolf. The Mother of God then transformed the wolf into a lamb in order to save him. Another legend tells of Mary announcing the bishop's imminent death on the Christmas Night of 1374 and leading him to God on the night before Epiphany, as the star once led the Magi. A miraculous scent was said to have emanated from his corpse, which healed the sick.
(from Helga-Maria M. Jaeger, Gott lebt! Sie sind seine Zeugen)
Feast of St. Peter Thomas, Bishop
January 8 Feast
Born in Perigod, France, around 1305, Saint Peter Thomas joined the Carmelite Order when twenty years of age. He was Procurator General of the Order at the Papal Curia at Avignon and also an official preacher to the Curia there.
St. Kuriakos Elias Chavara (CMI) Priest
January 3 Optional Memorial in the regions of India
Saint Kuriakos Elias Chavara, co-founder and first prior general of the congregation of the Carmelites of Mary Immaculate, was born at Kainakary in Kerala, India, on 10 February 1805. He entered the seminary in 1818 and was ordained priest in 1829. He made his religious profession in 1855, in the congregation he founded.




















