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O.Carm

O.Carm

International Formation Course Brings Together 40 of Order’s Formators in Perú

The General Formation Commission organized an international course for formators and vocation promotors. The theme was “Constantly Renew Our Lives to Adhere Radically to Christ According to the Carmelite Way of Life” (RIVC. 19). The course took place on May 5 - 17, 2025 at the Carmelite Center Villa Carmelitas in Lurín, Perú. The participants were 40 persons from America, Africa, Asia and Europe. 

In the first week the participants were enriched by the talks given by invited speakers and the members of the General Formation Commission. Those talks were: Mary and Formation by Fr. Míċeál O’Neill, O. Carm., Prior General, through Zoom. RIVC and Its Development by Fr. Alejandro López Lapuente Villalba, O. Carm., Formation and Synodality by Sr. Birgit Weiler, MMS., two talks Self-Care or Burn Out  and Accompaniment of the Gen Z & A in Carmelite Formation by Fr. Vagner Sanagiotto, O. Carm. (Brasil – Parana), and Theology of the Body for the Carmelite Formation by Fr. Benny Phang, O. Carm. (Vice Prior General).

In the weekend of the first week, the participants refreshed themselves by visiting the historical and the modern parts of the city of Lima and enjoyed the Peruvian delicacies.

In the second week the participants dedicated themselves to work in revising and updating the RIVC 2013, since according to the Constitutions 137, the Ratio needs to be revised every 12 years in responding to the development in the Order, Church and society.

According to one of the participants, Esmeraldo Reforeal, a member of the Province of the Philippines provincial council and formation program, “Stepping back from a week of meaningful discussions and sharing about essential topics on formation, we found solace in Lima, Peru's breathtaking beauty, The city's unique blend of Gothic, Andean Baroque, Romanesque and Arabic architecture stole our hearts. We marveled at the stunning basilicas of the Franciscans and Jesuits, the cathedral, and the Church of the Dominicans, home to St. Rose of Lima, the second patroness of the Philippines, and St. Martin de Porres. Many pilgrims flock to this church to venerate them, where their skulls are enshrined at the side altar. Their tombs are also in this place."

"A sumptuous meal at L'Eau Vive, managed by the Donum Dei sisters, was a heavenly treat. But the highlight was the mass at the Jesuit basilica, where I had the privilege of presiding and delivering a homily partly in Spanish, with  vice-general Benny Phang and commissary provincial of Peru, Raul Maravi concelebrating presiding. Grateful for this experience with confreres," concluded Fr. Esmeraldo.

pdf Read the report by Fr. Benny Phang, O. Carm. (Vice Prior General) ...(289 KB)

General Assembly with Elections of the La Famille Donum Dei Held in France in January and February

The General Assembly of La Famille Donum Dei, also known as Travailleuses Missionnaires de l'Eau Vive, was held in La Grâce-Dieu in the Archdiocese of Besançon, France. The meetings ran from January 27-February 11, 2025.

On February 11, 1950, the diocesan priest Marcel Roussel Galle established the Missionary Family “Donum Dei.” They took St. Thérèse of the Child Jesus as their patron. Three years after his death, on February 22, 1987, the Family Donum Dei, according to the will of its founder, joined the Carmelite Order as a secular Third Order. On December 8, 2020, they were erected as a Society of Apostolic Life with diocesan rights in the Archdiocese of Marseille in France. Now that Donum Dei has fulfilled the 5 year experimentum period and have communities in various countries, consultations will begin about the group becoming a Society of Apostolic Life with Pontifical Rights.

The missionary workers, present on all five continents, are dedicated to evangelization in many areas of society.

The following were elected to leadership:

Responsable Générale:
Marie-Michèle Manukula (Wallis)

Conseillère:
Geneviève Konsole (Burkina Faso)

Conseillère:
Anna Hong Nguyen

Conseillère:
Diana Focio Alarcon

Viernes, 16 Mayo 2025 09:12

Causa Nostrae Laetitiae

PROFESSIO SOLEMNIS
17-05-24  Roger Boris Ava Mbida (Ger-Cam) Yaoundé
06-04-25  Itamar dos Santos Neri (Pern) Aracaju, Brasil
26-04-25  Cristiano Garcia Dias Barbosa (Pern) Recife, Brasil
12-04-25  Mary Regina Wanjiru of the Sorrowful Virgin Mother (Mach) Kenya
12-04-25  Mary Nathalie Nsizoa of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus (Mach) Kenya

ORDINATIO DIACONALIS
05-07-24  Roger Boris Ava Mbida (Ger-Cam) Yaoundé

ORDINATIO SACERDOTALIS
05-07-24  Marius Darhlin Wabo Togueu (Ger-Cam) Yaoundé
05-07-24  Isaie Nathan Abiscegue Rousseau (Ger-Cam) Yaoundé
03-05-25  Anacleto Guterres Da Costa (Aust-TL)  Middle Park

Chapter of General Commissariat of "La Bruna" Held in Naples May 12-14, 2024 with Elections

The Chapter of the General Commissariat  “Santa Maria 'La Bruna'” took place May 12-14, 2025, in the Carmelite monastery in Naples under the presidency of the prior general, Míceál O’Neill, O. Carm., accompanied by Richard Byrne, General Councilor for Europe. The theme chosen for the chapter was: “The love of Christ impels us“ (2 Cor 5,14). Contemplation: towards the renewal of fraternal and missionary life in Carmel.

Unfortunately, the Carmelites in Tanzania were unable to receive visas to attend the Chapter in Italy. Instead, they participated by electronic means.

The Chapter opened on Monday, 12th May 2025 with a Votive Eucharist to the Holy Spirit. Thereafter, the gremiales went to the Chapter Hall and listened to an address from the Prior General. As usual, the chapter reflected on the previous three years aided by the reports from the officials of the Commissariat. Over the course of the chapter, the gremiales spent a lot of time reflecting on the relationship between the Carmelites in Tanzania and those in Italy and, in particular, how the Carmelite presence in Tanzania might be developed. Towards the end of the Chapter, the elections for the General Commissary and his Councillors were  held.

On the last day of the chapter, 14th May 2025, the Prior General celebrated the Eucharist on the Feast of St Matthias which coincided with the traditional Wednesday devotions to the Madonna of La Bruna in the Carmelite sanctuary which, as usual, were attended by a large number of the faithful. After the celebration of the Eucharist, the Acts of the Chapter were unanimously approved and signed by all present. With some final words of encouragement, and noting the rich history of the Commissariat, the prior general formally declared the chapter concluded.

The Commissariat is the heir to a tradition that dates back from 1524, when the convent of Carmine Maggiore in Naples was placed directly under the prior general. For awhile it became part of a province and, when this province disappeared due to the civil revolution, Carmine Maggiore was again placed under the jurisdiction of the prior general with the exception of the years 1910-1920 in which it was part of the Province of Naples. In 1947 a commissariat entitled "La Bruna" was set up to include Carmine Maggiore and two other housesIn October 2009 the foundation in Tanzania was established.

First page: www.santuariocarminemaggiore.it

The following members were elected to leadership:

Commissary General | Comisario General | Commissario Generale
Alfredo Di Cerbo, O. Carm.

1st Councilor | 1er Consejero | 1Consigliere
Luciano Di Cerbo, O.Carm.

2nd Councilor | 2do Consejero | 2Consigliere
Dominic Somola, O. Carm.

Jueves, 15 Mayo 2025 08:51

St. Simon Stock, Religious

16 May Optional Memorial (Obligatory Memorial the province of Great Britain)

From “Ignea Sagitta” by Nicholas the Frenchman, Prior General

I Will Lead Her into the Desert and Speak to Her Heart

Has not our Lord and Savior, by His grace, led us into solitude, where He speaks to our hearts with particular familiarity? He gives His friends consolation and reveals arcane mysteries not in public, in the marketplace, amid noise and tumult, but in the cell.

Indeed, in the solitude of a mountain, Abraham, moved by obedience, ascended at the Lord's command to sacrifice his son Isaac; he did not hesitate in his faith and gazed from afar at the fulfillment of the promise that was realized in the passion of Christ, who is the true Isaac. Lot, Abraham's nephew, was also ordered to hurry out of Sodom to save himself in the solitude of the mountains. In the solitude of Mount Sinai, Moses was given the law. Up there, he was clothed in such splendor that when he came down, the others could not look at his radiant face.

While Mary and Gabriel converse in the solitude of a cell, the Word of the Most High Father becomes incarnate. God, made man, in the Transfiguration clearly shows his glory to the representatives of the two testaments in the solitude of Mount Tabor. Our Savior chooses the solitude of a mountain to pray alone. In the solitude of the desert, he fasted uninterruptedly for forty days and forty nights, and there he wanted to be tempted by the devil to show what is the most suitable place to pray, mortify oneself, and overcome the tempter. The Savior therefore goes to the solitude of a mountain and into a desert to pray; he descends from the mountain when he wants to preach and show his works.

He who called our Fathers to the solitude of a mountain showed himself to them and to their successors as a sign, so that they might relive in their lives his actions, which are never without profound meaning.

Some of our predecessors followed this undoubtedly holy rule of the Savior. Recognizing their own imperfection, they lived for a long time in the solitude of the hermitage; and because they wanted to help their neighbors without the slightest personal distraction, they left the hermitage from time to time, but rather rarely, and sowed widely what they had gently reaped in the silence of contemplation, scattering the seeds through preaching.

To read more ...

Martes, 06 Mayo 2025 14:03

Vitam Coelo Reddiderunt

06-03-25
Fr. Emil (Francis) Agostino (PCM)


17-11-37
 


22-08-57
 


22-08-60
 


08-02-64
 

12-04-25
Sr. Agnes Lokate (BOX)


11-07-24
 


22-02-46
 


22-02-49
 



 

29-04-25
Fr. Stanisław Wysocki (Pol) 


25-03-59
 


25-08-79
 


29-05-83
 

02-06-85

Miércoles, 14 Mayo 2025 09:12

Pope Leo XIV Meets With Journalists

Pope Leo XIV Meets With Journalists Emphasizing the Role of Communications in Promoting Peace

In one of the first audiences of his young pontificate, Pope Leo XIV met with the international media in Aula Paulo VI. He thanked journalists for their service to the truth and stressed the role of communications in promoting peace.

“We are living in times that are both difficult to navigate and to recount. They present a challenge for all of us, but it is one that we should not run away from,” the pope said to approximately ____ journalists on May 12. “On the contrary, they demand that each one of us, in our different roles and services, never give in to mediocrity.”

“Thank you, dear friends, for your service to the truth,” he said, also underlining the importance of preserving free speech and the free press.

Using St. Augustine, the pope highlighted the place of communications: “The Church must face the challenges posed by the times. In the same way, communication and journalism do not exist outside of time and history. St. Augustine reminds of this when he said, ‘Let us live well, and the times will be good. We are the times’ (Discourse 311).”

Using the Sermon on the Mount, the pope stressed the important role communications plays in promoting peace: “Jesus proclaimed, ‘Blessed are the peacemakers’ (Mt 5:9). This is a beatitude that challenges all of us, but it is particularly relevant to you, calling each one of you to strive for a different kind of communication, one that does not seek consensus at all costs, does not use aggressive words, does not follow the culture of competition, and never separates the search for truth from the love with which we must humbly seek it.”

“Peace,” he continued, “begins with each one of us: in the way we look at others, listen to others, and speak about others. In this sense, the way we communicate is of fundamental importance: We must say ‘no’ to the war of words and images, we must reject the paradigm of war.”

The pope raised up the responsibility and discernment needed in the use of artificial intelligence. He earlier explained his choice of the regnant name Leo being influenced by the challenges AI presents.

On the topic of truth, Leo XIV reiterated the Church’s solidarity with journalists who have been imprisoned “for seeking and reporting the truth” and said their suffering "challenges the conscience of nations and the international community." He appealed for their release. The Committee to Protect Journalists said 361 journalists were in jail in 2024.

The Order’s leadership in communications gathered in Rome for a three-part meeting of on-going formation, Jubilee celebration, and discussion among themselves of how to serve the Order and the faithful in the future. A two-part follow-up online meeting is scheduled for May 21st.

The pope began the audience speaking in English. He thanked the journalists for the warm reception and then said, “They say when they clap at the beginning it doesn’t matter much… If you are still awake at the end, and still want to applaud, … Thank you very much!”

To read the full address, go here

Farewell, Glory & Discipleship of Love (John 13:31-35)

Given during Jesus’ last meal with his disciples, these words begin what is called The Farewell Discourse in John’s Gospel (13:31-17:26). They are Jesus’ last words to his disciples before his death. In the course of offering assurance and comfort, Jesus develops various themes that have been introduced earlier in his ministry, including in particular glory, mutual indwelling and love. His main point is the experience of life in God the disciples have and will continue to have. The relationship between the Father and the Son, which has been revealed in the first twelve chapters of the Gospel, Jesus now declares to be realised in the disciples.
The relationship between the Father, the Son and the Spirit are described in more detail here than anywhere else in the Bible. In these chapters, therefore, is the most profound teaching on God and discipleship in the Bible.
The first part of today’s Gospel reading is a bit confusing unless we understand that ‘glory’ in the biblical tradition has to do with the revelation of the unseen God. So, in these lines there is a sense of mutual glorification - the Father is revealed in the Son and the Son reveals the Father in his death on the cross. The Son will reveal the love of the Father most patently when he gives up his life.
Using the intimate form of address, ‘My little children,’ Jesus gently begins to prepare the disciples for the difficult reality of his leaving them.
Just as Jesus has been God’s love in action in the world, so now, the disciples must be. The indispensable nature of abiding in love is underlined by the use of ‘commandment’. It is through their mutual love that all will recognise them as disciples of the One who loved even to laying down his life.

Viernes, 09 Mayo 2025 06:56

St. George Preca, Priest

9 May Optional Memorial (Obligatory Memorial in the province of Malta)

Born in Malta on 12 February 1880. He lived in Valletta, the capital of Malta, near the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. As a child, and according to the customs of the times, George joined the Carmelite Family by being enrolled in the Scapular. As a young man he felt called to the priesthood. He was ordained priest on 22 December 1906.

To read more ...

Presentation of the Book "La chiesa e il convento di San Giuliano l'Ospitaliero ai Trofei di Mario" at CISA on May 16

Some would swear they had never heard of it, yet it existed until 1876 in what is now the central Piazza Vittorio Emanuele II in Rome. Between legend and real historical news, the church of San Giuliano seems to have been founded by St. Angelo di Sicilia himself, establishing itself as the first Carmelite presence in the capital, then passed in ownership to the Congregation of the Redemptorist Fathers, to the Odescalchi family, and finally expropriated and used by the Municipal Archaeological Commission. Built in the area where the horti of Maecenas must have stood, of which today we observe the well-known Auditorium on Via Merulana, the Carmelite church was also one of the stages of the procession of the Acheropita returning to the Lateran; in the garden of the convent, moreover, the famous fresco, preserved in the Vatican Museums and known as the “Aldobrandini Wedding” will be found. This book is proposed as a journey through time, carried out mainly within the archival record and aimed at reconstructing the church of San Giuliano in the Esquiline district, as important as it is almost completely unknown.
The presentation will be held at 5:30 p.m. at the Centro Internazionale Sant'Alberto (CISA) at Via Sforza Pallavicini, 10 in Rome. The presentation is sponsored by the Institutum Carmelitanum.
The book will be introduced by Giovanni Grosso, O. Carm., praeside of the Institutum Carmelitanum. He will also be the moderator. Prof. Maria Vittoria Marini Clarelli of the Ministry of Culture and the Pontifical Gregorian University will also present. The author, Cristina Cumbo, will be present.
The book can be purchased from the Edizioni Carmelitane web store. There is a special 30% discount offer at the presentation. You can use the following promotional code to get the discount in the web store: PRESENTAZIONELIBROCUMBO2025
 
About the author:
Cristina Cumbo was born in Rome, Italy, on July 22, 1987. She holds a PhD in Christian Archaeology. She graduated in History and Conservation of the Artistic and Archaeological Heritage, discussing a thesis on the patristic ogdoad and its reflection in iconography, architecture and liturgy, and in Science of Archaeology and methodology of historical-archaeological research at the University of Roma Tre with a thesis in iconography on the prophet Balaam. In 2016, following the achievement of the Baccalaureate and Licentiate degrees in Christian Archaeology, she was proclaimed Doctor of Research at the Pontifical Institute of Christian Archaeology with an innovative iconographic research on the so-called ganunadiae in the Roman catacombs and the creation of a database for their study (GMS - Gammadiae Management System).
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