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St Kentigern & St Edward Parish Shrine Day


by Fr. Bryan Cunningham on 28/04/2012 -

Today we had the first of the Parish Shrine Days.  34 Visitors came from St Kentigern’s Fallowfield and St Edward’s Rushholm Parish to spend the day at the Shrine. They were welcomed by the St. John Fisher’s team of ladies who looked after the pilgrims.  The day was very successful and both young and old enjoyed there stay and hope to come again. If you would like to read the report on the day then download this news report. The group were happy to get to know the Shrine.  Nine teenagers took part and Young people in Cottagethey had their own programme in the newly renovated Cottage. Some of the young people had been there with their school for an Amigo Day or for one of the programmes for High Schools. They had time in the Shrine and time to enjoy one another’s company. Fr. Bryan gave a talk on the meaning of the Shrine – a holy place where we can live in God’s presence and search to do his will. The group found out a lot about Schoenstatt and enjoyed being looked after by our team from St John Fisher’s. They hoped to come again and we look forward to welcoming them.

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Pilgrim Mother Rally


by Fr. Bryan Cunningham on 21/04/2012 -

Welcome to our Pilgrim Mother Rally starting at 1.30pm on Sunday 6th May 2012 at the Schoenstatt Centre, St Jon Fisher’s Kearsley. Please find the letter of Fr. David inviting you below:

Dear Coordinators and Members of the Prayer Circle of the Pilgrim Mother !

Wow! A nice long title but a noble one, don’t you think!

Some of you may have read either in the April edition of the MTA magazine or on the Internet Website of Schoenstatt  www.schoenstatt.org.uk  of the visit to us in England of a large replica of the Pilgrim Mother. The very original large Pilgrim Mother started out with John (João) Pozzobon of Brazil in the early 1950s and is still in that country.

The large replica Pilgrim Mother coming to us will be with us for the months of May and June before being returned to Schoenstatt in Germany. While it is here in England it is to be kept in safekeeping in our Shrine here in Kearsley, Bolton.

For us to Welcome this special Pilgrim Mother amongst us we intend to have a Rally Day on SUNDAY 6th MAY here at our Pastoral Centre beginning at 1.30 p.m A Programme of Welcome, Information and Planning for the future, Adoration with prayer, and Re-commissioning of yourselves as Co-ordinators and of course refreshments will be offered concluding at approximately 4 to 4.30 p.m.

On 8th September this year this Pilgrim Mother on return to Schoenstatt, Germany will be crowned by representatives of all the European Pilgrim Mother Coordinators and Prayer Circles; but more about this and other matters at our Rally.John Possobon and the Pilgrim Mother

May I request that you make a determined effort to attend not just as a Co-ordinator but with as far as possible members of your Prayer Circle….. and of course bring along your own Pilgrim Mother. Nearer the time would you kindly take the initiative to indicate you intend to come; this helps with catering. Trusting that the joy of Easter will remain with you in these days;

With Blessings from the ‘Shrine our home’.

Father David

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Blessing of the Foundations for the Mosaic


by Fr. Bryan Cunningham on 19/04/2012 -

At the beginning of our Covenant  Mass in April Father David  blessed the foundations of the future Mosaic Prayer Garden. Since September last year a group centred around Paul McEvoy have worked to put in pathways and the foundation for the Mosaic Prayer Garden. This Mosaic, designed by Paul Cooper, portrays the Prayers of the Office written by Fr. Kentenich while he was a prisoner in Dachau. His response to this most difficult situation was to believe in God’s care. Let us pray together:

The sun makes ready for the night and invites us to enter the Cenacle.Paul Cooper's design for the Mosaic

There you implored the Spirit for the Church who freed her from the scourge of half-heartedness, guided her to the teaching of Christ and enkindled in her the spirit of the apostles and the martyrs.

That is how you want to work in our shrine: strengthening our weak eyes of faith so that we might see life as God sees it and always walk by heaven’s light.

In this light of faith let me see how the Father’s love wished to accompany me today. Let loyalty to our mission be my thanksgiving for the boundless gifts he has showered on me in love.

Glory be joyfully given to the Father through Christ with Mary, highly praised, in the Holy Spirit full of splendor from the universe now and in all eternity. Amen.

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The Big Rocks


by Fr Duncan McVicar on 05/03/2012 -

A while back I was reading about an expert on subject of time management. One day this expert was speaking to a group of business students and, to drive home a point, used an illustration I’m sure those students will never forget. After I share it with you, you’ll never forget it either. As this man stood in front of the group of high-powered overachievers he said, “Okay, time for a quiz.” Then he pulled out a one-gallon, wide-mouthed mason jar and set it on a table in front of him. Then he produced about a dozen fist-sized rocks and carefully placed them, one at a time, into the jar. When the jar was filled to the top and no more rocks would fit inside, he asked, “Is this jar full?” Everyone in the class said, “Yes.” Then he said, “Really?” He reached under the table and pulled out a bucket of gravel. Then he dumped some gravel in and shook the jar causing pieces of gravel to work themselves down into the spaces between the big rocks. Then he smiled and asked the group once more, “Is the jar full?” By this time the class was onto him. “Probably not,” one of them answered. “Good!” he replied. And he reached under the table and brought out a bucket of sand. He started dumping the sand in and it went into all the spaces left between the rocks and the gravel. Once more he asked the question, “Is this jar full?” “No!” the class shouted. Once again he said, “Good!” Then he grabbed a pitcher of water and began to pour it in until the jar was filled to the brim. Then he looked up at the class and asked, “What is the point of this illustration?” One eager beaver raised his hand and said, “The point is, no matter how full your schedule is, if you try really hard, you can always fit some more things into it!” “No,” the speaker replied, “that’s not the point. The truth this illustration teaches us is: If you don’t put the big rocks in first, you’ll never get them in at all.” What are the “big rocks” in your life? Time with your loved ones? Your faith and your God, your Church, your education, prayer? A cause?

Remember to put these BIG ROCKS  in first or you’ll never get them in at all.

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Into My Vineyard


by Fr. Bryan Cunningham on 26/02/2012 -

The Original Shrine – source of Schoenstattʼs life, hub of the Schoenstatt Network

In recent times we have received the news that the Pallottine Fathers wish to transfer the responsibility for the Original Shrine to the Schoenstatt Movement. As we speak a contract of use is being drawn up with a view to a total handover before the celebration of Schoenstattʼs hundredth jubilee. Perhaps we register the impact of this development less since we are not living in Schoenstatt and probably initially there will be no great change in how things run. However in the scheme of things this could have great significance for Schoenstatt also in the development of its international outlook.

Network of Shrines

To a certain extent we could almost say that over the decades since the autonomy of the Movement was granted in 1964, the members of Schoenstatt have weaned themselves off the Original Shrine. People used the other Shrines in Schoenstatt or their local Schoenstatt Centres for the celebration and development of spiritual life. Of course the development of the network of Shrines across continents and in many different countries is a real area of growth and a gift of the fruitfulness of the Shrine. We could almost say that the network of Shrines experienced an evolution through the development of the Home and Heart and Pilgrim Mother Shrines. In the time Fr. Kentenich was in Milwaukee we have the initiative of Home Shrines – the reality and grace of the Shrine in our own homes and in Brazil we saw the apostolate of Deacon John Possabon who took the Blessed Mother on pilgrimage and brought the Pilgrim Mother to homes of those who would not have experienced the Shrine locally. Fr. Kentenich was to say that the pinnacle of this development was the Heart Shrine.

St Paul says: “Do you not know that your bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? You are not your own; you were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your bodies.” (1Cor 6:19f) In the first Letter of St Peter we read: “As you come to him, the living Stone—rejected by humans but chosen by God and precious to him— you also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus

Christ.” (1Peter 2:4-6) A twofold mystery is expressed here: God lives in us and we in God. Secondly together we build the Kingdom of God as his ʻliving Shrineʼ.

The Unique Gifts of the Original Shrine

On pilgrimage in Germany, for example on the Family Week, we would visit the Original Shrine and when the occasion arose we had the chance to celebrate holy Mass with one another there. Other than that we tended to have visitorsʼ access rights. This meant that the Original Shrine became a place to visit not the heart and home of the spiritual family which finds its source there. We need to refocus on the original gifts which came with the Shrine in order to know how life can develop around the Shrine.

For me there are three major elements which constitute the Shrine and express the uniqueness of its character: Since 1914 the Shrine is for us

a sacred place of encounter with God,

the ʻcradle of our sanctityʻ and

source and starting point for our apostolate.

 

Place of Encounter

At the inauguration of the Year of the Shrine we meditated on the Burning Bush and the experience of Moses – God is here. “When the Lord saw that he had gone over to look, God called to him from within the bush, “Moses! Moses!” And Moses said, “Here I am.” “Do not come any closer,” God said. “Take off your sandals, for the place where you are standing is holy ground.” Then he said, “I am the God of your father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob.” At this, Moses hid his face, because he was afraid to look at God.(Ex 3:4-6)

This encounter with God was to be the centre and guiding experience of his life – he cannot go back to his previous life – a quite existence as a shepherd caring for the flock of his father in law. Moses now had experiential knowledge of being in Godʼs presence. It was a lesson he was never to forget and gave him the ability always to find God in his life and to listen to him and follow his ways. Itʼs true that Moses was a natural leader. He had the inner authority of a charismatic Prophet and the strength to persevere in the face of hostility and setbacks. However his anchor-point was his encounter with the living God at the burning bush. His deep attachment to God from this experience was to become the centre and source of all the he achieved in his life as leader of Godʼs People through the desert to the Promised Land.

Shrine as a Place of Encounter

When we consider our experience with the Shrine (for some also an experience with the Original Shrine), then for many they describe their experience as God being near to them in the Shrine and that they found themselves to be in Godʼs presence. We could summarise the experience of many who come to the Shrine in saying: God is here! Making their way to the Shrine is a pilgrimage of faith in the hope of encountering the presence of God and receive his grace and mercy. Our way of expressing this dimension of how the Shrine influences our lives is to say we feel at home, we feel welcome, safe, wanted, accepted, forgiven, healed. For some it is about sensing Godʼs presence; for some it is knowing that Mary our Mother and Mother of the Lord welcomes us and encloses us in the embrace with her child.

The Shrine a holy place

“Let us then approach Godʼs throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need”. (Heb 4:16) At Schoenstattʼs beginnings Fr. Kentenich said: ”Undoubtedly, we could not accomplish a greater apostolic deed nor leave our successors a more precious legacy than to urge our Lady and Queen to erect her throne here in a special way, to distribute her treasures, and to work miracles of grace.” His vision for the Shrine was that it becomes the reserved space of Godʼs presence through Mary, the Mother of the Lord, establishing her home there. The Shrine should become a holy place to which people will go on pilgrimage in order to gain the graces of God. We should discover a new home in the heart of God. Being anchored in the Shrine we look for the change in our lives – the grace of inner transformation described by Fr. Kentenich as ʻthe cradle of our sanctityʼ.

Cradle of Sanctity

Moses was to experience more at the burning bush. He experiences a God who is near, a God who knows and cares for his people and loves them. “The Lord said, “I have indeed seen the misery of my people in Egypt. I have heard them crying out because of their slave drivers, and I am concerned about their suffering. So I have come down to rescue them from the hand of the Egyptians and to bring them up out of that land into a good and spacious land, a land flowing with milk and honey. (Ex 3:7f) A God who hears the cry of the poor! His concern is real and lasting. The prophet Isaiah sums up this concern when he says: “Can a mother forget the baby at her breast and have no compassion on the child she has borne? Though she may forget, I will not forget you! See, I have engraved you on the palms of my hands.(Isaiah 49:15f). The people of God respond with trust and commitment to walk the ways of their Lord, to follow the charismatic, prophetic leadership of Godʼs man, Moses. Their response is out of love to strive for holiness and remain within the precepts and the law of the Lord.

There are many examples of Godʼs caring for us in the life of Christ. The raising back to life of the son the widow of Nain (Lk 7), the healing of the leper who says to Jesus – if you want to you can heal me – “Of course I want to” (Mark 1:41), the healing of the blind Bartimaeus, (Mark 10:46ff), the Centurionʼs servant (Lk 7) All can be summed up in the description in St Johnʼs Gospel of the Good Shepherd (John 10) Again in St. Matthewʼs Gospel: “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” (Matt 11: 28-30) The healing signs set by Christ bore witness to who he was – the Saviour and at the same time showed his care and concern for the people. Jesus took pity on them because they were like sheep without a shepherd. Jesus wept his dear friend Lazarus and longed to gather the children of Jerusalem like a hen gathers her chickens. Each person had to make a choice on this encounter – to love the Lord and follow him or like the rich man who went away sadly because he had been asked to give up his wealth (Lk 18:23). Our response to Godʼs love is to grow in holiness. This is what Fr. Kentenich means when he says that the Shrine should become for us the cradle of sanctity.

Call to Holiness

In his letter at the beginning of this new millennium Blessed Pope John Paul said that holiness was first of all a gift of Godʼs grace. “But the gift in turn becomes a task, which must shape the whole of Christian life: “This is the will of God, your sanctification” (1 Th 4:3). It is a duty which concerns not only certain Christians: “All the Christian faithful, of whatever state or rank, are called to the fullness of the Christian life and to the perfection of charity” (Novo Millennio Ineunte 30)

This task involves ʻtraining for holinessʼ. In the founding document of Schoenstatt Fr. Kentenich describes a way to holiness: “Do not worry about the fulfillment of your desire. Ego diligentes me diligo. I love those who love me [Prv 8,17]. Prove to me first that you really love me, that you take your resolution seriously…This sanctification I demand of you. Diligently bring me contributions to the capital of grace. By fulfilling your duties faithfully and conscientiously and through an ardent life of prayer, earn many merits and place them at my disposal. Then it will please me to dwell in your midst and dispense gifts and graces in abundance. Then from here I will draw youthful hearts to myself, and I will educate them to become useful instruments in my hand.” (Founding Document 1914)

Here we have the threefold dimension of a spiritual way to perfection for each person according to their state in life and the challenges they face in every walk of life. Our way to sanctity is based on love. Through our Covenant of Love with Mary we become deeply rooted in the heart of God expressed in a life of ardent prayer. Our striving and the contributions to the Capital of Grace take place within the context of our everyday lives helping to build Godʼs Kingdom through ʻfulfilling our duties faithfully and conscientiouslyʼ. These actions fuel our sense of mission, to become apostles of the Covenant of Love and lead many to find their home in the Shrine.

Apostles of the Covenant of Love

This last aspect shows the direction of all striving for Holiness – to be in the service of others and win many for Christ. The gift of true intimacy with God in the friendship with Him bestowed on us through Christ is given so that we too can go out and bring this good news to many. For St. Paul this was his prayer and main concern in the development of the early Church “With this in mind, we constantly pray for you, that our God may make you worthy of his calling, and that by his power he may bring to fruition your every desire for goodness and your every deed prompted by faith. We pray this so that the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in you, and you in him, according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ.” (2 Thess 1:11f) (To download the text click here)


 

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Into My Vineyard February 2012


by Fr. Bryan Cunningham on 11/02/2012 -

Meeting of the Schoenstatt Family

Welcome to our ‘Into My Vineyard Meeting’. This year we focus on the Shrine as a place of being in God’s presence, a place of grace and spiritual growth, a place for the New Evangelisation spoken of by our Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI. We want to reach out to welcome new people. To download invite click here

We will change the dates and format of our Covenant Mass each month. A new initiative of Parish Shrine days extends an invitation to ten Parishes in Salford Diocese to spend a day at the Shrine. For this we need a new apostolic team to run the days. Our Taste and See Mass continues to invite especially young families to our Sunday Family Mass. This year we receive in the month of May/June a unique copy of the Pilgrim Mother Shrine from John Possabon which has been journeying in Europe and will be crowned as Mary Queen of the New Evangelisation in September 8th 2012. The Mosaic Prayer Garden is taking shape -  we look forward for an update in this gift to Our Lady for the year 2014. There will be time for the Branches to meet during the meeting to discuss and plan their programme  for the year. To download overview of programme towards 2014 click here

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Year of the Shrine – Annunciation


by Fr. Andrew Pastore on 01/11/2011 -

Continuing the excerpts from the book of Msgr. Peter Wolf describing Fr. Kentenich’s relationship to and thinking on the Shrine we learn this week of the importance of a discovery Fr. Kentenich made in a newspaper – a pilgrimage place built up in Italy. I don’t want to spoil the story… So read on…

Fr. Andrew

From One Annunciation Hour to Another

On 18 July 1964, a decisive hour for the Schoenstatt Fathers, the Founder’s thoughts took him back to the beginnings of the Movement. Referring to the date of that day, he spoke about an article written on that day in 1914 in the newspaper, “Allgemeine Rundschau”. He wanted to explain to those present how he had seen and understood the article about the origins of the place of pilgrimage at Valley of Pompeii as an “hour of Annunciation”. He let them share in his searching and questioning, which he connected with the hour of the Annunciation in the life of the Blessed Mother. He allowed them to sense what daring this required of him, and the loneliness of his position over the following months until he took the decisive initiative on 18 October.

 

When I now think of our Family history – it is a well-known expression – the great hour of Annunciation in Schoenstatt’s history was 18 October [1914]. However, I would like to add immediately that we deceive ourselves if we think we are dealing here with only one hour of Annunciation. It doesn’t exist on its own. The encounter between this world and the next, this hour of Annunciation, was repeated on countless occasions in our Family history.

If we want to study it more closely, and make a comparison, I think I would have to reach back – this may surprise you – to 18 July 1914. Do you know what happened at that time? It is the 18 July today. The newspaper, the “Allgemeine Rundschau” in which the article on Bartolo Longo appeared, was dated 18 July 1914. If you know the structure of my soul somewhat, you won’t find it difficult – perhaps at most because I was still very young at the time. However, a special gift given to me in my cradle enables me to look behind everything that has happened in my life, behind the least detail; I always simply looked for God’s message. The angel of the Lord brought a message to Mary!

So, in the fullest sense of the word, you may interpret it as a message from God for me. What sort of angel was that? The writer – I can’t remember his name at the moment, at any rate he was a Capuchin – had published a brief article. Who was the angel of the Lord? It was a converted lawyer.

And now the answer – again and again you will find the same response: The Blessed Mother thought about it. This reflection obviously took some time, longer than is usual in my life. From 18 July to 18 October is quite a considerable time. I reflected: What does God want to tell me through this article?

You can feel how strong the encounter was between the divine and the human, between this world and the next. Later, also when we discussed our history together, I constantly repeated: I believe that the “deathleap” for the mind, which I dared to undertake at that time, has never been repeated to the same extent. The deathleap for the will and heart could have been greater later on.

I reflected. Well, what did I think? You can read it up in the Founding Document. I thought: Would it not be possible? What is not possible? You have to keep in mind my attitude of soul at the time. It was the profound conviction that the Blessed Mother, as the great educator, wanted to take over the responsibility for my task as an educator.

It is all so simple, so natural; however it always touches the supernatural. That is the most important point. These weren’t just purely natural thoughts; there was always a search that reached into another world. God would increasingly need to give us all such a charism. So, what did God want to say?

You can well imagine my calculation. In the Pre-Founding Document we said: Under the protection of the Blessed Mother we want to educate ourselves. We can understand this very well, because in the meantime we have personally been active in education, also when we think of ourselves. 1912-1914, about two years, had been enough to show us that nothing much was going on with our self-education under the protection of the Blessed Mother. On the other hand, however, we admitted – that was our thinking: Hasn’t God richly blessed our efforts at self-education in these two years? Reflection: Couldn’t that be the case? If someone managed to draw down the Blessed Mother over there [in Pompeii], although more as a miracle worker, why shouldn’t it be possible to draw down the Blessed Mother here, here to this group? She would have free rein among us and not just give us her protection from heaven. She had to descend as the educator of our youth and work miracles of education from this shrine.

How simple the reasoning is! However, I must always emphasise that we are all the time dealing with grasping the supernatural. And now, simply based on these weak and truly short-term reflections, we said: Why not? Reflected: Why shouldn’t she be able to do this as well? If she was drawn down over there to work miracles, why couldn’t we also draw her down? God had obviously blessed our small beginnings.

Besides this – now comes the question as to how the Blessed Mother did it. Consider: Couldn’t that be the case? Then the question. Which question? You can read it all in the Founding Document. It is the question – now comes the metaphysician: Are we dealing with, or could we be dealing with, a law in God’s kingdom?

Of course it is true, also what has just been described so simply: Look at what midgets we are, still today! Even more so when we think of the great task. You can well imagine the whole generation of that time. Of course, it was all beautifully imagined, well considered: Something like that could be the case. But now the question. An angel wasn’t asked, God was asked how he worked in history: Hasn’t it always been true that God loves to choose what is small when compared with the great people in the world, and to work something exceedingly great through the little ones?

Can you notice how this was an hour of Annunciation? The angel of the Lord brought Mary a message. It was followed on 18 October 1914 by the great act, the greatness of which perhaps hardly anyone guessed at the time; just as little as anyone guessed it when the great hour of Annunciation had dawned for the Blessed Mother and for the whole order of salvation.

An hour of Annunciation – what do I want? Perhaps you could go there and follow my line of reasoning. What I am aiming at is that we should move completely in the other world, without which we cannot cope with the world in which are moving with our feet. An hour of Annunciation.

How often that hour of Annunciation was repeated! Allow me to ask you again to make a comparison all the time with the life of the Blessed Mother. It is actually very simple. In the time that followed, also with the Blessed Mother, angels weren’t constantly fluttering down from heaven. Although there were secondary causes, I like to think that it was just the same as was the case with us. Now you can proceed step by step. I don’t have to explain the great act of 18 October 1914.

I want to go to a year later, a few months later. The angel of the Lord brought a message. What sort of message was it? You can feel that there was always a search: What does the supernatural world want from this world? What sort of messenger was it?

A simple book you can only find in second-hand bookshops. It was a book by Fr Hattler about Fr Rem and his Marian Conferences. It is extremely important to take in how small and tiny messages from the supernatural world were repeatedly heard in this world, and time and again examined in this world. Can you also notice what Ingolstadt and the “Schoenstatt-Ingolstadt Parallel” meant for us at that time? The Parallel in itself is the answer. Through everything God placed on our path he always wanted to say something to us. Behind it there was always an intellect, although naturally not to be compared with the intellect of the Blessed Mother. But there was always the deep reflection: What does God want? What did he want to say through this or that? These were always answers that increasingly pointed to a single, great idea of God.

Let us now recall: What was the answer? Of course, I first reflect, asked and then acted. Reflected – there was always this simple consistency: Wouldn’t it be possible? If at the beginning of the modern era the Blessed Mother worked such great things in Ingolstadt for the renewal of Germany, especially for southern Germany – she did do it! – and if we now draw her down to us here, why shouldn’t it be possible for her to carry out, and want to carry out, a similar task for the whole of Germany in our modern era?

Allow me to repeat that on the whole such very small and insignificant starting points are no cause for coming to such a conclusion. You can tell this to later generations. So I don’t take it amiss if someone says: The discrepency between cause and effect is so great – either it was imagination, the expression of self-seeking, self-glorification, the influence of the devil, or from Almighty God, wasn’t it? Of course, if you were now to ask: How was it with the Blessed Mother? Of course, no one dares to make such a comparison. However, from a certain point-of-view that was the case.

I think we have all of us to conquer this for ourselves again: to be at home in another, supernatural, divine world. Unless this is given to us – I think you will admit this immediately – we can pack and go; we can return home. It would be better to remain where we were; we won’t need any more battles; we will at least have enough to eat and drink, and later on someone will care for us. No, no! That is the great thing, that is the world!

 

From: Joseph Kentenich, Address at the Foundation of the Institute of the Schoenstatt Fathers in the Waukesha shrine, USA, on 18 July 1965.

 

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