From: rich <
richarra@gmail.com>
27 April =E2=80=93 Blessed Nicolas Roland
Priest, Canon, Mystic, Apostle of the prayer, the poor, especially
children, teacher and Founder of the Congregation of the =E2=80=9CSisters o=
f
the Holy Child Jesus=E2=80=9D =E2=80=93 born on 8 December 1642 in Rheims, = Marne,
France and died on 27 April 1678 in Rheims, Marne, France of natural
causes, aged 35. He was a friend, contemporary and Spiritual Director
of Saint John Baptist de La Salle (1651-1719).
Nicolas Roland was born in the small town of Baslieux-les-Reims in the
ancient province of Champagne, 9 kilometers away from Reims, son of Jean-Baptist Roland (1611=E2=80=931673), Commissioner of the Government and antique merchant. He was Baptised on 23 July 1643. His Godfather was
his uncle, Fr Matthieu Beuvelet.
In 1650 he joined the Jesuit College at Reims, where he showed an
active intelligence and the wish to become a Priest. In 1653 he
obtained the tonsure from Bishop Pouy at the Abbey of Saint Pierre les
Dames. Completing his preliminary studies, he travelled around France
for a while.
The young student then moved to Paris in 1660 to continue his studies
in Philosophy and Theology, staying at the college of Bons Amis. He
joined several pious associations such as the =E2=80=9CFriends Association= =E2=80=9D of
the Jesuit Jean Bagot and one of Vincent de Paul. He=C2 considered
joining the Jesuits and was also interested in the work of the
Missionaries for a time and considered going to Siam after finishing
his doctorate in theology. But he was appointed to a well-endowed
Canonry at Reims Cathedral, before being ordained a Deacon and was
highly regarded as a Preacher but realised that his elegant style
reached few of the faithful. On 3 March 1665 he was Ordained a Priest.
In 1666 he left his parents house, moving to a house on Barb=C3=A2tre
Street, in Reims, where he began a life of poverty dedicated to
charity. He established contacts with the Saint Nicolas-du-Chardonnet
Seminary where his uncle worked and there he was exposed to the ideas
of Adrian Bourdoise, Fr Jean-Jacques Olier (the Founder of the
Sulpicians) and the movement for the renewal of the French clergy. Of
all his apostolic activities, education of the poor, was the
apostolate to which he was most attracted.
In Rouen he met yet another clergyman passionate about education of
the poor, the Minim Blessed Father Nicolas Barre, who arrived in the
city in 1659. Barre had organised a group of men and women who worked
in free schools located in several neighbourhoods of the city. Roland
returned to Reims with the intention of starting similar projects
there. On 15 October 1670 a Reims' orphanage founded by Marie Varle=
t
was entrusted to him and he gradually transformed it into a real
school. He asked Fr Barre to send two teachers from the Sisters of
Providence to help. On 27 December 1670, the teachers, Francoise Duval
and Anne Le Coeur, arrived. Fr Nicolas would later found with them,
the Congregation of Sisters of the Holy Child Jesus, dedicated to the
education of poor and abandoned girls.
In 1672 he met a young Canon, John Baptist de la Salle and became his
Spiritual Advisor. They stayed in touch while La Salle studied at the
Seminary of Saint-Sulpice in Paris. Roland influenced La Salle to
learn a type of spiritual detachment that he later demonstrated when
he founded the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools.
After the death of his father in 1673, Roland became more involved in encouraging the growing community of the =E2=80=9CSisters of the Holy Child Jesus.=E2=80=9D On 13 July 1673 he opened the first school of the sisters, =
at
his own expense. The Order received Diocesan approval and confirmation
in 1675.
He wrote many spiritual works and published the =E2=80=9CNotices for the regular people=E2=80=9D. One of the notices left for the sisters reads:
=E2=80=9CThe sacred fire must embrace the sisters, it makes them inflame th=
e
others and above all the teachers, the students and all the people
they come in contact with. That way with their example and edifying
words, they will do good as the divine providence wishes. With this
fire they will love their neighbour. God does not wish to divide the
charity with which we love Him, we must give this one equally to all
humanity. This is the principle on which we must encourage the
teaching of girls in the schools, not making any distinction of their
human and natural qualities.=E2=80=9D
The following year he gave all his inheritance to consolidate the
young congregation and increased his activities in favour of the poor
and all those in any need, gathering a group of Priests around him who
assisted in all these endeavours.
On 30 March 1678 he assisted, with great joy, in the first Holy Mass
of Saint John Baptist de La Salle. He encouraged De La Salle to trade
his Canonry for a small parish but the Archbishop opposed this move
and so the matter remained unsettled for the time being.
On 19 April 1678, he had to stay in bed due to a severe headache. On
the 23rd of the same month he prepared his Last Will and Testament,
leaving the administration and care of his Order and their works in
the hands of Saint John Baptist de La Salle. On the 27th he died
peacefully at Reims and was buried in the Sisters' Chapel on the 29=
th.
Below is his Shrine, relics and the Chapel. He was only 35 years old
and yet he left behind a huge apostolic project, an infirmary, a
hostel and four schools.
Saint John Baptist de La Salle then continued with the final approval
of his work and later on followed in his footsteps, founding the
Congregation of the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools
for the Christian education of the poor.
He was Beatified on 16 October 1994 by St Pope John Paul II, who, at
the Beatification of Blessed Nicolas said:
=E2=80=9CThis young Priest, Canon and Theologian of Reims' Cathedra=
l,
friend and counsellor of Saint John Baptist de La Salle
and Founder of the Sisters of the Child Jesus=E2=80=A6
This young man from a middle-class family,
well educated, able to see various sides of a question,
could have become rich and powerful and a man of distinction.
But he was called to follow another course,
another route to which he became passionately devoted.
He lived in the world of his day,
with its poverty and wretchedness, uncertainty and fear,
where the rich dominated and the poor never had a say,
he found the road shown him by God,
a road shown him by and in prayer.
And he invited everyone, the young, adults, children,
priests to follow the same road and he trained them how to do so.
He discovered that =E2=80=9CGod has so loved the world,
that he has given his Son=E2=80=9D to teach us how to pray to Him as a son,
and how to speak to one another as brothers and sisters.
This prayer is given to us in Jesus, by Jesus and with Jesus =E2=80=A6=E2= =80=A6=E2=80=A6 ..
This road is =E2=80=9Cthe life we live=E2=80=9D, in which =E2=80=9Cwe conve= rse=E2=80=9D ,
and have =E2=80=98relationships.'=E2=80=9D
https://anastpaul.com/2020/04/27/
Saint Quotes:
=E2=80=9CIn this daily life which is doubtlessly your own,
Listen to your heart=E2=80=A6 ..
Discover a Presence which is more real than
this visible presence,
which dazzles you
and attracts your whole being=E2=80=A6=E2=80=9D
=E2=80=9CTake a higher flight,
giving yourself completely
to the unique Goodness and Beauty.
Be content with God,
He will be your light,
your strength, your shelter at all times.=E2=80=9D
=E2=80=9CAsk God to lead you by Faith,
Only God, seek only Him.=E2=80=9D
--Bl Nicolas Roland (1642-1678)
<><><><>
I Will Put Myself In Your Hands
By St John Henry Newman (1801-1890)
O my God, I will put myself
without reserve ,into Your hands.
Wealth or woe, joy or sorrow,
friends or bereavement,
honour or humiliation,
good report or ill report,
comfort or discomfort.
Your presence or the
hiding of Your Countenance,
all is good, if it comes from You.
You are Wisdom and You are Love =E2=80=93
what can I desire more.
Amen
--- NewsGate v1.0 gamma 2
* Origin: News Gate @ Net396 -Huntsville, AL - USA (1:396/4)