The dispersal
The consecration of Fourviere was followed by a dispersal. Of the 12
seminarians, seven abandoned the project, two waited for the others to do
something and the three who acted were appointed to the extremities of the
diocese.
Jean-Claude Courveille was appointed curate at Verrieres
in the western extreme. From the start he made efforts to put the Marist
project in motion. He attempted to set up an association of lay women there.
Then, when he was moved to Epercieux, he tried to establish a community of
brothers. During this time he kept in touch with both Marcellin Champagnat
and Jean-Claude Colin. He was considered the central figure until 1826, when
the first of his difficulties began. From the, he began to disappear from
the story.
Marcellin Champagnat was sent to La Valla In the south
of the diocese. Called to the bedside of a dying boy who had no knowledge of
the faith or of God, Marcellin’s conviction that he had been given the
commission to set up a branch of brothers was even more confirmed. Less than
five months after his arrival at La Valla, he had invited two young men,
aged 22 and 14, to begin the branch of brothers. Soon eight more arrived,
the oldest 24, and the youngest 10.
Jean-Claude Colin was appointed to Cerdon, a northern
outpost, where his brother Pierre was the Parish Priest. After a short time
there, he spoke to his brother of the plan to form a Society of many
branches: priests, religious brothers and sisters, and lay people. Pierre
became enthusiastic, and suggested that two young women whom he knew in the
parish where he had previously worked be invited to join them at Cerdon. In
1817, Jeanne-Marie Chavoin and Marie Jotillon joined the Colin brothers in
the parish of Cerdon. Jeanne-Marie Chavoin was to become the foundress of
the Marist sisters.
And so, at the end of 1817, eighteen months after the Fourviere promise,
the group numbered four priests separated by a great distance, two young
brothers at La Valla, and two young women at Cerdon. Already three principal
characters have emerged: Champagnat, Colin and Chavoin.
It is time to meet each one.
DECLAS:
On leaving the seminary, we said that each one would go wherever Providence
would send him until the time when we would come together and go to Le Puy,
where the first idea of the Society had been given.
MAYET:
The thing that struck you about Father Courveille’s words was the comparison
with the Jesuits?
TERRAILLON:
Yes. When we gave shape to the project, we used to say: “There is a Society
of Jesus, there will be a Society of Mary. There is a body which bears the
name of Jesus, another must bear the name of Mary, That was our dominant
thought. What the Jesuits do under their appellation indicated to us what we
must do under ours.
COLIN:
To people who are not in the know, the beginnings of the Society present, at
first sight, a kind of obscurity and follow an exceptional course. This
comes from the fact that several people conceived almost simultaneously the
same project of the Society and worked separately for its implementation.
Father Courveille had the merit, in 1815 and 1816, of manifesting it
exteriorly, and 11 or 12 seminarians from the major seminary joined him to
work together for the project.
Then
Father Courveille and his young associates became priests at the end of the
school year of 1816, were appointed to the parish ministry in various
places, and gradually forgot about their plans, except for two of them,
namely Father Champagnat, who was appointed curate at La Valla and who
immediately set out to establish the branch of the teaching brothers….
MAYET:
And yourself, Jean-Claude Colin….
COLIN:
… who became curate in a parish in the department of Ain, and who used the
free time left by the ministry to jot down on paper the first thoughts which
were to serve as a basis for the constitutions. He was filled interiorly
with a strong confidence equivalent to a kind of certainty that the project
came from God and that it would take shape in the long run.
MAYET:
Where does Jean-Claude Courveille fit into the story of the origins of the
Marist work?
COLIN: But before coming to the seminary I had the idea of forming a society
which, it’s true, would be dedicated to Our Lady, but I didn’t have the name
“Society of Mary”. That name came from Father Courveille.
MAYET:
So you had this idea before coming to the major seminary of Lyon?
COLIN:
Yes, yes, definitely. Yes, before coming to the major seminary of Lyon. In
fact, I had even written up a small project. When I was still very young,
before I began my classical studies, I had a burning desire to withdraw
alone into a forest,
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