Bruno Lanteri

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Venerable Pio Bruno Lanteri
Fr. Pio Bruno Lanteri, OMV
Portrait by Michele Baretta.
Founder, Oblates of the Virgin Mary
Born (1759-05-12)12 May 1759
Cuneo, Piedmont
Residence Torino, Italy
Died 5 August 1830(1830-08-05)
Pinerolo, Italy
Major shrine Shrine of the Sacred Heart in Pinerolo, Italy (interred)
Influences St. Ignatius of Loyola, St. Alphonsus of Liguori, St. Teresa of Avila, Fr. Nicolas Joseph Albert von Diessbach
Influenced Spiritual direction, parish missions, anti-Jansenistic moral theology, St. Joseph Cafasso, St. John Bosco, Bl. Pier Giorgio Frassati, St. Joseph Cottolengo
Major works Réflexions sur la sainteté et la doctrine du Bienheureux Liguori (Paris, 1823)[1]

Pio Bruno Pancrazio Lanteri, or simply Bruno Lanteri (12 May 1759 – 5 August 1830), was a Catholic priest and founder of the religious congregation of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary in the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia in northwestern Italy in the early 19th century. His spiritual life and work centered on the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola.[2] He was also renowned for challenging Jansenism by distributing books and other publications that promoted the moral theology of St. Alphonsus Liguori, as well as establishing societies to continue this work.[1][3]

Lanteri's cause for canonization was begun in 1920 and he was declared Venerable by Pope Paul VI in 1965.[2][4]

Personal charism

Asceticism

Lanteri's life was marked by physical suffering from his pulmonary conditions that restricted his public speaking ability and his poor eyesight, because of which he often sought an assistant to read aloud to him. At age seventeen he sought the quiet and prayer of Carthusian monastic life and, although his entry was prevented by fragile health, he maintained this desire for silence and solitude throughout his life.[5] Witnesses of his life suggest that he reached the heights of mystical prayer during his years of house-arrest under Napoleon (1811–14).[6]

Devotion to Mary

At the death of Lanteri's mother in 1763, his father presented the four-year-old boy to a statue of Mary in their parish church, telling him, "She is your mother now." From this time, Lanteri maintained a deep and persistent devotion to Mary and communicated it to his colleagues and disciples, going so far as to declare that the religious institute he founded was principally the work of Mary and not his own.[7][8]

Good books

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After meeting Nikolaus Joseph Albert von Diesbach (1732–1798) in Torino in 1779,[9] Lanteri adopted Diessbach's passion for distributing good books as a remedy with both spiritual and human dimensions. Diessbach himself was converted from the Calvinism of his youth and the agnosticism of his military years by the chance reading of a good book that passionately expounded the truths of Catholicism.[8][10] With Lanteri he established a close-knit group of laypeople and clergy called the Amicizia Cristiana (Christian Friendship), who worked together to disseminate well-written, edifying books that inspired people to grow in their faith, contribute to society and cope with the unwelcome changes in their lives at the dawn of the French Revolution.[11] The Amicizia maintained catalogues of such books and managed a covert lending library in support of this work. Lanteri also communicated this passion for good literature to the Oblates of the Virgin Mary.[12]

Spirituality of discernment

Diessbach, a former Jesuit (the Society of Jesus having been suppressed by Pope Clement XIV in 1773) also introduced Lanteri to the spiritual patrimony of St. Ignatius of Loyola, particularly his Spiritual Exercises. In this series of guided meditations through which one becomes more attentive to the movements of the heart (discernment) and the accompanying rules for adapting them to individuals' particular spiritual needs, Lanteri recognized a powerful instrument for pastoral ministry, especially for conversion.[13] He applied them continuously in his own life and prayer, recommended them to others, and established groups of people whom he trained to do the same. These groups eventually yielded to the formation of the Convitto Ecclesiastico (Priestly Residence)[14] and the Oblates of the Virgin Mary, whom he charged to continue this work.

Contribution to moral theology

Lanteri worked to turn the tide of Jansenism, which had become popular in Europe in the preceding centuries and retained many adherents in his time, though formally condemned by the Catholic Church. He himself held certain Jansenistic tenets at age 20, but through the influence of Jesuit Diessbach he encountered the moral theology of Alphonsus Liguori and definitively rejected Jansenism.[15]

Lanteri subsequently promoted Liguorian moral theology, which is based on mercy and hope in contrast with a condemning and rigoristic Jansenism, both personally as he counseled people and young priests and institutionally through various publications. Of particular note is his 1823 book, published anonymously in French, entitled Réflexions sur la sainteté et la doctrine du Bienheureux Liguori (Reflections on the Holiness and Teaching of Blessed Liguori). It was soon translated into Italian and then Spanish. In this prose work, Lanteri describes the character of Liguori and his doctrinal teaching, particularly his moral theology. The book includes an exhaustive catalogue of Liguori's written works, which was a substantial aid to the Vatican committee reviewing Alphonsus' life and works.[16]

Scholars such as Guerber have shown that Lanteri, together with Diessbach and their associates in Northern Italy and France, was in large part responsible for the widespread familiarity among clergy with the moral theology of Alphonsus Liguori and its usefulness to both combat Jansenism and accomplish their evangelical mission.[16] One persistent point of Lanteri's teaching was to always follow the magisterium of the Church; the writings of Alphonsus Liguori had been officially declared "free of anything worthy of censure", and Lanteri always used this fact in support of his own promotion of Liguori's teaching.[17]

Writings

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Notes

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  7. Gallagher pp. 173, 220.
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  9. Gallagher p. 25.
  10. Viglione, Massimo (1995). La "Vandea Italiana". Roma: Effedieffe.
  11. Lanteri was at the head of the Christian Friendship organization from 1798. He was the author of about thirty pamphlets in which he refuted revolutionary theories. When Pope Pius VII was arrested by Napoleon, it was the Christian Friendship that secretly sent to the convent of Savona, where the pontiff was imprisoned, the juridical documents and doctrinal sources that served the pontiff for Bonaparte's excommunication. Napoleon ordered investigations in Piedmont until the society was discovered and dissolved.
  12. Gallagher p. 173.
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  14. Gallagher p. 32.
  15. Gallagher pp. 23–25.
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  17. Gallagher p. 159.

References

  • Bona, Candido (1962). Le «amicizie», società segrete e rinascita religiosa (1770–1830). Turin: Deputazione subalpina di storia patria.
  • Calliari, Paolo (1976). Pio Bruno Lanteri (1759-1830) e la controrivoluzione. Torino: Lanteriana.
  • Calliari, Paolo (1989). Servire la Chiesa: Il venerabile Pio Bruno Lanteri (1759-1830) pioniere del movimento laici cattolici, fondatore degli Oblati di Maria Vergine. Palermo: Lanteriana-Krinon.
  • Cristiani, Léon (1981). A Cross for Napoleon: The Life of Father Bruno Lanteri, 1759-1830. Boston, Ma.: St. Paul Editions.
  • Gallagher, Timothy (2013). Begin Again: The Life and Spiritual Legacy of Bruno Lanteri. New York: The Crossroad Publishing Company.
  • Gallagher, Timothy (2020). A Biblical Way of Praying the Mass: The Eucharistic Wisdom of Venerable Bruno Lanteri. Irondale, Alabama: EWTN Publishing.
  • Mattei, Roberto de (1980). Idealità e dottrine delle 'Amicizie'. Roma: Biblioteca Romana.
  • Mattei, Roberto de (2005). La Biblioteca delle “Amicizie”. Repertorio della cultura cattolica nell’epoca della Rivoluzione, (1770-1830). Napoli: Bibliopolis.

External links