Legion of Mary: What is Active Membership?
Active members meet weekly around an altar of Our Lady and carry out the weekly work of approximately two hours’ worth. They work to fulfill their Catholic duty of working for souls and performing the spiritual works of mercy as Jesus commanded us!
More from the Legion of Mary Handbook:
- The Legion of Mary is open to all Catholics who:
- Lead edifying lives.
- Are animated by the spirit of the Legion, or at least desire to foster that spirit in themselves.
- Are prepared to fulfil each and every duty which membership of the Legion involves.
- Persons who wish to join the Legion must apply for membership in a Praesidium.
- The admission of new members is the exclusive privilege and function of the Praesidium.
- Candidates under 18 years of age can only be received in Junior Praesidia. See the relative Section, page 67, and in particular paragraph 16.
- No one shall be admitted as a Candidate for membership of the Legion of Mary until the President of the Praesidium, to which admission is sought, is after careful enquiry satisfied that the person seeking admission fulfils the conditions required.
- A satisfactory probation of at least three months is required before the Candidate can be enrolled in the ranks of the Legionaries, but from the first the Candidate can participate fully in the works of the Legion.
- No Candidate can be accepted without the consent of the Parish Priest, or, in the case of a Praesidium not engaged in parochial work, of the Ordinary. The Ordinary and the Parish Priest shall determine the precise manner in which their consent shall be signified. It is open to the Ordinary and the Parish Priest to signify a general acceptance of all those approved by the Spiritual Director.
- A copy of the Tessera shall be given to every Candidate.
- Formal admission consists essentially in the Legionary Promise, and the entry of the name of the Candidate on the membership roll of the Praesidium. The wording of the Legionary Promise is given in the next Section. It is set out in a form which will facilitate reading.
H. E. Mgr. Montini, writing on behalf of the Holy Father, states: “This Apostolic and Marian Promise has strengthened the Legionaries in their Christian warfare throughout the world, especially those who are suffering persecution for the faith.”
A commentary on the Promise, “La Théologie de l’Apostolat” has been written by H. E. Mgr. L. J. Suenens, Auxiliary Bishop of Malines, and published by Desclée de Brouwer, Bruges, Belgium. This invaluable work should be in the hands of every Legionary. Like wise it should be read by every responsible Catholic, for it contains a remarkable exposition of the principles which govern the Christian apostolate.- When the period of Probation is judged to have been satisfactorily completed, the Candidate is given at least a week’s notice of reception. During that week the Candidate should seek to become familiar with the words and the ideas of the Promise, so that, at the actual reception, it will be read with facility, understanding, and earnestness.
- Then at an ordinary meeting of the Praesidium, immediately after the recitation of the Catena, all the members still remaining standing, the Vexillum is moved near to the Candidate, who then takes in the left hand a copy of the Promise and reads it aloud, supply-ing his or her own name in the proper place. When beginning the reading of the third paragraph of the Promise, the Candidate places the right hand upon the staff of the Vexillum, and keeps it there till the reading of the Promise is completed. After which, the Blessing of the Priest (if he is present) is given to the new Legionary. The latter’s name is then entered on the Membership Roll.
- After this, the members resume their seats, the Allocutio is given, and the meeting follows its ordinary course.
- If the Vexillum is not yet in the possession of the Praesidium, the Candidate should instead hold a pictorial representation of it. The Tessera will serve.
- Once the Candidate is deemed qualified, there should be no delay in taking the Promise. Two or more Candidates may be received simultaneously. But this is not desirable. For, it is pointed out that the greater the number of those received at the one time, the less solemn the ceremony becomes for each of them.
- The ceremony of reception may constitute an ordeal for specially sensitive persons. But such are really favoured, inasmuch as the ceremony possesses for them a particular solemnity and seriousness which will have its effect upon their subsequent membership.
- The duty of welcoming Candidates, instructing them in their duties, and fostering them through their Probation period and afterwards is allocated in a special manner to the Vice-President; but this is a duty in which all should take a part.
- If a Candidate for some reason does not wish to take the Promise, his probation may be extended for a further period of three months. The Praesidium has the right to postpone the Promise until it is sure of the suitability of the Candidate. Similarly it is only fair that the Candidate be given ample opportunity of making up his mind. But at the end of that supplementary period the Candidate must either take the Promise or leave the Praesidium
The probation and the Promise are the gateway of the Legion. That gateway must not lie negligently open for unsuitable material to enter in, to lower standards and to dilute spirit. - The Spiritual Director is under no obligation to take the Promise. But it would be legitimate and pleasing and an honour to the Praesidium for him to do so.
- The Promise should be reserved for its own proper purpose. It shall not be used as an Act of Consecration at the Acies or other functions. But of course it may be used, as desired, by Legionaries in their private devotions.
- Absences from the Praesidium should be viewed with a right degree of sympathy for the circumstances which are responsible. Names should not be lightly removed from the Roll, especially where sickness is in question, even though it is likely to be long-continued. But when a membership is deemed to have been discontinued and the name has been formally removed from the Roll, there is required for renewal a further probation and the re-taking of the Promise.
- For the purposes of the work of the Legion, but only for those purposes, members are addressed by the title of “Brother” or “Sister” as the case may be.
- Members may be grouped in Men’s, Women’s, Boys’, Girls’, or Mixed Praesidia, as the needs suggest, and as approved by the Curia.
The Legion came into existence as an organisation of women, and eight years passed before the first men’s Praesidium was established. Yet it forms an equally suitable basis for the organisation of men, and now there are in operation men’s Praesidia and mixed Praesidia in great numbers. The first Praesidium in the New World was of men.
Though women have thus the place of honour in the organisation, the masculine pronoun is used throughout these pages to designate the Legionary of either sex. This is the legal custom. It avoids, moreover, a tiresome repetition of the phrase “he or she.”
“A united, disciplined and coordinated body of all the Catholic forces, acting in dependence on the bishops. . . . It should be a great family of men and women, and boys and girls, moved by the one desire of sharing in the ministry of the Church and co-operating in the spreading of the Kingdom of Christ in individuals, in families, in society, a peaceful army of apostles eager to win souls to Christ and the Catholic Church . . . a single, compact, disciplined army.”
—(Letter of His Holiness Pius Xl. Acta Apostolicae Sedis, p. 664).