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Mar 15 – Laetare Sunday / S Clement Mary Hofbauer
Description
Sources Used Today:
- "Christian Joy" — Toward Easter
- "Sin of Omission: Vatican II and the Sources of Revelation" (FSSPX.news)
- The Spiritual Life — Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre (Angelus Press)
Saint Clement Mary Hofbauer was a priest whose missionary zeal helped carry the spirit of Saint Alphonsus Liguori and the Redemptorist Order into the heart of Central Europe. Born in 1751 in the small Moravian town of Tasswitz, Clement grew up in poverty after the early death of his father. As a boy he worked as a baker’s apprentice to support his family. Yet even amid long hours of labor, he felt drawn toward the priesthood and a life dedicated to God. His path was not easy. Financial hardship repeatedly interrupted his education, forcing him to rely on the generosity of benefactors and his own perseverance.
Eventually Clement was able to study theology and was ordained a priest. During a pilgrimage to Rome he encountered the Redemptorists, a congregation devoted to preaching missions and serving the poor. He immediately recognized in their spirituality the kind of apostolic life he desired and entered the order, taking the name Clement Mary. Soon after his profession, he was sent north to establish the Redemptorists beyond Italy.
His greatest work took place in Warsaw, where he founded a house near the Church of Saint Benno. Clement transformed the parish into a center of intense missionary activity. He organized preaching, confessions, catechesis, and charitable works that continued from early morning until late at night. His community became known for its dedication to the poor and abandoned. Yet the political climate in Poland grew increasingly hostile to religious orders. When Warsaw fell under foreign control, Clement and his companions were expelled and their work dismantled.
Forced to wander, Clement eventually settled in Vienna. Though he faced constant suspicion from civil authorities, he quietly continued his ministry, gathering students, intellectuals, and ordinary believers who were searching for deeper faith. His influence reached far beyond the confessional and pulpit. Many who later helped renew Catholic life in nineteenth century Europe traced their spiritual awakening to his guidance.
Clement died in Vienna in 1820, worn out by years of tireless service. His reputation for holiness spread quickly, and the Church later recognized him as a saint whose perseverance carried the Redemptorist mission into new lands.
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