- Rupert Mayer
Rupert Mayer (
23 January 1876 –1 November 1945 ) was aJesuit priest and a leading figure of theCatholic resistance in theThird Reich in Munich. In 1987 he wasbeatified byPope John Paul II .Life
Born in
Stuttgart , Rupert Mayer studiedphilosophy andtheology inFreiburg ,Munich andTübingen . He was, among other things, a member of A.V. Guestfalia Tübingen and K.D.St.V. Aenania München, two "Studentenverbindung en" that belong to theCartellverband der katholischen deutschen Studentenverbindungen . In 1899, he was ordained apriest and joined the Society of Jesus inFeldkirch, Vorarlberg ,Austria (thenAustria-Hungary ) in 1900. From 1906, he moved aboutGermany ,Switzerland , and theNetherlands as a People's Commissioner. From 1914, he was achaplain at the front in theFirst World War . In 1916, he lost his left leg after it was injured in agrenade attack. He was the first chaplain to win theIron Cross . He worked managing a clerical retreat, as a preacher, and as of 1921 as a leader of the Marian Congregation in Munich. In 1937, he found himself in "protective custody" for six months, and for seven months after that, he was inSachsenhausen concentration camp . He was released from there on the condition of a broad ban on preaching. Until the liberation by the US forces in May 1945, he livedEttal Abbey . An American Officer returned him to Munich, we he received a hero's welcome.He died on his feet on 1 November 1945 of a
stroke , while he was celebrating Mass, inMunich . Facing the congregation, "THE LORD THE LORD THE LORD". These were his last words.Accompanied by thousands of mourners, Rupert Mayer was first buried at the Jesuitenfriedhof in
Pullach . Due to the steady stream of pilgrims, his remains were moved to Munich in 1948 and were reburied in the Unterkirche of the Bürgersaalkirche, where his continued popularity as a Bavarian hero and intercessor is documented. In 1950,Protest against the Nazis
Rupert Mayer spoke out against anti-Catholic baiting campaigns and fought against Nazi church policy. He preached that man must obey
God more than men. His protests against the Nazis landed him several times inLandsberg prison and in Sachsenhausen concentration camp under the "Kanzelparagraphen", a series of 19th-century laws that forbade the clergy to make political statements from their pulpits. From late 1940, he was interned in Ettal Monastery, mainly because the Nazis were afraid that he would die in theconcentration camp , and thereby become amartyr .Rupert Mayer resolutely spoke out against the Nazi régime's evil in his lectures and sermons. Before the "Sondergericht" – one of
Adolf Hitler 's "special courts" – he declared "Despite the speaking ban imposed on me, I shall preach further, even if the state authorities deem my pulpit speeches to be punishable acts and a misuse of the pulpit."His time in prison and the concentration camp had taken its toll, as had the enforced inactivity while under house arrest at Ettal.
Rupert Mayer's legacy and honours
Since his death in 1945, Rupert Mayer's followers called for his
beatification . In 1950,Michael Cardinal von Faulhaber opened the information process in the diocese of Munich regarding the call to sanctity and virtues. In 1951, Jesuit provincialOtto Faller completed and formally forwarded the beatification information to Rome.In 1956,
Pope Pius XII , who had personally known Father Rupert Mayer during his time as Papal nuncio in Munich, awarded him the titleServant of God . UnderPope John XXIII , the beatification process was initiated, the results of which were formally accepted byPope Paul VI in 1971. UnderPope John Paul II , the degree of heroic virtue was issued in 1983. Rupert Mayer was beatified byPope John Paul II on3 May 1987 in Munich.Father Mayer's grave was visited by
Pope John Paul II andPope Benedict XVI , whose parents had venerated him. Many faithful hope for his canonization, which requires a miracle to be accepted by Vatican authorities. In the meantime, people from all walks of life, visit the church in the centre of Munich every day, packed with their shopping bags, children, dogs and, their problems, asking for his intercession, or for a small moment of rest at his side.In Bavaria, numerous streets are named after Ruper Mayer. In 1954, the "Cartell Rupert Mayer" (CRM) was founded. It was a further development of the first "Christliche Loge" (CL) founded in Munich in 1946. The mediaeval "Dombauhütten Logen" may be considered its forerunner. Furthermore, in Pullach, Bavaria, a public school, a "
Realschule " and a "Gymnasium" bear his name. Also a school located in cebu City; Sacred Heart School Jesuit, has a section named after him. Another Jesuit school in the Philippines; Xavier University - Ateneo de Cagayan, also has a section that bears his name.In 2006
Fordham University dedicated a chapel in his name at their Lincoln Center campus inManhattan, New York .Prayer of Rupert Mayer
The following text come from the song produced by
Bukas Palad Ministry :Lord, what You will let it be so
Where You will there we will go
What is Your will help us to know
Lord, when You will the time is right
In You there's joy in strife
For Your will I'll give my life
To ease Your burden brings no pain
To forego all for You is gain
As long as I in You remain
REFRAIN:
Because You will it, it is best
Because You will it, we are blest
Till in Your hands our hearts find rest
Till in Your hands our hearts find restExternal links
*PND|118579622
* [http://www.erzbistum-muenchen.de/EMF076/EMF007520.asp Biography]
* [http://www.erzbistum-bamberg.de/verbaende/uebersicht/daten/mayer.htm Cartell Rupert Mayer]
* [http://www.manresa-sj.org/stamps/1_Mayer.htm German stamp honouring Edith Stein and Rupert Mayer on the occasion of their beatification]
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