Maria Sieler: A Life Offered for Priests

<http://vultus.stblogs.org/2008/01/maria-sieler-a-life-offered-fo.html>http://vultus.stblogs.org/2008/01/maria-sieler-a-life-offered-fo.html

By <http://vultus.stblogs.org/>Father Mark on January 9, 2008 11:41 PM

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A Hidden Soul

Fifty--six years ago, in the heart of Rome, died 
one of those hidden souls whose entire life is 
but a silent offering. The holiness of such souls 
is brought to light when, providentially, one 
discovers that their action, although discreet, 
is wonderfully fruitful in the mystery of Mother Church.

Maria Sieler, who died in Rome in 1952, was one 
such soul. Austrian by origin, she settled in the 
Eternal City in 1939 to pursue and consummate a 
life yielded entirely to Christ, and to plant 
there the seed of the work that Heaven had asked of her.

Childhood in Austria

Born on February 3, 1899 in Winterdorf in central 
Styria, she was baptized the following day. Her 
parents were modest but very devout farmers. They 
had five children; Maria was the second of these. 
At six years of age she lost her father. His 
death reduced the family to poverty. At a very 
young age, Maria was obliged to begin work on the 
family farm and to care for her three younger 
sisters. Her childhood was divided among the 
school, the farm where she worked as a 
shepherdess, and her visits to the church. Very 
early on, she received two mystical graces, which 
were to orient her entire existence.

Conversation With Jesus

One day at school, while the teaching Sister was 
explaining prayer and recollection to the 
children, Maria heard a voice coming from the 
crucifix of the classroom, saying:
“Look at me and pray with fervour. By means of 
this prayer, you will arrive at conversing with 
Me, as do men among themselves.”

Shortly before her First Holy Communion, while 
she was speaking with a companion, a voice that 
was wholly interior said to her sorrowfully:

“I am so little known in the Most Holy Sacrament! 
Men do not believe, and they do not want to 
receive Me. And yet, I desire so much love, and I 
expect from you much love, for the others!” And, 
at the same time, a kind of ecstasy took hold of the little girl.

 From this moment forward, Jesus was the 
confidant of her heart. He engraved within her 
the love of silence and of solitude, and an 
attraction to the religious life. “My first love, 
my only love, was Jesus . . . my heart had to 
belong to Him, to Him alone . . . I have sought 
only Thee, O Jesus,” she wrote at the end of 
1942. She received Holy Communion very regularly: 
daily, beginning at the age of fourteen, for so 
had the Parish Priest determined for her out of 
prudence. Beginning at this period, she set about 
praying every night for long hours, often with 
her arms extended in the form of the cross. After 
1913 the end of her studies left her with more time.

Crisis

In 1915-16, however, she went through a little 
crisis of lukewarmness, brought on mostly by a 
certain feeling that Jesus had distanced Himself 
from her. She no longer felt His presence as she 
once had, and this caused her suffering. 
Immediately, nonetheless, she asked herself the 
most important question: “Is it God alone or, 
rather, His gifts and consolations that I am 
seeking in prayer” She was able to pass through 
this night of the senses, this darkness of the 
soul and dryness of the heart, with profit. This 
“night” became for her a time of spiritual ascent.

Sickness

In July 1917, during a retreat at the Convent of 
the Sacred Heart at Graz, she made the offering 
of herself to Jesus, and resolved to consecrate 
herself in the religious life. By a mysterious 
design of Providence and in view of her future 
mission, Maria had, for a time, to renounce this 
project. Johann, her only brother and the eldest, 
fell on the front at Assiago in 1918. Then, in 
December 1918, Maria suffered a grave illness of 
the lungs and had to receive the Anointing of the 
Sick. The illness lasted three years, during 
which time her calling became clearer: Jesus was 
asking her for the complete oblation of herself, 
a victimal oblation. Graces of union and heavenly 
favours abounded, but the young girl, stricken 
with fear, hesitated to surrender herself. Jesus 
asked her, “When will you surrender yourself to 
me totally, as an oblation. How long will you 
hesitate? I desire to make you my spouse of the 
Cross and to make you all offering for Myself. My 
life will become your life, full of suffering as yet veiled to your eyes.”

Victim Soul for Priests

Maria’s vocation became clearer. She was to be a 
soul of offering in whom the Lord might renew His 
Passion. Already, the divine exigencies had 
prevailed over her own desires and over her 
health. The victim was ready. The High Priest was calling her.

On December 8, 1923, Maria committed herself 
definitively, by the double vow for which the 
Lord had been asking: perpetual chastity and 
victimal oblation. Right from this hour she 
received a profusion of graces and lights on her 
vocation: not visions, nor apparitions, nor 
sensible revelations, but astonishing 
intellectual lights of a remarkable and amazing 
depth and doctrinal certainty. Her mission was 
defined by Jesus: a radical immolation for the 
profound intentions of the Church and for the renewal of the priesthood:

“I want to pour out my love again upon men, as I 
did in apostolic times, and you must be for Me 
the instrument of the outpouring of my love.”

Not Called to the Cloister

This calling was soon to manifest itself in a 
great trial. Already torn between the rhythm of 
her daily life and the aspirations of her soul, 
she regretted painfully her inability to 
consecrate her life to God in a cloister because 
of her precarious health. A novena to Saint 
Thérèse of the Child Jesus, who had just been 
canonized, brought some improvement to her 
health, and she enter the Good Shepherd (Convent) 
of Graz in April 1926. A few weeks later, her 
deficient health obliged her to leave this 
Congregation to go to the Sisters of the Cross. 
She finally left the latter on June 29, 1926, 
gravely ill and having received from Jesus the 
indication that her place would never be in a monastery.

Universal Renewal of the Priesthood

The trial was a terrible one, but the young woman 
came out of it purified and ultimately abandoned 
to the will of God. In the course of the autumn 
of 1926, Jesus said to her again: “I am preparing 
a universal renewal of the priesthood, and you 
must immolate yourself for that.”

Jesus Forsaken in the Blessed Sacrament

Maria Sieler was called to share all the 
sufferings of Christ, notably after her Holy 
Communions. “After Communion, Jesus made me feel 
the sorrows of His Heart. An unspeakable pain, 
poured out from His Heart, flowed into mine, and 
I thought I would die from it.” She felt the 
sufferings of Jesus because of the lukewarmness, 
the indifference, and the disregard of 
Christians, especially toward the Most Holy 
Sacrament. “He often showed me how much He is 
forsaken and so little honoured in the Blessed 
Sacrament, and the scant attention paid Him, the 
Lord, whom they treat as nothing. He showed me 
the pains of His Heart, and allowed me to feel them and to share them.”

Wounded for Priests

She also received the sublime and terrible grace 
of stigmatization, but obtained from Jesus that 
the wounds should remain invisible. “I felt the 
pains of the Wounds of the Saviour and of His 
pierced Heart, of His Head crowned with thorns. I faltered under it.”

At the heart of these sufferings, Maria, 
receiving lights that always more precise, 
discovered her particular vocation in the Church 
militant: to be a victim of holocaust for the priesthood.

“I want to renew the Church through priests and, 
in this way, give her new graces! I want to give 
new priests and new shepherds to my Church. . . .”

Painful Revelations Concerning Priests

She had painful revelations, notably concerning 
the unworthiness of priests and their tepidity 
with regard to the love of Jesus:

“How I love my priests! How I thirst for their 
love! I would see my life relived in them. They 
must be the joy of my Heart, but how I am 
rejected, offended, and disdained by them! They 
become a shame for my Heart and a scandal for my 
Church! Souls who should be saved by them are 
going to their perdition because of them! Souls 
ought to be able to find again the way to my 
Heart, through priests . . . but so many priests 
live self-seeking lives, (caught up) in their 
passions, and souls cannot come to Me through 
them, because the way traced by these priests is 
sullied. It is neither pure nor straight. I so love my priests. . . .”

Certainly, these hard words contain nothing new, 
and they are not addressed radically to all 
priests: Christ has communicated to other 
prayerful souls the same laments spoken to Maria 
Sieler, and He has always had the gentleness to 
clarify that they are directed only to certain 
priests. But the faults of consecrated souls are 
especially grave; they affect the salvation of 
the souls entrusted to the very ministry of priests.

Spiritual Discernment

Maria Sieler received the most important and 
abundant communications from Jesus between 1926 
and 1932. Her later years, while just as rich, 
were more a kind of deepening of these in silence 
and in prayer, in sacrifice and in immolation. 
All her revelations, carefully noted, were 
submitted at the time to the control of Monsignor 
E. List and of the Dominican theologian, Father 
Garrigou-Lagrange, who was the young woman’s 
director. Among her correspondents and friends, 
she counted Monsignor Graber, the bishop of 
Regensburg, and Monsignor Merk. The former was 
the founder of the Work that the Lord wanted to 
raise up for the radiance and renewal of the priesthood.

The Great Loss of Faith

In addition to these abundant lights on the 
sanctification of priests, Maria Sieler heard, 
over the years, moving reproaches of the Heart of 
the Jesus, the announcement of a crisis in the 
Church and the clergy, and that of grave and 
trenchant chastisements for all unworthy souls of priests.

In her notebooks, Maria Sieler wrote: “In 
countless hours of grace and of prayer, the Lord 
made me see, many years ago already, a great loss 
of the faith, which would go on increasing. All 
of hell will be unleashed and will do everything 
possible to cause great damages to the Church. 
Jesus made me know two ways: I must be a soul of 
offering for the renewal of priests, of the 
priesthood, and for the renovation of the Church.”

A Work for Priests

She received from the Lord, at Rome, a very 
precise mission: the regular foundation of a priestly work:
This work must have for its own name: The Work of 
the Great High Priest, because it is I Myself who 
will be its only Founder. In this Work, I will 
form priests in great number, who will live fully 
of my spirit, because this is what I desire for 
the times that are to come very soon!

Jesus promised new graces of choice to the 
priests who would belong to this Work: they would 
be "an example for each of their brothers in the 
priesthood, serving them out of love in their 
acts and their words, without division or compromise."

This work would be “international, regrouping 
priests from the monastic state as well as from 
the statute of priests serving in dioceses, regular and secular.”

Death

This whole foundation matured in prayer and in 
sacrifice for ten years, in an existence entirely 
surrendered to God, but Maria Sieler never saw 
the realization of it. She died prematurely, all 
alone in her room, in the night of July 26th to 
the 27th, 1952. She had just returned from a 
final pilgrimage to the tomb of Saint Francis in 
Assisi. She was discovered on the 29th; she 
appeared asleep, kneeling on the floor, against 
her bed, with her head resting on her arm. Her 
face was radiant. The Lord had come, like a 
thief, noiselessly, during one of those vigils in 
prayer that she offered Him, with her arms in the form of a cross.

Bishop Graber Establishes the Work

Many years later, on April 7, 1971, one of the 
most faithful friends of Maria Sieler officially 
founded the Work of the Great High Priest, 
together with thirteen other priests. It was 
Monsignor Rudolf Graber, the bishop of Regensburg (Ratisbonne).

I translated this short biographical notice of Maria Sieler from the French.

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