|

Born 7 June 1889 – Died 7 November 1980
Founded the Legion of Mary
On 7 September 1921
Frank Duff’s Message
There are a
couple of basic questions that we need to ask about Frank Duff and the process
for the Cause of his beatification.
Why do we want Frank Duff beatified?
What is the reason for spending so much time and energy on the Cause when
there are so many other forms of apostolic work that might seem more urgent and
necessary? One reason is that the prayer and work involved in the process of
beatification is itself a tremendous form of evangelization. We are not simply
eulogizing Frank Duff but we wish to spread the message that he taught and
lived.
What
he stood for is what is important.
One pivotal purpose in the beatification of a man or woman is to make their
message heard loudly throughout the Church. We might get some idea why it is
good to promote the beatification of men and women from the words of Frank Duff
himself.
He writes:
“We must read the lives of the saints. God’s purpose in
bringing about the canonization of saints was to provide a headline which would
draw us on to goodness and heroism. Saints are the doctrines and practices of
holiness made visible. If we frequent their company, we will soon imitate their
qualities.”
Evangelization is surely making the teaching of the Gospel
and the Christian way of life visible and accessible to as many people as
possible.
What are the main elements in his message and spirituality?
Let me stress just one or two points in his message. The
first published work of Frank Duff was the pamphlet entitled “Can We Be
Saints?” His answer was a resounding Yes.
Everyone, without exception, is made and called to be a
saint and the means are readily accessible to all in the everyday living of the
Catholic life.
That is their very first job – to try to be a saint. If we
are not really trying to be saints then to that extent we are wasting the gift
of our lives. It is no good, he used to say, to ask men and women to be good,
you have to ask them to be heroic. He founded the Legion of Mary as a school of
sanctity.
For nearly all his life, Frank lived in close, daily contact with the men and
women who lived in the hostels he founded. He cared for their material needs
and tried to ease the profound pain at the heart of their lives. But above all
he wanted each one of them to go to Heaven and so he provided them with access
to all the means that the Church offers them. Frank looked up to each
individual because he saw Christ in them.
I
knew Mother Teresa reasonably well during my ten years in India and met her
often at various places on my travels. Frank Duff had the same regard and love
of the poor that she possessed and above all wanted them to live and die in the
state of sanctifying grace.
He wanted everyone, to be authentically holy. In short, he
believed with all his mind and heart in what the Second Vatican Council referred
to as the universal call to holiness.
For Frank the universal call to holiness necessarily includes the universal
call to evangelization or mission. There is endless joy in being an instrument,
with God’s grace, in bringing even one soul to Heaven. Frank sought to bring
all souls to Heaven or at least as many as possible. I think it could be argued
that his desire for the salvation of souls was the deepest thrust in his
spirituality.
The salvation of souls dominates the life of every saint. Frank found it
difficult to imagine how you could save your own soul without seeking to save
the souls of others.
The desire to save souls defines also the reason why he
founded the Legion of Mary. He adapted the prayer attributed to St. Francis
Xavier for the Conversion of the Whole World as follows:
“O Lord all hearts are in Your hands. You can bend as it
pleases You the most obdurate and soften the most hardened. Do that honor this
day to the blood, merits, wounds, names and inflamed hearts of Your beloved Son
and His most Holy Mother by granting the conversion of the whole world. Nothing
less, my God, nothing less, because of Mary, their Mother; because of your might
and Your mercy.”
Frank Duff was great in the small things, and heroic
in doing the commonplace, and his purpose in al things great and small was his
immense desire to love God and to be an instrument with and through Mary and the
Holy Spirit in the conversion of sinners and the salvation of souls.
Fr.
Bede McGregor O.P.
His message is radically rooted in the Gospel
and the Tradition of the Church. This is why it is so important.
Early
Years
 

Francis Michael Duff was born on 7 June 1889. He was the
eldest of seven, two of whom died as children.
He attended both Belvedere and
Blackrock Colleges and was a
gifted student. However, due to his father’s premature illness, money was in
short supply and a university education was no longer an option.
Frank joined the Civil Service taking first place in the entrance examination.
He was assigned to the Department of Finance, devised a system of calculus which
was subsequently adopted by the Treasury in London. He was a keen cyclist,
played tennis and enjoyed a good social life.
He was invited by a colleague to join the St. Vincent de Paul
Society and in October 1913 joined at the age of 24.
He was affected by the chasm he saw between the society he
moved in and the poverty, hunger and squalor he witnessed.
He attended an enclosed retreat and was impressed by what he
heard. Accustomed to reading copiously he started reading more spiritual and
theological books about God, and the saints.
Besides the physical needs of the people he encountered,
Frank saw that many neglected the practice of the faith and needed
encouragement. In 1914, in parallel to this work with the St Vincent de Paul
Society, Frank commenced his own personal apostolate visiting tenement houses
where he received a kindly welcome.
Proselytism was rife in Dublin at the time. SVP member, Joe
Gabbett and some women set up an alternative food center for those in need.
Frank involved himself in this work.
Frank joined the Pioneer Total Abstinence Association of the
Sacred Heart. In 1915 he joined the Third Order of the Carmelites and made the
first of 49 pilgrimages to St Patrick’s Island Lough Derg.
In 1916 he wrote a booklet “Can We Be Saints”, his thesis
being “in the heart of every right thinking Catholic, God has implanted the
desire to become a saint.” That same year the Easter Rising took place and a
turbulent period of history followed by the War of Independence in Ireland from
1917 to 1921.
In 1917 he found a second-hand copy of “True Devotion to the
Blessed Virgin Mary” by St Louis Marie Grignion de Montfort, the contents of
which he found difficult to come to terms with at first. In 1919 he went to
Mount Melleray Cistercian Abbey and read a book entitled “The Knowledge of Mary”
by Fr. de Consilio, that opened up a new world for him. It gave him a
theological knowledge of Our Lady which was assumed in St Louis de Montfort’s
book.
Frank Duff served in several Government departments until
1932 when he retired from the Civil Service to give his complete attention to
the Legion of Mary, which, after the International Eucharistic Congress in
Dublin, was expanding worldwide.
First Works of the Legion
The first work of the Legion of Mary was the visitation of the South Union
Hospital (now incorporated as part of St James’s Hospital), Dublin, to a section
of the Hospital frequented by few, if any visitors to patients suffering from
cancer.
There was at the time in Dublin an area of ill repute known worldwide as Monto,
a no-go area for law and order. In large run-down tenement houses resided
many girls who plied the trade of prostitution.
Legionaries
decided to make a visit to this area and despite initial fears were made welcome
by those living there. Twenty-three of the thirty-nine girls agreed to give up
that way of life after attending a weekend retreat in the convent of the Sisters
if Charity in Baldoyle.
Thanks to the good offices of the then Minister for Local Government, W.T.
Cosgrave, a premises was procured in Harcourt Street Dublin, into which the
girls moved at the end if the retreat which became known then as Sancta Maria
Hostel.
This was followed in 1927 by the Morning Star Hostel for
homeless men and by Regina Coeli Hostel in 1928 for mothers and their children
and homeless women.

Frank Duff at the Second Vatican Council
In 1965
Frank Duff was invited to the Second Vatican Council and when his presence was
announced, the whole assembly of 2500 Bishops broke into spontaneous applause.
Frank Duff had the opportunity to renew several contacts and
establish new ones on the Legion’s behalf. While he was in Rome he gave 32
formal talks to different groups of bishops. He also gave a number of
interviews to newspaper reporters, wrote several articles and 200 letters.
His greatest experience was his private audience with the
Holy Father Pope Paul VI.
His Holiness thanked him for his services to the Church and
expressed his appreciation for all that the Legion of Mary had done. Frank Duff
assured the Holy Father that the primary ambition of the Legion was to keep in
closest union with the Church.
The Council, Frank Duff said, had risen to new heights in
regard to Mary in the Church. Referring to the Constitution on the Church
“Lumen Gentium” he said “Mary is inseparable from the Catholic Church. You
cannot take her out and yet leave the Church intact. It would cease to be the
Catholic Church. Her position is primary.” Then he added “In another of its
tremendous strokes the Council insists that all apostleship is but an extension
of the motherhood of Mary; it is part of her giving of Christ to the world. It
follows that nobody can take part in apostleship or persevere in it except with
her.”
Cyclist and Photographer
Frank,
like most Irish men of his time, used a bicycle to get around. But he also used
it to test his own endurance. For instance on Sunday, 31 May 1914, he cycled
155 miles from 8:00 in the morning to 11:20 in the evening. He was then on the
eve of his 26th birthday. After his mother’s death in 1951, he
almost died himself and took to the road on his bicycle to force air into his
lungs. This led him to take up cycling as his preferred holiday option with two
major expeditions each year and several minor ones. He came to love the Irish
countryside and especially its coastal beauty spots and he would record all
worthwhile vistas on his Leica cameras to be revisited on the screen later with
audiences small and large. In November 1980, at the age of 90, he planned a
cycling weekend which was to take place along the north Dublin coast. His
bicycle was ready in the hall downstairs and his packed bag was on the carrier
ready for the start next morning. Sadly it was not to be as on the eve of his
planned departure, he died.
I met
Frank Duff just in the last ten years of his life.
What struck me about him was the interest and care he took
with each individual he met. He was a man of wisdom, he could be forthright in
manner, he was kind, practical and had a wonderful sense of humor. He was a
good listener and a man of real humility. Those qualities were interspersed
with a deep prayer and sacramental life.
He was man who shunned publicity. He preferred to remain in
the background. An example that comes to mind in at the open-air Mass marking
the Golden Jubilee of the setting up of the Legion, he was to be found
anonymously among the large congregation present.
One commentator described Frank Duff as a “philosopher,
theologian, biblical scholar, possessor of vast knowledge on medicine, science
and mathematics and a great communicator – able to express complex ideas in
simple terms.” He was to my mind all of those things,
In my opinion, one of the great legacies that Frank Duff left
was a realization of the obligations and responsibilities given to each person
at Baptism, calling all to evangelization. Through the Legion of Mary he left a
workable means of seeing Christ in all, an organization with rules which works
on a democratic basis but fully in accordance with the Church, in union with Our
Blessed Lady. It works quietly in the 170 or so countries in which it is
established to date.
Sile Ni Chochlain, Concilium Legionis Mariae
An avid reader
Frank Duff was a regular reader of the National Geographic
and Time magazines. His reading of these magazines and other periodicals kept
him well informed about current affairs.
He showed particular interest in reading about the dedication
of those who in the interests of science and learning went on assignments to
foreign and remote areas to study various aspects of life. The sacrifices and
the hardships they endured appealed to his interest in adventure.
He liked to use their example of heroism as an ideal for
legionaries who might think of devoting part of their lives to working in some
far-flung area of the world in the interest of evangelization. He expressed it
as follows in the Legion of Mary Handbook “That Christian commission drastically
drives us out to people everywhere ... to those remote … to the forgotten sort …
to the dwellers in caves and caravans … to the avoided places … to the icy
wastes, to the sun baked desert, to the undiscovered tribe, out into the
absolute unknown, to find if there is someone living there, right to the ends of
the earth where the rainbow rests!”
This thinking would have influenced his interest in sending
out the early Envoys to set up the Legion in lands outside Ireland.
Prayer for
the Beatification of the Servant of God Frank Duff
God
our Father,
You inspired your servant Frank Duff with a profound insight
into the mystery of Your Church, the Body of Christ, and of the place of Mary
the Mother of Jesus in this mystery.
In his immense desire to share this insight with others and
in filial dependence on Mary he formed her Legion to be a sign of her maternal
love for the world and a means of enlisting all her children in the Church's
evangelizing work.
We thank you Father for the graces conferred on him and for
the benefits accruing to the Church from his courageous and shining faith.
With confidence we beg You that through his intercession you
grant the petition we lay before You. ...............
We ask too that if it be in accordance with Your will, the
holiness of his life may be acknowledged by the Church for the glory of your
Name, through Christ Our Lord, Amen.
Favors
attributed to the intercession of Frank Duff should be reported to:
Legion of Mary,
De Montfort
House
Morning Star
Avenue
Brunswick
Street,
Dublin 7,
Ireland
|