Bendel, Bernhard 1908 to 1980 Catholic
(ALCP/OSS) Germany / Tanzania
Father Bernhard Bendel was the founder of the
ALCP/OSS Missionary Society.
Bernhard Bendel was born on 20
October 1908 in the little village of Steinefrenz in the Westerwald
District. Steinefrenz lies in the middle the towns of Limburg, Lahn
and Montabaur, in the state of Hesse in Germany. Bernhard's father,
Heinrich Georg Bendel, and his mother Katharina (née Michel) were
prominent Catholics and faithful parishioners of the Steinefrenz
Parish in the diocese of Limburg.
The period before World
War I (1914-1918) was a golden time in Germany, a time of economic
development, which came about in the years after 1871. However, the
villages of the Westwald had experienced little of this upswing.
There the life of the farmers continued to be hard and difficult.
The Bendel family, including the grandparents and children, had to
work hard in order to make a living from their small, narrow fields.
The fields were narrow because of the peculiarities of the
inheritance laws in the former duchy of Nassau. Moreover, the soil
of the place was volcanic and not very fertile. Thus people of the
area grew up accustomed to working hard and living modestly. At the
same time these people were trustworthy, sincere and above all
deeply anchored in their Christian faith, a faith that provided not
merely a decoration for certain family festivities, but was also an
integral part of their daily lives.
Bernhard Bendel attended
elementary school in Steinefrenz for eight years. Then he studied
Latin for three years, since knowledge of Latin was a precondition
for acceptance in the higher school, the gymnasium, which, in
turn, was a prerequisite for admittance to the university. However,
instead of the gymnasium, Bernhard, at age fourteen, opted
for the diocesan minor seminary in Hadmar.
Life in the
Seminary
The minor seminary was a six-yeaar boarding
school which culminated with the completion of the abitur,--a
comprehensive exam marking graduation from high school,--which
Bernhard achieved in 1928. At the seminary, he built strong
friendships which lasted the rest of his life.
He was a
bright and popular student and a good athlete as well. His excellent
grades in his final examinations, especially in mathematics and
physics, led to tempting offers from industries. However, already
sure that his vocation was to become a priest, he gave up the
prospect of a lucrative career to enter the major seminary.
His philosophy and theology studies were done at the Jesuit
college of St. Georgen in Frankfurt am Main. He received financial
support from the diocese in the form of an interest free loan. The
years from 1928 to 1933, while Bernhard was studying in Frankfurt,
were years of great consequence for many. In government, communists
and Nazis were vying for power. In the church, these years and those
that followed, although turbulent, were times of Catholic activism
and there was an upsurge in vocations for the priesthood and
religious life.
At St. Georgen College, Bernhard was
attracted to the religious life that he experienced there but he did
not feel called to Jesuit spirituality. Nevertheless, he respected
and spoke about his professors with high esteem. After his
theological studies he received minor orders in May of 1933; on July
25 he became a sub-deacon and on July 30, 1933, a deacon at the
oratory of St. Georgen. On December 8, 1933 he was ordained a priest
in the cathedral of Limburg by his bishop Antonius Hilfrich. Two
days later he celebrated his first solemn mass of Thanksgiving in
his village parish church. This was the year Adolph Hitler seized
power in the country.
Soon after his priestly ordination, he
knew the time had come to bring forth the harvest that had been
nurtured during his years of studies. As a young priest he was soon
confronted by the challenges of the Hitler regime. This meant to
profess publicly his Christianity and to prove himself the yeast of
the Gospel and the leaven for the world.
Bernhard's Work,
1934-1950
Bernhard was a student during the Weimar
Republic from 1919 to 1933, years shaped by the German defeat during
World War I (1914-1918) and the humiliations at the hand the allies
in the Versailles Treaty (1919). The difficulties of this period
played a role in the rise of the right wing NSDAP, Adolf Hitler's
Nazi Party. It was also a time of continuing economic upheaval and a
time of violence, frequently instigated by the left wing communists.
All this led Adolf Hitler and his party to seize power on January
30, 1933, thus beginning the worst dictatorship in history.
Bernhard's first appointment as a priest on March 21, 1934
was as vicar in Bad Schwalbach. Two years later he became chaplain
in Geisenheim/Rheingau, and in 1937 he was appointed associate
pastor of Schramn in Neuenhain, with all the rights and duties of a
pastor. In 1940, he was made chaplain in Hattershein with the filial
parish, Okriftel. That same year, Bishop Hilfrich appointed him
curate for Mammolshain/Taunus, with pastoral responsibilities at the
children's sanatorium in Mammolshain. He remained in Mammolshain for
the rest of his priestly life, first as parish curate and later as
pastor.
Father Bernhard was officially summoned several
times by the Gestapo (the Secret Police founded to fight against
internal resistance), first on May 18 and again on June 3, 1942, in
Frankfurt to answer questions because of his activities, and was
given stern warnings. However, he was not discouraged and continued
to preach and bear witness to his Christianity even when it
conflicted with Nazi practice and theory.
When the war ended
in 1945, most of Germany experienced the end of the war as a
liberation. But because of the total surrender on the part of the
Germans, difficult times were to follow. After the war, Germany was
confronted with the work of reconstruction. Fr. Bernhard's efforts
were directed to the construction of a new church at Mammolshain,
from October 1946 to October 1948. He believed that the presence of
the church was the sign of a better life and a future. For him,
building a new church was a way to give hope to the people and to
show them they were moving forward into the future even if much had
been destroyed. In this way, he gave new courage to all the people
in his parish whom he loved and knew by name. He was a serious
pastor, devoted to his people.
Bernhard's Work,
1950-1980
Towards the end of 1949, the Vicar General of
Limburg Diocese, Dr. Georg Hohle, on behalf of the bishop asked
Father Bernhard Bendel to found a community of Sisters who could be
trained for the apostolate in Mammolshain. As he deliberated on this
invitation, he sought the advice of his confessor, who supported the
proposal. During the Holy Year 1950, Fr. Bernhard made a pilgrimage
to Rome, for the beatification of Vincent Palloti, the founder of
the Catholic Apostolate. Through the Schönstatt movement, he was
already acquainted with Palloti's spiritual thought. While he was in
Rome, he prayed at the tomb of the Apostles for the gift of
enlightenment concerning his bishop's request. He also visited
Assisi. As soon as he was back in Germany, the bishop approached him
again and this time Bernhard consented to establish a new Sister's
community in Limburg. The goal was to educate Sisters for general
pastoral work.
On April 21, 1950, the first three Sisters
came to Mammolshain. From that day on, Fr. Bendel worked entirely
toward the development of the Opus Spiritus Sancti (OSS). In 1953,
he undertook to organize a few priests who had shown interest in the
community of the Holy Spirit. The bishop accepted the idea and gave
his approval. This group was for diocesan priests only, since there
had been much isolation, loneliness and frustration among priests
during and after World War II. The group provided an opportunity for
priests to come together, to pray, to discuss their problems, and to
help each other.
As the project began to flourish and engage
more and more of his energies, Father Bernhard was released from
parish work in 1957, and was given an assistant, so as to dedicate
himself more fully to developing the communities that had been
started. During this time, he had many things to do, many of which
were outside of Germany. He was invited by bishops from America,
Africa and Asia. He went to America, the Diocese of Sioux City,
Iowa, in 1957, to Africa, Morogoro Diocese, Tanzania, in 1960, and
to Kerala, India in 1968. From January 1969 onwards, he made annual
trips to each place to give retreats, to continue developing
contacts and to strengthen the Opus Spiritus Sancti communities.
Apart from the Holy Spirit Sisters community there are now
four other communities, which came into existence spontaneously,
without a pre-existing plan: in 1950, the CAC (Christian Apostolic
Community),--a group of lay Christians who come together to pray
with the Sisters,--and in 1952, the Secular Institute of Priests
(SIP), diocesan priests who join the community of Sisters to invoke
the Holy Spirit. The latter group usually meets once a month, and
although they are members of the OSS, they still work with their
appropriate dioceses, meeting periodically for prayer and sharing.
1954 saw the birth of the community of the Secular Institute of
Women (SIW),--unmarried women who join the Sisters for prayer and
fellowship. In 1974, the last community, the Apostolic Life
Community of Priests (ALCP), was founded. This last group came about
due to the felt need of the founder and the other communities to
have a missionary community of priests who would take charge of
other communities. Fr. Bernhard Bendel made his dedication as the
first member of the ALCP/OSS that same year. On December 1, three
other candidates made their dedication.
While the Opus
Spiritus Sancti communities were still flourishing especially in
Africa and India, Father Bernhard became sick and died on January
19, 1980. Father Karl W. Bruno became his successor. After the death
of the founder, and thanks to the good foundation which he had laid,
the communities of the Opus Spiritus Sancti have continued to
prosper even up to the present day.
Titus John Mseke
Bibliography:
B. Bendel, The Origin and
Development of the Opus Spiritus Sancti in Veni 17 1975. K.
W. Bruno and T. J. Flanagan, The History of The Opus Spiritus
Sancti (Secunderabad: 1996). Phocas Amandus Massawe, The
Spirituality of the Opus Spiritus Sancti (Rome: 1988). Henry
Njaamba Mrema, The Apostolic Life Community of Priests, History
and Spirituality (Rome: 1998).
This article, received in 2003, was written by
Titus John Mseke, a member of the ALCP/OSS Congregation and resident
at their house of formation (Holy Spirit College, Morogoro,
Tanzania). He is a student at the Salvatorian Institute of
Philosophy and Theology, Morogoro, Tanzania, a DACB
participating institution. Fr. Bartholomew J. Murphy SJ is the
liaison coordinator.