We were then asked, “How does the founder Jean-Claude Colin fit into this?” Jean-Claude Colin, founder of the Marist Fathers, dreamed of a multi-branched Society of Mary, with the lay branch at its heart. The lay branch was essential, since all other branches begin with lay people — we are born into the laity and grow up as laity. However, Colin’s original vision of a fully multi-branched society was not accepted by the Vatican at the time. His story reminds us that living a dream often involves struggle and perseverance. Are we willing to continue promoting Marist Laity in our own lives, despite the challenges we face?
Today, our world confronts many global challenges: war, climate change, loss of biodiversity, family breakdown, materialism, individualism, injustice, domestic violence, sexism, and racism. In many Western societies, people are walking away from religion, influenced in part by the lack of women in leadership and the wounds of the sexual abuse crisis. Marist Laity has an important role to play in responding to these realities. As Lay Marists, we are called to build connections across cultures and communities, especially with those who are different from us, so that together we can face these challenges.
As a Lay Marist, I shared that my dream is for Lay Marists to become more deeply interconnected, so that we respond not merely as individuals, but as a community that inspires and strengthens one another to make a real difference. The dream for the future is not that we will have all the answers, but that we will have the courage to step out of our comfort zones, allowing Mary’s spirit and the life of Jesus to be born anew within us and through us today.

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