CFE 104 Handout
CFE 104 Handout
CFE 104 Handout
B. The Founder: Theophile Verbist and His First Companions (van Segvelt, Vranckx, Verlinden)
Theophile Verbist (1823-1868)
- Born in 1823 in Atrwerp, Belgium.
- A diocesan priest of the Archdiocese of Malines-Brussels in Belgium.
- He was on the staff of the minor seminary, the chaplain of the Military Academy in
Brussels, the Chaplain of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, and the National
Director of the Pontifical Association of the Holy Childhood.
- He died on February 23, 1868 due to typhoid fever in Laohugou, China
Alois van Segvelt (1826-1867)
Frans Vranckx (1830-1911)
Remi Verlinden (1830-1892)
D. The Patroness: Mary, the Intercessor for the CICM (as model of mission in the CICM schools);
Mary, the Mother of Incarnate Word
Fr. Verbist and his first companions during their first in a series of meetings drew up the
statutes of the new Congregation unanimously agreed to consecrate the Mission to the
Incarnate Word and to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, “…to whom they committed
themselves to recommend daily the interests of the Congregation.”
Article 16 of the CICM Constitution connects Mary to Jesus, to whom the CICM identity
and mission are hinged: “God chose Mary to be the Mother of the Incarnate Word. In
her, He reveals himself as the One who exalts the lowly. She has special place in our
lives as missionaries of the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary.” The CICM
missionary therefore is invited to look into Mary’s heart in her unqualified “yes” to the
call of the Father to follow Jesus.
E. The Logo or The CICM Emblem: The Four Stages of the CICM Emblem
1. The current CICM emblem includes in its upper portion the Virgin with a Child inside a trunk,
who is Our Lady of Grace of Scheut.
2. The cross in the topmost of the CICM Emblem: the cross means poverty, suffering,
deprivation and failure that often mark the life of the missionaries and their enterprises. But
the cross also always carries in it the seed of life and resurrection.
3. The lower right portion of the CICM emblem shows a heart surrounded by twelve stars; this
is a clear reference to the traditional catholic interpretation of Rev 12:1.
- Revelation 12:1
o A great sign appeared in heaven: a woman clothed with the sun, with the
moon under her feet and a crown of twelve stars on her head (NIV).
4. The outer left and right portions of the CICM emblem include the motto “Cor Unum et
Anima Una”, or as adopted in the Philippines, “Sampuso, Sandiwa”.