Servant of God Melchior-Marie-Joseph de Marion-Brésillac |
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Vicar Apostolic of Sierra Leone Titular Bishop of Prusa |
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Melchior de Marion Brésillac, Founder of the Society of African Missions
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Church | Catholic |
Appointed | 13 April 1858 |
Installed | 13 April 1858 |
Term ended | 25 June 1859 |
Successor | John Joseph O’Gorman |
Other posts | Vicar Apostolic of Coimbatore 3 Apr 1850 - 18 Mar 1855 (Resigned) |
Orders | |
Ordination | 22 December 1838 |
Consecration | 4 October 1846 by Clément Bonnand |
Personal details | |
Born |
Castelnaudary, France |
December 2, 1813
Died | June 25, 1859 Freetown, Sierra Leone |
(aged 45)
Buried | Chapel of the Society of African Missions in Lyon, France |
Nationality | French |
Denomination | Catholic |
Melchior-Marie-Joseph de Marion-Brésillac, S.M.A. (2 December 1813 – 25 June 1859) was a Catholic prelate and the founder of the Society of African Missions.
He was born at Castelnaudary, France on December 2, 1813. He was eldest of five children. He joined the seminary and was ordained as a priest on December 22, 1838. Brésillac served briefly as a parish priest in the parish of Saint-Michel in the town of his birth. However, the young priest felt dissatisfied and began to discern his calling to mission. Both his bishop and his father opposed his desire to become a missionary, but Brésillac was determined and consecrated himself totally to that calling. Eventually, his bishop supported his choice, but the opposition of his father was so strong that the young priest left to enter the seminary of the Paris Foreign Missions without even saying goodbye to his family. He remained at the seminary for nine months then was appointed to Pondicherry in India where he arrived July 24, 1842.
During his 12 years in India, Brésillac served in many capacities: Curate at Salern, Superior of the minor seminary at Pondicherry; (This seminary later became as Petit Seminaire Higher Secondary School) Fr.Marion was made the Titular Bishop of Prusa and later he became the provicar of Coimbatore. His rise was swift, achieving the rank of bishop at age 29. Through it all, he cherished the desire to train Indian priests. He wanted to establish an indigenous clergy, with their own hierarchy, capable of taking on responsibility for the missions, with Europeans acting only as assistants.
Bishop Brésillac found his progressive ideas were strongly resisted by many of his fellow missionaries. He was also distressed by many of the cultural realities he discovered in India, particularly the caste system, a practice that assigned people to strictly defined social classes of "desirables" and "undesirables". Brésillac felt it was the obligation of any Christian to reject a system that made outcasts of human beings. He was appalled that so many of his fellow priests did not agree. They accepted this system as part of the culture of the people and opposed his democratic desire to train local clergy. Dismayed by this attitude and by the conflicts that the opposing views created within the community of missionaries, the young bishop eventually resigned his post and returned to Rome.