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The current

Bishop of Lourdes

Bishop Brouwet

 New Bishop of Lourdes

helps at the baths in Lourdes

-from Clerical Whispers,Tuesday, June 19, 2012

 

The newly appointed Bishop of Tarbes and Lourdes, Bishop Brouwet,

was installed as bishop of the diocese during the diocesan pilgrimage Mass,

Sunday, March 25, 2012, in the Basilica of St. Pius X in Lourdes.

Bishop Nicolas Brouwet was formerly Auxiliary bishop of Nanterre.

 

He will be 50 years old in August this year, and will also this year celebrate

the 20th anniversary of his priestly ordination. He was educated at the Sorbonne

and the French College in Rome, during which time he taught for two years at

the seminary in Jerusalem.During this week, the Bishop has followed in the footsteps

of thousands of the volunteers of the Hospitalité Notre Dame de Lourdes (HNDL)

and did service in the baths, assisting sick and able pilgrims in completing one

of the spiritual exercises of Lourdes.

 

On Tuesday, he provided service in the men’s baths, and on the following day,

he offered his services on the plateau or exterior of the baths to assist those

who arrived and were preparing to bathe in the waters made famous in the apparitions

of our Lady to a young Saint Bernadette in 1856.Although arranged with HNDL,

most did not immediately recognise him as he dressed simply and when working with

the baths and assisting the men there, he wore the simple blue apron worn by

all Hospitalité members there.

 

The response of the members of Hospitalité Notre Dame de Lourdes,

on learning of this personal display of devotion to our Lady of Lourdes has left its

mark and according to those who were there and worked with him, his simplicity,

care and devotion will be remembered for a long time.

 

The appointment of the new Bishop came earlier than expected,

since Brouwet's predecessor, Bishop Jacques Perrier, in office since 1997,

passed the retirement age of 75 last December 4, and has therefore had just a

couple of months of "prorogatio."It is easy to think that the prefect of the

congregation for bishops, Cardinal Marc Ouellet, currently Papal Legate to the

Eucharistic Congress in Dublin, appreciated the fact that Brouwet is a member

of the ‘Johannesgemeinschaft’, the Institute of St. John founded by the theologian

Hans Urs von Balthasar.

 

Ouellet, in fact, is himself a great admirer and was a friend

of the Swiss theologian, whose thought he discussed in his doctoral thesis in

dogmatic theology at the Pontifical Gregorian University.

After undergraduate studies at the State University of Nanterre,

where he earned a degree in history, Brouwet entered the pontifical French seminary

in Rome. He attended courses in philosophy and theology at the Pontifical Gregorian University, concluding them with a bachelor's degree in theology.

 

He then enrolled in the John Paul II Institute for Marriage and Family Studies,

obtaining his license. From 1986-1988 he performed his civil service in Jerusalem,

teaching French. After ordination, he occupied various pastoral positions in the

Diocese of Nanterre, as parish priest, school and university chaplain, diocesan

delegate for the formation of seminarians, and also as professor of moral theology

and spiritual director at the preparatory seminary.Lourdes is not a cardinal diocese,

but with its famous Marian shrine, it is like the spiritual heart of France.

 

It is there, in fact, that the plenary assembly of French bishops regularly

meets. Not to mention the international dimension of the diocese; faithful,

seminarians, priests, bishops and cardinals from around the world arrive there.

For all these reasons, it is even more significant that Benedict XVI has entrusted

the diocese of Lourdes to a young bishop with well-defined characteristics like Brouwet.

 

Having made the start that he has, taking on the role of the humble volunteer

and coming in service to the sick, and with the response to this act by those who

dedicate a week or more each year to this work, he has made a great start in this

diocese that is inextricably linked in the minds of all Catholics around the world,

with the sick. 

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Bishop of Lourdes' plans for the future.

During the recent meetings of Pilgrimage Directors

at the time of the feast of Our Lady of Lourdes,

the Bishop of Lourdes gave a talk about how he

sees the future of the Sanctuary and made some

proposals concerning the Grotto area and the

renewal of the Baths.

Details of his plans can be read here...

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Administration

from Wikepedia

 

The Bishop of Tarbes and Lourdes is responsible for the spiritual governance

of the Domain. He appoints a local representative, who is called the Rector.

The Domain is run independently of the parish of Lourdes, which is responsible

for the spiritual needs of the Lourdais themselves.

 

Thirty full-time chaplains work in the Domain, from dioceses and religious

communities worldwide. As of 2010 there were 292 full-time lay employees

and a further 120 seasonal employees working in 63 different divisions

, with an annual running budget of €18 million, 90% from donations.

 

The Domain is open all year round. In winter there are many fewer visitors,

a reduced timetable of services and devotional activity, and no processions.

The winter season runs from 1 November (the feast of All Saints) until Easter.

On 11 February, the Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes,

a full programme of activities usually takes place.

 

The Domain is fully active between Easter and All Saints each year,

and has a programme of devotional activities including Mass, processions ,

Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, and the Sacrament of Reconciliation.

 

Many activities are carried out in several languages;

in some services the liturgy is repeated in different languages.

The grounds are open daily from 5am until midnight; outside these times the

Grotto is accessible via the Lacets Gate behind the Upper Basilica

.An estimated 200 million people have visited the shrine since 1860 .

 

The Roman Catholic Church has officially recognized 67 miracle healings,

the 67th of which was the cure of Anna Santaniello in 1952,

recognised on 9 November 2005.

 

About 800 tonnes of wax is burnt annually in devotional candles.

The Domain publishes the monthly Lourdes Magazine,

with news and featured articles about the Domain and

Lourdes generally.

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