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The
eloquent homily of Father Jacques Chaput for the funeral of Mrs. Gilberte Côté-Mercier, June 24, 2002
Five priests officiated the funeral of Mrs. Côté-Mercier. From left to right: Leonard Murphy, altar boy; Father Fernand Albert; Father Jacques Chaput; Father Gérard Montpetit, OMI; Father Edmond Brouillard, OMI; Father Thomas Nadeau, Cistercian; Benoît Ouellet, altar boy. The
parish church is a gathering place, a place of prayer, a place to meet with
Christ. Today, you desired that this parish church of Saint Michael of
Rougemont be the place for the last good-bye of Mrs. Gilberte Côté-Mercier. We
have left our occupations to gather here in the Lord's Temple. Our presence
here is not haphazard; we undoubtedly have many reasons to be present at this
funeral celebration. For
those who knew Mrs. Mercier, it is with respect, with gratitude, with
friendship that you have come for the last time around her earthly remains. We
are gathered to render her a last service, that of prayer. We are also
gathered to present to the Lord her life and her Work. Today, our mother the
Church celebrates the feast of Saint John the Baptist, the special patron of
the French Canadians. What a happy coincidence, what a beautiful combination:
Saint John the Baptist and Mrs. Gilberte Côté-Mercier. Who
was Saint John the Baptist? A prophet who was the link between the Old
Testament and the New Testament. A precursor, he who prepared the road for
Jesus. An ascetic, a man clothed with animal skins, who ate grasshoppers and
wild honey. A preacher, staff in hand, veins sticking out of his arms, skin
dried and burned by the desert sun of Judea, a haranguer of the crowds, who
cried out the truth. What
an interesting figure! A man who questioned the customs and laws of his time.
A man who cried, a man who assembled, who denounced injustices, a man who was
not afraid of the truth. At the same time, John the Baptist was a man capable
of seeing beyond appearances. Among the crowd of those who came to him, he
recognized Jesus. He was a revolutionary, but not a revolutionary for nothing;
a revolutionary able to open new avenues, and especially of denouncing evil
and the works of Satan. Mrs.
Gilberte Côté-Mercier was a representative of this famous patron, and
especially, she walked in the footsteps of Saint John the Baptist. In
each era, God raises up elite souls to save His people. 1910 saw the birth of
Gilberte Côté to whom God confided a very special mission, that of fighting
two great scourges that were wounding and are still wounding the world:
poverty amidst plenty, and Communism. 1929:
she is nineteen years of age. The Depression multiplies the needy. Her
Christian heart is suffering before so much poverty. But how to assist the
multitude of those in need? In
1936, she assisted at a conference given by Louis Even, which definitely
orientated her life. She understood Social Credit that would put an end to
poverty in a world of abundance. The Eternal Father set the table for each of
his children, without forgetting one. But the present barbaric monetary system
prevents human beings from eating at the Father's table. Like
Joan of Arc, our national heroine will take the forefront of the battle, by
waving the sharp sword of truth. This truth, she will not merely contemplate
it, but she will make herself its tireless apostle. Against the two great
evils that were raging across the world: Communism — state dictatorship, and
the flawed financial system — financial dictatorship, she would present the
dazzling light of Social Credit that would marvelously apply well the
principles of the social doctrine of our Roman Catholic Mother Church. God,
Church, and country need defenders. Like the virgin of France, under the
banner of the great Archangel Saint Michael, first defender of God's rights,
the life of our heroine will become a perpetual fight to defend the Divine
Plans, in the defense of her brothers, in the defense of truth in its
entirety. She
organized a program of meetings and door-to-door apostolate across the
country, and across the borders; her zeal will lead her to bring the good seed
even into France and in Brazil, and even in all the countries of the world. The
truth penetrates and enflames her, and gives her an unequal eloquence. Her
words teach the small and the humble, and confound the haughty. An army of
apostles rises up after her. In
paying her homage, Louis Even, the great master, thus spoke: “The
Joan of Arc of New France to emancipate the country from the financial
dictatorship that oppresses the people and dislocates families, she
consecrates her brilliant intelligence, her university education, her physical
strength up to exhaustion, her whole being, her time, her goods, to the
service of the Social Credit cause, without stop, without flagging, approved
or criticized, admired or persecuted, with no other concern than that of the
truth to proclaim and serve. “Guardian
of the `Michael' Journal, she administers it with a unique competence since
its first issue, and brought it to an unequaled place among the media of
ideas, without commercial advertisements, without financial assistance from
outside forces. “Vigilant
and devoted, with a remarkable clear-sightedness, she defends with intrepidity
the Work of `Michael' and its faithful followers against the attack of the
enemy. “A
fervent Catholic and fervent Social Crediter, first to set the example, she
applies herself constantly to develop in the Social Crediters the spirit of
the apostolate, unselfish devotion, pure intention, moral integrity, humility
allied with courage, and the recourse to Heavenly forces, in the pursuit of a
temporal order that will better permit each individual to tend towards his
proper destiny in accordance with God's Will.” Joan
of Arc's battle lasted only one year, but she consummated her sacrifice by
being burned at the stake at 18 years of age. That of our Canadian heroine
lasted for 66 years, and her final cross was the multiple sufferings of old
age. During
the last years of her old age, facing God, facing a happy eternity, she
prepared herself by prayer and contemplation. She recited her whole Rosary,
contemplated the Stations of the Cross, and edified as always her
collaborators by her words steeped in the hearts of Jesus and Mary, the source
of wisdom and of truth. With a boundless confidence in the Divine Mercy, she
held in her hands her crucifix for a happy death, telling us as she showed it
to us: “Here
is the key to Heaven that will permit me to enter straight into it.” The
Immaculate was the patroness of her birth and of her consecration; she was
born in the beautiful month of Mary, May 25, the same birth date as Saint
Padre Pio, whom she greatly admired. The powerful Queen of Heaven guided her
steps from her birth until death. May She receive her now into Her Celestial
Court, near the Blessed Trinity where she will find waiting to greet her:
Louis Even; Gérard Mercier; her father, Rosario Côté; her mother, Joséphine
Gariépy; her brother, Rosaire Côté; and all the phalanx of “White
Berets” who preceded her. Thank
you God for having given Gilberte Côté to Canada. Thanks to Gilberte Côté
for all the good she did for the country. In Heaven alone will we know the
greatness of her merits. We will pursue this celebration in thanksgiving for this life that we are presenting to Our Lord. We confide Mrs. Mercier to God, being convinced that He is a Father full of goodness, love, and mercy. Father
Jacques Chaput See
also: Words of Father Montpetit for the funeral of Mrs. Gilberte Côté-Mercier Biography of Gilberte Côté-Mercier Back to About us Back to the Michael's homepage |