What is the MI?
The Militia of the Immaculata
(MI) is a worldwide
evangelization movement founded by St. Maximilian Kolbe in 1917
that encourages total consecration to the Blessed Virgin Mary
as a means of spiritual renewal for individuals and society.
The MI movement is open to all
Catholics. It employs prayer as the main weapon in the spiritual
battle with evil. MIs also immerse themselves in apostolic initiatives
throughout society, either individually or in groups, to deepen
the knowledge of the Gospel and our Catholic Faith in themselves
and in others.
Marian consecration is a formal
act of self-giving that does not stop at Mary, but is Christ-directed.
It is really consecration to Jesus. The MI's mission is "To
Lead Every Individual With Mary to the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus."
By joining the MI, members become
willing instruments of Our Lady, the woman foreshadowed in Genesis
3:15. She leads them to personal sanctification, the conversion
of Church opponents and ultimately the universal reign of the
Sacred Heart of Jesus.
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The Militia
of the Immaculata began on October 16, 1917, around a table at
the Conventual Franciscan seminary in Rome. Maximilian Kolbe
gathered together six like-minded young friars before a statue
of the Blessed Virgin and drafted a charter that would establish
one of the most influential Marian apostolates ever. The charter
still serves as a blueprint of spiritual progress for MI members
today.
Since these
humble beginnings, the MI has spread throughout the world and
is today present on five continents and in forty-six nations.
Official membership now nears four million.
"Membership
in the Militia means
complete dedication to the Kingdom
of God and to the salvation of souls
through Mary Immaculate."
Pope John Paul II
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Founding of
the MI, 1917
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In 1922, the
Movement was canonically established as a Pious Union of the
Faithful and in 1926 Pope Pius XI elevated it to the status of
a Primary Union. Today, the MI falls under the direction of the
Vatican's Pontifical Council for the Laity and has been highly
endorsed by Pope John Paul II. In 1981 the Holy Father noted
that "membership in the MI means complete dedication to
the Kingdom of God and to the salvation of souls through Mary
Immaculate."
With the approval by the Pontifical Council for the Laity on
October 16, 1997, of the MI's updated International Governing
Statutes, the MI was given the privilege of status as an "international
public association" - a status shared by only three other
Catholic organizations.
During his lifetime St. Maximilian Kolbe founded Cities of the
Immaculata in Poland and Japan to serve as centers of Marian-Franciscan
evangelization for the Movement. He employed the mass media,
especially the printed word, to spread the ideals of the MI and
to encourage others to consecrate themselves to Our Lady. Despite
his death as a martyr of charity in 1941, the Movement continues
to expand and several religious communities and institutes have
sprung from the spiritual legacy initiated in 1917.
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