Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI)

 - Class of 1956

Page 7 of 368

 

Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 7 of 368
Page 7 of 368



Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 6
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Page 7 text:

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Page 6 text:

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Page 8 text:

6 . wwf rf' ' J A , ' l'7 . ' n V ' -. - -I a ' 'lfifr f 'A' A la l , - -1 sway 2 -, I ag, H iw' 5 :-' 'Q' :ng v 'ft' Huw - Qii7Fii:a?g2g,ifM'2sv:2:ifi at 'wing- ld E - T ' 'fi -- A - wus !!-1 19 ia , fr- f VW, l . ,. ,. ': 'E r.,-522. -f 'ff A-W I if uf-, at-xii ' , -- XM i ' HH Q Q Ss - '-? - ' ,::::.:Jlk75-fgff, ,,., fr,1,ff... 6, N :FWS cf W all HAVE no other thought than that of doing what Cod willsf' Pere 5 Marquette wrote. U u . ' ' 1 'Q Such was the characteristic childlike candor with which he f G 14' disclosed his thoughts not only to the men he obeyed but to everyone he met. Such was the humble resignation by which he made God's will his-own will. Pere Marquette's work was not with the soul alone. I-Ie had first to gain the confidence and reach the minds of the natives by teaching them of earthly things. He had to travel with them, work side by side with them, share in their hardships and their struggles before he could teach them. I-Ie had to iight through the miles of forest and uncivilized land from eastern Canada to St. Ignace before he reached them to share in their lives. This was work with the body and the mind as well as with the soul. Pere Marquette's aim was to educate the whole man. This was G-od's will. To do this it was necessary to fuse the natural and the supernatural, to blend the physical and the spiritual, and to offer all to the greater glory of God. There is no merit, no glory, no service in half a man. Is not this a principle of a great university? ak 211 22 ff, AVN 1 NE must have patience with savage minds, Pere Marquette wrote. Only by instruction could the savage minds be molded into the - form to which Pere Marquette had dedicated his ambition. He T V was fully conscious that he was a human being teaching other J , human beings. Yet his deep faith in God was balanced by his faith in man. I-Ie never faltered in his goal, never relaxed his work. Even after he was urged by his friends to spare himself, to rest before pressing onward, he continued unrelenting in his work up to the time of his death. He was not content with preaching to the Indians and teaching them only in the roughly-hewn chapels they had built. He believed he must bring the word of God to them everywhere, that they might hear it and eventually come to understand it. 1 If 5 t l l 1l-

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Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

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Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

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Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

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Marquette University - Hilltop Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

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