†
Saint of the Day †
(October
14)
✠ Blessed Marie Poussepin ✠
Lay Sister and Founder:
Born: October 14, 1653
Dourdan, France
Died: January 24, 1744 (Aged 90)
Venerated in: Roman Catholic Church
Beatified: 1994
Pope John Paul II
Feast: October 14
Blessed Marie Poussepin was a French
Dominican who founded the congregation of the Dominican Sisters of Charity of
the Presentation.
Marie Poussepin, born in Dourdan
(France), was baptized on October 14, 1653, in the church of St. Pierre by the
parish priest Etienne Legou. She belonged to a family of artisans, dedicated to
the work of making hand-knitted silk stockings: they were well-off, thriving
economically. She lived in a Christian home committed to religious and civic
society: her father Claude collaborated with parish activities; her mother
Julienne Fourrier was treasurer of the confraternity of Charity dedicated to
the care of to the sick poor.
Marie attended the only school in
the town, managed by a group of pious laypeople. She was a smart and
well-gifted student, pious and open to others. From an early age, she
accompanied her mother on visits to the sick and her heart was full of
tenderness and compassion for their misfortune. Later she wrote,
"Everything must aim to the care of the sick and the weak, it is Jesus
Christ who is served in the person."
She was attentive to the children
who were helping in her family workshop. When she became an educator, her main
concern will be to “bring the knowledge and love of Jesus Christ” to others and
to form the students of the little school in the values of the Gospel. Her
method of teaching was realistic and concrete.
The death of her mother occurred
very early, leaving her with all the responsibility of the home and the
education and care of her younger brother Claude of just 10 years old. This was
then followed by her father’s critical financial problems, his breakdown,
illness and death.
That which distinguished her from
the women of her time of the seventeenth century in which there were spiritual
opportunities and charitable foundations abound, is her perception of the new
needs and her audacity to respond to the problems of her time. Her sense of
justice and gratuity, prudence in all her actions, innovative and creative, yet
always centered on God as an entrepreneur in Dourdan and as Foundress in
Sainville.
Thus, after the death of her father,
in 1683, with dramatic setbacks generated by emerging industrialization, she
becomes a model as an innovator of manufacturing techniques. Abandoning her
traditional craftwork, she introduces weaving looms for making stockings,
forsaking silk she adapted to the wool industry, which is more profitable. She
welcomed apprentices from modest environments, between 15 to 18 years of age
and exempted them from the payment of a fee which they ordinarily should pay.
She provided for them of a real social training and promotion. She collaborated
in the economic and social development of the family and the city of Dourdan.
At the same time, she cultivated an intense spiritual life supported by
charitable activities and the spirituality of the Third Order of St. Dominic.
Nevertheless, the Lord calls her to
a greater vocation and to a unique service. In 1696, after having heard about
the ignorance and misery in Sainville, 17 kilometers from Dourdan, she decided
to leave everything to commit herself totally "to the service of charity”,
“usefulness in the parish”. How? By forming “a community of Third Order of St.
Dominic, to instruct the children and to serve the sick poor of the
countryside.”
For this, Marie leaves Dourdan, her
securities, and the fame that surrounds her.
She renounces in the spirit of the Gospel all that she possesses, making
a donation in an official act on November 13, 1697, to Noëlle Mesnard, a novice
from Sanville, first in the long list of the Dominican Sisters of Charity. She
did it as a Dominican in the presence of Fr. Mespolié o.p who helped her in her
spiritual journey and Gabriel Debilly, the parish priest.
That same year, Marie begins to
plant the seeds of her Charism in Janville, followed by 19 communities in six
dioceses around Chartres. All were dedicated to the education of the children
without possibilities of formation in their rural settings and relief to the
sick in their homes and in the hospitals. Her Rule, approved in 1738 by the
Bishop of Chartres, calls for a fraternal life in community animated by
contemplative and liturgical prayer, the Eucharist, asceticism, study and
assiduous work that assures the means for daily life and gratuitous service in
the schools.
After 90 years of life totally
committed to others, marked by suffering and renunciation, according to her own
words, she said that her community was sole “the work of Providence.” Marie Poussepin will enjoy eternal rest in
the Lord on January 24, 1744.
One of her many trials was that of
having to renounce the Dominican identity for her community; this idea was not
acceptable in her time. Both the Bishop of Chartres and the Master of the Order
could not conceive of a Dominican life outside the cloister. In 1897, the
Congregation will regain its Dominican identity but it will be aggregated
definitely to the Order only in 1959.
Today, the Dominican Sisters of
Charity of the Presentation, in fidelity to the Project of their Foundress,
work in 36 countries in four continents at the service of the Church. Marie
Poussepin traced a path... others, after her, heirs of her spirit and Charism,
strive to respond to the calls of their time, to the urgency of evangelization,
maintaining the original vision and priority for the poor through a great
diversity of presences.
Pope John Paul II beatified Marie
Poussepin on November 20, 1994, in Rome, Italy.
No comments:
Post a Comment