Category Archives: Vincent de Paul

Feast of Annunciation, Vow Day for Daughters of Charity

DC Community seal

Daughters of Charity Community Seal, seen in the entrance lobby of the Provincial Archives

(Text used with permission of Sister Mary Gilbart. Image used with permission of Daughters of Charity Provincial Archives)

On March 25th, feast of the Annunciation, over 17,000 Daughters of Charity in 91 countries all over the world will renew their vows.

This will not be simply a renewal of devotion,but, as their vows will have expired the night before, they will be free to choose to commit themselves to God by making them all over again.

Our vows differ from those of most religious in so far as they are annual, taken for one year at a time, and also we take a vow of service of persons who are poor as well as the usual vows of Chastity, Poverty and Obedience.

To understand these differences we must go back in history to the roots of our Company in 17th century France. At that time, there was great poverty, both in the cities and in the country areas which were ravaged by war and disease. St. Vincent de Paul felt urged to respond to the terrible needs he saw daily all around him. He had already organized some ladies into what became known as the Confraternities of Charity. In Paris many of the grand ladies were involved in ministering to the poor. This arrangement went well for a time, but then some ladies grew lax and sent their servants to replace them. This was not good enough for Vincent, and he and his collaborator, Louise de Marillac agonized seeking a solution. Divine Providence provided an answer. A good country girl, Marguerite Naseau, arrived in the capital and offered her services to help in caring for the sick.

Vincent was delighted, and soon other girls followed. At first they helped the Ladies in the parishes, and Louise kept in touch with them. The time came when she saw the need to gather them into a community for their protection and formation. After some initial reluctance Vincent agreed and in 1633 Louise took four girls into her house, and thus was born the Company of the Daughters of Charity.

Vincent and Louise wanted these girls to give their lives totally to God in order to serve Christ in the poor, but they avoided anything that would classify them as nuns. The reason for this was that, at that time religious women were cloistered, and this would prevent the girls being free to go into the hovels of the poor to care for the sick. For eight years there was no question of vows, though the girls lived a life of total dedication in imitation of Christ. Then Vincent tentatively mentioned the possibility to them, and a year later, on the feast of the Annunciation 1642, Louise and four others made perpetual vows of Chastity, Poverty and Service of the Poor. Vows were optional for many years. Louise, with her great devotion to Mary, chose this feast, and saw Mary as a model for her Daughters in her complete surrender to the call of God, and in dedicating her life completely to the person and mission of her Son. After 1660 it became standardized that all the Sisters made annual vows after five to seven years, and this practice has endured to the present day.

One might ask why continue this now, as many religious with perpetual vows are free to come and go. The answer is, I suppose that annual vows for the service of the poor has become part of our identity and is recognized by the Church. The Sisters look forward each year to the Feast of the Annunciation when they must choose to commit themselves all over again, and a great current of renewal sweeps through the entire Company, which is now established in 91 countries all over the world.

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Filed under Feast Days, Formation, Louise de Marillac, Vincent de Paul, Vows

Founding of the Daughters of Charity, November 29, 1633

Names of earliest Daughters of Charity

Names of the first Daughters of Charity.

November 29, 1633 is the founding date for the Company of the Daughters of Charity. The image seen here includes the names of the first Sisters. The first Sister on the list, Marguerite Naseau, had died in 1633, but Vincent de Paul and Louise de Marillac, the founders of the Community, considered Marguerite Naseau to be the first Daughter of Charity. Vincent speaks of Marguerite Naseau in his Conference of February 13, 1646:

“The first of these Sisters was a poor young woman from the country; I have to tell you this, Sisters, to let you see the Providence of God, who willed that your Company be composed of poor women, either by birth or by the choice they would make of poverty; yes, Sisters, I say poor women because you must be so in reality. This poor young woman had given herself to God to instruct, to the best of her knowledge, the children of her village and, while tending cattle, had learned to read almost on her own, for no one had taught her. She would stop a passerby and ask, ‘Monsieur, please tell me what these letters are, what this word means,’ and in this way she taught herself in order to teach others.

“Whenever she learned something, she taught her companions. We went to that place to give a mission, and God soon showed that this didn’t displease Him. When this dear young woman heard that people were looking after the sick in Paris, she wanted to serve them.We had her come here, and she was placed under the direction of Mlle Le Gras [Louise de Marillac] and at the service of the sick poor in Saint-Nicolas-du-Chardonnet parish. A short time later she caught the plague and died at Saint-Louis Hospital. The Sister who was serving the sick at Saint-Sauveur took her place.

“And that, Sisters, was the beginning of your Company. As it wasn’t then what it is now, there’s reason to believe that it’s still not what it will be when God has perfected it as He wants it.”

(Translation by Sister Marie Poole, D.C., in Vincent de Paul, Correspondence, Conferences, and Documents, Volume 9).

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Feast of Vincent de Paul

Vincent painting

Oil painting of Vincent de Paul

“The main purpose for which God has called the Daughters of Charity and brought them together is to honor our Lord Jesus Christ as the source and model of all charity, serving Him corporally and spiritually in the person of the poor …”

Vincent de Paul, Common Rules of the Daughters of Charity.
Correspondence, Conferences, and Documents, Vol. 13b, Document 149a, p.147.

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Filed under Feast Days, Vincent de Paul