Feast of the Immaculate Conception

Today the Catholic Church celebrates the Feast of the Immaculate Conception. The dogma of the Immaculate Conception was proclaimed by Pope Pius IX on December 8, 1854, and the event was noted in the Provincial Annals for that year.

1854. A great year in the annals of Holy Mother Church! A great, consoling year for every Catholic heart, for it was on the 8th of December of this year, our Holy Father, Pius the ninth, gloriously reigning, proclaimed the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of Mary, our beautiful Mother, our Queen. We had never doubted this glorious privilege of our Mother, but new we have the merit of believing it as an article of faith.

Read the English text of Ineffabilis Deus, Apostolic Constitution of Pope Pius IX, December 8, 1854, proclaiming the dogma of the Immaculate Conception (from http://www.papalencyclicals.net)

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Filed under Church History, Popes

Anniversary of Pearl Harbor

(December 7, 1947 letter to St. John’s Hospital, Lowell, MA used with permission of the Daughters of Charity Archives)

Over the weekend we marked the anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941. The Provincial Annals for the following day recorded the news of the events in Hawaii.

December 8 [1941]
Our great Feast of the Immaculate Conception, celebrated with Solemn High Mass at eight o’clock. Father Cloonan was the celebrant, assisted by Seminarians … This day is ever to be remembered, as the news was made known that the United States had declared war with Japan. It had been rumored for some days past that this dreaded news might be expected. The fighting is going on in Manila.

In the years following World War II the American provinces of the Daughters of Charity received many letters similar to the one below. In response both provinces of the Daughters of Charity in the U.S. organized war relief efforts which sent food and clothing to Sisters and poor persons in post-war Europe. This letter comes from the records of St. John’s Hospital in Lowell, Massachusetts.

Heinburg, Dec. 7, 1947
My Most Reverend and dear Sister:

The grace of Our Lord be with us forever.

Through Very Reverend Weiser, (Boston, Mass), I heard of the charity and benevolence of you, most reverend and dear Sister. Permit me, therefore, now before Christmas to knock on the door of your sympathetic heart and to beg for soap, starch, [wool] stockings, Cornette linen, and linen, etc., and whatever your kindness and generosity can spare. We are most grateful for anything, as we were completely burned out, and through the ration cards we can barely obtain the bare necessities with the greatest difficulty. Two third [sic] of our Motherhouse in Graz was destroyed by fire and for the last two years the Sisters are living in a private home, awaiting the completion of the building of the motherhouse, God willing, and hope to have it ready in the coming year. We are contented and happy due to the fact that we are working in an Orphanage connected with the mills.

May the Divine Child bless and reward you. I wish you, most reverend and Dear Sister a very blessed and holy Christmas and New Year, I remain in the love of Jesus and Mary, my dear most reverend Sister.

Your humble,
Sister Girarda Ulz,
Austria

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Filed under Health Care, Ministries, World War 2

DC Feast Days, Foundation of the Company of the Daughters of Charity.

DC Community seal

Daughters of Charity Community Seal, seen in the entrance lobby of the Provincial Archives (used with permission of Daughters of Charity Provincial Archives)

This weekend, the Daughters of Charity have celebrated three important feast days. The Feast of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal was on the 27th; the Feast of Catherine Laboure on the 28th. November 29, 1633 is the founding date for the Company of the Daughters of Charity. The narrative below, about the founding of the Company, is taken from the Daughters’ international website.

Beginnings

The Company of the Daughters of Charity was born imperceptively, in the manner of the things of God.  The Spirit of God breathed into the hearts of several persons, Vincent de Paul, Louise de Marillac and Marguerite Naseau.  Successive and significant events marked their lives.  Little by little they saw the hand of God in these events.

Vincent de Paul discovered the material and spiritual misery in the countryside.  In 1617, in Châtillon les Dombes, he brought together the ladies of the bourgeoisie  after an encounter with a poor family.  He founded the “Confraternities of Charity.”  They were to organize the daily material support and spiritual accompaniment of those who were poor in order to help them move toward well being and regain their self assurance.

Louise de Marillac, who had always been aware of those in difficulty around her, visited poor persons even before meeting Vincent de Paul.  Attentive to the needs of the most humble and with an open heart of faith she visited the first “Confraternities of Charity” at the request of Vincent de Paul.

Vincent and Louise realized that the direct service of poor persons was not easy for the ladies of nobility or of the bourgeoisie.  It was difficult to overcome the barriers of social class.  These women took meals, distributed clothing and gave care and comfort.  They visited the slums dressed in beautiful dresses next to people they considered to be peasants: what a formidable challenge!  The tension between the ideal of service and social constraints was real.  The families of the ladies were not always favorable to these works.

Marguerite Naseau, a 34 year old woman from the countryside in Suresnes, taught herself to read by asking those whom she met along the road to help her.  She worked in her village with other young girls teaching children to read.  Her only intention was to serve God.  She met Vincent de Paul with other priests of the Congregation of the Mission during one of his Missions of Evangelization.  In 1630 she met up with Vincent and Louise in Paris.  They suggested that she help the Ladies of the Confraternities.

Louise had the idea that young women, like Marguerite, could assure the concrete, daily service of the poorest people.  Vincent was happy that the simple country girls could come to the aid of those in need.  But the idea of creating two distinct groups from different social classes, with the Ladies on one side and the “humble country girls” on the other didn’t seem appropriate.  After three years of reflection, their ideas came together.

Three stories, three vocations intersect and join together to serve those who are poor.  The difficulties in the confraternities finally opened the way to a new creation: the Company of the Daughters of Charity was born on November 29, 1633.

For more information about the origins of the Daughters, see www.filles-de-la-charite.org

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Filed under Louise de Marillac, Vincent de Paul