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Saint Vincent de Paul (Paperback)
Loot Price: R209
Discovery Miles 2 090
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Saint Vincent de Paul (Paperback)
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Loot Price R209
Discovery Miles 2 090
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The Life of St Vincent de Paul. c. 1581-1660 His Legacy continues
today. Written for teens and young adults. Excerpt: Chapter 5
MISSION WORK THE incident which had given rise to Vincent's first
mission at Folleville had never been forgotten by Madame de Gondi.
It seemed to her that there was need to multiply such missions
among the country poor, and no sooner had Vincent returned to her
house than she offered him a large sum of money to endow a band of
priests who would devote their lives to evangelizing the peasantry
on her estates. Vincent was delighted, but considering himself
unfit to undertake the management of such an enterprise, he
proposed that it should be put into the hands of the Jesuits or the
Oratorians. Madame de Gondi, although convinced in her own mind
that Vincent, and Vincent alone, was the man to carry out the
enterprise, obediently suggested it to one religious Order after
another. In every case some obstacle intervened, until the Countess
was more than ever persuaded that her first instinct had been
right. Knowing Vincent's loyalty to Holy Church and his obedience
to authority, she determined to have recourse to her
brother-in-law, the Archbishop of Paris. An old house called the
College des Bons Enfants was at that moment vacant. She asked it of
the Archbishop, whom she had interested in her scheme, and who
proposed to Vincent to undertake the foundation. There was no
longer room for hesitation; the will of God seemed plain; indeed,
Vincent's love of the poor had been for some time struggling with
his humility. The new Congregation was to consist of a few good
priests who, renouncing all thought of honor and worldly
advancement, were to devote their lives to preaching in the
villages and small towns of France. Their traveling expenses were
to be paid from a common fund. They were to spend themselves in the
service of their neighbor, instructing, catechizing and exhorting;
and they were to take nothing in return for their labors. Nine
months of the year were to be given to this kind of work; the other
three to prayer and preparation. In March, 1625, the foundation was
made, and Vincent de Paul was named the first superior. It was
stipulated, however, that he should remain, as he had already
promised, in the house of the founders, a condition which seemed
likely to doom the enterprise to failure. Vincent could hardly fail
to realize how necessary it was that the superior of a new
Congregation should be in residence in his own house, but he
confided the little company to God and awaited the development of
events.
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