Saint
Vincent de Paul, Priest
Founder of the Lazarist Fathers and the Daughters of Charity
Feast day – September 27
Saint Vincent was born in 1576 near Dax, south of Bordeaux,
of a poor family which survived by means of their labor. It seemed that “mercy
was born with him.” When sent by his father to the mill to procure flour, if he
met a poor man coming home, he would open the sack and give him handfuls of
flour when he had nothing else. His Christian father was not angry; seeing his
good dispositions, he was sure his son should become a priest, and placed him
as a boarding student with a group of religious priests in Dax. Vincent made
rapid progress, and after seven years of studying theology at Toulouse and in
Saragossa, Spain, was ordained a priest in 1600. He always concealed his
learning and followed the counsel of Saint Paul who said, “I have wanted to
know nothing in your midst but Jesus Christ, and Jesus Christ crucified.”
Soon after his ordination, he was captured by corsairs and
sold as a slave in Tunisia. He converted his renegade master, and escaped with
him to France. Then, after a time of study in Rome, he returned to Paris and
took for his spiritual director Abbé de Berulle, a famous director of souls.
This servant of God saw in him a priest called to render outstanding service to
the Church, and to found a community of priests who would labor for its benefit.
He told Saint Vincent this, that he might prepare himself insofar as was
humanly possible. When Saint Vincent was appointed chaplain-general of the
galleys of France, his tender charity brought hope into those prisons where
hitherto despair had reigned. When a mother mourned her imprisoned son, Vincent
put on his chains and took his place at the oar, and gave him to his mother.
His charity embraced the poor, the young and the aged, the
provinces desolated by civil war, Christians enslaved by the infidels. The poor
man, ignorant and degraded, was to him the image of Him who became as “a leper
and no man.” “Turn the medal,” he said, “and you will see Jesus Christ.” He
went through the streets of Paris at night, seeking the infants and children
left there to die — three or four hundred every year. Once robbers rushed upon
him, thinking he carried a treasure, but when he opened his cloak, they
recognized him and his burden, an abandoned infant, and fell at his feet. Not
only was Saint Vincent the providence of the poor, but also of the rich, for he
taught them to undertake works of mercy. When in 1648 the work of the
foundlings was in danger of failure for want of funds, he assembled the ladies
of the Association of Charity, and said, “Compassion and charity have made you
adopt these little creatures as your children. You have been their mothers
according to grace, when their own mothers abandoned them. Will you now cease
to be their mothers? Their life and death are in your hands. I shall take your
votes; it is time to pronounce sentence.” The tears of the assembly were his
only answer, and the work was continued.
The Priests of the Mission or Lazarists, as they are called,
and thousands of the Daughters of Charity still comfort the afflicted with the
charity of their holy Founder. It has been said of him that no one has ever
verified more perfectly than Saint Vincent, the words of Our Lord: “He who
humbles himself shall be exalted...” The more he strove to abase himself in
the eyes of all, the more God took pleasure in elevating him and bestowing His
blessings on him and on all his works. He died in 1660, in an old age made
truly golden by his unceasing good works.
Sources for this article were taken from: Lives of the Saints - http://magnificat.ca/cal/en/saints/vincent_de_paul.html
Prayer
O Glorious Saint Vincent de Paul, The mention of your
name,
Suggests a litany of your virtues: Humility, zeal, mercy, self-sacrifice.
It also recalls your many foundations:
Works of Mercy, Congregations, and Societies.
The Church gratefully remembers your promotion of the priesthood.
Inspire all Charitable Workers, Especially those who minister,
To both the spiritually And the materially poor.
O Lord, give us the grace, that you bestowed upon,
Your servant St. Vincent de Paul, To relinquish the temptation,
Of material things, In our holy effort, To minister to the poor.
Amen.
Suggests a litany of your virtues: Humility, zeal, mercy, self-sacrifice.
It also recalls your many foundations:
Works of Mercy, Congregations, and Societies.
The Church gratefully remembers your promotion of the priesthood.
Inspire all Charitable Workers, Especially those who minister,
To both the spiritually And the materially poor.
O Lord, give us the grace, that you bestowed upon,
Your servant St. Vincent de Paul, To relinquish the temptation,
Of material things, In our holy effort, To minister to the poor.
Amen.
St. Vincent
de Paul – Pray for us
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