Saint of the Day - October 3
St. Theodora Guérin
(1798-1856)
Trust
in God’s Providence enabled Mother Theodore to leave her homeland, sail
halfway around the world and to found a new religious congregation.
Born in Etables, France, Anne-Thérèse’s life was shattered by her
father’s murder when she was 15. For several years she cared for her
mother and younger sister. She entered the Sisters of Providence in
1823, taking the name Sister St. Theodore. An illness during novitiate
left her with lifelong fragile health; that did not keep her from
becoming an accomplished teacher.
At the invitation of the bishop
of Vincennes, she and five sisters were sent in 1840 to Saint
Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana, to teach and to care for the sick poor. She
was to establish a motherhouse and novitiate. Only later did she learn
that her French superiors had already decided the sisters in the United
States should form a new religious congregation under her leadership.
She
and her community persevered despite fires, crop failures, prejudice
against Catholic women religious, misunderstandings and separation from
their original religious congregation. She once told her sisters, “Have
confidence in the Providence that so far has never failed us. The way is
not yet clear. Grope along slowly. Do not press matters; be patient, be
trustful.” Another time, she asked, “With Jesus, what shall we have to
fear?”
She is buried in the Church of the Immaculate Conception
in Saint Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana, and was beatified in 1998. Eight
years later she was canonized.
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