
Saint of the Day
St. Théodore Guérin, SP, was born Anne-Therese Guerin at Etables, Brittany in France on October 2, 1798.
As she was growing up, the French government was virulently anti-clerical, closing down seminaries and churches and arresting priests and religious. Her cousin was a seminarian who lived in hiding in her parents’ devout Catholic home. He instructed her thoroughly in the faith and she displayed an advanced knowledge of theology, even at a young age.
Anne-Thérèse entered the Sisters of Providence at 26 and devoted herself to religious education. Her intellectual capacities were formidable, and she was even recognized by the French Academy for her achievements.
In 1840 Mother Théodore Guérin was sent to Indiana, in the USA to found a convent of the Sisters of Providence in the diocese of Vincennes. There she pioneered Catholic education, opened the first girls’ boarding school in Indiana, and fought against the anti-Catholicism prevalent in the day.
She was well known for her heroic witness to faith, her hope, and her love of God. The fledgling years of the convent of Our Lady of the Woods were difficult, with the ever present danger of it being burned down by anti- Catholics. The persecution also came from within the Church, from her own bishop, who, on not being allowed to tamper with the order’s rule, excommunicated her. The excommunication was eventually lifted by his successor.
James Cardinal Gibbons said of her in 1904, that she was “a woman of uncommon valour, one of those religious athletes whose life and teachings effect a spiritual fecundity that secures vast conquests to Christ and His holy Church.”
She died on May 14, 1856 after a period of sickness, and her feast day is celebrated on October 3.
She was beatified by Pope John Paul II on October 25, 1998, and canonized a saint of the Roman Catholic church on October 15, 2006, by Pope Benedict XVI.
REFLECTION FOR THE DAY
… rejoice that your names are written in heaven. Luke 10:20
Today is the day to stop the wishful thinking about being able to eradicate disease and hunger in the world and, rather, be grateful for God’s mercy. The disciples, overjoyed to know the power Jesus had given them, raced to him to reveal their successes. Jesus was happy for them but reminded the disciples that they were to rejoice because their names were written in heaven. Ours are as well! There is no need to “wish things had been different.” God knows that we largely do the best that we can with what we have. And God knows that mistakes are inevitable for us. We are to trust God, who alone knows our heart and accepts both the imperfections and the yearnings of our life. What we need to relish is that God has the perfect white-out: mercy. It is freely given, never deserved, corrects what we have done and failed to do, and then welcomes us home. Healing power is given to a few; mercy extends to all.
