Today's featured saint is the patron of social workers. Find out who this holy person is! 🙌
logo-tag

March 15, 2024

Hello John,

 

Today, I give God thanks and celebrate my 50th birthday. I cannot recall a birthday that wasn’t celebrated during Lent. Perhaps that is why I prefer to observe my birthday quietly by reflecting upon God’s presence and invitation in my life.

 

Today’s Pause+Pray asks us to acknowledge and share our own pain and grief, finding solace and solidarity in Christ's suffering and Resurrection. Jesus knows our suffering and joy—there’s no reason to hold back. These texts encourage us to navigate life's challenges with faith, compassion, and a steadfast trust in God's guidance and presence. We are never alone.

 

There have been many ups and downs in the first 50 years of my life, but I still proclaim, “God is Good! All the Time!”

 

Please join me today in supporting Franciscan Media’s mission to share God’s love with your gift. Donate today!

Abundant blessings, 

Christopher_Meyer

Christopher Meyer
Director of Development 

cmeyer-1
SAINT OF THE DAY
elderly-woman-hands

Saint of the Day for March 15: Louise de Marillac

(August 12, 1591 – March 15, 1660)

Saint Louise de Marillac’s Story

Born near Meux, France, Louise lost her mother when she was still a child, her beloved father when she was but 15. Her desire to become a nun was discouraged by her confessor, and a marriage was arranged. One son was born of this union. But Louise soon found herself nursing her beloved husband through a long illness that finally led to his death.

 

Louise was fortunate to have a wise and sympathetic counselor, Francis de Sales, and then his friend, the bishop of Belley, France. Both of these men were available to her only periodically. But from an interior illumination she understood that she was to undertake a great work under the guidance of another person she had not yet met. This was the holy priest Monsieur Vincent, later to be known as Saint Vincent de Paul.

 

At first, he was reluctant to be her confessor, busy as he was with his “Confraternities of Charity.” Members were aristocratic ladies of charity who were helping him nurse the poor and look after neglected children, a real need of the day. But the ladies were busy with many of their own concerns and duties. His work needed many more helpers, especially ones who were peasants themselves and therefore, close to the poor and able to win their hearts. He also needed someone who could teach them and organize them.

 

Only over a long period of time, as Vincent de Paul became more acquainted with Louise, did he come to realize that she was the answer to his prayers. She was intelligent, self-effacing, and had physical strength and endurance that belied her continuing feeble health. The missions he sent her on eventually led to four simple young women joining her. Her rented home in Paris became the training center for those accepted for the service of the sick and poor. Growth was rapid and soon there was the need for a so-called “rule of life,” which Louise herself, under the guidance of Vincent, drew up for the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul.

 

Monsieur Vincent had always been slow and prudent in his dealings with Louise and the new group. He said that he had never had any idea of starting a new community, that it was God who did everything. “Your convent,” he said, “will be the house of the sick; your cell, a hired room; your chapel, the parish church; your cloister, the streets of the city or the wards of the hospital.” Their dress was to be that of the peasant women. It was not until years later that Vincent de Paul would finally permit four of the women to take annual vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. It was still more years before the company would be formally approved by Rome and placed under the direction of Vincent’s own congregation of priests.

 

Many of the young women were illiterate. Still it was with reluctance that the new community undertook the care of neglected children. Louise was busy helping wherever needed despite her poor health. She traveled throughout France, establishing her community members in hospitals, orphanages and other institutions. At her death on March 15, 1660, the congregation had more than 40 houses in France. Six months later Vincent de Paul followed her in death.

Louise de Marillac was canonized in 1934 and declared patroness of social workers in 1960.

 

Reflection

In Louise’s day, serving the needs of the poor was usually a luxury only fine ladies could afford. Her mentor, Saint Vincent de Paul, wisely realized that women of peasant stock could reach poor people more effectively, and the Daughters of Charity were born under her leadership. Today, that order—along with the Sisters of Charity—continues to nurse the sick and aging and provide refuge for orphans. Many of its members are social workers toiling under Louise’s patronage. The rest of us must share her concern for the disadvantaged.

 

Saint Louise de Marillac is the Patron Saint of:

Social workers

Support Franciscan Media's mission by purchasing this powerful book collection and receive FREE shipping!

Catholic books
Click here to learn more!
MINUTE MEDITATIONS
prayer-1

Prayerful Wandering in Lent

 

This year, I am wandering the Mojave in my mind. If you’ve experienced the Judean wilderness or Jordan’s Wadi Rum, go there. Just go. Jesus stayed for 40 days. I’m staying just one day—actually one fragment of a day—at a time. I’ll sit down. I’ll be quiet. I’ll stay. No timers, no music, no script. I just mean to stay until I know where I am. I may be in a cavern. I may be in a field of wildflowers. I may be lost in a barren sandscape. When I know where I am, I may say, “Let me finish,” or I may say, “I’ve got to rush off.” But I will have been in the desert of Lent, a place where Jesus has been and where the divinely human awaits.

 

I’m not asking for insights or visions or comfort. I’m just repeating: “Let us pray. Let me pray. Let me finish or refinish.” Or I may be silent. The less of a rule I make for myself, the less likely I will fail to observe it. I don’t want to box out any possibilities. I want to be open to uncertainty. I want to be in the desert, but not be deserted.

 

—from St. Anthony Messenger‘s “Let Us Pray: Allowing, Aiding, and Abetting“ by Carol Ann Morrow

Reflect, Pray, Act!

 

Every page is designed to give you the space to pause, reflect prayerfully on an intention, and take that intention with you into the world.

Click here to learn more!
Pause & Pray cover
PAUSE+PRAY
grief

To the Aching Soul

 

Reflect

During the season of Lent, we bring with us our own pain and grief. In the waiting for the Resurrection, we are reminded of a God who became one like us and understands the reality of waiting amid our hardship. This Lenten season, may we bring forward our own pain and grief into the desert and find solidarity and peace with Christ alone.

 

Pray

To the God who waits with us,
who sits with us,
who mourns with us,
and who, within our lament, holds us:
This Lenten season, may we find solace in your Son,
solace in the divine and human coming together in one,
to show us that we are not alone in the waiting.
To the God who beckons us home:
Guide us in our waiting.
Amen.

 

Act

Find time today to write down whatever you bring into this Lenten season that is marked by pain and grief. Find time during the week to bring those words to adoration, and welcome Christ into that space with you, allowing Jesus to sit and grieve with you.

 

Today's Pause+Pray was written by Vanessa Zuleta Goldberg. Learn more here!

This newsletter is not free to produce! Please consider making a donation to help us in our efforts to share God's love in the spirit of Saint Francis.

Please donate today!

Donate   |   Shop   |   About   |   St. Anthony Messenger Magazine

Franciscan Spirit   |   Saint of the Day   |   Minute Meditations   |   Pause and Pray

Facebook
X
Instagram
Pinterest

Franciscan Media, 28 W. Liberty St., Cincinnati, OH 45202, USA

Unsubscribe Manage preferences