Born
at Dijon in France in 1572, Jane was very pious and religious from a
very young age. In 1592 she married the Baron de Chantal, who inherited
many debts along with his title. Despite the early financial worries,
she and her husband were devoted to each other and to their four
children. She restored order in the household, which was on the brink of
ruin, and was generous with the little she had by allowing the poor to
visit her home for food. Often people who had just received food from
her would pretend to leave, go around the house and get back in line for
more. When asked why she let them get away with this, she replied,
"What if God turned me away when I came back to him again and again with
the same request?"
In 1601, the Baron was accidentally killed
while hunting. It was said he forgave the man who shot him before he
died. Left a widow with four young children at the age of twenty-eight,
Jane took a vow of chastity and begged God to send her a spiritual
guide. In a vision, God showed her the one He had intended for this very
purpose. During Lent in the year 1604, while visiting her father in
Dijon, the young widow recognized the orator preaching the sermon as the
mysterious director who had been shown to her, and placed herself under
his guidance. Francis de Sales was the Bishop of Geneva and later
co-founded the Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary with her.
St.
Francis de Sales’ method of attaining perfection consisted in always
keeping one’s will united to the Divine will, in taking so to speak
one’s soul, heart, and longings into one’s hands and giving them into
God’s keeping, and in seeking always to do what is pleasing to Him.
The
Order of the Visitation was founded in 1610 for those women desirous of
seeking perfection but unable to subject themselves to the austere
practices of penance and mortification in force in all the religious
orders at the time.
Often sought after for spiritual counsel,
Mother de Chantal would frequently advise: "Should you fall even fifty
times a day, never on any account should that surprise or worry you,
instead, ever so gently set your heart back in the right direction and
practice the opposite virtue, all the while speaking words of love and
trust to Our Lord after you have committed a thousand faults, as much as
if you had committed only one. Once we have humbled ourselves for the
faults which God allows us to become aware of in ourselves; we must
forget them and go forward."
Jane Frances de Chantal died in 1641 at sixty-nine years of age and was canonized in 1767.
Thursday, August 12, 2021
St. Jane Frances de Chantal
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment