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| THE GALLICAN CHURCH.A HISTORY OF THE CHURCH OF FRANCE FROM THE CONCORDAT OF BOLOGNA, A.D. 1516, TO THE REVOLUTION, A.D. 1789. |  | 
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 CHAPTER VIII.SAINT VINCENT DE PAUL
 From this summary of the external policy of the Church of France during the
          earlier years of Richelieu’s ministry, I return to the details of its interior
          history. The reader’s attention must be claimed, in the first place, for some
          new religious institutions belonging to this period, which have not been
          hitherto noticed.
           No name more worthy of pre-eminent honour and
          veneration is to be found in the records of the 17th century than that of Vincent de Paul. This celebrated man was
          not, like Francois de Sales, the scion of a noble house, but sprang from the
          ranks of the people. His parents were peasants of the village of Pouy, near Dax, in the Landes of
          Gascony. Here Vincent was born on the 24th of April, 1576. The religious
          disposition and love of learning which the boy manifested at a very early age
          determined his father to devote him to the clerical profession; and after
          receiving the rudiments of education at Dax, he was sent to study at Toulouse.
          Here he was admitted to the priesthood in September, 1600. A singular
          misfortune which befell him not long afterwards seems to have had the effect of
          shaping the prevailing character of his subsequent ministry. In the course of
          a coasting voyage from Marseilles to Narbonne, in 1605, the vessel in which he
          sailed was captured by pirates from Barbary. Vincent was loaded with chains,
          and sold into slavery at Tunis. In this desolate condition he remained for
          more than two years, enduring many hardships and much cruel treatment; but
          learning at the same time inestimable lessons of personal sympathy with human
          suffering and sorrow; displaying a wonderful example of humility, fortitude,
          and resignation to the Divine will; and effecting in the end the conversion of
          his master, a hardened renegade from Christianity. In company with this man, who thus became
            the first fruits of his missionary zeal, Vincent made his escape from Tunis,
            and returned to Europe; and after spending some time at Rome, he arrived at
            Paris in 1609. He was charged with an important confidential mission from Pope
            Paul V to Henry IV. He was now gradually brought into contact with most of
            those distinguished and devoted persons who were labouring in various
            departments for the reorganization of the Church in France. With De Bérulle,
            who at that time was laying the foundations of the Oratory, he contracted a
            close friendship, and resided under his roof for two years, not precisely as a
            member of the new congregation, but for the sake of retirement and study under
            the direction of the Superior. After discharging for some time the duties of
            parish priest in the suburban village of Clichy, Vincent de Paul was
            recommended by de Bérulle to the count and countess de Joigny for the
            responsible post of preceptor to their sons. This nobleman, Philippe Emanuel de
            Gondi, was the head of a branch of that ancient family, and held the office of Général des Galéres de France.
            His wife, a daughter of the Comte de la Rochepot, was
            one of the most accomplished, intellectual, and religious women of the time.
            They had three sons, of whom the eldest became Due de Retz, and general of the
            Galleys on the resignation of his father; the second died in early boyhood; the
            third was Jean FranÇois Paul, the demagogue of the Fronde, coadjutor to his
            uncle the Archbishop of Paris, and at length his successor in that see. Vincent
            accepted the appointment, and his admirable conduct in this new sphere of duty
            soon won for him the warm esteem not only of the Count and Countess and their
            family, but of all with whom he had intercourse. While thus employed at the
            Count’s chateau of Folleville, he was one day
            requested to attend the death-bed of a peasant in the neighbouring village of Gannes, who had expressed an earnest wish to see him. So
            skilfully did Vincent deal with the burdened conscience of this dying sinner,
            that he was induced to make a general confession of the errors of his past
            life, including certain secret griefs which he had never hitherto had the
            courage to reveal. This afforded him inexpressible relief, and he expired in
            peace and hope. The occurrence sunk deeply into the mind of Madame de Gondi, and at her suggestion Vincent
              de Paul delivered a discourse in the church of Folleville,
              in January, 1617, exhorting the villagers to avail themselves of the same
              method of cleansing their consciences and making their peace with God. The
              result was marvellous. The preacher “bowed the hearts” of the congregation
              “as the heart of one man”; they were drawn by a simultaneous and irresistible
              attraction to the tribunal of penance; and so great was the throng of
              applicants, that Vincent and another priest who assisted him found themselves
              unequal to the task of hearing their confessions, and were compelled to send
              for aid to the Jesuit college at Amiens. Such was the first of those parochial
              “missions” for which Vincent de Paul became so famous. But his lowly spirit
              shrunk from the éclat which followed, as from a dangerous snare ; he felt it
              necessary to relinquish his office in the household of the Comte de Joigny, and
              retired to an obscure town in the district of Bresse,
              where he devoted himself to the humblest duties of the pastoral care among a
              rude, ignorant, and vicious population. Even here his reputation had preceded
              him, and ere long he found himself the leader of a religious movement in the
              neighbourhood, which was destined to bear solid and permanent fruit. It was at
              Chatillon en Bresse that
              Vincent founded an association to which he gave the name of “confrerie de la Charité,”—the
              first type of a multitude of similar institutions which at no distant date were
              to overspread France. Its members were females, whose duty was to minister,
              according to a fixed rule, to the necessities, temporal and spiritual, of the
              sick poor, under the direction of the parochial clergy. They were called originally
              “Servantes des pauvres,” a
              title afterwards exchanged for that of “Soeurs de la
              charity.” These sisterhoods were soon appreciated, and multiplied rapidly. In
              the course of a very few years Vincent established them in upwards of thirty
              country parishes; and with the co-operation of a benevolent widow lady, Louise Legras, they were introduced into the metropolis in 1629.
               Overcome by the urgent solicitations of the Count and
          Countess de Joigny, Vincent de Paul took up his abode in their family a second
          time in December, 1617; but his tutorial duties were now scarcely more than
          nominal, and he was enabled to dedicate himself almost entirely to that which
          he regarded as his
            special vocation, missionary work among the people of neglected rural districts.
            With the assistance of other priests of congenial spirit, he visited various
            parts of the dioceses of Paris, Beauvais, Soissons, and Sens, where the house
            of Gondi possessed estates. As the sphere of these operations widened, Vincent
            and his friends formed a plan for perpetuating them, by founding a distinct
            institution for the purpose; and the project was realized in 1625 by the
            munificence of the Countess de Joigny, who by a legal deed of assignment gave
            the sum of 46,000 livres for the support of a community of missionary clergy,
            of which Vincent was named the first Superior. The new foundation received the
            sanction of the Archbishop of Paris, a brother of the Count de Joigny, on the
            24th of April, 1626; and the ancient College des Bons Enfants was made over to
            Vincent as a residence for himself and his associates. Letters patent were
            obtained from the Crown, and Pope Urban VIII, by a bull dated January 12, 1632,
            erected the society into a congregation by the name of the “Congregation of
            Priests of the Mission.” The charter of foundation, which breathes throughout
            the characteristic humility of its author, provides that the ecclesiastics thus
            incorporated shall renounce all thought of dignified preferment and fixed
            benefices, and shall devote themselves exclusively to the work of evangelizing
            country towns and villages,—preaching, catechising, hearing confessions, and
            ministering to the spiritual needs of the inhabitants, without recompense of
            any kind whatsoever. They were to pay special attention to prisoners under
            sentence of travaux forces; and they bound themselves not to exercise their
            functions in towns where there existed a metropolitan or diocesan see, or a ‘‘presidial” court of justice.
             Vincent de Paul had only one companion, Antoine Portail, when he established himself at the College des
          Bons Enfants. Six other priests joined him in the following year. Looking back,
          at the distance of twenty years, on these modest commencements of his work, he
          says, “We went forth in all honesty and simplicity, commissioned by our
          superiors the bishops, to preach the Gospel to the poor, even as our blessed Lord had done; this
            is what we did, and God, on His part, did what He had foreordained from all
            eternity. To some extent He blessed our labours; and perceiving this, other
            good priests entered our Society, not all at once, but at many different
            periods. O Saviour! who could have imagined that the work would ever reach the
            state in which we behold it now? If anyone had told me this when we began, I should
            have thought he was mocking me; nevertheless that was the commencement from
            which it has pleased God to raise up our great community. Well! can that be
            properly called human which no human being could ever have conceived?
            Certainly neither I nor my poor friend Portail ever
            dreamed of it. Very far indeed were we from cherishing any such idea.” 
             The “priests of the Mission” had not long plied
          their calling in the outlying townships and remote hamlets of provincial
          France, before they discovered that the pastors stood in scarcely less urgent
          need of reformation than the flock; and that if the people were sunk in
          ignorance and vice, the main cause lay in the negligence, incapacity, and
          unedifying example of the clergy. I have already spoken of the general
          relaxation of discipline which followed the civil and religious distractions of
          the preceding century; and of the state of degeneracy with regard to learning,
          zeal, and morals into which the parochial priesthood had consequently fallen.
          All the leading churchmen of the day were anxiously employed in devising
          remedies for this most serious evil. The Jesuit colleges were beginning to
          supply candidates who had undergone a regular course of training for the
          ministry with considerable care and success; the Oratory, under the direction
          of De Bérulle, had taken root at Paris, and was gradually extending itself into
          the provinces by means of affiliated branches; some two or three diocesan Seminaries
          had been opened, and the bishops seemed disposed to favour similar
          institutions. But the agencies hitherto attempted were manifestly insufficient
          to meet the case. Vincent de Paul suggested the experiment of retreats, as
          methods of preparatory discipline for those about to undertake the pastoral
          office. He submitted his plan first to the Bishop of Beauvais, Augustin Potier de Gesvres, an enlightened
            and conscientious prelate, who gave it his cordial approval; and it was
            announced that none would be ordained in the diocese of Beauvais without first
            passing through the course of exercises proposed by the Superior of the
            congregation of the Mission, under his personal direction. The bishop received
            the candidates in his palace, and here, in the Lent of 1628, Vincent de Paul,
            with the assistance of two priests of his Society, conducted the Retreat, which
            produced the happiest fruits. The scheme, with the encouraging result of its
            first trial, was next laid before the Archbishop of Paris, who on many
            occasions had testified his high esteem of the character and labours of Vincent
            de Paul; and the retreats for ten days previous to the general ordinations were
            adopted in the metropolitan diocese by a mandement of February, 1631. The first was held in the Lent of that year at the Colège des Bons Enfans, where
            Vincent de Paul was then residing. At each subsequent ordination from seventy
            to ninety candidates were received in the same institution; and here the
            priests of the Mission provided them with board and lodging, and all other
            reasonable comforts, without requiring any payment in return; this being laid
            down as an essential feature of the system. The daily work was divided into two
            portions; in the morning the instructions turned upon points of moral theology,
            and the practical functions of the sacerdotal office; upon laws divine and
            human; the Decalogue, the Creed, the Sacraments in general, the nature,
            varieties, and effects of sin, the duties of the priest in the confessional,
            the Eucharist as a sacrament and a sacrifice, and the various details of the
            ritual system of the Church. The evening was spent in considering the virtues,
            qualities, and graces peculiarly necessary to the ministers of Christ, and the
            means of cultivating them; special stress being laid upon vocation, upon the
            priestly life, upon the habit of mental prayer, and upon the distinctive
            character of each order of the ministry. After the lecture, the candidates were
            assembled in groups of ten or twelve, as nearly as might be of equal capacity
            and attainment, each under the guidance of a priest of the Mission, for the purpose
            of conferring together familiarly upon the topics which had been brought before them, and thus
              storing up in the memory materials for future improvement. Every effort was
              made by Vincent de Paul and his colleagues, in the general arrangements of the
              establishment, to render the sojourn of the candidates among them not only
              edifying in the highest sense, but also socially agreeable. They were treated
              not as strangers, but as friends, on a footing of cordial sympathy and
              brotherly affection. Their wants and wishes were assiduously studied; the
              members of the Congregation, with their staff of lay assistants, devoted their
              whole time and thoughts to the comfort of their guests. That under such
              circumstances the scheme was eminently successful, and assumed proportions of
              extraordinary magnitude, cannot excite surprise. From every diocese into which
              priests had gone forth with the recommendation of having been trained at the
              College des Bons Enfans, encouraging testimony was
              received to the signal benefits conferred by this means upon the Church. The
              Bishops of Poitiers, Angouleme, Noy on, Chartres, Saintes, and others, wrote to
              congratulate Vincent de Paul upon the zeal and ability of the labourers whom he
              had formed for the Lord’s vineyard, and to assure him of the high estimation
              which they had won from the faithful of all classes. Applications poured in
              from all parts of France for a larger supply of well-qualified pastors; demands
              with which the Congregation of the Mission found itself quite unable to comply
              while restricted within the narrow bounds of its original home. Most
              opportunely the way was opened, in 1632, for their removal to a much more
              spacious abode, namely the Priory of St. Lazare in the Faubourg St. Denis,
              which was in ancient times a hospital for lepers, but had passed into the possession
              of the Canons Regular of St. Victor. The prior of this community, Adrian Lebon, offered to cede the whole establishment and its
              dependencies, upon very favourable conditions, to Vincent and his priests. They
              accordingly took possession of it in January, 1632, the Archbishop of Paris
              presiding, at their installation; and it was from this new acquisition that the
              members of the Congregation derived the appellation by which they were afterwards
              most commonly known, that of Lazarists.
               Vincent no sooner found himself amply provided with
          space and other material appliances, than he expanded his field of action to a
          degree which he had never before contemplated. One of his first steps after establishing
          himself at St. Lazare was to set on foot a series of Conferences meetings at
          which the clergy of Paris and other dioceses might consult together on the
          difficulties of their ministry, and impart the advantage of mutual experience.
          This, it need hardly be remarked, was a project which required peculiar
          delicacy of handling, both with regard to organization and execution. But the
          character of Vincent de Paul, combining the deepest humility and the tenderest
          charity with that lofty gift of wisdom which, more surely than any merely
          intellectual endowment, sways and subdues minds of a lower order, was precisely
          adapted to such an undertaking ; and the results of the attempt were in the
          highest degree satisfactory. The first Conference was held at St. Lazare on the
          16th July, 1633; and for many years they were regularly continued on the
          Tuesday in each week, becoming celebrated far and wide as the Tuesday Conferences of St. Lazare. A code of rules was drawn up for the
          association by Vincent de Paul, of which the following were the principal
          features. That the main object proposed by the members was to honour the
          incarnate life of the Son of God, His everlasting priesthood, His holy family,
          and His love towards the poor; to this end they were to study to conform their
          whole life to His, to labour for the glory of God in all the details of the
          ecclesiastical career, and especially by diligent ministrations among the poor.
          The design of the Conferences being to support and build up in practical
          godliness those who should frequent them, their ordinary subject-matter should
          be the virtues, functions, and occupations specially appropriate to men
          dedicated to the service of the Altar. That the members sought by means of this
          Association to become more closely knit together in Jesus Christ; and with a
          view to promote this sacred union, they were to be assiduous in visiting and
          consoling one another, especially in times of sickness and affliction; that
          these offices of sympathy were to be continued not only during life, but, so
          far as possible, after death; that the members were to assist at the funeral
          obsequies of their departed brethren; they were to say three masses for them,
          or to communicate for their intention. Systematic directions were also given
          for the employment of each portion of the day. The priests were to rise at a
          prescribed hour; to devote at least half an hour to mental prayer; to say Mass, and afterwards to read
            on their knees a chapter of the New Testament; to engage in certain spiritual
            exercises before each meal; to spend a definite time in external works of
            charity; and to conclude the day with a general examination of conscience.
             The biographer of Vincent de Paul enlarges on the
          incomparable unction, the noble simplicity, the surprising power of Scriptural
          illustration, the touching pathos, the almost superhuman eloquence, displayed
          by this eminent servant of God at his Conferences. Nor does his picture appear
          to be at all overcoloured. It is borne out by the concurrent evidence of
          numbers of ecclesiastics who were present at these exercises; and the general
          influence for good accruing from them to the Church is the common theme of the
          historians of the time.
           The effect produced by the “Tuesday Conferences” of
          St. Lazare, in raising the tone of feeling and the practical standard of duty
          among the French clergy, was truly astonishing. It was not long before they
          attracted the attention of the all powerful Richelieu, who with his usual
          penetration at once appreciated their importance. He sent for Vincent de Paul, and desired
            him to give a detailed account of the nature and progress of his work, of which
            he expressed his approval. The minister, moreover, took with his own hand a
            list of the members of the Association, and invited Vincent to mention any
            whom he deemed peculiarly qualified to be advanced in the Church. A few were
            accordingly named; and the Cardinal did not fail, as opportunity offered, to
            recommend them to the king for promotion to vacant sees. After Vincent had
            retired . on this occasion, Richelieu is said to have observed to his niece the
            Duchess of Aiguillon, “I have always had a very high
            opinion of M. Vincent; but since my last interview with him, I regard him as a
            totally different character from what I first imagined.”
             Among the earliest and most notable members of this
          clerical association were Adrien Bourdoise, afterwards founder of the seminary
          of St. Nicolas du Chardonnet; Jacques Olier, founder and first superior of the
          Seminary of St. Sulpice; Jean Duval, Bishop of Babylone,
          founder of the Congregation des Missions Etrangères; Nicolas Pavilion, the
          saintly Bishop of Alet, so conspicuous in the
          Jansenist controversy; Antoine Godeau, Bishop of
          Grasse; and Louis Abelly, author of a well-known ‘Life
          of St. Vincent.’ The institution could reckon, even during the lifetime of
          Vincent de Paul, the names of thirty-three prelates, whose life and ministry
          had been moulded upon its system; besides a multitude of dignitaries of lower
          grades—vicars-general, archdeacons, canons, directors of diocesan seminaries,
          superiors of religious houses, and parochial clergy.
           Not satisfied with these labours for the regeneration
          of the priestly order, Vincent de Paul commenced the practice of holding
          retreats at St. Lazare for the laity of all classes and conditions, and threw
          open his gates with indiscriminate benevolence to all applicants. Within a
          brief space the antique halls of St. Lazare were more densely crowded with
          patients tainted with moral leprosy than they had ever been in former days with
          sufferers under physical disease. Vincent compared his abode to Noah’s Ark,
          where animals of every form, species, and character were lodged together
          indifferently. It was, indeed, a singular spectacle. This motley assemblage,
          frequenting the same hospitable board, and listening to the same salutary instructions,
          consisted of noblemen of the highest rank and of the humblest sons of toil and
          penury; of enlightened magistrates and simple artisans; of courtly men of
          fashion and rude unlettered peasants; of masters and servants; of old men
          heavily burdened with the sins and follies of the past, and of youths seeking
          by timely self-discipline to fortify themselves against the struggles and
          temptations of the future. Vincent spared no pains to render these retreats
          lastingly beneficial to his guests, whom he called Exercitants. He impressed
          upon them, as a fundamental principle, that the object to be kept in view by
          each was to render himself a perfect Christian according to his appointed
          vocation; a perfect student, if called to a life of study; a perfect lawyer or
          magistrate, if engaged in the profession of the law; a perfect soldier, if trained
          to arms; and so with all other walks of life. Scrupulous caution was observed
          with regard to those who seemed disposed to enter on a conventual life.
          Vincent never permitted such persons to be determined in their choice of a
          religious order by anyone under his control; and under no circumstances were
          they to be encouraged to join the congregation of the Mission. It has been
          calculated that during the latter twenty-five years of Vincent’s life, near
          20,000 persons availed themselves of the privilege of making a “retreat” at St
          Lazare; so that his visitors averaged about eight hundred in each year. Some
          few of these paid their own charges during their sojourn, either in part or in
          full; but the majority contributed nothing at all, either on account of
          insufficient means or from a mistaken idea that the Lazarists were bound by
          their statutes to receive all comers gratuitously. Large expenses were incurred
          in consequence; and many were the remonstrances made to the Superior against
          what was deemed an extravagant and imprudent outlay. But Vincent was proof
          against such considerations. “If we had thirty years to live,” said he, “and
          if by our labours in this work of Retreats we should shorten that space by one half, we
            ought still to persevere in the same course. It is true that the expense is
            great, but our funds cannot be better employed; and if our house should become
            involved in debt, God can find the means of extricating it, and His infinite
            goodness gives us every reason to believe that He would do so in case of need.”
             The institution of the “Filles de la Charité,” already
          mentioned, was entrusted by Vincent de Paul in 1633 to the direction of his
          devoted coadjutrix Madame Legras. This order was
          originally intended to minister to the sick in country parishes, where there
          were no hospitals at hand, and medical aid could not be easily procured; but in
          process of time the sisters were led to undertake other departments of
          charitable labour among the poor. They were gradually introduced into the hospitals,
          both in Paris and the provinces, as nurses for the sick; they took charge of
          the education of foundlings, and conducted female schools; they systematically
          visited the distressed and destitute; and they performed certain offices of
          compassion even among prisoners condemned to the galleys. Their constitutions,
          framed by Vincent de Paul, abound with wise regulations and weighty
          admonitions. The founder points out that although, from the nature of their
          employment, they cannot lead a recluse life like other religious societies,
          they ought nevertheless to be as strict in their conduct as the most austere
          of cloistered nuns; more so, indeed, inasmuch as they were more exposed to
          external perils than those who are altogether debarred from intercourse with
          the world. Their monasteries, he reminds them, would be in ordinary cases the
          houses of the sick; their cells, a hired lodging; their convent chapel, the
          parish church; their cloisters, the streets of the city or the wards of
          hospitals: their vow of seclusion, submission to their superior; their grate,
          the fear of God; their veil, a holy and rigid modesty. The other provisions of
          the Rule are conceived in the same spirit of practical wisdom and elevated
          piety. After having been tested by the experience of twenty years, it was formally approved by Cardinal de Betz,
            Archbishop of Paris, in 1655, and the letters patent were registered by the
            Parliament in the following year. The soeurs de la Charité,—or
            “soeurs grises ” as they
            are sometimes called,—undergo a probation of five years before they are
            admitted to their office. On this occasion they take the three customary vows
            of religious profession, to which a fourth is added, pledging them to labour
            for the poor. These vows are made for the space of one year only, and are
            renewable annually on the 25th of March, with the previous permission of the
            Superior. The refusal or suspension of this licence is regarded in the Order as
            the gravest of all penances, and instances of its infliction are extremely rare.
             A kindred association, also originated by Vincent de
          Paul, and styled the “Compagnie des Dames de Charité,” acquired great
          reputation and influence at Paris by its energetic labours in the service of
          the sick and poor. Its members were chiefly ladies of high rank; the Marquise
          de Magnelais, a daughter of the house of Gondi,
          sister of the Archbishop of Paris; the Princess of Mantua, afterwards Queen of
          Poland; Madame d’Aligre, wife of the Chancellor of
          France; the “Presidente” de Goussault,
          who became the first superior of the society; Marie Fouquet, mother of the
          unfortunate finance minister of Louis XIV; Madame de Lamoignon,
          wife of the famous magistrate of that name; Madame de Herce;
          and the favourite niece of Richelieu, the Marquise de Combalet,
          afterwards Duchess of Aiguillon. At the meetings
          presided over by these noble matrons benevolent schemes of all kinds were
          discussed and organized; but the principal duty for which they made themselves
          responsible was that of visiting the inmates of the Hotel Dieu, or central
          hospital of Paris. In this undertaking they were zealously seconded by Madame Legras and her Filles de Charité; and a detachment of the
          latter community was established for this purpose in a house adjoining the
          hospital. On the recommendation of Vincent de Paul, the ladies formed two
          divisions, the first having for its province the religious instruction and
          consolation of the patients, while the second ministered to their temporal
          necessities. Fourteen members were elected every quarter, in the Ember week, to
          compose each section; they attended two and two, by rotation, at the Hotel
          Dieu, every day in the week; and at the end of their term of service they made a report to the
            general meeting of the Society, recording’ the course of their proceedings,
            with any circumstances which might be useful for the guidance and encouragement
            of those who were to replace them. It may be well imagined that the spectacle
            of such self-devotion in those whose birth had placed them on the highest steps
            of society, and who were accustomed to every luxury that wealth can procure,
            made a vivid impression upon the inhabitants of Paris in general, independently
            of the direct benefits conferred upon the sufferers in the hospital. The
            gentleness, tenderness, and persevering patience displayed by the Dames de Charité
            in the discharge of their functions was followed by a signal reward. If we may
            credit the biographer of Vincent de Paul, their success in the work of
            conversion was such that in the course of a single year, and that the first
            year of the Society’s existence, no less than seven hundred and sixty heretics
            of different persuasions abjured their errors and embraced the Catholic
            faith.* The annual outlay of the institution in acts of corporal charity
            exceeded seven thousand livres.
             Volumes would be required to give an adequate idea of
          the multifarious labours of Vincent de Paul. New establishments of “Priests of
          the Mission” were gradually formed in most of the large ton ns of France, and
          earnest application was made for their services in various foreign countries.
          In 1639 they planted a colony at Annecy in Savoy; in 1642 they passed the Alps
          into Italy, and were installed under the patronage of the Duchesse d’Aiguillon in a spacious college at Rome; three years
          later they were summoned to Genoa by Cardinal Durazzo; and subsequently the
          Queen of Poland, Mary of Gonzaga, the same who has been mentioned as one of the
          Dames de Charité, expressed a desire for their ministrations at Warsaw, where
          she assigned them a house and sufficient revenues.
           The Lazarists were also entrusted with the management
          of diocesan Seminaries in various parts of France; besides the noble college at
          their head-quarters at St. Lazare, they successively undertook the direction
          of similar institutions at Saintes, Le Mans, St. Malo, Agen, Tréguier, and Narbonne. This became one of their most
          fruitful fields of labour; and the names of St. Vincent de Paul and the Lazarists are
            inseparably identified with the vital work of clerical education. The impulse
            of their zeal raised up many earnest co-operators in the cause; among the most
            distinguished was Jean Jacques Olier, a man scarcely second to Vincent himself
            in saintly virtue and energetic devotion to the duties of the ministry. Olier
            was one of those pupils and associates of his early days for whom Vincent had
            always cherished special affection and unreserved sympathy. On being ordained
            priest in 1633, he undertook an important mission in connexion with the Abbey
            of Pebrac in Auvergne; and such was his reputation
            for ability at this early age, that Richelieu offered him soon afterwards the
            appointment of coadjutor to the Bishop of Chalons-sur-Marne. Olier, however,
            declined it, from a strong conviction that he was called to exercise his ministry
            in a different capacity, namely, as a founder and director of Seminaries.
            Encouraged by Vincent de Paul, Father Condren,
            Superior of the Oratory, and other experienced advisers, Olier commenced in
            1641 an institution of this kind at Vaugirard, near Paris;
            and in the following year, having accepted the charge of the parish of St.
            Sulpice, he transferred his college to that locality. Here he ere long found
            himself surrounded by a band of zealous associates, many of whom rose in due
            time to the highest stations in the Church. Among those who are best known to
            fame were Francois de Caulet, Bishop of Pamiers, De Gondrin, Archbishop
            of Sens, and Claude Joly, Bishop of Agen. Besides his
            chief establishment at St. Sulpice, Olier became the founder of provincial
            seminaries at Clermont, Le Puy, Viviers, and Bourg
            St. Andeol; and an offshoot of his congregation was
            planted even in the French colony of Montreal in Canada. He abridged his life
            by his excessive labours, and by unsparing asceticism; his death occurred in
            1657, in his forty-ninth year. Olier has always been reckoned among the most
            illustrious sons of the Gallican Church. Bossuet styles him “virum praestantissimum ac sanctitatis odore florentem”; he is eulogized by Fenelon as vir traditus gratiae Dei, et plane apostolicus; and in a letter from the
            Assembly of the Clergy to Pope Clement XII, we find him extolled as eximium sacerdotem, insigne cleri nostri decus et ornamentum. The congregation of St. Sulpice
            possessed, at the epoch of the Revolution, five affiliated seminaries at Paris,
            and twelve in the provinces.
             Another successful labourer in the same department of
          Church restoration was Claude Bernard, commonly known by the title of the poor
          Priest. From the time of his ordination he dedicated himself exclusively to
          ministrations among the poor, and sacrificed for their benefit a fortune of
          400,000 livres which had been bequeathed to him. In 1638, on the auspicious
          occasion of the birth of Louis XIV, Bernard instituted a college for the education
          of priests at the Hotel d’Albiac, in the Rue de la
          Montagne Ste. Genevieve. Anne of Austria was a
          munificent contributor to this seminary, by way of thank-offering for what she
          regarded as a signal token of Divine favour both to herself and to France. The
          new establishment was entitled the “Seminary of the Thirty-three,” in
          commemoration of the thirty-three years of the Redeemer’s life on earth. It was
          confined to the reception of young students in needy circumstances, who would
          not otherwise have been able to meet the expense of systematic preparation for
          the ministry. Numbers of exemplary priests were trained in this establishment
          for different posts of labour in the Church; many of them devoted themselves
          with remarkable success to the work of missions, both at home and abroad.
          Claude Bernard closed his career in March, 1641, at the age of fifty-three. He
          was succeeded in the government of his seminary by his faithful coadjutor
          Thomas Le Gauffre, nephew of the well-known Ambroise Le Gauffre, professor in the University of Caen and canon of the Cathedral of
          Bayeux, who had formerly followed the legal profession, and was one of the
          masters of the Chambre des Comptes, but was won over
          by the influence of his friend Bernard to embrace a religious life and enter
          the priesthood. Le Gauffre died in 1646, when he had just been designated to
          the see of the new French colony of Montreal. He possessed a considerable
          fortune, and left by his will large benefactions to the Seminary of the
          Thirty-three, as well as to other charitable institutions at Paris.
           
 
 CHAPTER IX.REVIVAL OF THE BENEDICTINE RULE
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