St. Vincent DePaul
One
Today, we celebrate the feast of St. Vincent DePaul. His life is a striking example of Divine Providence, the way God works all things for good for those who love him. Vincent lived from 1576-1660. He was ordained a Catholic priest in 1600 but did not finish his studies until Oct 1604. When he graduated, he was saddled with a large student loan debt. Nothing changes right! In 1605 the good news reached him that a family friend had died and left him some money to pay for his debt for which he had to go ship to Marseilles through the Mediterranean. In 1605, Vincent returning to by ship and was taken captive by Barbary or Muslim pirates, who took him to Tunis. There, De Paul was auctioned off as a slave. His first master was a fisherman, but Vincent was unsuitable for this line of work due to sea-sickness and was soon sold. His next master was alchemist and inventor. Upon the Alchemists death, Vincent was sold again. His new master was a former Franciscan priest from Nice, France, who had converted to Islam in to gain his freedom from slavery and was living in the mountains with three wives. The second wife, a Muslim by birth, was drawn to and visited Vincent in the fields especially when she heard Vincent singing the Hail, Holy Queen, and she questioned him about his faith. She became convinced that his faith was true and admonished her husband for renouncing his Christianity. Her husband became remorseful and decided to escape back to France with his slave. They waited ten months, but finally they secretly boarded a small boat and crossed the Mediterranean, landing in France in June 1607, more than two years of slavery. Through all of this God was working.
Two
After DePaul returned to France he became a Parish Priest and continued his spiritual formation under Fr. Pierre de Bérulle, who was one of the greatest Marian Mystics and Theologians at the time. Bérulle assigned Vincent to serve as a chaplain and tutor to the Gondi family. Preaching a mission to the peasants, who were slaves for all intents and purposes, reminded him of his own harsh captivity and he was inspired to direct all his efforts to the poor. In 1617, Vincent contacted the Daughters of Charity and they then introduced him to poor families. Vincent then brought them food and comfort. He organized these wealthy women of Paris to collect funds for missionary projects, founded hospitals, and gather relief funds for the victims of war and to ransom 1,200 galley slaves from North Africa.
St. Vincent DePaul founded the Confraternities of Charity, the Congregation of the Mission and the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul. St. Vincent’s work has developed into 268 charitable organizations in 132 countries, serving 100s of millions of people each year. It was his experience of slavery and the cross which inspired St. Vincent to establish communities of charity and mercy for the poor. Thus do good fruits flow from difficult circumstances.
Three
The world and our lives are not governed by random chaotic forces nor are they controlled by evil and stupid people. The World and our lives are in the hands of an all good, all powerful and loving Father who is guiding all things that happen to us for our greatest good and the greatest good of our loved ones. And I emphatically mean ALL things, even our own stupid or sinful choices. God allowed or permitted St. Vincent DePaul to be captured and made a slave for two years to bring about an even greater good – that Vincent would be moved by this experience and the grace of God to serve countless poor and slaves and to inspire 400 years of charitable work in his wake. Even more, to embody our Lord’s love for the least and the poor. How do I embody this love?
Four
The Catechism states, CCC 312 “In time we can discover that God in his almighty providence can bring a good from the consequences of an evil, even a moral evil, caused by his creatures: "It was not you", said Joseph to his brothers, "who sent me here, but God. . . You meant evil against me; but God meant it for good, to bring it about that many people should be kept alive." From the greatest moral evil ever committed - the rejection and murder of God's only Son, caused by the sins of all men - God, by his grace that "abounded all the more", brought the greatest of goods: the glorification of Christ and our redemption. But for all that, evil never becomes a good.” This is why St. Paul tells us that we can never do evil so that good may come of it. That would make us evil-doers! But, it does mean we needn’t despair when suffering and travail come our way. It’s a sure sign that we have been made partners with the Cross of Christ, a cross He so identifies with, He’s poured His own life’s blood into it! This is why the cross of Christ brings life and goodness!
Five
There are two parts of the Doctrine Divine Providence: The first is that God is so All-Powerful and Good that He can work All things, and I mean everything to our greatest good. The second part is that we will only benefit from the Providence of God if we cooperate with Him and do our part – responding with Faith, Hope and Love. Vincent could have responded to his enslavement the way his last master had, convert to Islam, take three wives and live and easy life. Vincent could have responded with anger, resentment and hatred toward God for allowing his capture and enslavement and become and atheist and ruined his life. But Vincent responded with Faith, with Trust, with Hope and Love for God which maintained him in his time of darkness and trial and inspired him to go on to do great things for God and for people. Everything that happens to us God either wills directly or He allows. God is never the cause of evil but he permits bad things to happen. We all experience the good and the bad. The question is, how are we responding to what God has allowed into our lives that we did not choose, do not like and cannot change? Do we respond with faith, trust, hope and love of God? When the storms in our lives rage, we must anchor ourselves to the reality of Divine Providence because God really does work all things for good for those who love him, that is, for those who respond with virtue and not sin. As an action step from this reflection, I promise you, Lord, that at least for the next 24 hours I will not complain, not even about the smallest contradiction, but will bless your name in all circumstances because I know you bring good out of it!