Sisters celebrate at motherhouse as Mother Theodore Guérin is beatified
ST. MARY-OF-THE-WOODS—Many
Sisters of Providence wiped away tears of
joy Oct. 25 in the Church of the
Immaculate Conception at St. Mary-of-the-Woods upon hearing the news that
their beloved foundress, Mother Theodore
Guérin, had been beatified by Pope John
Paul II in St. Peter’s Square in Rome.
Providence Sister Diane Ris, general
superior of the 158-year-old religious
order, called from the Vatican with the
historic news, which was announced in
the motherhouse church at The Woods
just before the start of the eucharistic
liturgy there celebrating Mother Theodore’s
elevation to blessed.
Extended applause erupted from the
sisters and others gathered in the church
to honor Mother Theodore as a “strong
woman of faith who relied on
Providence” and a devout and courageous
“woman for our time.”
Last week, Sister Diane and a large
contingent of Providence sisters traveled
to Rome to join Archbishop Daniel M.
Buechlein and archdiocesan pilgrims at
the Vatican for the ceremony marking
their late foundress’s beatification.
During that ceremony, Providence
Sisters Joan Slobig and Margaret Ann
McNamara, general officers of the congregation,
presented a wooden plaque,
made from a tree at The Woods, to the
Holy Father.
The inscription on the plaque, taken in
part from remarks by Pope John Paul II, read, “‘We must break open the cycles of
despair in which are imprisoned all those
that lack decent food, shelter or employment
...’”
The text continued, “On the occasion
of the beatification of Mother Theodore
Guérin, our foundress, we, the Sisters of
Providence of St. Mary-of-the-Woods,
Indiana, recall the generosity of the pioneer
family of St. Mary of the Woods
who offered housing to Mother Theodore
and her five companions when they
reached the dense forests of Indiana in
1840 only to find themselves homeless. It
is fitting that we, her daughters, respond
now to the housing needs of our neighbors
in West Terre Haute, Indiana, by
establishing a revolving loan fund of $50,000 which will help to make adequate housing available
to those who could not otherwise afford it.
“We present this gift in the name of Pope John Paul II,
whose words challenge us: ‘The poor of the United States
and of the world are your brothers and sisters in Christ.
You must never be content to leave them just the crumbs
from the feast. You must treat them like guests at your
family table.’
“May this gift of Providence help to build a community
of love, mercy and justice. 25 October 1998.”
An identical plaque was presented to the congregation
last Sunday during the liturgy at the motherhouse chapel.
“I am so very happy today,” said 90-year-old
Providence Sister Angela Garlat, who resides in the congregation’s
infirmary at the motherhouse and was seated
in a wheelchair in the church near other senior sisters.
“I am celebrating to the best of my ability,” she said. “I
think this is one of the top days that she [Mother
Theodore] has reached and we have reached with her. It
gives me great joy to be able to be here for the liturgy.”
In praise and thanksgiving for their foundress, Sister
Angela said, Sisters of Providence who are working in ministries“all over the world” are celebrating her beatification. “We’re in so many countries,” she said, “and the sisters
are all celebrating to the top of their abilities. When I
think of it that way, I can close my eyes and take in all of
this celebration, country to country to country, going on
today and tomorrow.”
Retired from teaching for many years, Sister Angela
said she spends her days praying for the congregation, for
vocations and for the many special intentions from people
received at the motherhouse throughout the year.
“My life is totally devoted to prayer now,” she said. “This certainly is a big intention day!”
Blessed Mother Theodore—born Anne-Thérèse Guérin
on Oct. 2, 1798, in the French village of Étables—traveled
from France to the forests of Indiana with five Providence
sisters to found St. Mary-of-the-Woods near Terre Haute
on Oct. 22, 1840.
The congregation’s history notes that, upon arriving at
the densely forested site, “equipped with little more than
her steadfast desire to serve God, Mother Theodore and
her five companion sisters ... knelt in prayer before the
Blessed Sacrament to thank God for their safe journey and
to ask for God’s blessings for their new mission.”
Mother Theodore and the Sisters of Providence of
St. Mary-of-the-Woods went on to found and staff schools
in Indiana and elsewhere in the United States and begin a
variety of other ministries.
Sacred music for the historic liturgy at the motherhouse
chapel was provided by the Indiana State University Brass Ensemble and Organ and the Sisters of Providence Choir
and Hand Bell Choir, assisted by St. Mary-of-the-Woods
College students.
Father Lawrence Richardt, chaplain of St. Mary-of-the-Woods Convent and Motherhouse, concelebrated the liturgy
with Msgr. John Minta, a retired diocesan priest and
former chaplain of the order.
During the liturgy, Providence Sister Nancy Nolan,
former general superior of the order, paid tribute to
Mother Theodore’s life, mission and ministry. “Mother Theodore has been declared blessed by the
Church,” Sister Nancy said. “‘This is the day the Lord has
made. Let us rejoice and be glad.’
“This is the day the words of Scripture are fulfilled for
us,” she said. “This is the day Pope John Paul II lifts up
the life and virtues of Anne-Thérèse Guérin to the universal
Church and proclaims her blessed. This is the day we
acknowledge the power of the life and love of one woman
to transform the lives of many.
“This woman who labored only 16 years in the place
called St. Mary-of-the-Woods has packed this church
today and has caused over 400 pilgrims from all over the
world to descend on Rome to sing her praises. It is amazing.
It is awesome. It touches a deep place in one’s soul.”
However, Sister Nancy said, “Mother Theodore doesn’t
get all the credit! The unique spirit that was hers was
embodied in her sisters, in the lives they lived, in the institutions
they founded, in the people they loved, cared for
and ministered with and to. Yes, the legacy of Mother
Theodore Guérin has been alive and well and has
expressed itself in the lives of many.
“Today we rejoice for Mother Theodore, but also for
ourselves and all those Sisters of Providence and friends
of the congregation, who from the day Mother Theodore
died, until the present, kept her spirit alive in themselves
and in their works of love, mercy and justice. We knew we
had someone special, a valiant woman, whose life and
virtues have the power to transform ... and today we share
her with the universal Church.” †