Editorial
Rely on Providence and all will be well
This Sunday, Oct. 25, Venerable
Mother Theodore Guérin will be proclaimed “blessed” by Pope John
Paul II.
What a great day for the
Church in Indiana!
Born in 1798 in the village of Étables,
Brittany, France, Anne-Thérèse
Guérin entered the Sisters of Providence
at Ruillé-sur-Loire, in the Diocese of Le
Mans, at the age of 25.
In 1840, Mother Theodore, known
then as Sister St. Theodore, answered
the request of Bishop Célestine de la
Hailandière for missionary sisters for
his Diocese of Vincennes (later to be
known as the Archdiocese of
Indianapolis). Then a 42-year-old
woman of somewhat frail health who
had been recognized by the French government
as an accomplished teacher,
Mother Theodore came with five other
sisters to the wilderness of Indiana.
Here she founded the Congregation of
the Sisters of Providence of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods.
Within a year of arriving
in the Indiana forest, she and her sisters
had established an academy for young
women that was later to grow into Saint
Mary-of-the-Woods College, the first
Catholic liberal arts college for women
in the United States.
Mother Theodore died in 1856 at
the age of 57.
Even during her lifetime, many people
thought Mother Theodore was a
saint. And after her death, her sisters
and others who knew her or who knew
of her would invoke her intercession
with God.
In 1909, Providence Sister
Mary Theodosia Mugg, who had had a
mastectomy because of breast cancer,
was spontaneously healed of severe
neuritis in one of her arms and of an
abdominal tumor after praying to
Mother Theodore. Even her eyesight
was improved! It is this cure that has
led to the beatification of Mother
Theodore.
But perhaps more important than
evidence of miracles—as impressive as
those can be—in considering Mother
Theodore’s holiness is simply the
example of her life, the way she overcame
obstacles in her service to God
and the Church, the wisdom found in
her writings, and her spirituality that
centered itself upon reliance on Divine
Providence.
“Put yourself gently into the hands
of Providence,” she said. … “Love all
in God and for God, and all will be
well.”
These are brave words for a middleaged
woman living in a forest in an
area of the New World not particularly
welcoming to Roman Catholics,
responsible for a newly founded congregation
of religious women, and in
charge of a new academy for the education
of young daughters of pioneers.
Blessed Mother Theodore Guérin was
pressed on all sides by monumental
administrative and leadership responsibilities,
by challenges of the harsh environment,
and by difficulties arising from
both anti-Catholic “Know-Nothings” and
even, at times, from her own bishop.
But
she relied on Providence, a Providence
she said that never failed her, groping
along slowly when the way was not clear
to her or her sisters.
Surely, this woman speaks to us
today. She is truly, as Providence
General Superior Sister Diane Ris
said, “a woman for our time” and an
appropriate role model for all of us to
follow.
— William R. Bruns