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The Life of Saint Marguerite Bourgeoys

The statue of St. Marguerite in the church

The statue of St. Marguerite in the church narthex.

St. Marguerite Bourgeoys was born in Troyes, France in 1620, and died in Montreal in 1700. She is renowned for her work, her spirituality, and her impact on society and the Church in North America.

As one of the older girls of a devout Catholic middle class family, St. Marguerite had to assume the responsibility for the household when her mother died. At the age of twenty, she had a conversion experience during a religious procession that profoundly influenced her future mission and focused her values. She felt singled out by the Blessed Virgin, and in response she joined a local group of women who gathered to do charitable work as an extension of a cloister in Troyes. St. Marguerite served as leader of this extern group, and as her service taught the children in the poor section of town. In 1653, Paul de Maisonneuve, founder of Montreal, passed through Troyes and invited St. Marguerite to join him in Ville Marie as a lay teacher, to instruct the children of the colonists and of the Native Americans. In June 1653, she sailed from Nantes on a three month voyage to the New World.

St. Marguerite’s humanitarian and Christian work in Canada was principally as educator and founder. In 1658, she opened her first school in a stone stable given her by the town leaders. St. Marguerite had a broad concept of education. She saw the school as a vehicle of religious and social development. Unique to her time, she provided education for all, giving special attention to girls, the poor and the natives. Education in Marguerite’s schools consisted in the basics of literacy, religious instruction, home economics and the arts. Beyond the classroom, St. Marguerite worked with families, assisted in faith formation in the parish, and addressed the social service needs of the colonists. Noteworthy among her contributions to the colony are the special vocational schools she established to provide the domestic skills a young woman would need to run a home in the wilderness.

St. Marguerite became the official guardian to the “filles du roi”, young orphan girls sent by the monarch to establish new families. She lodged them in her own home, served as a matchmaker, and prepared them for their new life as pioneers. Her signature appears as a witness on many of the early marriage contracts in Montreal. As a result of these activities she was affectionately referred to as “the Mother of the Colony”. St. Marguerite made three trips back to France to recruit other women to join her in her work of education and to obtain civil approbation from the king.

St. Marguerite’s apostolic spirituality was a special gift to the Church. She was a woman of action in her time and left a mark on the history of Montreal and education in Canada. She was a woman of faith and deeply committed to the service of the Gospels. She was personally motivated by the missionary journeying of Mary in service to her cousin, Elizabeth, and desired to form a group of uncloistered women who would imitate Mary in this mystery of the Visitation.

St. Marguerite had an exceptional and practical love of God and neighbour. She had a great desire to serve the Church in its most local form, the parish. She exhorted her extern congregation of educators to be “daughters of the parish” - to worship with the people and use the local church as a source of spiritual nourishment.tain-glass of St. Marguerite inside the church

Her Congregation received Church approbation in 1698 and at that time pronounced vows as uncloistered religious. Today the Congregation de Notre Dame numbers 2600 sisters in North America, Japan, Latin America, and the Cameroons in service to the people of God in the spirit of the Visitation.

Prayer to Saint Marguerite Bourgeoys

O Mother Bourgeoys,
you, whose compassionate power is ever increasing,
show us your way of Truth, Faith and Holiness.

Make us humble enough to abandon ourselves to the Will of God,
generous enough to find in the Cross the joy of the Loving Giver.

May your fidelity to Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament
lead us ever nearer to this source of light and peace.
May your spirit of openness help us to be concerned
for our brothers and sisters throughout the world.

Finally, may Our Lady of the Trinity, Father, Son and Holy Spirit,
bring us to this unity of eternal grace
to which God has called you for all eternity.

Amen

Stain-glass of St. Marguerite inside the church

This page is a reproduction of the St. Marguerite Bourgeoys Roman Catholic Church web-site

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