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May 28 – Thu of Pentecost / S Emilie de Vialar
Description
Sources Used Today:
- "The Holy Ghost: Caster-out of Devils" — Eastertide Day by Day
- "Leo XIV Announces His Trip to France" (FSSPX.news)
- "Pentecost: United In Grace" (SSPX Sermons)
- The Spiritual Life — Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre (Angelus Press)
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Saint Emilie de Vialar was a French religious sister whose life was devoted to caring for the poor, the sick, and those abandoned by society. She was born in 1797 in Gaillac, France, into a wealthy family during the turbulent years following the French Revolution. Though raised amid privilege, Emilie was deeply affected by the suffering she saw around her and felt called from a young age to dedicate her life entirely to God.
Her path was not easy. After the death of her mother, tensions developed within her family, especially regarding her desire for religious life and charitable work. Yet Emilie remained steadfast. Using the inheritance left to her, she founded the Sisters of Saint Joseph of the Apparition in 1832, a congregation dedicated to serving those most in need, especially the sick and the poor.
What made Emilie’s work remarkable was its missionary spirit. At a time when travel and communication were difficult, she sent sisters not only throughout France, but across the Mediterranean and into the Middle East and North Africa. Hospitals, orphanages, schools, and homes for the elderly were established under her guidance. Her sisters cared for victims of epidemics, ministered during wars, and taught children who otherwise had little access to education.
Emilie herself traveled extensively, enduring hardship, misunderstanding, and financial difficulty in order to support these missions. Though naturally energetic and determined, she remained deeply rooted in prayer and trust in divine providence. Her spirituality emphasized practical charity lived with humility and courage.