Today's Minute Meditations reminds us: We are bathed in God's light. ☀️
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April 8, 2025

SAINT OF THE DAY
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Saint of the Day for April 8:

Julie Billiart

(July 12, 1751 – April 8, 1816)

 

Listen to Saint Julie Billiart’s story here

Born in Cuvilly, France, into a family of well-to-do farmers, young Marie Rose Julie Billiart showed an early interest in religion and in helping the sick and poor. Though the first years of her life were relatively peaceful and uncomplicated, Julie had to take up manual work as a young teen when her family lost its money. However, she spent her spare time teaching catechism to young people and to the farm laborers.

A mysterious illness overtook her when she was about 30. Witnessing an attempt to wound or even kill her father, Julie was paralyzed and became a complete invalid. For the next two decades, she continued to teach catechism lessons from her bed, offered spiritual advice, and attracted visitors who had heard of her holiness.

 

When the French Revolution broke out in 1789, revolutionary forces became aware of her allegiance to fugitive priests. With the help of friends, she was smuggled out of Cuvilly in a haycart. She then spent several years hiding in Compiegne, being moved from house to house despite her growing physical pain. She even lost the power of speech for a time.

 

But this period also proved to be a fruitful spiritual time for Julie. It was at this time she had a vision in which she saw Calvary surrounded by women in religious habits and heard a voice saying, “Behold these spiritual daughters whom I give you in an institute marked by the cross.”

 

As time passed and Julie continued her mobile life, she made the acquaintance of an aristocratic woman, Françoise Blin de Bourdon, who shared Julie’s interest in teaching the faith. In 1803, the two women began the Institute of Notre Dame, which was dedicated to the education of the poor, young Christian girls, and the training of catechists. The following year the first Sisters of Notre Dame made their vows. That was the same year that Julie recovered from the illness: She was able to walk for the first time in 22 years.

 

Though Julie had always been attentive to the special needs of the poor and that always remained her priority, she also became aware that other classes in society needed Christian instruction. From the founding of the Sisters of Notre Dame until her death, Julie was on the road, opening a variety of schools in France and Belgium that served the poor and the wealthy, vocational groups, teachers. Ultimately, Julie and Françoise moved the motherhouse to Namur, Belgium. Julie died there in 1816 and was canonized in 1969.

 

Reflection

Julie’s immobility in no way impeded her activities. In spite of her suffering, she managed to co-found a teaching order that tended to the needs of both the poor and the well-to-do. Each of us has limitations, but the worst malady any of us can suffer is the spiritual paralysis that keeps us from doing God’s work on earth.

 

Saint Julie Billiart is a Patron Saint of:

Educators/Teachers

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MINUTE MEDITATIONS
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Bathed in God’s Goodness

 

Our wounded human nature being what it is, the temptation may be to wish we didn’t feel so guilty in doing something wrong or sinful. In a moment of weakness, we could wish our conscience was not with us. And yet what a blessing and grace that is for us.

 

For a moment, we might envy the gains of the man who always gets his way. And it is sometimes difficult to always want to seek the good and the right when it might seem easier to put our conscience to sleep. And yet, when we take a moment to think, we know we are grateful for our well-formed conscience. As the wise saying goes, “The softest pillow we can lay our head on is a good conscience.”

We can be grateful that we are bathed in the goodness and the wisdom of the Lord. We would be miserable without it.

 

—from St. Anthony Messenger‘s “Notes from a Friar: The Book of Proverbs“
by Jim Van Vurst, OFM

 

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PAUSE+PRAY
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Walk Your Path

 

Reflect

Sometimes on the path we’re walking, it is easy to take our frustration and confusion out on God. This is human, normal, and okay. But what would it look like to consider resting in your inherent union with the divine in the unknown, in the proverbial desert, and in the tension?

 

Pray

This path is uniquely mine,
which is to say it is ours, 
since you never leave me,
though it sometimes seems like
you forsake me, 
especially when I judge you
through the lens of my fantasies.

Today I will trust our path, 
where my illusions are freed
to sink in the soil
and my obsessions are freed
to sink in the sea, 
here on “the edge of the inside,”
this perfect path for me.

In a world that is not my own, 
I will make our path my home.

 

Act

Whenever you begin to feel lost today in the overwhelming nature of life’s complexities, consider allowing a phrase from this prayer to ruminate and create the cognitive space for you to make your home, with God, in the unknowing.

 

Today's Pause+Pray was written by Stephen Copeland. Learn more here!

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