I suspect we have all known relationships that should not have worked out… but did.
Those familiar only with the younger lives of St. Vincent and St. Louise would have been surprised by their lifelong journey. Vincent and Louise would not have been considered a good bet as a relationship that would work out.
Yet, knowing the last chapters of their lives, we see they were both transformed and transforming. Together they did things that transformed the face of France. (Louise gets little credit for reasons that would take us too far afield.)
Their journey transformed them from opposites to equals.
They offer important lessons for a divided church today.
Inauspicious beginnings
Their journey should not have worked out as it did.
Vincent and Louise came from very different backgrounds.
Vincent was a country boy. We presume he was loved and wanted by his family.
Louise was a city girl, illegitimate, lonely, isolated, not wanted.
Their personalities were very different.
At the risk of over-simplifying, Vincent was outgoing, smart in the ways of the world.
Louise was more introverted, anxious, organized, strong-willed, yet a worrier.
There are many early hints they themselves did not expect much of their relationship. They certainly never envisioned how intertwined their lives would become.
Yet, their 35-year journey from opposites to equals transformed not only themselves but also France, the Church, and religious life.
It was not always a smooth journey
Some (“Collaboration between two exceptional people“] have observed that for nine years, they had major differences over many structural concerns for the Daughters. But they learned to respect each other and the people they served.
Yet Vincent and Louise continued to collaborate. They set up missions, worked with the Ladies of Charity, hospital administrators, parish priests, Bishops, Cardinals, politicians, penal systems, and other organizations. Above all the they wanted the poor better served and evangelized.
Their relationship worked because they discovered they shared a common dream – serving the broken and bleeding bodies of Christ. They listened to the voice of God calling them and respected that each saw different aspects of that dream.
The lively exchanges between these two pioneers of charity, enable us to glimpse the movement of the Spirit. Together they brought good news to those suffering from spiritual neglect and living on the margins of society.
Animated by a solid sense of mission and what they believed to be the will of God, They combined their natural gifts and skills in respectful co-responsibility.
They prove that whatever our background, personality, life experiences, conflicts and opposites people can work together toward a common vision.
A synodal journey?
Isn’t this on a personal level what Pope Francis is urging all of us to do? Listen to the spirit speaking to us and each other about things we may not yet appreciate.
We SAY we are each God’s sons and daughters. But we are still scratching at the surface of LIVING God’s vision.
In initiating the world’s largest conversation, Pope Francis is calling us to listen together to the Spirit.
Vincent and Louise might not have used the language of encounter and synodality, but they teach us much about how the process unfolds over a lifetime.
It is a journey from opposites to equals seeking to understand… and live… the same vision under the guidance of the Spirit.
Together we learn the implications of Jesus’ prayer – Our Father.
Vincent and Louise came to appreciate each other’s way of looking at how to serve.
I think I need to reflect more on Vincent and Louise as models of synodal spirituality.
Click below for an early version of this Vincentian Mindwalk
By the way, John, I was just reading last night, “Vincent de Paul and Jean-Jacques Olier: Unlikely Friends (https://via.library.depaul.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=&httpsredir=1&article=1306&context=vhj). And in the light of today’s Mindwalk, they too are, no doubt, models of synodal spirituality and journey.
Thanks, John.