Sisters of Charity of St. Paul

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The Sisters of Charity of St. Paul of Chartres are a Roman Catholic religious congregation for teaching, nursing, visiting the poor and taking care of orphans, the old and infirm, and the mentally ill. On 1696, the congregation was founded by Father Louis Chauvet, the parish priest of Levesville, assisted by Marie Anne de Tilly.

There are no lay-sisters, but every sister must be prepared to undertake any kind of work. The interior spirit is a love of sacrifice and labor for the spiritual and temporal good of others. The postulancy lasts from six to nine months, the novitiate a year, after which the sisters take vows annually for three years, and then perpetual simple vows.

History

Their first house formerly belonged to a sabot-maker, and this gave them the name of "les Sœurs Sabotiers", by which they were originally known. The congregation was dispersed under the Terror, during the French Revolution, but it was restored by Napoleon I, who gave the sisters a monastery at Chartres, which originally belonged to the Jacobins, from which they became known as "les Sœurs de St. Jacques". They settled in England in 1847 at the invitation of Cardinal Wiseman.

Hong Kong

The first Sisters of St Paul de Chartres arrived in Hong Kong in 1848. Institutions founded by the Sisters include:[1]

See also

References

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    • Steel, Convents of Great Britain (London, 1902)

External links