Saint of the Day – 26 December – Saint Vincenza Maria Lopez (1847- 1890) professed religious and the founder of the Daughters of Mary Immaculate. Born as Vincenza Maria Lopez y Vicuña on 24 March 1847 in Cascante, Navarra, Spaind and died on 26 December 1890 (aged 43) in Madrid, Spain of natural causes. She is the Patron of the Order she founded.
Her order was dedicated to administering to “working girls”, or young women in domestic employment and she took the view that these housemaids and other domestic servants needed care, with a particular emphasis on girls who suffered abuse.
Young working women, especially those who earn their living in today’s large cities, are subject to many temptations regarding faith and morals. Saint Vincenza Maria Lopez dedicated her life to mothering such working girls. In fact, she found the work a complete delight and declared herself ready to suffer anything, even death, rather than abandon this apostolate.
Vincenza was thus a social activist on behalf of women workers, even as her contemporary, Blessed Adolf Kolping (1813-1865), was a social activist on behalf of working men. Both dealt with people exposed to those trials of the marketplace that became acute during the Industrial Revolution.
This “foster mother” was a Spaniard, born at Cascante, in Navarre, to devout middle-class parents. In 1854 the Lopezes sent their daughter to Madrid for schooling, and from that time on she became a Madrilena. She lived with her aunt, Eulalia y Vicuna and this admirable women set her an example that shaped her whole adult life and her growth in holiness.
Eulalia had already established a hospice for jobless young servant girls. Vincenza was attracted by this sort of charity. Realising its necessity, she worried what would become of the hospice if anything happened to her aunt. At 19, increasingly convinced that she herself was called to the religious life in its “active” rather than contemplative form, she took a private vow not to marry.
Senor and Senora Lopez, despite their piety, were not pleased with their daughter’s decision. They wanted her either to marry or to join the Visitation nuns, a cloistered order. When Vincenza refused their proposal, they ordered her to come back to Cascante. Apparently they thought that the only remaining alternative was for her to live at home as a spinster.
She did return home. When she fell ill, however, her parents became concerned and rather ashamed of themselves, so they eventually allowed her to go back to Madrid. Now Vincenza’s plans began to mature. In 1871 she and her aunt and a few other women on the hospice staff began to lead a community religious life. Then in 1876, with the assistance of a Jesuit, Father Hidalgo y Soba, they drew up a rule of life that would commit them to conduct homes for working girls and teach them domestic arts. Thus was founded the Daughters of Mary Immaculate for Domestic Service. Vincenza and three others received the veil from the bishop of Seville that year. They pronounced their vows as sisters two years later.
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