Feast Day of Joan of Arc

Joan was a being so uplifted from the ordinary run of mankind that she finds no equal in a thousand years. She embodied the natural goodness and valour of the human race in unexampled perfection. Unconquerable courage, infinite compassion, the virtue of the simple, the wisdom of the just, shone forth in her. She glorifies as she freed the soil from which she sprang.

Sir Winston Churchill

 

One of the examples of the direct intervention of God in human affairs, the brief history-altering life of Saint Joan of Arc has attracted the admiration of the most unlikely of men, including the Protestant Sir Winston Churchill, and the agnostic Mark Twain, who called his book on Joan of Arc the finest thing he ever wrote.  She was not canonized until 1920, but almost all of her contemporaries who met her had no doubt that she was a saint sent by God.  Some of the English who were present as she was burned at the stake cried out that they were all damned because she was a saint.   Jean Tressard, the Treasurer of Henry VI, King of England, wrote the following soon after the execution of Joan:   “We are all lost for it is a good and holy woman that has been burned. I believe her soul is in the hands of God, and I believe damned all who joined in her condemnation”.  With Saint Joan humanity came into contact with a messenger from God, and the result to her was as predictable as it was lamentable.  However, the outcome of her mission was exactly as she had predicted.  The weak Dauphin that she had crowned would reign as Charles VII and end the Hundred Years War in victory for France, something that none of his contemporaries thought remotely possible before Joan embarked on her mission.

 

God tends to use unlikely tools to work His ends.  A peasant girl who lived scarcely nineteen years on this globe can sway the destiny of nations if God so wills.  Joan speaks to us powerfully across almost six centuries of the power of God and the courage of a young maid.

Whatever thing men call great, look for it in Joan of Arc, and there you will find it.

Mark Twain

 

5 1 vote
Article Rating
3 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Fr. J
Fr. J
Thursday, May 30, AD 2024 12:18pm

Outstanding article! Thank you for posting it!

Your point about God directly intervening in the affairs of this world is very well taken. Things were very bleak in Christendom by the early 1400’s. And then, as if out of nowhere, there arose St. Joan, St. Vincent Ferrer, the “Angel of the Apocalypse” and Wonder-Worker, St. Francis of Paola (a wonder-worker in truth if not in name), St. John Capistrano (the Bulwark of Christendom), and many others. All of them contemporaries or near contemporaries.

Sin wasn’t allowed to arrive at its natural conclusion, by the grace of God. In fact, St. Vincent once said that if he had not been sent, the world would have indeed ended at that time.

The Bruised Optimist
The Bruised Optimist
Thursday, May 30, AD 2024 2:59pm

Let’s hope our “rescue saints” didn’t get intercepted by the abortionist’s knife.

Scroll to Top