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Foundation of
Visitation Annecy |
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| In the early 1600's, a woman
had to be physically strong, single, and young if she wished to become a
religious. The bishop, Francis de Sales, saw the need for a religious
community that would substitute interior self-discipline for the physical
austerities customary in the convents of his day. In 1604, he met the
young widow, Jane Frances Fremyot de Chantal. He recognized her as his
co-worker in actualizing his dream for a new form of religious life. At
the same time, she recognized him as the spiritual director God had
promised her in a dream. For the next six years Francis guided Jane until
she, along with her two companions, Marie Jacqueline Favre and Jeanne Charlotte
de Brechard, were ready and free to begin the Visitation Order on Trinity
Sunday, June 6, 1610. |

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St. Francis de Sales:
1567-1622
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Francis de Sales, founder of the Visitation Order in 1610,
wrote,
"This Congregation is founded spiritually on Mount Calvary for the service of Jesus Christ crucified, in imitation of whom all the sisters must crucify their senses, imaginations, passions, inclinations, aversions, and humors for the love of their Heavenly Father."
St. Francis de Sales, Constitution XXXIII |

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Jane de Chantal, the foundress of the Visitation Order, taught,
"Simplicity towards God consists in seeking Him only in all our actions, whether we are going to the Office, dining room, or recreation; let us go everywhere to seek God and to obey God. In all our works, let us seek to please only God and to advance in His love."
St. Jane de Chantal Conference
XLIV |
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St. Jane de Chantal:
1572-1641
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Marie Jacqueline
Favre:
1589-1637
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Marie Jacqueline
Favre, the youngest of the first three
Visitation sisters, wrote,
"My life is wholly dedicated to the service of God, and it matters little whether it be long or short, whether I spend it here or there, in this or in that employment; all is alike indifferent to me. . . Command me freely, and I will die rather than fail in obedience; and this I say with my whole heart." Letter to Francis de Sales
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Jeanne Charlotte de
Brechard, one of the first three
Visitation sisters, wrote,
"It is true that the less there is in our works of the creature, the more there is of God. . . Let us be cheerful in our little exercises before God, in order that we may rejoice in Him in our little labors, by the merits of His most holy Passion..." Jeanne Charlotte de Brechard, Letter to Mother de Chatel |
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Jeanne Charlotte de Brechard
1580-1637
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