<h1 align="center"><SPAN name="III">C</SPAN>HAPTER III.</h1>
<h2 align="center">THE "HOUSE OF PROVIDENCE" AND THE TRIBULATIONS.</h2>
<p><font size="+3">I</font>N 1825, seven years after Father Vianney
had been appointed to the parish at Ars, he resolved upon a new and
important undertaking. He wanted to bring together in one home all the
neglected poor and orphan children of Ars and the surrounding country,
and to provide at one and the same time for both their physical and
spiritual needs. Facing the village green there stood a desirable
house, which he would gladly have acquired for this purpose. One day
he received from an anonymous donor a considerable sum of money for
charitable purposes. He immediately betook himself to the owner of the
house in question, and without much difficulty was enabled to purchase
it. And this was the beginning of the "House of Providence."</p>
<p>As directresses for this home he selected two young women of the
parish and placed them in charge, but without imposing upon them any
religious vows. The home soon sheltered many little ones, either
neglected or homeless, who were fed, clothed and cared for, and whose
instruction in the catechism Vianney took upon himself daily. By
degrees the grown up parishioners came to assist at these
instructions, which took the place of those which had been held in the
parish church.</p>
<p>This home was maintained by Father Vianney for twenty-five years.
For its financial support he made use of the alms given to him, and it
frequently happened that sums of money to be used in charity were
transmitted to him most unexpectedly and at times when the home was in
greatest need. Relief sometimes came in a manner which excludes the
idea of human intervention. Among other incidents observed by many
witnesses it is related that one day there was no flour for the day's
supply of bread and no money with which to purchase any. Everyone whom
Father Vianney approached upon this subject seemed either to be unable
or unwilling to relieve him, so that the curé imagined himself almost
forsaken.</p>
<p>Never before had he felt so miserable. Then he remembered St.
Francis Regis and deciding to seek heavenly intercession, he took the
relics of the saint and carried them to the store-room, concealing
them under the remnant of grain that lay there. Next day the
caretakers of the home came and again reminded the pastor that there
was nothing left to eat in the house. Father Vianney, weeping,
exclaimed: "Then we must send our poor children away!" Nevertheless he
betook himself with one of the care-takers to the store-room and, with
great anxiety, opened the door, when, behold the store-room which had
been empty was found to be filled with grain.</p>
<p>It was on such an occasion as this that Father Vianney's sanctity
manifested itself. Instead of welcoming this public miracle with
joyful satisfaction he felt on the contrary, deeply humiliated,
because of his having previously given way to discouragement. He
hastened to the children of the home and exclaimed in self-accusation
"Behold, dear children, I mistrusted the good God. I was about to send
you all away, and for this He has well punished me!"</p>
<p>The report of this miraculous supply of food was quickly
circulated. The whole congregation visited the store-room; everyone
could convince himself of the truth of the matter. Later, Bishop
Devie, of Belley, inquired personally into the matter and found the
facts to be as above stated.</p>
<p>Now, great graces in the lives of holy persons are never bestowed
without great trials, and the good curé was no exception to this rule.
During the ten years of his ministry he had suffered from suspicion,
distrust and calumny. His enemies had criticised his actions and had
held him up to derision. He had even been threatened with violence.
Among those who attacked him were some of his own colleagues in the
ministry, who were greatly angered because their parishioners flocked
in numbers to Ars to ask advice and counsel of one whom they had
called the inexperienced and ignorant priest. Of course Father
Vianney's own behavior gave no little reason for their disparaging
opinion of him, for, in his humility, he had several times declared
himself to be a worthless and incapable servant of God, an opinion
which undoubtedly he sincerely held.</p>
<p>These aspersions from his colleagues were disseminated among the
people, so that many of the faithful, influenced by the mistaken
opinion of their spiritual leaders, took upon themselves the liberty
of defaming their pastor. Some went further and wrote and left at his
door notice containing coarse and dishonorable remarks. To such an
extent had these ideas progressed that some persons attributed the
furrows with which penitential works had seamed the brow of the humble
priest to an immoral mode living.</p>
<p>With touching patience and resignation Father Vianney bore those
years of bitterness. His zeal never relaxed for a day, and the
interior agony which he suffered was not observable in any of his
pastoral duties. At that time he frequently repeated those memorable
and beautiful words: "We can do more for God when we perform our
duties faithfully, without interior gladness and a certain relish in
fulfilling them."</p>
<p>The profound repose of his inner life will appear still more
admirable to those who learn what cunning snares were prepared for him
at the same time by the arch enemy of the human race.</p>
<p>When news of the diabolical visitations to which Father Vianney was
frequently exposed, reached his colleagues, they laughed aloud. They
declared that he was a dreamer, whose brain was disordered.</p>
<p>With his accustomed composure the humbled curé bore the derision of
his colleagues, and of the faithful who agreed with them. Far from
being weakminded, as his associates represented him to be, Father
Vianney at first refused to believe that it was the powers of evil
that were persecuting him and depriving him of his night's rest in
order to render him unfit for his pastoral duties. When the nocturnal
rappings became more pronounced, he begged some courageous men of the
parish to assist him in discovering the evildoers or thieves, as he at
first considered them, whose purpose he thought was to carry off some
of the costly articles which had been presented for the parish church.
Those men came to keep watch with him, and for many nights in
succession they heard the same sounds which Father Vianney had heard,
without seeing any person or thing to account for them. Like their
pastor they were much wrought up over the strange occurrences.</p>
<p>One winter's night, however, when the rappings upon the front door
were louder than usual, the curé sprang from his bed and hurried to
the courtyard, believing that he might find traces of the marauder in
the freshly fallen snow. But there were no foot prints to be seen.
Then Father Vianney no longer doubted that it was Satan that was
persecuting him and this conviction removed all sentiments of fear
from his soul, for he knew well how to combat the enemy of God.</p>
<p>These violent satanic assaults were kept up against Father Vianney
for the space of thirty-five years. That a man so tortured and
deprived continually of his needed rest, so enfeebled by the
mortifications which he imposed on himself, did not die earlier than
his seventy-fourth year, seems almost more miraculous than the
inexhaustible activity of his life.</p>
<p>Meanwhile his enemies had advanced a step further in their efforts
to render this zealous pastor's position precarious. They calumniated
him to the bishop of the diocese of Belley, to which Ars now belonged,
saying that their pastor was unfit to be entrusted with the care of
souls. The bishop, however, would not condemn the poor priest without
a hearing. He sent his vicar-general to Ars and informed Father
Vianney that in future he must submit to the episcopal jurisdiction
all difficult cases of conscience coming before him as well as the
decision he has passed upon them himself. The investigation was
welcomed by Father Vianney, and he very soon submitted over two
hundred cases. Bishop Devie, of Belley, examined these himself and
found that the decisions reached upon the difficult points (excepting
only two cases in which his opinion differed), were correct. From that
moment he would not suffer anyone to speak, of the curé of Ars as an
incapable pastor. About this time, moreover, the bishop personally
visited Father Vianney at his house in Ars, and found there a zealous
and holy man, instead of the ridiculous figure which the curé's
enemies had made him out to be. Speaking one day to his assembled
clergy, in regard to the curé of Ars, he said: "Gentlemen, would that
you all had a trifle of the foolishness about which you make so merry.
It would not prejudice your intelligence in the least!"</p>
<p>Yet, far more than the protection thus afforded by the bishop, did
the unalterable humility and amiability of Father Vianney bring these
opponents to reason. In the course of a few years this noble character
ceased to have any enemies among the clergy. Laymen likewise stopped
their calumnies, even if they did not cease their ridicule
altogether.</p>
<p>But God had prepared a new trial for His servant. We have already
told how Father Vianney had founded and under great difficulties had
carried on the home for neglected children called the "The
Providence." The time had come when this useful institution was to be
taken from his control. The board of education had found fault with
the home as being neither a regular school nor a hospital. The clergy
criticised its management by lay persons, until at last the bishop was
prevailed upon to put the institution in charge of a religious order,
and the curé, although sore at heart, subscribed to the deed of
surrender in November, 1847. Thereupon the Sisters of St. Joseph from
Bourg were put in charge of the institution, which came to be known as
a "Free School for Girls." Soon it became evident that this blow, hard
as it was, but in which Father Vianney as ever beheld the finger of
God, turned out to his profit, for all the powers of his body and mind
henceforth were devoted to the single purpose of the conversion of
sinners, who kept coming to Ars in ever increasing numbers.</p>
<p>Before we speak further on this point, we must draw attention to an
event that took place in the year 1843. In May of that year, Father
Vianney became ill as a result of overwork. So serious was his
condition that he received the last Sacraments. There was universal
sorrow in the village and the church was constantly filled with
parishioners who prayed that he might be spared. But the physicians
gave no hope. One of them as he touched the cold hand of the
motionless figure, exclaimed aloud: "He has only a few moments to
live."</p>
<p>The dying man heard plainly the verdict pronounced over him and at
that same moment, as he afterwards declared, he was seized with such
terror of the supreme judgment of God, that he besought the
intercession of the Blessed Virgin and of St. Philomena, and he
implored the Almighty through them to vouchsafe to postpone the awful
moment of his appearance before Him. His prayers were heard.</p>
<p>To the great astonishment of those present the vitality of the man,
sick apparently unto death, returned and, on May 19th, Father Vianney
was able to be carried into the church amidst the rejoicings of his
children, and there he prayed at length before the Tabernacle. But at
this time he made a resolution which, earlier, he could not have
carried into effect. His bishop, seeing the great amount of work which
had to be performed at Ars, had sent him an assistant priest, to whom,
in his humility, Vianney considered himself subordinate and, knowing
that there was some one now to take his place, he decided to retire
from his pastoral work and to spend the rest of his "poor life," as he
called it, in some remote monastery. To carry out this purpose he
planned to flee from Ars under cover of the darkness and mist. But his
project was betrayed by his friends at the "Providence" to whom he was
obliged to give necessary instructions regarding the future care of
the children. Great excitement immediately prevailed among the
parishioners and the many visitors, and they quietly surrounded the
rectory in order to prevent his escape. The pastor, however, managed
to elude them and made his way through a path in the garden which had
been overlooked and hastened to his birth-place at Dardilly.</p>
<p>Thereupon the sheep went in search of their shepherd, but as soon
as they discovered him in his home he fled farther away, they still
following him. At last, moved by the distress which his departure had
caused and the appeals made to him by the inhabitants of Ars to return
to them, he concluded that it was the holy will of God that he should
return and resume the heavy burden of his pastorate, from which he had
hoped to be relieved. All thought they had surely won him back, but
later on the Blessed Vianney made two other efforts to lay down his
pastoral cares and to retire into a monastery, there to work out his
own salvation. But God granted the fervent petition of the people of
Ars and caused these plans to come to naught.</p>
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