Saint of the Day – 18 February – St Bernadette Soubirous (1844-1879) of Lourdes – Virgin, The Visionary of Lourdes, Consecrated Religious. Born on 7 January 1844 at Lourdes, Hautes-Pyrénées, France and died on 16 April 1879, Nevers, Nièvre, France of natural causes, aged 35. Her Body is incorrupt and is on display in Nevers, France. Patronages – Bodily illness, Lourdes, France, shepherds, against poverty, people ridiculed for their faith. She was Canonised on 8 December 1933 by Pope Pius XI.
The Hidden Life at Nevers
St Bernadette, herself, used this expression:
“I came here to hide myself.”
In Lourdes, she was Bernadette, the Visionary. In Nevers, she became Sister Marie Bernard, who would be a Saint. One often hears about the severity of her Superiors towards her but it has to be understood that she was a unique case – she had to be shielded from curiosity, to be protected and, the community too, had to be protected.
Bernadette gave her account of the Apparitions before the assembled community on the day after she arrived, thereafter, it was not to be spoken of. She was kept in the Mother House where she loved to care for the sick. On the day of her Profession, no particular office or task had been prepared for her for the Bishop declared that her work would be “the work of prayer.”
“Pray for sinners” the Lady had said. She remained faithful to this task.
“My weapons,” she wrote to the Holy Father, “are prayer and sacrifice.”
Her own illness made her a regular patient in the Infirmary and then, there were endless parlour visits. “These poor Bishops, they’d do better to stay at home.” Lourdes was a long way off … she would never return to the Grotto. But every day she made her pilgrimage in spirit. She did not speak of Lourdes but she lived its message.
“You will become the first to live the message,” said her Confessor Father Douce. And in fact, after having been Assistant Infirmarian, she entered bit by bit into sickness herself.
She did “her work” in this, accepting all crosses for sinners, in an act of perfect love. “After all, they are our brothers.”
During long sleepless nights, uniting herself with the Masses celebrated throughout the world, she offered herself as a “living crucified” in the tremendous combat between light and darkness, bound, with the Blessed Virgin Mary, to the Mystery of the Redemption, eyes fixed on the Crucifix:
“That is where I find my strength.”
She died at Nevers on 16 April 1879, aged 35. The Church proclaimed her a Saint on 8 December , 1933, not for having been chosen for the Apparitions but for the way in which she responded to that grace
Dear little Saint Bernadette, Pray for us!






