
The Church of St. Etenne-des-grès in the centre of the Latin quarter, destroyed during the French Revolution. |
The little group continued to grow. Finally, a dozen students asked Claude to set up a community, so at Pentecost, 1703, in the Church of Saint Etienne-des-Grès, the group consecrated themselves to the Holy Spirit under the protection of the Immaculate Conception. Guided by Providence and with the approval of his confessor, Claude became the founder of the Seminary of the Holy Spirit even though he was not yet a priest and was only 23. During a retreat he made in the Christmas holidays of 1704, he wrote: "It is already three years since the Lord in his extraordinary mercy, pulled me from the world".
Six years of direction (Ordination and the death of Claude)
These poor clerics received an extended and solid theological formation from the Jesuits of Louis-le-Grand. Claude encouraged them to live their lives as priests in poverty and amongst the poor. They should deliberately avoid any lucrative benefices: they will be the apostles of the abandoned souls. In 1705, the Seminary set up a body of directors called "The Associates" who would jointly oversee the work. Claude was finally ordained priest on December 17, 1707, but he died of pleurisy on October 2, 1709, aged only 30. Following his wishes, he was buried with the poor in a common grave in the little cemetery of Saint Étienne-du-Mont, beside the chapel of Our Lady.
The Seminary, based solidly on poverty and a love of abandoned souls, already had 70 students. In an incredibly short time, it had built itself up as a practical response to the decrees of the Council of Trent on the formation of priests, becoming the nucleus of a religious family, the Congregation of the Holy Spirit, present today throughout the five continents.
The Diocese of Paris introduced the cause of the beatification of Claude François Poullart des Places in 1989.
The spirit behind the foundation of Poullart des Places
From its foundation, the Seminary of Poullart des Places was known by the following characteristics: the poverty of its students, the lack of fees charged for formation, the length and depths of its studies and its dedication to poverty and apostolic availability.
To be admitted to the Seminary of the Holy Spirit, it was not enough to be just poor; the applicant had to have obtained high marks in the entrance exam, which included amongst other things, an aptitude for study. These poor students received exactly the same formation as the scholastics of the Company of Jesus at Louis-le-Grand:
three years of philosophy, four years of theology and, for the more able, two years of further study.
To be poor meant to accept the conditions of the life of the poor. Throughout the XVIII century, the Seminary lived from hand to mouth. Pierre Caris, who was in charge of getting food for the poor students for more than 40 years, relied entirely on Providence to fill their plates: "I do my best to pay my debts but I never catch up with them..."
The Diocese of Paris introduced the cause of the beatification of Claude François Poullart des Places in 1989.