
Francis de Sales was born at Thorens in Savoie,
August 21, 1567 of a noble family, illustrious in the annals
of his native province. His father and mother brought him up
in the strictest principles of the Catholic faith, the more
so as near-by Geneva, where the family counted many friends,
was the central stronghold of Calvinism.
The young nobleman's education was that of the
youths of his class in the last years of the sixteenth century.
His mother taught him his prayers and catechism. He made his
first studies near his native place at the college of Annecy
in Savoie: later under the Jesuits in Paris. At the age of twenty,
the young man, handsome, cultured, and courtly, the stereotype
of the gentleman of his time, went to Italy to the famous law
school of Padua. The world smiled on him, pleasure beckoned
him, and the highest honors of the state were dangled before
his eyes. He made many friends by his refined manners, his kindly
humor, his eloquence, his wit, his unfailing kindness, and his
all winning gentleness and sweetness.
Because of his father's wishes, Francis received
a law degree and accepted office before the local Senate of
his native province of Chambery. In 1593, while still a layman,
he was named Provost of the Episcopal Chapter of Geneva and
the same year he was ordained a priest, which he knew to be
his true calling.
If there was ever a priestly soul, it was Francis
de Sales. His life was stainless. His character was balanced.
His intellect was of the highest order. His love of God burned
like a flame; it was tender and childlike; it was the very breath
of his apostolate.
Francis volunteered to reevangelize the Chablais
region of France, south of Geneva. There were some 72,000 souls
who were now Calvinists, their ancestors having succumbed to
Protestantism 60 years before. It was a hopeless looking mission
of reaching people who would not listen to Catholic preaching
for fear of reprisals. St. Francis' first few months saw mostly
failure, as he spent a very cold winter tramping of the countryside,
receiving a frigid welcome and sometimes sleeping in haylofts
at night. So he resorted to writing pamphlets which he posted
on walls and slipped under doors. By this method he was able
to reach the souls he was after, such that at the end of four
years almost the entire population had returned to the ancient
Catholic Faith. The conversion of the Chablais is truly one
of the most remarkable conversion stories in Catholic history.
The pamphlets that St. Francis de Sales wrote
are currently gathered together in a book called "The Catholic
Controversy" The arguments in this book were of vital importance
to me as I had been schooled in Calvinism and worked at a Reformed
Presbyterian School, Geneva College. Gently, St. Francis guided
me into an understanding of Catholic truth just as he did the
people of the Chablais 400 years ago. And so, to St. Francis,
the patron of writers, I dedicate this humble bookstore and
ask his intercession so that more people may read in the pages
of these books, the life-giving truth taught by Christ's Church.