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  1. On May 25, 1925, Madeleine Sophie Barat was proclaimed a saint of the Catholic Church. General chapters of the Society are held every eight years. The Special Chapter of 1967 began the process of renewal of structures and way of life, and was memorable for the resignation of superior general Sabine de Valon, who had been elected for life.

  2. Reflection. St. Madeleine Sophie Barat did not let the French Revolution and the oppression of Christian schools stop her from starting a new religious congregation – the Society of the Sacred Heart, an order dedicated to the education of young girls.

  3. At her birth, Sophie Barat inherited two rich spiritual traditions: the Medieval School of Spirituality and the17th century French School of Spirituality, both of which expressed a warm and tender love of the Heart of Christ.Yet she also inherited the spirituality of Jansenism.This was an austere theology, which viewed God as distant, severe and menacing and the human being, as sinful, unable to please God.The world, especially the human body, was suspect and innately evil.

  4. Phil Kilroy rscj. (2012). The Society of the Sacred Heart in 19th Century France, 1800-1865. Cork University Press.

  5. Journée Madeleine-Sophie BARAT. LES CE1 vont découvrir le laboratoire. Mélanie CHAMBRIN rencontre les CE1-1. Carnaval à Sophie Barat. Tout voir. L'actualité du ...

  6. "Madeleine Sophie Barat" published on by null. (1779–1865),virgin, foundress of the Society of the Sacred Heart. Born at Joigny in Burgundy, the daughter of Jaques Barat, who owned a small vineyard and was a cooper by trade, she was educated largely by her brother Louis, eleven years her senior and a student for the priesthood.

  7. École secondaire Sophie-Barat is a Francophone public co-educational secondary school located in the Ahuntsic-Cartierville borough in Montreal, Quebec.Part of the Centre de services scolaire de Montréal (CSSDM), it was originally in the Catholic School board Commission des écoles catholiques de Montréal (CECM) before the 1998 reorganization of School boards from religious communities into linguistic communities in Quebec.