04:36
Spirituality of Bl. Josepha Hendrina Stenmanns. worldsspsrome. Blessed Hendrina Stenmanns (28 May 1852 - 20 May 1903) was a German Roman Catholic professed religious who assumed the religious name of "…More
Spirituality of Bl. Josepha Hendrina Stenmanns.

worldsspsrome. Blessed Hendrina Stenmanns (28 May 1852 - 20 May 1903) was a German Roman Catholic professed religious who assumed the religious name of "Josefa" and was the co-founder of the Missionary Sisters Servants of the Holy Spirit (1889) which she founded alongside Saint Arnold Janssen and Blessed Helena Stollenwerk.[1] She was also a professed member of the Third Order of Saint Francis since 1871.[2]
Stenmanns was beatified on 29 June 2008 in the Netherlands after Pope Benedict XVI approved her beatification months earlier - the pontiff delegated Cardinal José Saraiva Martins to preside over the celebration on his behalf.[2][3]
Hendrina Stenmanns was born in the German Confederation in mid 1852 as the eldest of seven children to Wilhelm Franz Stenmanns (1821-1887) and Anna Maria Wallboom (1825-1 December 1878).[1][2]
She became concerned in her childhood for the poor people and for those who suffered and so visited them with her mother to provide them with both spiritual and material comfort.[1] Stenmanns worked as a silk weaver after finishing school - which she began in the spring of 1858[2] - in order to contribute to the household income. Stenmanns became professed as a member of the Third Order of Saint Francis in 1871 due to feeling called to live a life for the poor - but she harbored an ardent desire for the monastic life.[1][2] An aunt of hers was a member of that order. The German Kulturkampf - which sought to subjugate the church to state control - made religious life impossible so she had to put her plans to become a religious on hold. She promised to look after her father and siblings to her mother who was on her deathbed and later died on 1 December 1878.[2] This - to her - was a sure sign that she would have to renounce the religious life.[1][3]
Stenmanns relocated to the Netherlands on 12 February 1884 (after a period of annual visits)[2] where she met Saint Arnold Janssen who was there due to the Kulturkampf and was in the process of establishing a religious order. The priest accepted her request to be part of his mission house for priests as a kitchen maid though her true intention was to support Janssen through this work as a call from God.[1][3]
On 8 December 1889 she became a postulant alongside other religious and the foundations of the order she co-found with Janssen and Blessed Helena Stollenwerk was laid. She entered the novitiate on 17 January 1892 and then received the light blue habit from Janssen in that same month.[2] professed her first vows in March 1894 in the new religious name of "Josepha".[1][3] Stenmanns made her perpetual vows on 8 December 1901. She later became the directress of postulants and then appointed as superior in 1896. On 11 September 1895 she travelled to Argentina with her fellow religious to oversee the first establishment of the congregation in that nation.[2]
Stenmann's death in the Netherlands in 1903 was most unexpected to the congregation and the religious died of lung disease.[2] She had suffered from dropsy and asthma attacks before her death.