Blessed Maria Theresia Bonzel, born Regina Christine Wilhelmine Bonzel, was a Roman Catholic German nun and was the founder of the Sisters of Saint Francis of Perpetual Adoration.
Background
Regina Christine Wilhelmine Bonzel was born on 17 September 1830, the elder of two daughters of Friedrich Edmund and Angela Maria Liese Bonzel. Her mother sent her to study at the Ursulines in Cologne and it was there that her vocation matured.
Career
By the time of her death, the order had sisters all over the world, and had established schools, hospitals, and orphanages. Bonzel was beatified in 2013 by Cardinal Angelo Amato on behalf of Pope Francis. She was familiarly called "Aline".
Her parents were opposed to her desire to enter religious life but she nonetheless entered the Third Order of Saint Francis in 1850.
Alongside eight other women she joined and took the name of "Maria Theresia". She established the Sisters of Saint Francis of Perpetual Adoration on 20 July 1863.
During the war years of 1870-1871, eight hundred wounded soldiers were cared for by the Sisters from Olpe. Mother Maria Theresia decided to begin a new foundation in North America.
The first missionaries arrived in Lafayette, Indiana, in December 1875 and began their work of caring for the sick.
By 1882 legal restrictions in Germany had eased, and new members were again admitted. Bonzel died on February 6, 1905 at Olpe. The order at the time of her death had 73 branches in Germany and 49 in North America.
The cause of beatification commenced under Pope John XXIII on 18 September 1961 which bestowed on her the title of Servant of God.
The Positio – which documented her life of heroic virtue – was submitted to the Congregation for the Causes of Saints which led to Pope Benedict XVI"s declaration of Bonzel to be Venerable on 27 March 2010. An investigation into a presumed miracle took place in 2001 and Pope Francis approved the miracle on 27 March 2013.
Cardinal Angelo Amato – on behalf of Pope Francis – presided over the beatification on 10 November 2013. The miracle involved the cure of a 4-year-old boy in Colorado Springs, Colorado.