Chasing Saints Relics • Saints • Prayer
Portrait of Bl. Maria Helena Stollenwerk, patron of Missionaries, religious sisters

Saint profile

Bl. Maria Helena Stollenwerk

1852–1900

Associated with Conversion, Religious; patronage includes Missionaries; religious sisters.

ConversionReligious
Life dates1852–1900
Feast dayNovember 28
PatronageMissionaries; religious sisters

Biography and devotion

Bl. Maria Helena Stollenwerk: life, patronage, and devotion

Blessed Maria Helena Stollenwerk was born Helena Stollenwerk in Rollesbroich, Germany, on 28 November 1852. From youth she desired missionary life, especially service to children in China. At a time when opportunities for women missionaries were limited, she persevered in prayer and discernment until she came into contact with St. Arnold Janssen at Steyl in the Netherlands.

Her longing for mission helped shape the founding of the Missionary Sisters Servants of the Holy Spirit. Helena became one of the co-foundresses, taking the name Maria Helena. The congregation was formed to support and undertake missionary work through prayer, education, catechesis, and service. She served in leadership but also suffered misunderstandings, changes of office, and the purification that often comes when a founding work grows beyond the founder’s personal control.

Later she entered the contemplative branch, the Servants of the Holy Spirit of Perpetual Adoration, embracing a hidden missionary life of prayer before the Blessed Sacrament. This movement from active missionary desire to contemplative offering did not cancel her vocation; it fulfilled it in another way. She offered her life for the missions she had long desired to serve.

Maria Helena died on 3 February 1900. Pope St. John Paul II beatified her in 1995. She is remembered by missionary sisters, adorers, and those whose vocation requires patient surrender. Her life shows that missionary zeal can be lived both in visible service and in hidden adoration.

Her sacrifice is especially moving because her first dream was active work in China, yet obedience led her through founding responsibilities and finally into adoration. She gave up the exact form of mission she had imagined while keeping the missionary heart. In the Steyl family, her life shows that evangelization needs both sisters who go out and sisters who remain before the Eucharistic Lord for the mission.

At a glance

Life dates
1852–1900
Feast day
November 28
Patronage
Missionaries; religious sisters

Relic in the Chasing Saints collection

A relic of Bl. Maria Helena Stollenwerk is present in the Chasing Saints Relic Collection. Private registry details, certificate IDs, provenance notes, and storage information are intentionally not shown publicly.

Reported favors

Favors received and prayers answered

Share a favor received
0approved favors shared by visitors for this saint. These are personal testimonies, not official declarations of miracles.
No approved favors have been shared here yet.