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{{short description|Spanish nun}}
{{More citations needed|date=May 2018}}
{{Expand Spanish|topic=bio|Joaquina María Mercedes Barceló Pagés|date=May 2024}}
{{Infobox saint
| honorific-prefix = [[Venerable]]
| name=
| honorific-suffix = [[Augustinians|OSA]]
|birth_date= July 24, 1857
|death_date= {{death date and age|1940|8|4|1857|7|24}}
|image=Svjoaquinapages.jpg
|imagesize=200px
|birth_place= [[Barcelona, Spain]]
|death_place= [[Manila, Philippines]]
}}
'''Joaquina
==Life and Mission==
Joaquina studied for fourteen years and was an intern at the Colegio de las Esclavas del Sagrado Corazon de Jesus (The Slaves of the Sacred Heart of Jesus) in Barcelona.
Despite her outgoing personality, she felt a calling to the contemplative life like her eldest sister, Ana Maria. She entered the Monasterio de las Comendadoras de San Juan de Jerusalén in Barcelona. The recurrence of an abscess in her knee forced her to leave the monastery.
She entered the
On November 21, 1883, she received the Augustinian habit of the tertiary order at the chapel of the orphanage in [[Mandaluyong]]. She was given the name Sor Maria de la Consolacion and was called Sor Consuelo upon her entrance to the novitiate.<ref name=college/>
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When the Americans came, the Augustinian provincial officially dissolved the sisters’ community, as well as their Colegio-Asilo. Mother Rita and mother Consuelo, bound by strict obedience, left the Philippines for Spain on March 13, 1899.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://philippineromancatholic.blogspot.com/2012/12/the-philippines-just-got-second.html|title=Filipino Catholicism: The Philippines just got a second venerable... did you notice?|last=Ca|date=2012-12-23|website=Filipino Catholicism|access-date=2018-06-16}}</ref> The Filipino beatas were left “with neither a house nor a single cent nor the hope of acquiring it.” But they resolved to stay together to preserve their community. They were supported by the daughters of charity, especially Mother Maria Ocariz.
The Filipino sisters applied for affiliation with the Agustinas Misioneras in Madrid. They also applied with the Beaterio de Barcelona
The Hermanas Agustinas Terciarias de las Islas Filipinas received on May 31, 1902, the official aggregation to the Augustinian Order by the Prior General in Rome. This was upon the recommendation of Mother Rita before she died in Barcelona.
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Back in the Beaterio of Barcelona, Mother Consuelo adapted so harmoniously with the Spanish Beatas that, in recognition of her personal qualities and her administrative ability, the members of the community elected her as their superior in February 1903. It was unprecedented for a beata to attain this position in a religious house where she did not originate. It was also rare for a beata to have become superior in two distinct communities (Mandaluyong and Barcelona).
On January 11, 1904, Father Bernabe Jimenez, the then spiritual director of the Filipino sisters, wrote Mother Consuelo informing her that the apostolic delegate, who had received petitions from the Filipino sisters in Manila for her and for Mother Rita’s return, had approved the petitions. But Mother Rita died on May 14, 1904, before she could return to the Philippines. On June 18, 1904, Mother Consuelo returned to the Philippines alone.<ref name=nominis/>
Upon Mother Consuelo’s return to the Philippines, she was at first appointed superior of the new novitiate house of St. Joseph in Sta. Ana, Manila.
==Death==
On July 31, 1940, she suffered two strong heart attacks and was brought to the hospital
Mother Consuelo died in the morning of August 4, 1940, at the age of 83.
==Legacy==
The principal theological virtue that characterizes the life and death of Mother Consuelo Barceló is the love of God and neighbor.<ref name=nominis/> Her words and her action give credence to her great charity that burst forth from the deep love of God so that she concretely demonstrated it in her love of her neighbors – her religious sisters, sisters of other congregations, the bishops, priests, the orphans and the working girls, the teachers and personnel of Augustinian schools, her family and other people, especially the poor. Her life had a clear option for the poor as seen in her exhortations to sisters to open their hearts to them.
The cardinal virtue that is foremost in her life is justice – both human and divine. This parallels the theological virtue of love of God and neighbor. She loved people so that she desired to give them what was their due. She loved God so that she gave to God, to the church, and to her institute what belonged to each of them. Coupled with justice is her prudence, fortitude and temperance which enabled her to judge justly and decide lovingly for the needs and concerns of the congregation and her individual sisters.
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==Veneration==
Barcelo Pages is currently in consideration for sainthood in the Roman Catholic Church with protocol number 2472 assigned by the [[Congregation for the Causes of Saints]]. On June 18, 2002, she was declared [[Servant of God]] and on December 20, 2012, she was declared [[The Venerable#Catholic|venerable]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://newsaints.faithweb.com/year/1940.htm#Pages|title=1940|website=newsaints.faithweb.com|access-date=2018-06-16}}</ref>
==Gallery==
<gallery widths=200 heights=150>
File:La_Consolacion_University_Philippines_Bulihan_Campus_47.jpg|[[La Consolacion University Philippines]]
File:La_Consolacion_University_Philippines_Malolos_City_19.jpg|Our Lady of Consolation Chapel (La Consolacion University Philippines)
File:La_Consolacion_University_Philippines_Malolos_City_01.jpg|Historical marker of garden
</gallery>
==External links==
* {{commonscat-inline}}
==References==
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{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Barcelo Pages,
[[Category:1857 births]]
[[Category:1940 deaths]]
[[Category:Augustinian nuns]]
[[Category:Venerated Catholics by Pope Benedict XVI]]
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