The association worked to correct abuses among the
clergy and in
monasteries and to procure
missions for
rural parishes. Moreover, it was interested in the care of the poor, the improvement of hospitals, and the administration of those condemned to
galleys and
prisons; and, that the poor might have legal advice, it created what today is known as the (public legal services). It protected the
fraternities of shoemakers and tailors organized by the Baron de Renty and assisted Vincent de Paul in most of his undertakings.
Duelling The Company established the Confraternity of the Passion of Christ, led by Marquis Antoine de Salignae-Fénelon to discourage
duelling.
Foreign missions In 1653, the Company provided financial assistance to aid the establishment of the
Paris Foreign Missions Society. In order to assist missionaries traveling to Asia, in 1660 the
Compagnie de Chine was founded, modeled on the
Dutch East India Company. The
Propaganda, the Portuguese, the Dutch, and the Jesuits objected that this was an attempt by France to become engaged in the Asian apostolate and trade. In 1664, the Compagnie de Chine was absorbed by
Jean-Baptiste Colbert's
Compagnie française pour le commerce des Indes orientales. ===
General Hospital of Paris=== The devastation of the
Fronde resulted in a particularly large influx of beggars into Paris. The growing population of beggars was approximately 40,000 people, many of whom were refugees impoverished during the wars. This amount would have constituted roughly 10% of the Parisian population. To alleviate such destitution, in 1652 the Company started relief efforts centered around the development of a charitable storehouse stocked with provisions, clothing, and agricultural implements to be distributed among the impoverished peasants. At that time the Company spent 380,000 livres in charity each year. However, after the wars' conclusion, the company decided to advocate for a policy of confinement, a more long-term solution to the city's poverty and mendicancy. Christophe du Plessis-Montbard, a member of the Company of the Blessed Sacrament, began to work with the Parliament in 1653 on developing plans for a new Parisian general hospital. The General Hospital of Paris was ultimately established three years later in 1656 by a royal edict of Louis XIV. The hospital was endowed not just with authority on its own premises, but also with jurisdiction over all the poor residents of the city. During the middle decades of the century, the Company of the Blessed Sacrament "...was the only organization with any political effectiveness in the country."
Armand de Bourbon, Prince of Conti joined in the mid 1650s. On one occasion, by secret manoeuvring, the Company succeeded in preventing twenty-five otherwise eligible young Huguenots from being received as attorneys at the parlement of Paris. According to the Count d'Argenson and
René Rapin, a Jesuit who opposed the Company, proceedings of the Company were the starting-point of the policy that was to culminate in 1685 in the
revocation of the Edict of Nantes. == Decline ==