Saint Catherine of Siena: Suffering With Joy
By: Christ or Chaos
Saint
Catherine of Siena, the Third Order Dominican whose feast we celebrate April 30, 2015, was truly a victim-soul, favored by
God as early as the age of six years old with Heavenly visions and
gifts. Saint Catherine of Siena suffered much within her wealthy family
as she sought the things of Heaven and eschewed the pleasures and riches
of this passing, mortal vale of tears. She was very misunderstood and
very harshly treated at times by her own mother, who reduced her to the
status of a family servant when she, Catherine Benincasa, announced at
the age of twelve that she would not marry and that she desired a life
of solitude in prayer. Saint Catherine of Siena preferred God to
creatures, accepting all manner of calumnies and sufferings as the price
she had to pay for her mystical espousal to Christ the King at the age
of twelve.
Yes,
it is difficult to “kick against the goad” in the world. It is hard,
humanly speaking, for many to realize that we must be avowedly Catholic
at all times and in all places and to all people no matter the
consequences that might befall us in this passing, mortal vale of tears.
However, we must indeed come to accept the simple truth that all will
be confusion and chaos and disorder and rot in the lives of individuals
and their nations unless each person absent a due subordination to the
Deposit of Faith and a due reliance upon the supernatural helps
available only in and from the Catholic Church, now found in the
catacombs. Saint Catherine of Siena wanted only to please God. Her heart
was on fire for love of Him as He has revealed Himself to us
exclusively through the Church that He Himself founded upon the Rock of
Peter, the Pope. And she was quite willing to “kick against the goad” to
be faithful to her Beloved.
We
must, therefore, persevere in defense of the Faith in the spirit with
which Saint Catherine of Siena persevered in the face of that fierce
opposition, sometimes bordering on mockery, within her own family that
she accepted with such serenity and joy. We must accept suffering and
misunderstanding and rejection and ridicule with that same sort of
serenity and joy as our sins imposed suffering, misunderstanding,
rejection and ridicule upon Our Divine Redeemer, Our Blessed Lord and
Saviour Jesus Christ, during His Passion and Death. Who are we to be
exempted from the same kind of suffering and rejection and ridicule and
mockery? We deserve far, far worse than anything we are privileged to
suffer in this life as we make reparation for our sins to the Most
Sacred Heart of Jesus through the Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart of
Mary. Suffering is the path to salvation. There is none other.
Saint
Catherine of Siena understood this. She was given infused knowledge by
Our Lord Himself, which made her so suspect in the eyes of some that she
was called before a general chapter of the Order of Preachers to defend
herself. Her examiners were astounded at the clarity and theological
precision of her answers. It was from that point forward in her brief
thirty-three years of life that she became, in effect, a spiritual
director to priests and learned theologians, reconciling enemies to each
other and serving the plague-stricken, including several of her
priest-followers, when Siena was in the grip of a severe outbreak of the
plague. Saint Catherine’s holy name even suffered after her death as
she, whose body was incorrupt, was blamed for precipitating the Great
Western Schism in 1379 by having convinced Pope Gregory XVI to return to
the seat of the Holy Faith, Rome, from exile in Avignon, France, a move
that made her hated among many within the papal curial, most of them
being French themselves, did not want to leave the creature comforts of
Avignon for the grime and filth of Rome at the end of the Fourteenth
Century. It is most likely the case that Saint Catherine knew that she
would be excoriated many after her death as she had been in life. This
did not matter at all. Right was right, no amount of “strategic
considerations” could ever cause her to veer from the course that she
knew to be correct.
It
was, as mentioned just above, in her home as a child that Catherine
Benincasa learned how to carry her cross and to accept without complaint
the cruelties visited upon her by her mother and siblings. Just
consider this brief passage from an account of the life of the saint who
lived on nothing other than Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ
in the Eucharist for weeks on end and who considered it be a singular
privilege to suffer with Him for the sake of souls:
Back
home, Catherine began to make penances for the love of Jesus. She began
to eat less and less, and to sleep less and less. She spent her nights
praying fervently, keeping up straight on the hard floor.
Catherine’s
parents and relatives were puzzled. Why was she such a strange girl?
Why didn’t she like fine clothes as the other girls did? Why didn’t she
want to be admired? Why didn’t she like boys? She was entering her
teens, and since she was charming and had a winning personality, her
relatives thought it was time for her to be married.
But
Catherine had vowed her virginity to God at the age of seven; she
wished to be only His, and refused to listen to talk of boy friends and
marriage.
“Let us put her to doing the housework,” her parents decided. “Then she won’t be able to spend all her time praying.”
So
Catherine took care of the house, doing each and every duty well. She
was serving God with her hands, while she kept Him in her thoughts and
in her heart. Instead of lessening, her thoughts and in her heart.
Instead of lessening, her love for Him and union with Him grew. A great
resolve was forming within her: she wanted to become a sister.
When
her parents found out her hopes, they said, “No.” But Catherine did not
let that stop her. She kept on begging her mother to let her mother to
let her enter the Dominicans, and paid no attention at all when friends
told her mother, “Catherine is too pretty to be a sister!”
Too
pretty? Would such a human motive come between Catherine and her
spiritual desire? “Send me a sickness, my Lord,” the girl prayed. Make
me ugly, but grant me my desire.”
The
sickness came, and Catherine’s beauty faded. At last she was permitted
to enter the Third Order of St. Dominic. As a religious, she continued
to live in the world, and went about doing good. Her father let her
spend part of the family’s income in helping the poor. (Fifty-Seven Saints for Boys and Girls, Daughters of Saint Paul, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, 1963, pp. 282-283.)
Mary
Fabyan Windeatt had this description of Saint Catherine of Siena’s
confrontation with her mother about being a Third Order member of the
Order of Preachers:
“I want to be a Dominican,” she announced. “Not a nun in a convent, but a Dominican Tertiary.”
“Why
can’t you be like other people?” sighed her mother, when she heard the
news. Lapa knew that Tertiaries were very holy people, men and women,
who wore the habit of a friar or a nun and yet lived in their own homes.
Usually they were middle-aged folk, not sixteen-year old girls like
Catherine.
Catherine
wondered if her mother were going to be angry. “I think God wants me to
be a Tertiary, not a nun,” she said. “It is really a wonderful thing to
be called to be Tertiary, Mother.”
Lapa
shook her head. “Why do you want to dress like a nun and yet not really
be one? Oh, Catherine, you are always causing me trouble! First you
must cut off your hair. Then you must live in the worst room in the
house. Now you want to go and be a Dominican Tertiary! Oh, dear ! I
never had such trouble with my other children!”
“I
have promised not to leave my little room,” said Catherine. “Please,
Mother, go to the Dominican Tertiaries and tell them I want to be a
Tertiary, too.”
Lapa
shrugged her shoulders. “I will not,” she said. “I have no use for
being different from other people. Besides, the Tertiaries will never
have you. They are all older women–widows, too. The would not want to
take in a young girl.”
“Oh, please go and ask them!” begged Catherine. “If you only knew how much I want to wear the blessed habit of Saint Dominic!”
“There
is no arguing about it,” said Lapa. “I will not have you in my house,
wearing a religious habit and looking like a nun. Don’t bother me
again.”
Catherine
knelt down in the middle of the her little room. She was very sad. How
could she go to become a Tertiary when she had promised to remain at
home to pray for sinners?
“Dearest
Saint Dominic, you will have to help me,” she said. And then a little
of her sadness left her when she offered her disappointment for the
conversion of a certain man who had sworn he would never go to church
again.
The
same year that Catherine was sixteen, a smallpox plague swept through
the town. The dyer’s young daughter caught the terrible disease and for a
time it seemed as though she would die of it. She lay on her hard bed,
her face and body covered with sores, her thoughts far away from this
world. Poor Lapa was terribly worried.
“Oh,
dear! Isn’t there something you would like, Catherine? Perhaps I could
make you a pudding or something. Or maybe you would like a little fruit .
. .”
But Catherine shook her head. “The only thing I want is to be a Dominican Tertiary,” she said sadly.
Lapa
realized that she could hold out no longer. “All right,” she said. “I
will go to the woman in charge of the Tertiaries and see what can be
done.” (Mary Fabyan Windeatt, Saint Catherine of Siena, published originally in 1941 by Sheed and Ward. Republished by TAN Books and Publishers in 1993, pp. 32-34.)
Saint
Catherine of Siena suffered for the Faith throughout her entire life,
including bearing Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ’s stigmata.
Tormented by terrible demonic visions now again, something that is not
uncommon for genuine mystics to experience, Saint Catherine was also
given many consolations in the gifts bestowed upon her by Our Lord and
the spiritual intimacy that she had with her Beloved, Christ the King.
Although
formally unschooled and for a time completely illiterate, unable to
read or write until she asked for the gift to do so (asking later that
the same gift be taken away from her), she wrote her famous Dialogue,
which many masters of the interior life consider to be one of the most
brilliant expositions of the the deepest secrets of Divine Intimacy. She
also composed this eloquent letter to Pope Gregory XI to urge him to
return to the seat of the legitimate successors of Saint Peter, Rome:
In
the name of Jesus Christ crucified and of sweet Mary: Most holy and
most reverend my father in Christ Jesus: I Catherine your poor unworthy
daughter, servant and slave of the servants of Christ, write to you in
His precious blood; with desire to see you a good shepherd. For I
reflect, sweet my father, that the wolf is carrying away your sheep, and
there is no one found to succor them. So I hasten to you, our father
and our shepherd, begging you on behalf of Christ crucified to learn
from Him, who with such fire of love gave Himself to the shameful death
of the most holy cross, how to rescue that lost sheep, the human race,
from the hands of the demons; because through man’s rebellion against
God they were holding him for their own possession.
Then
comes the Infinite Goodness of God, and sees the evil state and the
loss and the ruin of these sheep, and sees that they cannot be won back
to Him by wrath or war. So, notwithstanding they have wronged Him-for
man deserves an infinite penalty for his disobedient rebellion against
God-the Highest and Eternal Wisdom will not do this, but finds an
attractive way, the gentlest and most loving possible to find. For it
sees that the heart of man is in no way so drawn as by love, because he
was created by love. This seems to be the reason why he loves so much:
he was created by nothing but love, both his soul and his body. For by
love God created him in His Image and Likeness, and by love his father
and mother gave him substance, conceiving and bearing a son.
God,
therefore, seeing that man is so ready to love, throws the book of love
straight at him, giving him the Word, His Only-Begotten Son, who takes
our humanity to make a great peace. But justice wills that vengeance
should be wrought for the wrong that has been done to God: so comes
Divine Mercy and unspeakable Charity, and to satisfy justice and mercy
condemns His Son to death, having clothed him in our humanity, that is,
in the clay of Adam who sinned. So by His death the wrath of the Father
is pacified, having wrought justice on the person of His son: so He has
satisfied justice and has satisfied mercy, releasing the human race from
the hands of demons. This sweet Word jousted with His arms upon the
wood of the most holy Cross, death fighting a tournament with life and
life with death: so that by His death He destroyed our death, and to
give us life He sacrificed the life of His body. So then with love He
has drawn us to Him, and has overcome our malice with His benignity, in
so much that every heart should be drawn to Him: since greater love one
cannot show-and this He himself said-than to give one’s life for one’s
friend. And if He commended the love which gives one’s life for one’s
friend, what then shall we say of that most burning and perfect love
which gave its life for its foe? For we through sin had become foes of
God. Oh, sweet and loving Word, who with love hast found Thy flock once
more, and with love hast given Thy life for them, and hast brought them
back to Thy fold, restoring to them the Grace which they had lost!
Holiest
sweet father of mine, I see no other way for us and no other aid to
winning back your sheep, which have left the fold of Holy Church in
rebellion, not obedient nor submissive to you, their father. I pray you
therefore, in the name of Christ crucified, and I will that you do me
this grace, to overcome their malice with your benignity. Yours we are,
father! I know and realize that they all feel that they have done wrong;
but although they have no excuse for their crimes, nevertheless it
seemed to them that they could not do differently, because of the many
sufferings and injustices and iniquitous things they have endured from
bad shepherds and governors. For they have breathed the stench of the
lives of many rulers whom you know yourself to be incarnate demons, and
fallen into terrible fears, so that they did like Pilate, who not to
lose his authority killed Christ; so did they, for not to lose their
state, they maltreated you. I ask you then, father, to show them mercy.
Do not regard the ignorance and pride of your sons, but with the food of
love and your benignity inflict such mild discipline and benign reproof
as shall satisfy your Holiness and restore peace to us miserable
children who have done wrong.
I
tell you, sweet Christ on earth, on behalf of Christ in Heaven, that if
you do this, without strife or tempest, they will all come grieving for
the wrong they have done, and lay their heads on your bosom. Then you
will rejoice, and we shall rejoice, because by love you have restored
the sheep to the fold of Holy Church. And then, sweet my father, you
will fulfill your holy desire and the will of God by starting the holy
Crusade, which I summon you in his name to do swiftly and without
negligence. They will turn to it with great eagerness; they are ready to
give their lives for Christ. Ah me, God, sweet Love! Raise swiftly,
father, the banner of the most holy Cross and you will see the wolves
become lambs. Peace, peace, peace, that war may not delay that happy
time!
But
if you will wreak vengeance and justice, inflict them on me, poor
wretch, and assign me any pain and torment that may please you, even
death. I believe that through the foulness of my iniquities many evils
have occurred, and many misfortunes and discords. On me then, your poor
daughter, take any vengeance that you will. Ah me, father, I die of
grief and cannot die! Come, come, and resist no more the will of God
that calls you; the hungry sheep await your coming to hold and possess
the place of your predecessor and Champion, Apostle Peter. For you, as
the Vicar of Christ, should abide in your own place. Come, then, come,
and delay no more; and comfort you, and fear not anything that might
happen, since God will be with you. I ask humbly your benediction for me
and all my sons; and I beg you to pardon my presumption. I say no more.
Remain in the holy and sweet grace of God-Sweet Jesus, Jesus Love. (As
found in an article about Saint Catherine of Siena’s life: http://www.ewtn.com/library/MARY/CATSIENA.htm.)
The
account of Saint Catherine of Siena’s life as found in the readings for
Matins in today’s Divine Office should give us much inspiration for our
own days, replete as they are with challenges even greater than the
ones faced during her own days in the Fourteenth Century:
This
Katharine was a maiden of Sienna, and was born of godly parents, (in
the year 1347.) She took the habit of the Third Order of St Dominick.
Her fasts were most severe, and the austerity of her life wonderful. It
was discovered that on some occasions she took no food at all from Ash
Wednesday till Ascension Day, receiving all needful strength by taking
the Holy Communion. She was engaged oftentimes in a wrestling with
devils, and was sorely tried by them with divers assaults : she was
consumed by fevers, and suffered likewise from other diseases. Great and
holy was the name of Katharine, and sick folk, and such as were vexed
with evil spirits, were brought to her from all quarters. Through the
Name of Christ, she had command over sickness and fever, and forced the
foul spirits to leave the bodies of the tormented.
While
she dwelt at Pisa, on a certain Lord’s Day, after she had received the
Living Bread Which came down from heaven, she was in the spirit; and saw
the Lord nailed to the Cross advancing towards her. There was a great
light round about Him, and five rays of light streaming from the five
marks of the Wounds in His Feet, and Hands, and Side, which smote her
upon the five corresponding places in her body. When Katharine perceived
this vision, she besought the Lord that no marks might become manifest
upon her flesh, and straightway the five beams of light changed from the
colour of blood into that of gold, and touched in the form of pure
light her feet, and hands, and side. At this moment the agony which she
felt was so piercing, that she believed that if God had not lessened it,
she would have died. Thus the Lord in His great love for her, gave her
this great grace, in a new and twofold manner, namely, that she felt all
the pain of the wounds, but without there being any bloody marks to
meet the gaze of men. This was the account given by the handmaiden of
God to her Confessor, Raymund, and it is for this reason that when the
godly wishes of the faithful lead them to make pictures of the blessed
Katharine, they paint her with golden rays of light proceeding from
those five places in her body which correspond to the five places
wherein our Lord was wounded by the nails and spear.
The
learning which Katharine had was not acquired but inspired. She
answered Professors of Divinity upon the very hardest questions
concerning God. No one was ever in her company without going away
better. She healed many hatreds, and quieted the most deadly feuds. To
make peace for the Florentines, who had quarrelled with the Church, and
were under an Ecclesiastical Interdict, she travelled to Avignon, (in
1376) to see the Chief Pontiff Gregory XI. To him she showed that she
had had revealed to her from heaven his secret purpose of going back to
Rome, which had been known only to God and himself. It was at her
persuasion, as well as by his own judgment, that the Pope did in the end
return to his own See. She was much respected by this Gregory, as well
as by his successor Urban VI., who even employed her in their embassies.
The Bridegroom took her home, upon the 29th day of April, in the year
of salvation 1380,when she was about thirty-three years old, after she
had given almost countless proofs of extraordinary Christian graces, and
manifestly displayed the gifts of Prophecy and miracles. Pope Pius II.
enrolled her among the Virgin Saints. (Matins, The Divine Office, April
30.)
Saint
Catherine of Siena had the stigmata impressed upon her soul mystically
by Our Lord Himself. We need to beg her to have our puny hearts enlarged
as we seek to imitation her holy life and saintly example, remembering
that we must love suffering as she did.
We
must remember that will be hated by relatives and friends and
acquaintances for making no concessions to the false religion of
conciliarism, which itself makes all manner of concessions to false
religions that are hated by God, worship the devil and are thus harmful
to souls and to social order and the cause of genuine peace, that of the
Divine Redeemer Himself, in the world.
We
must remember that will be hated for attempting to defend the honor and
majesty of God as a prideful Modernist handles with his own priestly
hands the symbols of false religions in direct violation of the First
Commandment. We will be hated for pointing out the evils of a synthetic
“liturgy” that incorporate elements of Protestantism and is designed to
propagate a Judeo-Masonic spirit of naturalism by means of the
“inculturation of the Gospel.” We will be hated for reminding our
associates that to attack the very nature of dogmatic truth itself, as
the now retired Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI has done throughout the
course of his priesthood, is to attack the very nature of God Himself.
None
of this matters, however. Our sins deserve us to be punished by means
of humiliation and calumny, among so many other ways. Following the
example of Saint Catherine of Siena, we should consider it a joy to
suffer justly for our sins as we attempt to make reparation for them in
some small manner as the consecrated slaves of Our Blessed Lord and
Saviour Jesus Christ through His Most Blessed Mother’s Sorrowful and
Immaculate Heart, especially at those times when we have been given the
opportunity to defend the truths of the Faith against the attacks of the
fomenters of the novelties of our own day.
No
matter the opposition that befalls us, my friends, we must be about the
business of planting a few seeds for the restoration for the Social
Reign of Christ the King, of making possible the restoration of the
Catholic City that was so near and dear to the heart of Pope Saint Pius
X.
We
help to restore the Catholic City every time we receive Holy Communion
worthily in a true offering of the Immemorial Mass of Tradition by a
true bishop or a true priest.
We
help to restore the Catholic City as we spend time each day in prayer
before Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ’s Real Presence in the
Most Blessed Sacrament, especially on First Friday into the morning
hours of First Saturday.
We help to restore the Catholic City with each Rosary we pray.
We help to restore the Catholic City with each good, sincere, humble, integral Confession we make of our sins.
We
help to restore the Catholic City with each blessed Green Scapular we
pass out to a lost soul who has been abandoned to the ways of the world
by the counterfeit church of conciliarism.
We
help to restore the Catholic City by consecrating ourselves to Our
Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ through the Sorrowful and
Immaculate Heart of Mary, offering up all of our prayers and penances
and sacrifices and mortifications and humiliations to His Most Sacred
Heart through her Immaculate Heart.
We help to restore the Catholic City by enthroning our homes to the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
We help to restore the Catholic City by fulfilling Our Lady’s Fatima Message in our own lives as best we can.
We
help to restore the Catholic City by remembering that this is the time
that God has ordained from all eternity for us to live in, seeking
therefore to cooperate with the graces He won for us by the shedding of
every single drop of His Most Precious Blood on the wood of the Holy
Cross and that flows into our hearts and souls through the loving hands
of Our Lady, the Mediatrix of All Graces, to persevere to the point of
our dying breaths in states of Sanctifying Grace as members of the
Catholic Church with Perfect Contrition for our sins.
Dom
Prosper Gueranger, O.S.B., provided an inspiring prayer of this mystic
who lived such a life of total self-denial in service to her Espoused,
Christ the King:
Holy
Church, filled as she now is with the joy of her Jesus’ Resurrection,
addresses herself to thee, O Catharine, who follwest the Lamb
whithersoever he goeth. Living in this land of exile, where it is only
at intervals that she enjoys his presence, she says to thee: Hast thou
seen him upon whom my soul loveth? Thou art his Spouse; so is she: she
there are no evils, no separation, for thee; whereas for her, the
enjoyment is at rare and brief periods, and even so there are clouds
that dim the lovely light. What a life was thine, O Catharine! uniting
in itself the keenest compassion for the sufferings of Jesus, and
intense happiness by the share he gave thee of his glorified life. We
might take thee as our guide both to the mournful mysteries of Calvary,
and to the glad spendours of the Resurrection. It is these latter that
we are now repsectfully celebrating: oh! speak to us of our Risen Jesus!
Is it not he that gave thee the nuptial ring, with its matchless
diamond set amidst four precious gems? The bright rays which gleam from
thy stigmata tell us that when he espoused thee to himself thou sawest
him all resplendent with the beauty of his glorious Wounds. Daughter of
Magdalen! like her, thou art a messenger of the Resurrection; and when
thy last Pasch comes–the Pasch of thy thirty-third year–thou takest thy
way to heaven, to keep it for eternity. O zealous lover of souls! love
them more than ever, now that thou art in the palace of the King, our
God. we too are in the Pasch, intercede for us, that the life of Jesus
may never die within us, but that we strengthen its power by loving him
with an ardour like thine own.
Our
God used thee as his instrument, O humble virgin, for bringing back the
Roman Pontiff to his See. Thou was stronger than the powers of this
earth, which would fain have prolonged an absence disastrous to the
Church. The relices of Peter in the Vatican, of Pual on the Ostian Way,
of Lawrence and Sebastian, of Cecily and Agnes, exculted in their
glorious tombs when Gregory entered with triumph into the Holy City. It
was through thee, O Catharine, that a ruinous captivity of seventy
years’ duration was brought on that day to a close, and that Rome
recovered her glory and her life. In these our days, hell has changed
its plan of destruction! men have deprivedits Pontiff-King of the city
which was chosen by Peter as the See where the Vicar of Christ should
reign to the end of the world. It is this design of God, this design
which was so dear to thee, O Catharine! is it now to be frustrated? Oh!
our aid–and through they divine Spouse, in his just anger, permits us to
sufer these humiliations, pray that at least they may be shortened.
Pray,
too, for unhappy Italy, which was so dear to thee, and which is so
justly proud of its Saint of Siena. Impiety and heresy are now permitted
to run wild through the land; the name of thy Spouse is blasphemed; te
people are taught to love error, and to hat what they had hitherto
venerated: the Church is insulted and robbed: faith has long since been
weakened, but now its very existenced is imperiled. Intercede for thy
unfortunate country, dear Saint! oh! surely, it is time to come to her
assistance, and rescue her from the hands of her enemies. The whole
Church hopes that thou mayest effect the deliverance o this her
illustrious province: delay not, but calm the storm which seems to
threaten a universal wreck! (Dom Prosper Gueranger, O.S.B., The Liturgical Year: Paschal Time: Book II, pp. 389-391.)
May
Saint Catherine of Siena, who suffered much for the good of Holy Mother
Church, help us to cleave to the same unadulterated and immutable Faith
as she cleaved to and defended in word and in deed with every beat of
her humble, suffering heart.
Four
hundred fifty-two years after the death of the great defender of the
good of Holy Mother Church, Saint Catherine of Siena, Pope Gregory XVI
explained in Mirari Vos, August 15, 1832, that true popes adhere to Catholic teaching without any novelties. So must we:
These
and many other serious things, which at present would take too long to
list, but which you know well, cause Our intense grief. It is not enough
for Us to deplore these innumerable evils unless We strive to uproot them.
We take refuge in your faith and call upon your concern for the
salvation of the Catholic flock. Your singular prudence and diligent
spirit give Us courage and console Us, afflicted as We are with so many
trials. We must raise Our voice and attempt all things lest a wild boar
from the woods should destroy the vineyard or wolves kill the flock. It is Our duty to lead the flock only to the food which is healthful.
In these evil and dangerous times, the shepherds must never neglect
their duty; they must never be so overcome by fear that they abandon the
sheep. Let them never neglect the flock and become sluggish from
idleness and apathy. Therefore, united in spirit, let us promote our
common cause, or more truly the cause of God; let our vigilance be one
and our effort united against the common enemies.
Indeed
you will accomplish this perfectly if, as the duty of your office
demands, you attend to yourselves and to doctrine and meditate on these
words: “the universal Church is affected by any and every
novelty” and the admonition of Pope Agatho: “nothing of the things
appointed ought to be diminished; nothing changed; nothing added; but
they must be preserved both as regards expression and meaning.”
Therefore may the unity which is built upon the See of Peter as on a
sure foundation stand firm. May it be for all a wall and a security, a
safe port, and a treasury of countless blessings. To check the
audacity of those who attempt to infringe upon the rights of this Holy
See or to sever the union of the churches with the See of Peter, instill
in your people a zealous confidence in the papacy and sincere
veneration for it. As St. Cyprian wrote: “He who abandons the See of
Peter on which the Church was founded, falsely believes himself to be a
part of the Church.” (Pope Gregory XVI, Mirari Vos, August 15, 1832.)
When
was the last time you heard those who have severed their relationship
with the true Church by means of their embrace of one condemned notion
after another as they regard with public esteem and respect false
religions quote from Pope Saint Agatho on the simple fact that “nothing
of the things appointed ought to be diminished, nothing changed, nothing
added; but they must be preserved both as regards expression and
meaning”? Not lately, I can assure you. Not lately. It is the conciliar pontiffs who have abandoned the See of Peter by changing and adding
and diminishing the things appointed by Our Blessed Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ to His true Church, which is why the forces of Modernity in
the world have been able to do their nefarious work with the help of so
many Catholics who are attached to the structures of the counterfeit
church. It is the conciliar popes who must return to the Faith just as
Pope Gregory XVI had to return to the seat the Faith, Rome.
May
it be our privilege to plant a few seeds for the day when the enemies
of the Immaculata in the world and the counterfeit church of
conciliarism are defeated for all to see as glory is given to the Most
Holy Trinity through her Immaculate Heart that was pierced with Seven
Swords of Sorrows because of our sins. And may we rely every day upon
the holy patronage of Saint Catherine of Siena, who should inspire us to
love God with a purity of intention that will inspire us to the heights
of personal sanctity, praying as many Rosaries each day as our
state-in-life permits.
Immaculate Heart of Mary, triumph soon!
Viva Cristo Rey! Vivat Christus Rex!
Saint Joseph, Patron of Departing Souls, pray for us.
Saints Peter and Paul, pray for us.
Saint John the Baptist, pray for us.
Saint John the Evangelist, pray for us.
Saint Michael the Archangel, pray for us.
Saint Gabriel the Archangel, pray for us.
Saint Raphael the Archangel, pray for us.
Saints Joachim and Anne, pray for us.
Saints Caspar, Melchior, and Balthasar, pray for us.
Saint Catherine of Siena, T.O.P., pray for us.
You may wish to refer to Sigrid Undset's biographical work: CATHERINE OF SIENA. As Christ tells us, no one took His Life; rather He lay it down. So it was with Catherine. She BEGGED her mother for the smallest room in the house for prayer and communion with Christ with the OFFER to care for hearth and home. In addition, Mother Benecasa joined Catherine in the Third Order of Penance along with other older Catholic women. The striking thing was that a young woman as Catherine would seek this. Catherine was the 24th child of a large Catholic family whose twin had perished in birth! Her mother should be canonized as well. ;) -Denise D'Lisa TOP
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ReplyDeleteFor information on the Traditional Third Order of Penance: Sacred Heart Lawrence Mass