Saints and Heroes
"Saints and Heroes"
Catherine of Sienna
Deacon Keith A Fournier
(c) Third Millennium, LLC
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"Eternal Trinity, Godhead, mystery deep as the sea, you could give me no greater gift than the gift of yourself. For you are a fire ever burning and never consume, which itself consumes all the selfish love that fills my being.”
St. Catherine of Sienna
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Born in 1347, Catherine Benincasa was the twenty-fifth child born to Giacomo and Lapa Benincasa. Her father Giacomo was a wealthy businessman. Her mother, as one can imagine, had her days—and nights—filled with caring for twenty-five children!
At the age of six, young Catherine was walking home when she saw Jesus seated in glory. Accompanying Him were members of the heavenly family—the “Church triumphant”—Peter, Paul, and John. It was on that day that young Catherine decided to surrender her life to the Lord in prayer and service to the Church.
Catherine’s parents wanted her to marry and have the best life they could provide. At first, they resisted young Catherine’s desire to surrender the joys of marriage for the life of remaining celibate, a life consecrated to God and His Church.
But, like many parents of saints and heroes of the faith, they began to see the finger of God working in their daughter’s life. They could not stand in the way. In fact, they paved the way in prayer.
At the age of sixteen, Catherine chose the way of another hero of the faith, Dominic. He had left a way of life for all who sought to live what the church has called the “evangelical counsels.” Catherine became a tertiary (lay follower) of the Dominican rule.
She embraced a life of poverty, chastity, and obedience. She lived this response to the Gospel while still living with her family. Catherine understood that the mission field is often found in our own backyard!
She first reached out and cared for those whom others avoided in the hospital located in Sienna, her own hometown. She, like so many other saints and heroes, believed that Jesus hid Himself in the face and the wounds of the poor.
She preferred the lepers and the cancer patients, loving them with the love of the Crucified One whom she loved. Then the Lord gave her sisters—women who recognized that Catherine was a servant of the Servant. They began to walk the way with her.
When the plague broke out in Sienna, one of her friends wrote:
“She was always with the plague-stricken. She prepared them for death; she buried them with her own hands. I myself witnessed the joy with which she nursed them and how effective her words were.”
Catherine also regularly frequented the prisons and loved to work with those preparing for execution. One of the many stories told concerns one prisoner, whom she led to faith and baptism. Having heard he was afraid to die, she wanted him to experience the love of Jesus so much that she stayed with him, holding his head even as he was executed!
Catherine’s reputation for holiness spread throughout Italy. Her wisdom and ability to bring true reconciliation and authentic peace to hostile parties led to her being sought out by families and political leaders who were at odds with one another.
That same gift was offered, as were all of her gifts, to the Church. Rome, the center of Western Christianity, had fallen into decay. The pope was in Avignon in the South of France. Though the Church was struggling, Catherine remained loyal. She referred to the pope as the “sweet Christ on earth.”
Having heard from the Lord in prayer that the pope must return to Rome in order to begin the needed reforms of the Church, she courageously advised Pope Gregory (and sought the support of every cardinal who would receive her letters) that he must return to Rome!
In 1377, Gregory did return. When he died the next year, Urban VI was elected in Rome and a rival, Clement VII, installed in Avignon. A time of great upheaval, division, and suffering—known as the Great Schism—ensued in the Church. Catherine’s heart broke over the divisions in the body of Christ.
She persevered in prayer and continued her counsel to all who would listen: the pope, cardinals, kings, princes and bishops. In January of 1380, while praying at Peter’s tomb, she experienced the great weight of the Church fall on her shoulders, and she offered herself and her suffering as a “victim” for the renewal of the Church.
On April 29 of that year, around midday, God called her to Himself. Days before her death, she wrote, “If I die, let it be known that I die of passion for the Church.” Her deathbed prayer is a model of love poured out for all who follow Jesus Christ and desire the unity of the ...
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