...the
LORD is my portion ...He is good to those
whose hope is in Him... Lamentations 3:24, 25
whose hope is in Him... Lamentations 3:24, 25
"Christ Jesus had stolen
the heart of Rita
–
He
alone possessed it. He made her heart His heart;
and
under the white veils of the Eucharist He was for her soul,
as
He is for all loving hearts, heaven upon earth.
How
sweet is the moment
in
which poor humanity, wearied and afflicted,
may
remain alone, with Jesus alone, in the Sacrament of Love;
for
there the Lord, with His flaming heart open, calls unto
all,
'You that are burdened and heavy
laden,
come unto Me and I will refresh you.' "
come unto Me and I will refresh you.' "
Fr M.J. Corcoran,
OSA
Our Own St Rita: A Life of the Saint of the Impossible
Our Own St Rita: A Life of the Saint of the Impossible
St
Rita of Cascia
Italy
~ 1381-1457
Wife,
Mother, Augustinian Nun
Stigmatist, Incorrupt
Stigmatist, Incorrupt
Patron
of Impossible Cases*
*especially matrimonial difficulties
*especially matrimonial difficulties
FEAST
DAY - May 22
The
saint of Cascia belongs to the great host of Christian women who "have had a
significant impact on the life of the Church as well as of society" (Apostolic
Letter Mulieris dignitatem, n. 27). Rita well interpreted the
"feminine genius" by living it intensely in both physical and spiritual
motherhood. " ~ Saint John Paul
II
MORE
ABOUT ST
RITA:
From an early
age Rita desired to become a nun, but her parents thought it best for her to
marry. She suffered through a difficult marriage for 18 years, with an abusive,
ill tempered husband. He converted shortly before his political murder. Their
twin sons wanted to avenge his death. When St. Rita learned that her sons
planned to avenge their father's murder, she prayed to God to save them from
committing such a grievous sin. Almost immediately, both boys fell ill. She
nursed them lovingly, and they both died, reconciled with God.
Now a widow
and childless, St. Rita applied for admission to the Augustinian convent in
Cascia, but was refused because its rule only permitted virgins. After much
prayer and entreaty, an exception was finally granted to her and she was allowed
to enter in 1413. The story is told that St. Rita was miraculously transported
into the monastery itself, despite its locked doors; when the nuns found her
there in the morning, they allowed her to stay, taking it as the will of
God.
St
Rita had a deep devotion to the passion of
Christ and the Holy Eucharist. She spent many hours in
Eucharistic Adoration daily. Confined to her bed the last four years of her
life, she consumed little more than the Eucharist.
Near the end of her life, she had a visitor from her home town who asked if
she'd like anything. Rita's only request was a rose from her family's estate.
The visitor went to the home, but it being January, knew there was no hope of
finding a flower; but there, sprouted on an otherwise bare bush, was
a single rose blossom.
St
Rita was a stigmatist who suffered a wound of Christ on her forehead. When St.
Rita died her face became beautifully radiant and her cell was aglow with
heavenly light, while the great bell of the monastery rang of itself. Her
incorrupt body, which for several centuries gave off a sweet fragrance, is
preserved in a shrine in Italy .
It is said that at her beatification, the body of the saint raised itself up and
opened its eyes. St. Rita is called "The Saint of the Impossible" and is
particularly invoked in cases of matrimonial
difficulties.
St.
Rita of Cascia was the first woman to be canonized in the Great Jubilee at the
beginning of the 20th century, on May 24, 1900.
St
Rita of Cascia, pray for us!
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