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Author Topic: St. Gertrude The Great  (Read 1002 times)

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Offline Binechi

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St. Gertrude The Great
« on: November 16, 2016, 05:40:32 AM »
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  • Offline Binechi

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    St. Gertrude The Great
    « Reply #1 on: November 16, 2016, 05:45:09 AM »
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    St. Gertrude the Great, Abbess and Virgin
    by Father Francis Xavier Weninger, 1876


    The Roman Martyrology commemorates, today, the virgin St. Gertrude, who is to be distinguished from another virgin of the same name, whose life is recorded in the month of March. The Breviary relates of her, as follows: Gertrude was born at Eisleben, in Saxony, the same place where, two hundred years later, the unhappy Luther came into the world. When hardly five years old, she went into the Benedictine convent at Rudersdorf, to consecrate herself entirely to the service of the Most High. From that time, she despised all that was worldly, and striving only after virtue, led an almost heavenly life. The meditation of the divine mysteries, to which she was much devoted, served her as an incitement to virtue and perfection. In all her actions, she sought only the honor of God. Her conversations on our Lord and His holy life were most edifying, and her devotion to the Holy Eucharist, and the bitter passion and death of Christ was so fervent, that she frequently shed floods of tears in contemplating them. The Virgin Mother, whom in a vision, Christ had given her as mother, she venerated with filial affection. She daily offered all her prayers and other good works for the souls in purgatory, many of whom she freed from their sufferings.

    When thirty years of age, she was chosen abbess or superior, and successively governed two convents, with so much mildness, wisdom and zeal for the maintenance of the Rule, that the houses under her charge were justly regarded and praised as true dwellings of religious perfection. Although the holy virgin, as superior, stood above all, she would be the least of them, and endeavored to show those under her all possible kindness. The Almighty favored her with extraordinary gifts. She had many visions of Christ, the Blessed Virgin and other Saints. The revelations which she had of secret and future events were almost numberless. She often went into ecstasy during her prayers and continued in it a considerable length of time. But notwithstanding these and other divine gifts, she was so humble that she frequently said that one of the greatest miracles of divine goodness was the fact that God suffered her to serve Him.

    Quite different was the judgment of heaven; for, to say nothing of many other proofs of the favor with which she was regarded, we will only relate, that Christ Himself revealed to another holy person, that He had chosen for Himself a most lovely dwelling in the heart of Gertrude. God made the hour of her death known to her; and the nearer it approached, the more her zeal in the Lord's service increased; until a happy death called her home, in 1292. She was during her life, venerated as an example of all virtues, among which her love of God was the brightest. This love was so great, that her death was caused rather by its ardor than by the sufferings of her malady. Before and after her death, God wrought many and great miracles by her intercession.




    PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS.


    The nearer the hour of her death approached the more zealous St. Gertrude became in the service of God. Many persons are aware when their lives are drawing to a close, either because they are very old, or because they perceive that their strength leaves them, or because God visits them with a mortal sickness. If these persons wish to act sensibly they will endeavor to employ the time left to them to the best advantage. They ought to prepare themselves carefully and in time for death; bear the pains they suffer patiently, in the spirit of penance, and offer them to the Almighty; practice good works daily; repent daily and hourly of the sins of their past life, in order to atone, at least in some measure, for their former negligence, and yet gather some treasures for eternity, during the few days of life that still remain.

     "Work while it is day," admonishes the Lord; "the night cometh when no man can work." (John ix.). The laborers in the gospel who did not begin to work until the eleventh hour, received the same wages as those who had worked longer, because in their zeal they had done as much in the last hour, as the others during the whole day. St. Chrysostom says: "At the eleventh hour are called those who are advanced in age. This parable is intended to encourage those who do not reform until they are old, that they may not think that their happiness in heaven will not be as great as that of others." But Christ gave this parable to comfort not only the aged, but all those who have been negligent in the service of the Most High. Such people especially when they feel that their end draws near, should employ all their strength to serve the Lord, in order to repair, in a short time, what they have neglected. They will surely gain eternal life by acting thus. St. Chrysostom says: "The older we are or the nearer we are, for other reasons, to eternity, the more eagerly must we run along the way to Heaven."

    The special devotion of St. Gertrude to the passion and death of our Lord, prompts me to say a few words more. Harder than a stone must you be, if, considering not only who He was who suffered and died for your sake, but also, how He suffered in soul and body and how painful a death He died--harder than a stone, I say, must you be, if, considering all this, you are not moved with love and devotion towards your Savior. But you must prove your gratitude and love, especially, by earnestly repenting of your sins, which were the cause of Christ's sufferings and death.

     "He was wounded for our iniquities, He was bruised for our sins," says the Prophet. (Isai. liii.) "See, O man!" says St. Bernard, "the greatness of your wounds, in the awful suffering of the Lord." And if you recognize the enormity of sin, tell me, how can you dare to sin again? "The son of God died for our sins;" says Origen: "and canst thou, O Christian, delight in sinning?" You know that Christ, true God and Man, sweat blood for your crimes, in the garden of Olives; that He was made a prisoner, was derided, scourged, crowned with thorns, and finally crucified; and you dare to sin anew? Is then hell itself enough to punish such abominable wickedness? The holy Apostle curses all those who do not love our Lord Jesus Christ. What then does he deserve who even dares to offend Him anew? "If any man love not our Lord Jesus Christ, let him be Anathema Maranatha." (1 Cor. xvi.)


    Offline Binechi

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    St. Gertrude The Great
    « Reply #2 on: November 16, 2016, 05:51:13 AM »
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    by a Religious of the Order of Poor Clares,


    "St. Gertrude, in the most extensive sense, was a daughter of the cloister. Officium and sacrificium, the Scriptures and the Liturgy, are the two wings by which pure souls fly to God in monastic life. The Missal and the Breviary are the two fountains of liturgical devotion from which they may draw the pure waters of life. These waters and those wings were well understood and appreciated in the Middle Ages; and in the sixty thousand convents which sent up praise to God, sicut incensum in conspectu ejus, during the lifetime of St. Gertrude, there was not one being who more fully grasped these two means of perfection, or turned them to greater advantage, than our Saint. Through them she became the grosse Aebtissinn; through them, directed by the tender, loving spirit of the Rule, she became the most perfect and striking exponent of the spirit of St. Benedict that can be found in the lives of the Saints of God."

    http://catholicharboroffaithandmorals.com/St.%20Gertrude%20Book.html


    To download the entire book, click on the link below.  



     Download the book, "The Life and Revelations of Saint Gertrude"

    Offline Binechi

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    St. Gertrude The Great
    « Reply #3 on: November 16, 2016, 05:55:20 AM »
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     CONTENTS

     PART I.

     CHAPTER I. PAGE 1.
     The Saint's birth and parentage--Her early dedication to God--Intellectual gifts--Divine communications concerning her sanctity-- Our Lord declares that He finds rest and repose in her heart-- Desires a holy person to seek Him there.


     CHAPTER II. PAGE 11.
     St. Gertrude predicts the election of Adolphus of Nassau--Quiets the fears of the sisters, who expect to suffer a temporal loss--Her election as Abbess--Removal to Heldelfs--Revelations of her sanctity-- Our Lord appears to her, bearing the house of religion--Her gene rosity of spirit.


     CHAPTER III. PAGE 20.
     The Saint obtains favourable weather--Miracles mentioned in her Office --Union of her will with God's--Counsels others --Desired to write her revelations--Her sanctity revealed to St. Mechtilde.


     CHAPTER IV. PAGE 29.
     She asks St. Mechtilde to pray for her--Our Lord is pleased with her patience and mildness--He declares that He dwells in her; and hides her imperfections.


     CHAPTER V. PAGE 32.
     The Saint as Abbess--Tenderness towards others--Care of the sick-- Her last illness--Value of suffering--She is forbidden to resign her office--Our Lord accepts as done to Himself what is done for her St. Lebuin.


     CHAPTER VI. PAGE 41.
     Her dying words--Devotion to the Divine Office--Tenderness to her spiritual children--Our Lord appears to her in her agony--Promises to receive her as He received His Blessed Mother--Angels call her to paradise.


     CHAPTER VII. PAGE 45.
     Her death--Of her eternal joys--Our Lord consoles her religious-- Revelations of her sanctity--Prays that her religious may be com forted at her tomb--Her obsequies--Our Lord blesses her tomb.


     CHAPTER VIII. PAGE 52.
     Favours granted at the interment of the Saint--Souls released through her intercession--How our Lord gathered a lily--Of fear in the last agony--Purgatory in sickness--Efficacy of prayers for the dead.


     CHAPTER IX. PAGE 56.
     Happy death of another religious--Our Lord specially rewards her charity to others--Purgatory in sickness--How our Lord purified a dying religious--Efficacy of prayers for the departed--Of Masses for the dead--Reward of fervour when suffering.


     CHAPTER X. PAGE 60.
     St. Gertrude not formally canonised--History of her cultus--Benedict XIV.--Her Office approved--Name inserted in Martyrology--Lans pergius--His History--Preface to Insinuationes--Plea for the female sex--Conclusion.


     PART II.

     CHAPTER I. PAGE 71.
     The Saint's thanksgiving to God for the first grace vouchsafed to her, by which her mind was withdrawn from earthly things and united to Him.


     CHAPTER II. PAGE 74.
     How the grace of God illuminated her interiorly.

     CHAPTER III. PAGE 75.
     Of the pleasure which God took in making His abode in the soul of Gertrude.


     CHAPTER IV. PAGE 79.
     Of the stigmatas imprinted in the heart of Gertrude, and her exercises in honour of the Five Wounds.


     CHAPTER V. PAGE 82.
     Of the Wound of Divine Love; and of the manner of bathing, anointing, and binding it up.


     CHAPTER VI. PAGE 85.
     Of the intimate union of the Infant Jesus with her heart.


     CHAPTER VII. PAGE 88.
     The Divinity is imprinted upon the soul of Gertrude as a seal upon wax.


     CHAPTER VIII. PAGE 86.
     Of the admirable union of her soul with God.


     CHAPTER IX. PAGE 90.
     Of another admirable manner in which St. Gertrude was closely united to God.


     CHAPTER X. PAGE 92.
     How the Lord obliged her to write these things; and how He illuminated her.


     CHAPTER XI. PAGE 94.
     She receives the gift of tears, and is warned of the snares which the demon has laid for her.


     CHAPTER XII. PAGE 96.
     With how much goodness God bears our faults.


     CHAPTER XIII. PAGE 97.
     Of the necessity of exact vigilance over the senses and affections.


     CHAPTER XIV. PAGE 99.
     Different exercises by which the soul is purified.


     CHAPTER XV. PAGE 100.
     How agreeable works of charity are to God; and also meditations on holy things.


     CHAPTER XVI. PAGE 102.
     Of the inconceivable tenderness which the most glorious Virgin has for us.


     CHAPTER XVII. PAGE 104.
     Of the garments with which we should clothe Jesus and His Mother.


     CHAPTER XVIII. PAGE 106.
     How God bears with our defects--Instruction on humility.


     CHAPTER XIX. PAGE 107.
     How God is pleased to condescend to His creatures; and what glory God derives thence from the blessed.


     CHAPTER XX. PAGE 109.
     Of some considerable privileges which God granted to this Virgin, and of the grace which He promised to her clients.


     CHAPTER XXI. PAGE 114.
     Thanksgivings for the confirmation of the aforesaid favours.


     CHAPTER XXII. PAGE 116.
     How St. Gertrude was admitted to the vision of God--Of the kiss of peace, and other similar favours.


     CHAPTER XXIII. PAGE 119.
     Recapitulation of the gifts already mentioned--The Saint complains of her infirmity and ingratitude.


     CHAPTER XXIV. Page 128.
     Conclusion of this Book.