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Author Topic: St Rita of Cascia  (Read 502 times)

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Offline poche

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St Rita of Cascia
« on: May 22, 2014, 02:48:50 AM »
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  • Rita's childhood was one of happiness to her parents. To satisfy her desire of a life of union with God by prayer, her parents fitted up a little room in their home as an oratory, where she spent all her spare moments. At the age of twelve, however, she desired to consecrate herself to God in the religious state. Pious though her parents were, their tearful pleadings to postpone her noble purpose prevailed on Rita, and they gave her in marriage, at the age of eighteen, to an impulsive, irascible young man, who was well fitted to try the patience and virtue of the holy girl. Two sons were born to them, each inheriting their father's quarrelsome temperament. Rita continued her accustomed devotions, and her sanctity and prayers finally won her husband's heart so that he willingly consented that she continue her acts of devotion.

    Eighteen years had elapsed since her marriage, when her husband was murdered by an old enemy; both of her sons died shortly after. Rita's former desire to consecrate herself to God again took possession of her. Three times she sought admittance among the Augustinian Nuns in Cascia, but her request was refused each time, and she returned to her home in Rocca Porrena. God Himself, however, supported her cause. One night as Rita was praying earnestly in her humble home she heard herself called by name, while someone knocked at the door. In a miraculous way she was conducted to the monastic enclosure, no entrance having been opened. Astonished at the miracle, the Nuns received Rita, and soon enrolled her among their number.

    St. Rita's hidden, simple life in religion was distinguished by obedience and charity; she performed many extreme penances. After hearing a sermon on the Passion of Christ she returned to her cell; kneeling before her crucifix, she implored: "Let me, my Jesus share in Thy suffering, at least of one of Thy thorns". Her prayer was answered. Suddenly one of the thorns detached and fastened itself in her forehead so deeply that she could not remove it. The wound became worse, and gangrene set in. Because of the foul odor emanating from the wound, she was denied the companionship of the other Sisters, and this for fifteen years.

    Miraculous power was soon recognized in Rita. When Pope Nicholas IV proclaimed a jubilee at Rome, Rita desired to attend. Permission was granted on condition that her wound would be healed. This came about only for the duration of the trip. Upon her return to the monastery the wound from the thorn reappeared, and remained until her death.

    As St. Rita was dying, she requested a relative to bring her a rose from her old home at Rocca Porrena. Although it was not the season for roses, the relative went and found a rose in full bloom. For this reason roses are blessed in the Saint's honor.

    After St. Rita's death, in 1457, her face became beautifully radiant, while the odor from her wound was as fragrant as that of the roses she loved so much. The sweet odor spread through the convent and into the church, where it has continued ever since. Her body has remained incorrupt to this day; the face is beautiful and well preserved.

    When St. Rita died the lowly cell was aglow with heavenly light, while the great bell of the monastery rang of itself. A relative with a paralyzed arm, upon touching the sacred remains, was cured. A carpenter, who had known the Saint, offered to make the coffin. Immediately he recovered the use of his long stiffened hands.

    As one of the solemn acts of his jubilee, Pope Leo XIII canonized St. Rita on the Feast of the Ascension, May 24, 1900.

    http://www.catholicculture.org/culture/liturgicalyear/calendar/day.cfm?date=2014-05-22

    Patron: Abuse victims; against loneliness; against sterility; bodily ills; desperate causes; difficult marriages; forgotten causes; impossible causes; infertility; lost causes; parenthood; sick people; sickness; sterility; victims of physical spouse abuse; widows; wounds.

    Symbols: Nun holding a crown of thorns; nun holding roses; nun holding roses and figs; nun with a wound on her forehead.



    Offline poche

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    St Rita of Cascia
    « Reply #1 on: May 22, 2014, 02:51:15 AM »
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  • St. Rita of Cascia is the patroness of desperate cases. Her aged parents were Antonio Mancini and Amata Ferri Mancini, two hard-working peasants of Rocca Porena, a hamlet in the commune of Cascia in Umbria. They had been married fifty-three years when Rita was born. This event in their advanced age helps one to believe in the legend that an angel appeared to Amata Mancini and told her: "You shall have a daughter and you shall call her Margherita." The good lady, relying solely on divine Providence, did not complain: "If it's God's will, I would prefer a boy, so that he could grow up and care for this farm and for Antonio and for me when we can work no longer."

    The angel's prophecy was fulfilled and a girl was born to Amata and Antonio, May 22, 1381. The parents called this miraculous flower, which blossomed in the winter of their lives, Margherita—"the pearl." The old folks grew young again with the joy that had once been in the hearts of Sts. Joachim and Anne.

    As soon as Margherita could walk, she toddled off with her father to the fields. She was able to pronounce the names of the domestic animals, the names of the tools, the names of the trees and of the various fruits. Once in a while the little girl went with her mother to the mountains to pick berries or to gather herbs.

    The parents could not read, but they knew their prayers, the catechism and the Sunday Gospel. They meditated on the Scriptures, and the Gospel stories were engraved upon their untutored minds.

    From her devoted parents Rita soon learned her prayers by heart; she gradually came to know her catechism and the truths of her holy religion. Like Sts. Zachary and Elizabeth, Antonio and Amata taught by example. Both couples were "just before God, walking blamelessly in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord" (Luke 1: 6). Rita learned charity toward persecuted folk from her parents. They loved their neighbors as the Master had commanded.

    It was Rita's desire to be a nun. Out of deference to her parent's wishes, however, she agreed to marry a youth selected by her parents. This man turned out to be a brute, and once was accused of murder. His wife's heroic patience caused grace to flow into his soul, and he finally repented. Yet his enemies murdered him. His two sons sought revenge, but contracted a fatal fever which gave them time to repent.

    Now all alone in the world, Rita entered the convent of the Augustinian nuns where she died in sanctity, May 22, 1457, having fulfilled the vocations of daughter, wife, mother, widow, and nun. On May 24, 1900, Pope Leo XIII canonized St. Rita, heralding her as the saint of impossible and desperate cases. St. Rita's Church at Cascia was raised to the ranks of a basilica, September 11, 1955, by Pope Pius XII. Her tomb contains her incorrupt body where numerous miracles have been wrought since her death. The Saint's prayers have aided countless youths in choosing a vocation which they never would have dreamed humanly possible to achieve.

    http://www.catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=6115


    Offline Cantarella

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    St Rita of Cascia
    « Reply #2 on: May 22, 2014, 10:50:36 AM »
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  • St Rita Pray for us
    If anyone says that true and natural water is not necessary for baptism and thus twists into some metaphor the words of our Lord Jesus Christ" Unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Spirit" (Jn 3:5) let him be anathema.