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Saint Frances of Rome
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Posted on 03/09/2005 5:21:51 PM PST by Salvation

FRANCES of Rome

27kb jpg holy card of Saint Frances of Rome with her Guardian Angel
Also known as
Franziske
Memorial
9 March
Profile
An aristocrat by birth, her parents were Paul Bussa and Jacobella de' Roffredeschi. Married at age 12 to Lorenzo de' Ponziani, her marriage lasted 40 years. Mother of three in 1400, 1404, and 1407. Widow.

Benedictine. Foundress of the Oblates of the Tor de' Specchi (Collatines). Said to have been guided by an archangel only she could see. Spent her life and fortune, both as laywoman and religious, in the service of the sick and the poor, including the founding of the first home in Rome for abandoned children. Dictated 97 Visions, in which she saw many of the pains of Hell.

On her feast day priests bless cars due to her patronage of cars and drivers. Frances certainly never drove, but legend says that when she went abroad at night, her guardian angel went before her lighting the road with a headlight-like lantern, keeping her safe in her travels.
Born
1384 in Rome, Italy
Died
1440 in Rome, Italy; relics at Saint Frances of Rome, Rome, Italy; entombed beneath the pavement of the Ponziani sacristy of the Church of Saint Cecilia, Rome
Canonized
1608 by Pope Paul V
Patronage
automobile drivers, automobilists, cab drivers, death of children, lay people, motorists, people ridiculed for their piety, Roman housewives, taxi drivers, widows
Representation

woman habited in black with a white veil, accompanied by her guardian angel, and sometimes carrying a basket of food; nun with her guardian angel dressed as a deacon; nun with a monstrance and arrow; nun with a book; nun with an angel with a branch of oranges near her; receiving the veil from the Christ Child in the arms of the Blessed Virgin
Additional Information
Open Directory Project links to sites devoted to or with information about Saint Frances of Rome
Images
Prayers
Prayer to...
Reading
God not only tested the patience of Frances with respect to her material wealth, but he also tested her especially through long and serious illnesses which she had to undergo. And yet no one ever observed in her a tendency toward impatience. She never exhibited any displeasure when she complied with an order, no matter how foolish.

With peace of soul, she always reconciled herself to the will of God, and gave him thanks for all that happened.

God had not chosen her to be holy merely for her own advantage. Rather the gifts he conferred upon her were to be for the spiritual and physical advantage of her neighbor. For this reason he made her so lovable that anyone with whom she spoke would immediately feel captivated by love for her and ready to help her in everything she wanted. She seemed able to subdue the passions of every type of person with a single word and lead them to do whatever she asked.

For this reason people flocked to Frances from all directions, as to a safe refuge. No one left her without being consoled, although she openly rebuked them for their sins and fearlessly reproved them for what was evil and displeasing to God.

Many different diseases were rampant in Rome. Fatal diseases and plagues were everywhere, but the saint ignored the risk of contagion and displayed the deepest kindness toward the poor and the needy. Her empathy would first bring them to atone for their sins. Then she would help them by her eager care, and urge them lovingly to accept their trials, however, difficult, from the hand of God. She would encourage them to endure their sufferings for love of Christ, since he had previously endured so much for them.

For thirty years Frances continued this service to the sick and the stranger. During epidemics like this it was not only difficult to find doctors to care for the body but even priests to provide remedies for the soul. She herself would seek them out and bring them to those who were disposed to receive the sacraments of penance and the Eucharist.



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A very unusual life.

Prayer to Saint Frances of Rome Dear Frances, you were an exemplary wife, ever faithful to your husband. After his death, you founded and governed the Congregation of Mount Olivet, revealing your great devotion to our Lord's Passion. Your faith in Angels was rewarded by frequent visions of them. Please pray for Catholics in our day that they may be as dedicated to God as you were. Amen.

1 posted on 03/09/2005 5:21:52 PM PST by Salvation
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To: Salvation
St. Frances, Widow, Foundress of the Collatines

MARCH 9

ST FRANCES, WIDOW, FOUNDRESS OF THE COLLATINES

Abridged from her life by her confessor, Canon Mattiotti, and that
by Magdalen Dell' Anguillara  superioress of the Oblates, or
Collatines. Helyot, Hist. des Ordr. Mont. t. vi. p. 208.

A. D. 1440

ST FRANCES was born at Rome in 1384. Her parents, Paul de Buxo and 
Jacobella Rofredeschi, were both of illustrious families. She
imbibed  early sentiments of piety, and such was her love of
purity from her tender  age that she would not suffer her own
father to touch even her hands,  unless covered. She had always an
aversion to the amusements of children,  and loved solitude and
prayer. At eleven years of age she desired to enter  a monastery,
but in obedience to her parents was married to a rich young  Roman
nobleman, named Laurence Ponzani, in 1396. A grievous sickness
showed how disagreeable this kind of life was to her inclinations. 
She joined with it her former spirit; kept herself as retired as
she could,  shunning feastings and public meetings. All her
delight was in prayer,  meditation, and visiting churches. Above
all, her obedience and condescension to her husband was
inimitable, which engaged such a return  of affection that for the
forty years which they lived together there never  happened the
least disagreement; and their whole life was a constant  strife
and emulation to prevent each other in mutual complaisance and 
respect. Whilst she was at her prayers or other exercises, if
called away  by her husband, or the meanest person of her family,
she laid all aside to  obey without delay, saying, "A married
woman must, when called upon,  quit her devotions to God at the
altar to find him in her household  affairs." God was pleased to
show her the merit of this her obedience;  for the authors of her
life relate, that being called away four times in beginning the
same verse of a psalm in our Lady's office, returning the fifth
time, she found that verse written in golden letters. She treated
her domestics not as servants, but as brothers and sisters, and
future co-heirs in heaven; and studied by all means in her power
to induce them seriously to labour for their salvation. Her
mortifications were extraordinary, especially when, some years
before her husband's death, she was permitted by him to inflict on
her body what hardships she pleased. She from that time abstained
from wine, fish, and dainty meats, with a total abstinence from
flesh, unless in her greatest sicknesses. Her ordinary diet was
hard and mouldy bread. She would procure secretly, out of the
pouches of the beggars, their dry crusts in exchange for better
bread. When she fared the best, she only added to bread a few
unsavoury herbs without oil, and drank nothing but water, making
use of a human skull for her cup. She ate but once a day, and by
long abstinence had lost all relish of what she took. Her garments
were of coarse serge, and she never wore linen, not even in
sickness. Her discipline was armed with rowers and sharp points.
She wore continually a hair shirt and a girdle of horse-hair. An
iron girdle had so galled her flesh that her confessor obliged her
to lay it aside. If she inadvertently chanced to offend God in the
least, she severely that instant punished the part that had
offended; as the tongue by sharply biting it, &c. Her example was
of such edification that many Roman ladies, having renounced a
life of idleness, pomp, and softness, joined her in pious
exercises, and put themselves under the direction of the
Benedictine monks of the congregation of Monte-Oliveto, without
leaving the world, making vows, or wearing any particular habit.
St. Frances prayed only for children that they might be citizens
of heaven, and when she was blessed with them it was her whole
care to make them saints.

It pleased God, for her sanctification, to make trial of her
virtue by many afflictions. During the troubles which ensued upon
the invasion of Rome by Ladislas, King of Naples, and the great
schism under Pope John XXIII at the time of opening the Council of
Constance, in 1413, her husband, with his brother-in-law Paulucci,
was banished Rome, his estate confiscated, his house pulled down,
and his eldest son, John Baptist, detained as hostage. Her soul
remained calm amidst all those storms: she said with Job, "God
hath given, and God hath taken away. I rejoice in these losses,
because they are God's will. Whatever he sends I shall continually
bless and praise his name for." The schism being extinguished by
the Council of Constance, and tranquillity restored at Rome, her
husband recovered his dignity and estate. Some time after, moved
by the great favours St. Frances received from heaven, and by her
eminent virtue, he gave her full leave to live as she pleased; and
he himself chose to serve God in a state of continency. He
permitted her in his own lifetime to found a monastery of nuns,
called Oblates, for the reception of such of her own sex as were
disposed to embrace a religious life. The foundation of this house
was in 1425. She gave them the rule of St. Benedict, adding some
particular constitutions of her own, and put them under the
direction of the congregation of the Olivetans. The house being
too small for the numbers that fled to this sanctuary from the
corruption of the world, she would gladly have removed her
community to a larger house; but not finding one suitable, she
enlarged it in 1433, from which year the founding of the order is
dated. It was approved by Pope Eugenius IV in 1437. They are
called Collatines, perhaps from the quarter of Rome in which they
are situated; and Oblates, because they call their profession an
oblation, and use it in the word <offero>, not <profiteor>. St.
Frances could not yet join her new family; but as soon as she had
settled her domestic affairs, after the death of her husband, she
went barefoot, with a cord about her neck, to the monastery which
she had founded, and there, prostrate on the ground before the
religious, her spiritual children, begged to be admitted. She
accordingly took the habit on St. Benedict's day, in 1437. She
always sought the meanest employments in the house, being fully
persuaded she was of all the most contemptible before God; and she
laboured to appear as mean in the eyes of the world as she was in
her own. She continued the same humiliations, and the same
universal poverty, though soon after chosen superioress of her
congregation. Almighty God bestowed on her humility, extraordinary
graces, and supernatural favours, as frequent visions, raptures,
and the gift of prophecy. She enjoyed the familiar conversation of
her angel-guardian, as her life and the process of her
canonization attest. She was extremely affected by meditating on
our Saviour's passion, which she had always present to her mind.
At mass she was so absorbed in God as to seem immovable,
especially after holy communion: she often fell into ecstasies of
love and devotion. She was particularly devout to St. John the
Evangelist, and above all to our Lady, under whose singular
protection she put her order. Going out to see her son John
Baptist, who was dangerously sick, she felt so ill herself that
she could not return to her monastery at night. After having
foretold her death, and received the sacraments, she expired on
the 8th of March, in the year 1440, and of her age the fifty-
sixth. God attested her sanctity by miracles: she was honoured
among the saints immediately after her death, and solemnly
canonized by Paul V in 1608. Her shrine in Rome is most
magnificent and rich: and her festival is kept as a holy-day in
the city, with great solemnity. The Oblates make no solemn vows,
only a promise of obedience to the mother-president, enjoy
pensions, inherit estates, and go abroad with leave. Their abbey
in Rome is filled with ladies of the first rank.

In a religious life, in which a regular distribution of holy
employments and duties takes up the whole day, and leaves no
interstices of time for idleness, sloth, or the world, hours pass
in these exercises with the rapidity of moments, and moments by
fervour of the desires bear the value of years. There is not an
instant in which a soul is not employed for God, and studies not
with her whole heart to please him. Every step, every thought and
desire, is a sacrifice of fidelity, obedience, and love offered to
him. Even meals, recreation, and rest, are sanctified by this
intention; and from the religious vows and habitual purpose of the
soul of consecrating herself entirely to God in time and eternity,
every action, as St. Thomas teaches, renews and contains the
fervor and merit of this entire consecration, of which it is a
part.  In a secular life, a person, by regularity in the
employment of his time, and fervour in devoting himself to God in
all his actions and designs, may in some degree enjoy the same
happiness and advantage. This St. Frances perfectly practiced,
even before she renounced the world. She lived forty years with
her husband without ever giving him the least occasion of offence;
and by the fervour with which she conversed of heaven, she seemed
already to have quitted the earth, and to have made paradise her
ordinary dwelling.

(Taken from Vol. III of "The Lives or the Fathers, Martyrs and
Other Principal Saints" by the Rev. Alban Butler, the 1864 edition
published by D. & J. Sadlier, & Company)

Copyright (c) 1997 EWTN Online Services.

2 posted on 03/09/2005 5:24:02 PM PST by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Salvation

BTTT on the Optional Memorial of St. Frances of Rome, March 9, 2006


3 posted on 03/09/2006 7:35:47 AM PST by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Salvation
American Catholic’s Saint of the Day

                                                   
March 9, 2007
St. Frances of Rome
(1384-1440)

Frances’s life combines aspects of secular and religious life. A devoted and loving wife, she longed for a lifestyle of prayer and service, so she organized a group of women to minister to the needs of Rome’s poor.

Born of wealthy parents, Frances found herself attracted to the religious life during her youth. But her parents objected and a young nobleman was selected to be her husband.

As she became acquainted with her new relatives, Frances soon discovered that the wife of her husband’s brother also wished to live a life of service and prayer. So the two, Frances and Vannozza, set out together—with their husbands’ blessings—to help the poor.

Frances fell ill for a time, but this apparently only deepened her commitment to the suffering people she met. The years passed, and Frances gave birth to two sons and a daughter. With the new responsibilities of family life, the young mother turned her attention more to the needs of her own household. The family flourished under Frances’s care, but within a few years a great plague began to sweep across Italy. It struck Rome with devastating cruelty and left Frances’s second son dead. In an effort to help alleviate some of the suffering, Frances used all her money and sold her possessions to buy whatever the sick might possibly need. When all the resources had been exhausted, Frances and Vannozza went door to door begging. Later, Frances’s daughter died, and the saint opened a section of her house as a hospital.

Frances became more and more convinced that this way of life was so necessary for the world, and it was not long before she requested and was given permission to found a society of women bound by no vows. They simply offered themselves to God and to the service of the poor. Once the society was established, Frances chose not to live at the community residence, but rather at home with her husband. She did this for seven years, until her husband passed away, and then came to live the remainder of her life with the society—serving the poorest of the poor.

Comment:

Looking at the exemplary life of fidelity to God and devotion to her fellow human beings which Frances of Rome was blessed to lead, one cannot help but be reminded of Mother Teresa of Calcutta, who loved Jesus Christ in prayer and also in the poor. The life of Frances of Rome calls each of us not only to look deeply for God in prayer, but also to carry our devotion to Jesus living in the suffering of our world. Frances shows us that this life need not be restricted to those bound by vows.

Quote:

In Something Beautiful for God, Mother Teresa said of the sisters in her community: “Let Christ radiate and live his life in her and through her in the slums. Let the poor seeing her be drawn to Christ and invite him to enter their homes and lives.” Says Frances of Rome: “It is most laudable in a married woman to be devout, but she must never forget that she is a housewife. And sometimes she must leave God at the altar to find Him in her housekeeping” (Butler’s Lives of the Saints).



4 posted on 03/09/2007 7:35:19 AM PST by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Lady In Blue
St. Frances of Rome, Religious

Saint Frances of Rome, Religious
Optional Memorial
March 9th


traditional prayer card

 

A married woman, she brought up her three children in the love and fear of God. She performed every household duty as though they were sacraments of love. "A married woman, "she said, "must often leave God at the altar to find Him in her household care." She founded an order of oblates.

Source: Daily Roman Missal, Edited by Rev. James Socías, Midwest Theological Forum, Chicago, Illinois ©2003

 

Collect:
Merciful Father,
in Frances of Rome
You have given us a unique example of love in marriage
as well as in religious life.

Keep us faithful in Your service,
and help us to see and follow You
in all the aspects of life.

We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, Your Son, who lives and reigns
with You and the Holy Spirit, one God forever and ever. +Amen.

First Reading: Proverbs 31:10-13, 19-20, 30-31
A good wife who can find?
She is far more precious than jewels.
The heart of her husband trusts in her,
and he will have no lack of gain.
She does him good, and not harm,
all the days of her life.
She seeks wool and flax,
and works with willing hands.

She puts her hands to the distaff,
and her hands hold the spindle.
She opens her hand to the poor,
and reaches out her hands to the needy.

Charm is deceitful, and beauty is vain,
but a woman who fears the Lord is to be praised.
Give her of the fruit of her hands,
and let her works praise her in the gates.

Gospel Reading: Matthew 22:34-40
But when the Pharisees heard that Jesus had silenced the Sadducees, they came together. And one of them, a lawyer, asked Him a question, to test Him. "Teacher, which is the great commandment in the law?" And He said to him, "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it, you shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the law and the prophets."


5 posted on 03/09/2009 9:36:05 AM PDT by Salvation ( †With God all things are possible.†)
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To: All
Saint Frances of Rome

SAINT FRANCES OF ROME

6 posted on 03/09/2010 9:11:03 AM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All
Vultus Christi

Saint Francesca of Rome

|

S Francesca Romana Clothed by the Virgin.jpg

This painting, attributed to Antonio da Viterbo the Elder (1450-1516), depicts Saint Francesca being clothed by the Blessed Virgin in the great white veil that, even today, characterizes the Olivetan Benedictine Oblates of Mary she founded in 1433.

Our Lady wears a golden mantle, which Saint Paul at the left wraps around Francesca Romana. Saint Paul also holds a scroll. The mystical scene takes place on a cloud; fiery seraphim accompany the Madonna and Child. Saint Mary Magdalene, in red vesture, and Saint Benedict, in the foreground, drape a protective mantle around twenty Oblates.

Note the angel below the Gothic windows at left. He is busy carding golden threads with a warp and loom. Nearby are two frisky dogs and two cats. Francesca's Oblate Congregation, it is said, was woven together by heavenly graces and harassed by evil spirits in the form of cats and dogs. The grace of Christ prevailed and the Oblates flourished.

Married Life and Monastic Conversion

Saint Frances of Rome (1384-1440),more properly called by her own name, Francesca, is the patroness of Benedictine Oblates. The Collect for her feast tells us why. The Church has us pray:

O God, Who in Saint Frances of Rome, have given us a model of holiness in married life and of monastic conversion, make us serve Thee perseveringly, so that in all circumstances we may set our gaze upon Thee and follow Thee.

It is not often that we mention both married life and monastic conversion in the same Collect! Francesca is there to tell us that it can be done.

Patronness of Rome

I find it extraordinary that the Romans should be so proud of their Francesca, even to the point of considering her their special patron. They can lay claim, after all, to Saints Peter and Paul, to innumerable martyrs and glorious Popes, and yet, with all that spiritual richness, they remain attached to Francesca, a married woman, a servant of the poor, a mother to the sick, a spiritual daughter of Holy Father Benedict, and a mystic.

Enthusiasm for Holiness

Francesca did nothing by half-measures. Being Roman, she lived life with a kind of reckless enthusiasm -- not for the usual things Romans get excited over -- but for holiness! Her life was extraordinary in some ways. She went in for fasting, austerities, and almsgiving in a huge way. The devil bothered her continually, not as he bothers us with boring, nagging temptations, but with spectacular assaults. Francesca was in the same league as Saint Anthony of Egypt and the Curé d'Ars.

Intensely Alive

For me, Francesca's appeal is in her warm and very human personality. She was no dried up prune of a saint. She was intensely alive to everything human and capable of the grand passions without which life is bleak and dreary. She suffered struggles, endured sorrows, and bore with every manner of disappointment and hurt. One cannot say that Francesca's holiness was of the tidy sort. One might even say that Francesca's life was a mess. Her desire to serve God and live for him was continually frustrated by persons and circumstances. It was precisely in the midst of these conditions that Francesca grew in holiness, "setting nothing before the love of Christ" (RB 4:21), and "never despairing of God's mercy" (RB 4:74).

Married at Thirteen

As a young girl, Francesca did not want to marry. She lived, after all, in the city of the Church's shining virgin martyrs: Agnes, Cecilia, and so many others. Like them she wanted to consecrate her virginity to Christ, but her parents had other plans. The first big decision in her life was out of her hands. At the age of thirteen she gave in to her parents and married Lorenzo Ponziano, the wealthy nobleman they had chosen for her.

Francesca was expected to be the perfect socialite, charming, beautiful, witty, and worldly as only Romans know how to be worldly. In her heart she longed for the cloister, but the will of God had placed her, concretely, in a setting far removed from it.

They Never Once Had A Quarrel

Lorenzo, Francesca's husband treated her always with love and respect. He accepted that he had married an unusual woman, that she would never be like other Roman wives, and that there was something in her that he, try as he might, would never be able to satisfy. Francesca loved Lorenzo. She recognized his qualities and accepted that loving Lorenzo was part of God's plan for her. It is said that through all their married life, Francesca and Lorenzo never once had a quarrel. For that alone they should both be canonized!

Devotion in a Married Woman

Francesca is best known for a sagacious remark, one that two centuries later Saint Francis de Sales would echo. "Devotion in a married woman," she said, "is most praiseworthy, but she must never forget that she is a housewife. Sometimes she must leave God at the altar, to serve Him in her housekeeping". An indication of Francesca's Benedictine vocation was in her devotion to the Divine Office. One day in praying the Hours she was interrupted five times in succession. Each time she closed her book, attended to what was asked of her, and then returned to her prayer. After the last interruption she found the words of the antiphon she had been trying to pray written in letters of gold. God rewarded her patience as much as her zeal for the Divine Office.

Her Guiding Light

If you have ever seen a painting of Saint Francesca, you may have noticed a little angel standing near her. Francesca had lost her little eight-year-old boy, Evangelista, to the plague. After his death he appeared to her announcing the death of yet another child, her daughter Agnese. I cannot help but relate Francesca;s grief to the passage in Isaiah: "Can a mother forget her infant, be without tenderness for the child of her womb? Even should she forget, I will never forget you" (Is 49:15). Francesca never forgot the little ones taken from her by death. In exchange for these terrible losses, she was given an unusual grace: that of always seeing her guardian angel. Her angel took on the appearance of a little boy of about eight years (like her son Evangelista); he wore a dalmatic like the deacon at Solemn Mass. Francesca's guardian angel was with her visibly at every moment, assuring her of the love of Christ, giving her counsel and providing her, even visibly, with a guiding light. It was this fact that made Pope Pius XI declare Francesca the patroness of motorists!

Rival Popes

Francesca lived in troubled times. There were two rival Popes, making for schism and Civil War. Lorenzo was wounded fighting on behalf of the true Pope. In the aftermath of the conflicts, he lost his estates. Their home was destroyed and their one surviving son taken hostage. As if that were not enough Rome was beset with looting, famine, and plague. And we think we have troubles!

Mother of the Poor, the Sick, and the Brokenhearted

Francesca rose to the occasion. She fixed up the ruins of her home and opened a hospital. With poor and suffering people all around her, Francesca became a kind of Mother Teresa, compassionate and wonderfully effective. She fed and housed the poor sick picked up on the streets. She arranged for priests to minister to the dying. She reconciled enemies and calmed the rage of those plotting revenge. After the troubles caused by the schism, Lorenzo came home to her, but he was a broken man both physically and mentally. Francesca cared for him with every tenderness.

Benedictine Oblates

Francesca's activities did not go unnoticed. Other Roman ladies, many of them war widows, were drawn to her. Little by little a new form of Benedictine life emerged: women living under the Rule of Saint Benedict, not as enclosed nuns, but as Oblates of the Roman monastery of the Olivetans at Santa Maria Nuova. Francesca's Oblates were free to go out to serve the poor and sick. Their life was shaped to a great extent by the first part of Chapter Four of the Holy Rule, the Instruments of Good Works:

To relieve the poor, to clothe the naked, to visit the sick, to bury the dead, to give help in trouble, to console the sorrowful, to avoid worldly behaviour, and to set nothing before the love of Christ (RB 4:14-21).

Francesca's Oblates survive to the present day, not only in Rome, but also at Le Bec-Hellouin in France, at Abu-Gosh in Israel, and elsewhere. They wear unchanged the distinctive black habit and long white veil dating from the time of Saint Francesca.

Lorenzo's Deathbed Declaration of Love

Lorenzo died in 1436. His last words were for his darling Francesca. They are worth quoting. "I feel," he said, "as if my whole life has been one beautiful dream of purest happiness. God has given me so much in your love." A husband's deathbed confession of undying love! No wife could ask for more.

The Angel Beckons

After Lorenzo's death, Francesca was free to take a fuller role in the Benedictine community she had established. Her sister Oblates elected her prioress. Four years later, on the evening of March 9th her face became radiant with a strange light. "The angel has finished his task," she said; "he beckons me to follow him". Francesca was 56 years old. Her death plunged all of Rome into mourning. Miraculous healings abounded. Rome had another saint.

Acceptance of Things As They Are

Francesca's life tells us that the plan of God for our holiness us unfolds in ways that often contradict our own projects and desires. Our endless planning can be no more than an attempt to control life, to manipulate people and events. Francesca challenges us to detachment from life as we would have it be, and to the acceptance of things as they are. Each of us has unexpected elements that, thrown into the mix, unsettle our plans, making life untidy and somehow bearable at the same time. And each of us has a guardian angel, a light in life's obscurity, a faithful friend and spiritual counselor.


7 posted on 03/09/2010 7:31:07 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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