  
   Like Elizabeth Ann Seton, Rita of Cascia was a wife, mother, widow
 and member of a religious community. Her holiness was reflected in each
 phase of her life. 
 
Born at Roccaporena in central Italy, Rita wanted to become a nun
 but was pressured at a young age into marrying a harsh and cruel man. 
During her 18-year marriage, she bore and raised two sons. After her 
husband was killed in a brawl and her sons had died, Rita tried to join 
the Augustinian nuns in Cascia. Unsuccessful at first because she was a 
widow, Rita eventually succeeded.  
Over the years, her austerity, 
prayerfulness and charity became legendary. When she developed wounds on
 her forehead, people quickly associated them with the wounds from 
Christ's crown of thorns. She meditated frequently on Christ's passion. 
Her care for the sick nuns was especially loving. She also counseled lay
 people who came to her monastery.  
Beatified in 1626, Rita was 
not canonized until 1900. She has acquired the reputation, together with
 St. Jude, as a saint of impossible cases. Many people visit her tomb 
each year. 
   Comment:  Although we can easily imagine an ideal world in 
which to live out our baptismal vocation, such a world does not exist. 
An “If only ….” approach to holiness never quite gets underway, never 
produces the fruit that God has a right to expect. 
 
Rita became holy because she made choices that reflected her 
Baptism and her growth as a disciple of Jesus. Her overarching, lifelong
 choice was to cooperate generously with God's grace, but many small 
choices were needed to make that happen. Few of those choices were made 
in ideal circumstances—not even when Rita became an Augustinian nun. 
            Quote:  For the Baptism of adults and for all the 
baptized at the Easter Vigil, three questions are asked: “Do you reject 
sin so as to live in the freedom of God's children? Do you reject the 
glamor of evil, and refuse to be mastered by sin? Do you reject Satan, 
father of sin and prince of darkness?” | 
No comments:
Post a Comment