  
   Blessed Angeline founded the first community of Franciscan women other than Poor Clares to receive papal approval. 
 
Angeline was born to the Duke of Marsciano (near Orvieto). She 
was 12 when her mother died. Three years later the young woman made a 
vow of perpetual chastity. That same year, however, she yielded to her 
father’s decision that she marry the Duke of Civitella. Her husband 
agreed to respect her previous vow.  
When he died two years later,
 Angeline joined the Secular Franciscans and with several other women 
dedicated herself to caring for the sick, the poor, widows and orphans. 
When many other young women were attracted to Angeline’s community, some
 people accused her of condemning the married vocation. Legend has it 
that when she came before the King of Naples to answer these charges, 
she had burning coals hidden in the folds of her cloak. When she 
proclaimed her innocence and showed the king that these coals had not 
harmed her, he dropped the case.  
Angeline and her companions 
later went to Foligno, where her community of Third Order sisters 
received papal approval in 1397. She soon established 15 similar 
communities of women in other Italian cities.  
Angeline died on July 14, 1435, and was beatified in 1825. 
   Comment:  Priests, sisters and brothers cannot be signs of 
God’s love for the human family if they belittle the vocation of 
marriage. Angeline respected marriage but felt called to another way of 
living out the gospel. Her choice was life-giving in its own way. 
            Quote:  Blessed Pope Paul VI wrote in 1971: "Without 
in any way undervaluing human love and marriage— is not the latter, 
according to faith, the image and sharing of the union of love joining 
Christ and the Church?— consecrated chastity evokes this union in a more
 immediate way and brings that surpassing excellence to which all human 
love should tend" (Apostolic Exhortation on the Renewal of Religious Life, #13). | 
No comments:
Post a Comment