The Stigmata of Saint Francis - September 17 breski1 We celebrate on 17th September the stigmata of St. Francis of Assisi. Few saints have had a decisive influence on the civil and ecclesiastical …More
The Stigmata of Saint Francis - September 17
breski1 We celebrate on 17th September the stigmata of St. Francis of Assisi. Few saints have had a decisive influence on the civil and ecclesiastical history of all time as the Poverello of Assisi. And few have taken the evangelical maxims as far as this man who identified himself so much with Jesus Christ crucified, that he deserved to receive in his body the sacred stigmata.
According to his biographers, two years before his death, St. Francis of Assisi retired in Tuscany with five of his closest brothers, on the Mount La Verna, to celebrate the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin and prepare the feast of St. Michael the Archangel by forty days of fasting. It was around the feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross. Kneeling before his cell, Francis was praying with outstretched arms awaiting dawn and was subject to an outstanding grace. The Lord crucified appeared to him in a figure of a six-winged seraph. After spending time with him in conversation, he departed leaving in the body of Francis the sacred stigmata printed.
Thus, this disciple and a passionate lover of Christ, who longed to resemble him, received this similar trait with Jesus Christ.
At the close of his life, when he was at the end of his strength, stigmatized, suffering without relief both physically and morally, that he reached the summit of perfect joy and composed the Canticle of the Creatures. He needed to attain the very heart of the Paschal Mystery of death and Resurrection before he could express this hymn in which the whole of creation is reconciled with God and in Him recovers its pristine integrity.
Our current preoccupations with freedom, with peace, with life, with happiness, with respect for God's creation, all these aspirations are suggested to us by Francis of Assisi.
www.fmm.org/…/v3_s2ew_consult…
breski1 We celebrate on 17th September the stigmata of St. Francis of Assisi. Few saints have had a decisive influence on the civil and ecclesiastical history of all time as the Poverello of Assisi. And few have taken the evangelical maxims as far as this man who identified himself so much with Jesus Christ crucified, that he deserved to receive in his body the sacred stigmata.
According to his biographers, two years before his death, St. Francis of Assisi retired in Tuscany with five of his closest brothers, on the Mount La Verna, to celebrate the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin and prepare the feast of St. Michael the Archangel by forty days of fasting. It was around the feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross. Kneeling before his cell, Francis was praying with outstretched arms awaiting dawn and was subject to an outstanding grace. The Lord crucified appeared to him in a figure of a six-winged seraph. After spending time with him in conversation, he departed leaving in the body of Francis the sacred stigmata printed.
Thus, this disciple and a passionate lover of Christ, who longed to resemble him, received this similar trait with Jesus Christ.
At the close of his life, when he was at the end of his strength, stigmatized, suffering without relief both physically and morally, that he reached the summit of perfect joy and composed the Canticle of the Creatures. He needed to attain the very heart of the Paschal Mystery of death and Resurrection before he could express this hymn in which the whole of creation is reconciled with God and in Him recovers its pristine integrity.
Our current preoccupations with freedom, with peace, with life, with happiness, with respect for God's creation, all these aspirations are suggested to us by Francis of Assisi.
www.fmm.org/…/v3_s2ew_consult…
One more comment from Irapuato
Saints of the Day:
Robert Bellarmine (Optional Memorial)
Stigmata of Francis of Assisi
Blessed Virgin Mary (Optional Memorial; 2016)
—
Agathoclia
Álvaro Santos Cejudo Moreno Chocano
Brogan of Ross Tuirc
Columba of Cordova
Crescentio of Rome
Emmanuel Nguyen VanTrieu
Flocellus
Hildegard von Bingen
Juan Ventura Solsona
Justin of Rome
Lambert of Maastricht
Narcissus of Rome
Peter Arbues
Rodingus …More
Robert Bellarmine (Optional Memorial)
Stigmata of Francis of Assisi
Blessed Virgin Mary (Optional Memorial; 2016)
—
Agathoclia
Álvaro Santos Cejudo Moreno Chocano
Brogan of Ross Tuirc
Columba of Cordova
Crescentio of Rome
Emmanuel Nguyen VanTrieu
Flocellus
Hildegard von Bingen
Juan Ventura Solsona
Justin of Rome
Lambert of Maastricht
Narcissus of Rome
Peter Arbues
Rodingus
Satyrus of Milan
Socrates
Stanislaus of Jesus and Mary
Stephen
Theodora
Timoteo Valero Pérez
Uni of Bremen
Zygmunt Szcesny Felinski
—
Francis Mary of Camporosso
Sigismund Sajna
catholicsaints.info/17-september/