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May 25 Saint Mary Magdalene de Pazzi. on Feb 6, 2013 From bobandpennylord.com Virgin, Carmelite (1566-1607) Saint Mary Magdalene of Pazzi was the only daughter of the illustrious Camille de Pazzi, …More
May 25 Saint Mary Magdalene de Pazzi.

on Feb 6, 2013 From bobandpennylord.com

Virgin, Carmelite (1566-1607)
Saint Mary Magdalene of Pazzi was the only daughter of the illustrious Camille de Pazzi, related to the Medicis of Florence. She was born in the year 1566, and was baptized with the name of Catherine. As a child she loved to go into solitary places to enter into prayer with God, who revealed Himself to her from her tender years without the aid of teachers, as her Creator, Redeemer and Sanctifier. She made a crown of thorns one day, and wore it for an entire night, enduring great pain. She received her First Communion at ten years of age; at twelve years, she made a vow of virginity and took great pleasure in teaching Christian doctrine to poor children.
Her father, not knowing of her vow, wished to give her in marriage, but she persuaded him to allow her to become a religious, and chose the Carmelites, because there the nuns received Communion frequently. She entered in the year of the death of Saint Teresa of Avila, 1582, at the age of sixteen. It had been more difficult to obtain her mother's consent; while she was a novice, her mother sent a portrait artist to the convent, with instructions that her daughter be portrayed in lay clothing. The Sisters complied with her request, and the portrait can still be seen in the Convent. She became professed at eighteen years of age in the Carmelite monastery of Santa Maria degli Angeli in Florence, May 17, 1584, Feast of the Holy Trinity. She changed her name of Catherine to that of Mary Magdalene on becoming a nun, and took as her motto, Either suffer or die.
Her life thereafter was one of penance for sins not her own, and of love for Our Lord, who tried her in ways fearful and strange. She was obedient, observant of the Rule, humble and mortified, and had great reverence for the religious life. One day, when she seemed to be at the last hour of her life, she rose from her sickbed and hastened everywhere throughout the convent, saying during her ecstasy, O Love! O Love! No one knows You, no one knows You, no one loves You! For five years she was tormented by demons with fearful temptations of pride, sensuality, gluttony, despair, blasphemy; they became so violent that she said, I do not know whether I am a reasonable creature or one without reason; I see nothing in myself but a little good will never to offend the divine Majesty.
God raised her to elevated states of prayer and gave her rare gifts, enabling her to read the thoughts of her novices, and filling her with wisdom to direct them. She was twice chosen mistress of novices, and then made Superior. On her deathbed she asked her Sisters to love only Our Lord Jesus Christ, to place all hope in Him, and be perpetually ardent with desire to suffer for love of Him. God took her to Himself on May 15, 1607. Her body remains incorrupt.
Reflection. Saint Mary Magdalene of Pazzi was so filled with the love of God that her Sisters saw it in her love for them, and called her Mother of Charity, and the Charity of the Monastery.
Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints, a compilation based on Butler's Lives of the Saints and other sources by John Gilmary Shea (Benziger Brothers: New York, 1894).
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Santa Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi Vergine
25 maggio - Memoria Facoltativa
Una santa da capogiro. Parte della sua vita si svolge come fuori dal mondo, in lunghe e ripetute estasi, con momenti e atti quasi “intraducibili” oggi: come lo scambio del suo cuore con quello di Gesù, le stigmate invisibili, i colloqui con la Santissima Trinità... Scene vertiginose di familiarità divino-umana; dopo le quali …More
Santa Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi Vergine
25 maggio - Memoria Facoltativa
Una santa da capogiro. Parte della sua vita si svolge come fuori dal mondo, in lunghe e ripetute estasi, con momenti e atti quasi “intraducibili” oggi: come lo scambio del suo cuore con quello di Gesù, le stigmate invisibili, i colloqui con la Santissima Trinità... Scene vertiginose di familiarità divino-umana; dopo le quali, però, lei ritorna tranquilla e laboriosa monaca, riassorbita nella quotidianità delle incombenze.
Appartiene alla casata de’ Pazzi, potenti (e violenti) per generazioni in Firenze, e ancora autorevoli alla sua epoca. Battezzata con il nome di Caterina, a 16 anni entra nel monastero carmelitano di Santa Maria degli Angeli in Firenze e come novizia prende il nome di Maria Maddalena.
Nel maggio 1584 soffre di una misteriosa malattia che le impedisce di stare coricata. Al momento di pronunciare i voti, devono portarla davanti all’altare nel suo letto, dove "dì e notte sta sempre a sedere". Ed ecco poi quelle estasi, che si succederanno per molti anni. Le descrivono cinque volumi di manoscritti, opera di consorelle che registravano gesti e parole sue in quelle ore. (Parole sorprendenti: nelle estasi, lei usava un linguaggio colto, “specialistico”, di gran lunga superiore al livello della sua istruzione). Questi resoconti, che lei legge e corregge, e che acuti teologi perlustrano in punto di dottrina, contengono – espresso in mille modi e visioni e voci – l’invito appassionato a ricambiare l’amore di Cristo per l’uomo, testimoniato dalla Passione.
Più tardi le voci dall’alto le chiedono di promuovere la “rinnovazione della Chiesa” (iniziata dal Concilio di Trento con i suoi decreti), esortando e ammonendo le sue gerarchie. Maria Maddalena esita, teme di ingannarsi. Preferirebbe offrire la vita per l’evangelizzazione, segue con gioia l’opera dei missionari in Giappone... Voci autorevoli la rassicurano, e allora lei scrive a papa Sisto V, ai cardinali della Curia; e tre lettere manda ad Alessandro de’ Medici, arcivescovo di Firenze, che poi incontra in monastero. "Questa figliola ha veramente parlato in persona dello Spirito Santo", dirà lui. Maria Maddalena gli annuncia pure che presto lo faranno Papa, ma che non durerà molto (e così gli ha predetto anche Filippo Neri). Infatti, Alessandro viene eletto il 10 maggio 1605 con il nome di Leone XI, e soltanto 26 giorni dopo è già morto.
Per suor Maria Maddalena finisce il tempo delle estasi e incomincia quello delle malattie. Del “nudo soffrire”, come lei dice, che durerà fino alla sua morte, già accompagnata da voci di miracoli, che porteranno nel 1611 l’apertura del processo canonico per la sua beatificazione, a pochi anni dalla morte avvenuta nel 1607. Papa Clemente IX, il 22 aprile del 1669, la canonizzerà. Le spoglie di santa Maria Maddalena de’ Pazzi ora riposano nell’omonimo monastero, a Firenze.

Autore: Domenico Agasso
Irapuato
May 25 Saint Mary Magdalene de Pazzi Virgin, Carmelite (1566-1607)
Saint Mary Magdalene of Pazzi was the only daughter of the illustrious Camille de Pazzi, related to the Medicis of Florence. She was born in the year 1566, and was baptized with the name of Catherine. As a child she loved to go into solitary places to enter into prayer with God, who revealed Himself to her from her tender years …More
May 25 Saint Mary Magdalene de Pazzi Virgin, Carmelite (1566-1607)
Saint Mary Magdalene of Pazzi was the only daughter of the illustrious Camille de Pazzi, related to the Medicis of Florence. She was born in the year 1566, and was baptized with the name of Catherine. As a child she loved to go into solitary places to enter into prayer with God, who revealed Himself to her from her tender years without the aid of teachers, as her Creator, Redeemer and Sanctifier. She made a crown of thorns one day, and wore it for an entire night, enduring great pain. She received her First Communion at ten years of age; at twelve years, she made a vow of virginity and took great pleasure in teaching Christian doctrine to poor children.
Her father, not knowing of her vow, wished to give her in marriage, but she persuaded him to allow her to become a religious, and chose the Carmelites, because there the nuns received Communion frequently. She entered in the year of the death of Saint Teresa of Avila, 1582, at the age of sixteen. It had been more difficult to obtain her mother's consent; while she was a novice, her mother sent a portrait artist to the convent, with instructions that her daughter be portrayed in lay clothing. The Sisters complied with her request, and the portrait can still be seen in the Convent. She became professed at eighteen years of age in the Carmelite monastery of Santa Maria degli Angeli in Florence, May 17, 1584, Feast of the Holy Trinity. She changed her name of Catherine to that of Mary Magdalene on becoming a nun, and took as her motto, Either suffer or die.
Her life thereafter was one of penance for sins not her own, and of love for Our Lord, who tried her in ways fearful and strange. She was obedient, observant of the Rule, humble and mortified, and had great reverence for the religious life. One day, when she seemed to be at the last hour of her life, she rose from her sickbed and hastened everywhere throughout the convent, saying during her ecstasy, O Love! O Love! No one knows You, no one knows You, no one loves You! For five years she was tormented by demons with fearful temptations of pride, sensuality, gluttony, despair, blasphemy; they became so violent that she said, I do not know whether I am a reasonable creature or one without reason; I see nothing in myself but a little good will never to offend the divine Majesty.
God raised her to elevated states of prayer and gave her rare gifts, enabling her to read the thoughts of her novices, and filling her with wisdom to direct them. She was twice chosen mistress of novices, and then made Superior. On her deathbed she asked her Sisters to love only Our Lord Jesus Christ, to place all hope in Him, and be perpetually ardent with desire to suffer for love of Him. God took her to Himself on May 15, 1607. Her body remains incorrupt.
Reflection. Saint Mary Magdalene of Pazzi was so filled with the love of God that her Sisters saw it in her love for them, and called her Mother of Charity, and the Charity of the Monastery.
Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints, a compilation based on Butler's Lives of the Saints and other sources by John Gilmary Shea (Benziger Brothers: New York, 1894).