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Wednesday 17 May – The Saints speak to the Priests
LECTURE BY PROFESSOR MARIA ANTONIETTA FALCHI PELLEGRINI
St. CATHERINE and the
Priests: A MESSAGE for THE CHURCH OF THE THIRD MILLENNIUM
Your Eminencies, Excellencies, reverend and
dear priests, I feel especially honoured to provide this small service to you,
whom St. Catherine of Siena defines as "Ministers of the Blood of
Christ", in this patriarchal Basilica, centre of Catholicism, housing the
Chair of he who is the "Sweet Christ on earth".
"In the centuries, always, the visible
events of the life of the Church are prepared in the silent dialogue of the
souls consecrated with their Lord. The Virgin, who cherished in her heart every
word addressed to her by God, is the model of those attentive souls in whom the
prayer of Jesus the high priest, lives, and those souls who, following His
example, devote themselves to the contemplation of the life and passion of
Christ, preferentially chosen by the Lord to be the instruments of His great
works in the Church, like St. Bridget and St. Catherine of Siena".
These are the words of Edith Stein and provide
a surprising introduction to the understanding of St. Catherine, her privileged
relationship with the Church and her Ministers. This phrase covers the three
Saints recently proclaimed by John Paul II as Co-Patronesses of Europe: St.
Bridget of Sweden, St. Catherine of Siena, St. Theresa Benedicta of the Cross.
It is a significant coincidence, perhaps the intuition of a common path whose
outcome the author could not foresee. However, these three women certainly have
in common "the contemplation of the life and passion of Christ", and
the sharing of His priestly prayer.
Through these considerations, we reach the
heart of Catherine’s sainthood, it basis, as solid as rock: the love for Jesus
Crucified, which becomes love and dedication to the Church, her Spouse, her
earthly Vicar and her Ministers. It is a love which is both daughter and mother,
tender and strong, apprehensive and reassuring, severe and comprehensive, who
asks for and gives all without sparing herself. This is why the Saint has been
chose and accepted to become the instrument of God’s work in the Church.
The life of this girl from Siena was
extraordinary and many-faceted. She was born in 1347, the twenty-fourth daughter
of the cloth dyer Iacopo di Benincasa and of Monna Lapa; she died in Rome in
1380, was canonised by Pius II in 1461, proclaimed a Doctor of the Church on
October 1970 by Paul vi, and finally proclaimed Co-Patroness of Europe on 1
October 1999 by John Paul II. This path over many centuries of history of the
Church, indicates a growing relevance of Catherine’s message of Catherine in a
new cultural and social situation.
The Sienese saint, who refused the marriage
for mother wished to impose on her, in order to totally devote herself to her
only Spouse, Jesus, living her mystical marriage in the world, in the Dominican
Third Order of the Catherinites, wonderfully incarnates the "female genius
" described by John Paul II in the Mulieris Dignitatem. In the Pope’s
words, the union with Christ and freedom rooted in God explain the great work of
Saint Catherine of Siena in the life of the Church (M.D., n.27).
Only union with Christ must have given
Catherine, in a period when women had no opportunities for action outside the
home or the convent, the strength to travel, to speak in public, to deal with
popes and kings, to undertake valuable and difficult functions of pacification
in the bloody political conflicts of the rime, to fight for the reform and the
unity of the Church, divided first by the exile in Avignon and then by the
Western Schism. Catherine, a young uneducated woman who authoritatively dealt
with the most powerful men of the time! This strength was certainly not her own,
nor the authority she showed, as she herself tirelessly repeated. Christ spoke
in her and through her; she had become a perfect instrument of the will of God.
She wrote to the powerful in the name of Jesus Crucified and His precious Blood,
and in this glorious name she scolded and incited, always aiming at the glory of
God, the good of the Church, the salvation of souls, the peace of all
men.
Reading the life of Catherine, we recall the
words addressed to the Holy Virgin by the Archangel Gabriel: "Nothing is
impossible for God". And the Lord also reminded Catherine of these words
when he asked her to leave home and begin her public apostolate. In her life
everything is the work of God. This included her doctrine, of which Pius II, in
the bull of canonisation, said "non acquisita fuit", i.e. not
justified by her cultural background, as well as her action, which transcended
every possible commitment of human strength. Of her Paul VI, proclaiming her
Doctor of the Church, said: "what is most striking in the saint is the
inherent wisdom, the lucid, profound and inebriating assimilation of divine
truths and of the mysteries of the faith... an assimilation, though favoured by
very singular natural talents, but obviously prodigious, due to a charism of the
wisdom of the Holy Spirit".
Her docility to the action of God and the gift
of the Spirit is what makes St. Catherine great, in a total union of love
between He who is and she who is not, as in her typical language she expresses
the relationship between the Creator and the creature. "I decided to send
women, unknowing, weak and fragile by nature, but rich in my divine wisdom, to
confound their pride and rashness", says the Lord. Once again God has
chosen the weak to confound the strong and has revealed the mysteries of His
Kingdom to the little ones, to a great little woman.
Near to Mari in the obedience of the faith,
Catherine is also near her in the spiritual maternity of the Church.
"Catherine reflects in herself the image of Mary, mother of the Church. She
feels this maternal task as her own very particular mission". She therefore
suffers when she sees her Spouse exhausted and pale due to her children, whom
she accuses and scolds for this reason; all the more so if the very Ministers
injure the Souse of Christ by their conduct. As John Paul II recalls,
proclaiming her Co-Patroness of Europe, the Sienese virgin unreservedly spent
her whole life for the Church. She herself testifies this to her spiritual
children on her deathbed: "Recall, dearest children, that I have given my
life for the Holy Church".
In 1370, revived after the experience of
mystical death, Catherine confided to her Confessor that she heard the Lord
speak these words; "The cell will no longer be your usual home; indeed, for
the salvation of souls you shall also leave your city... you shall bear the
honour of my name and my doctrine to small or great, be they lay, clergy or
religious. I shall place on your mouth a wisdom, which no one can resist. I
shall lead you before Pontiffs, Heads of the Churches and of the Christian
people, so that through the weak, as is my way of acting, I shall humiliate the
pride of the strong".
This is how Catherine of Siena’s public life
began, out of obedience to the love of God. The more she left the cell of her
room to become ambassador of Christ, "Sweet Truth" in Italy and
Europe, the more she concentrated in her "interior cell" where the
soul is alone with the Lord. Here and here only did she take from the Crucified
the wisdom and strength for the action. Certainly, St. Thomas and the entire
Christian tradition are present in Catherine, assimilated by the religious
environment surrounding her. But the Saint is not based on a human culture, but
rather, like St. Paul, on the knowledge of Christ Crucified, and as a
true daughter of St. Dominic, she transmits to others what she has learned in
contemplation.
The life of the Sienese saint shows that
action and contemplation are not alternatives, or opposites, but necessarily
compensate one another, since neither is complete without the other. This
teaching appears all the more significant in today’s society, where we live in
a continuous race against time. No pastoral or working task can distract us from
intimacy with Him without whom nothing would have meaning. We must remain in the
"interior cell", the cell of "self-knowledge". Catherine
never tired of telling this to the priests, is the first weapon to defeat the
temptations and snares of the world.
While Italy was torn by civil strife and the
Church was subject to corruption and political interests, the work of the Saint
has three major objectives; the pacification of the Italian cities, the reform
of the Church and the return of the Pope to Rome from Avignon. She devoted
herself unsparingly to each task, armed only with the strength of her faith and
her charity. God crowned her work with success. The return of Gregory XI from
exile in Avignon was the greatest of these results, the one for which history
will always remember the name of Catherine, an arduous result for anyone,
impossible for a girl lacking any earthly power. But God worked through her.
The joy for the return of the Pope was short
lasting. Soon after the Church was torn by schism. Catherine went to Rome,
called by Urban VI. Here she consumed her remaining strength in a sacrifice for
the Church, unsparingly sustaining by every means the legitimate Pontiff, by
fierce scolding, exhortations and prayer for this last battle whose end she did
not see.
The battles fought by St. Catherine for the
Church are witnessed to in her letters to Popes, Cardinals, monks and priests.
In them there is always a great love for the holy Ministers, love joined with
devotion and respect, reverence for the dignity of the Sacrament they
administer. "Father, for reverence for the Sacramento", as she often
said to the priests. The depth of this love, which certainly did not depend on
the human characteristics of its recipients, is equal only to the strength of
the reproof of those who injured the face of the Church-Spouse. It was the
awareness of this love that made Catherine free, enabling her to make
accusations and reproofs for the good of the Church, without fear of being
motivated by other, more earthly reasons.
Only the Pope could correct the defects of the
priests, and not the laity who should always revere them, since Christ left to
the Apostle Peter and his successors the key of His Blood, from which all the
Sacraments gain life. The Pope, with ardent faith recognised by Catherine as
"sweet Christ on earth" and called with tender affection "My
kindest daddy" is asked to work strongly for the reform of the Church.
"Intervene to eliminate the stink of the ministers of the Holy Church; pull
out the stinking flowers and plant scented plants, virtuous men who fear
God".
In her letters to the priests, Catherine
outlines a reform which in order to extend to the entire body of the Church must
start from personal conversion. She refers to love of self as the source of all
vices and to humility as the first of the virtues. She recommends a sober life,
detached from earthly pleasures, but attentive to the good of souls, inspired by
purity, peace and charity. The priest lives in prayer, and as described in
Catherine’s beautiful symbolism, Catherine, "with the spouse of the
breviary at his side". Addressing the priests in their various conditions
with maternal solicitude, she always recalls, even to the most fragile, the
dignity conferred on them by God as dispensers of the Blood of the Lamb. In
order to help them to remember how "self-knowledge", obtained with the
illuminated reason of faith, is an essential condition of a virtuous life and
encourages them to entrust themselves to Mary, to whom, she writes, "you
have been offered and given". The strength of her reproofs is also
maternal; they are always oriented towards the conversion of those who have made
an error. But there is one thing that is indispensable for Catherine:
"Remain in the sweet and holy delight of God".
To conclude, let us listen to the
wisdom-filled charism of Catherine the definition of priests. The Saint devotes
many pages of her book to this (The Dialogue of Divine Providence)
dictated by her when in ecstasy to her disciples, and describes the ministerial
dignity, a gift of God, as a dignity superior to that of the Angels.
"Oh dearest Daughter, I have told you all
this so that you may better know the dignity I have conferred on my ministers,
and that their misery may make you sadder… They are my anointed ones,
and I call them my Christs, because I have given them my own self to
administer to you. Angels do not have this dignity, and I have granted to men,
to those whom I have appointed as my ministers".
In this regard there is an especially valuable
consideration in numbers 17/18/19 of the "Directory for the Ministry and
Life of Permanent Deacons". Certainly, in present circumstances, it would
not be exaggerated to say that a soul concerned for the "Christs" of
God, such as Catherine, would feel like a providential instrument for the
sanctification of the priests and the consequent good of the entire body of the
Church, in a generous and motivated application of this Directory, as well as
the subsequent documents of the Congregation for the Clergy, i.e. the inter-dicastery
instruction "De Ecclesiae mysterio" and the circular letter "The
Priest and the third Christian Millennium Teacher of the Word".
For Catherine, the priests are "ministers
of the Sun", since they are ministers of the Body and Blood of Christ, who
is one with God, the true sun. The functions and duties of priests are derived
from this high Ministry: administering the Sacraments, devotion to the glory of
God and the salvation of souls, the illumination of the faithful with the word
and with example, the correction of sinners, prayer for the faithful, charity to
the poor.
The holy and virtuous ministers, God says to
Catherine, themselves resemble the sun. They have, in fact, produced light and
heat, "since in them there is no shadow of sin or ignorance, because they
follow the doctrine of my Truth. They are warmed by it since they burn in the
furnace of my charity". Thus they give light and heat in the mystical body
of the Church, illuminating and heating souls with supernatural knowledge and
the ardent charity.
For the priests, His "Christs", God always demands
reverence and respect, whatever their human weakness may be, since any offence
against them is also against Him. He asks Catherine and all the Christians to
pray assiduously for the Holy Church and her ministers.
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1 The Prayer of the Church, 1936.
2 Thomas of Siena detto il Caffarini, Vita di S. Caterina, P.II,
c.I.
3 AAS, LXII, 31 October 1970.
4 Thomas of Siena detto il Caffarini, op.cit, P.II, c.I.
5 C. Riccardi, II message filosofico and mistico of S. Caterina da Siena,
Ed. Cantagalli, 1994, p.152.
6 Raimondo da Capua, Vita di S. Caterina da Siena, l.III, c.IV, n.363.
7 Ibid., n. 216.
8 Cfr. S. Caterina da Siena, Dialogo della Divina Provvidenza, c.115.
9 A Gregorio XI, Lettera 270.
10 A prete Andrea de' Vitroni, Lettera n.2.
11 A don Roberto da Napoli, Lettera n.342.
12 S. Caterina da Siena, Dialogo della Divina provvidenza, c.113.
13 Ibid., c. 119.
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