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|    talk.religion.misc    |    Religious, ethical, & moral implications    |    30,222 messages    |
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|    Message 29,151 of 30,222    |
|    Weedy to All    |
|    How Burdens must be Borne to win Eternal    |
|    06 Jun 20 23:55:09    |
      From: richarra@gmail.com              How Burdens must be Borne to win Eternal Life [II]              Labor with all your might. Work faithfully in My vineyard;(Matt. 20:7)       I myself will be your reward. (Gen. 15:1) Write, study, worship, be       penitent, keep silence and pray. Meet all your troubles like a man:       eternal life is worth all this and yet greater conflicts. Peace will       come at a time known only to the Lord. It will not be day or night as       we know it, (Rev. 22:5) but everlasting light, boundless glory,       abiding peace and sure rest. You will not say then, 'Who will free me       from this mortal body?; (Rom 7:4) nor cry, 'Alas, how long is my       exile!' (Ps. 120:5) for the power of death will be utterly broken,       (Isa. 25:8) and full salvation assured. No anxiety will remain, but       only blessed joy in the fair and lovely fellowship of the Saints.       --Thomas à Kempis --Imitation of Christ Bk 3 Ch 47              <<>><<>><<>>       June 7th - Bl. Anne of St. Bartholomew, Virgin, Wonder-Worker              d. 1626       IN the writings of St. Teresa of Avila we find various allusions to a       young lay-sister, Anne-of-St.-Bartholomew, whom she made her special       companion and whom she once described as a great servant of God. Anne       was the child of Ferdinand Garcia and Catherine Mançanas, peasants       living at Almendral, four miles from Avila. Until the age of 20 she       was employed as a shepherdess, but she then obtained admission to the       Carmelite convent of St. Joseph at Avila. During the last 7 years of       her life St. Teresa took Anne on nearly all her journeys, declaring       that in her work of foundations and reforms she found her more useful       than anyone else. Several times she proposed that Anne should receive       the black veil, but Anne always refused, preferring to remain a       lay-sister. Anne has left a graphic description of their journey from       Medina to Alba and of the saint's death, pathetically recording the       consolation she herself derived from being able to gratify the holy       Mother's love of neatness up to the very end. “The day she died she       could not speak. I changed all her linen, headdress and sleeves. She       looked at herself quite satisfied to see herself so clean: then,       turning her eyes on me, she looked at me smilingly and showed her       gratitude by signs." It was in Anne's arms that St. Teresa breathed       her last.              For six years more Anne remained on quietly at Avila, and then a great       change came into her life. Important personages in Paris--notably       Madame Acarie and Peter de Bérulle--had for some time been anxious to       introduce the Barefooted Carmelites into France. They now applied for       some Spanish nuns to help in making a foundation, and Teresa's       successor, Anne-of-Jesus, set out with five nuns, of whom Bl.       Anne-of-St. Bartholomew was one. Upon their arrival in Paris, whilst       the rest were being welcomed by Princess de Longueville and ladies of       the court, Anne slipped into the kitchen to prepare a meal for the       community. Her superiors, however, had decided that St. Teresa's       chosen companion was fitted for higher work, and shortly afterwards       Anne unwillingly found herself promoted to be a choir sister. She had       signed her own profession with a simple cross, but according to the       best authorities she had acted long before this as secretary to St.       Teresa: according to others, she now found herself miraculously able       to write. It may be that the gift of letters was bestowed upon her       with other wisdom when she was about to be faced with new       responsibilities. Difficulties of various kinds attended the       establishment of Carmel in France, and five of the six Spanish nuns       went to the Netherlands. Anne, who remained in France, was appointed       prioress at Pontoise and then at Tours. The prospect of being set to       govern others at first distressed her greatly, and in fervent prayer       she pleaded her incompetence, comparing herself to a weak straw. The       answer she received reassured her: "It is with straws I light my       fire", our Lord had replied.              A few years later Carmelite houses were opened in the Netherlands. Bl.       Anne was sent to Mons, where she remained a year. In 1612 she made a       foundation of her own at Antwerp. It was soon filled with the       daughters of the noblest families in the Low Countries,[* Among them       was Anne Worsley (Anne-of-the-Ascension), the first English Teresian       Carmelite. It was she who in 1619 established the English community at       Antwerp, now at Lanherne in Cornwall. See Sr A. Hardman, English       Carmelites in Penal Times (1936).] all eager to tread the path of       perfection under the guidance of one who already in her lifetime was       regarded as a saint and was known to be a prophet and a wonder-worker.       On two occasions, when Antwerp was besieged by the Prince of Orange       and was on the point of capture, Anne prayed all night; the city was       saved, and she was acclaimed the protectress and defender of Antwerp.       Her death in 1626 was the occasion for extraordinary demonstrations,       when 20,000 persons touched her body with rosaries and other things as       it lay exposed before burial. For many years afterwards the city       continued to venerate her memory by an annual procession in which the       members of the municipality, candle in hand, led the way to her       convent. Bl. Anne was beatified in 1917.              The apostolic letter pronouncing the decree of beatification is       printed in the Acta Apostolicae Sedis, vol. ix (1917), pp. 257-261,       and it contains the usual biographical summary. Bl. Anne wrote an       autobiography at the command of her superiors; the account is carried       down to the first years of her residence in Antwerp, and the original       document is preserved in the Carmelite convent there. An incomplete       French translation was published in 1646, and Fr Bouix makes limited       use of the autobiography in his life, "purement édifiante", of the       beata (1872); see also Fr Bruno's La belle Acarie (1942). C. Henriquez       published a life in Spanish in 1632, and a modern account in the same       language, by Florencio del Niño Jesus, appeared in 1917: this was       adapted into French by Abbe L. Aubert (1918). See also H. Bremond,       Histoire littéraire..., t. ii, pp. 299-319 (there is an English       translation of this volume).                     Saint Quote:       When you find your intellect occupied pleasurably with material things       and becoming fondly attached to its conceptual images of them,       you may be sure that you love these things more than God.       "For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also." (Matt. 6:21)       --St. Maximos the Confessor              Bible Quote              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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