Showing posts with label St. Rose of Lima. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Rose of Lima. Show all posts
Monday, August 12, 2019
August 23--St. Rose of Lima, Virgin
“No pain, no gain!” We apply that to athletes, but what about saints? How should we act if we want to be totally dedicated to Jesus? Should we be willing to suffer to the nth degree. St. Rose wanted to be like St. Catherine of Siena and imitate her actions and acts of suffering. To that end she fasted often and sometimes made herself vomit after meals, which we would regard as bulimia. She frequently beat herself with a little whip! To make herself unattractive and unmarriageable she would rub pepper on her face. Eventually, she took a vow of virginity and became a third-order Dominican, like St. Catherine. She died in 1617 and was canonized about 50 years later, the first person in the Americas to be recognized as a saint.
Some of these actions are quite severe, although self-mortification is seen as a way of imitating the suffering of Christ. St. Rose of Lima found her way to God through such actions. But it was not without love or prayer or service to others. Today, we see athletes undergo severe suffering and admire their discipline and willingness to go beyond what others do. “No pain, no gain!” And yet, we shy at such a willingness to suffer for Christ.
God may not call us to undergo severe mortifications as St. Rose of Lima did. However, he does call us to pick up our cross and follow him. Being a disciple of Christ is not always easy and not always fun. But Jesus also said, “Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am meek and humble of heart; and you will find rest for yourselves. For my yoke is easy, and my burden light.” (Mt. 11:29-30) The key is to follow Christ as he calls us.
Monday, March 17, 2014
March 23—St. Turibius de Mongrovejo, Bishop
Saint Who? St. Turibius was one of the first saints of
the Western Hemisphere. He was archbishop
of Lima, Peru from 1580-1606, home to St. Rose of Lima and St. Martin de
Porres. But before he was assigned to
Lima, he first was ordained bishop after just being ordained priest. Correct, he was drafted to be the archbishop
of Lima when he was still a layman! But
the reason he was drafted was because of his ability as a lawyer and judge in
Spain. The Church needed someone beyond
reproach to clean up the ecclesiastical and colonial mess of the conquistadors.
When he arrived in Peru he walked to
Lima, 600 miles away, teaching and baptizing as he went. He traversed his diocese three times,
baptizing and confirming nearly 500,000 natives. He also challenged the governors and promoted
the rights of the native peoples against their Spanish overlords. He built roads, schoolhouses, hospitals, chapels,
convents, and the first seminary in the Western Hemisphere in Lima.
St. Turibius was a pioneer in
protecting native rights and ministering to their needs. Not all of Spain was bent on the gold and
glory of conquest. He was concerned with
God and how to bring God to these people.
It was not a matter of imposing a foreign god upon a defeated people; it
was a matter of sharing the message of the love of the true God to those who
had never heard of him. He was their
protector against the corruption and greed of the conquistadors. Who do we protect? To whom do we minister? With whom do we share the message of God? St. Turibius de Mongrovejo is not Saint Who?
but rather, Saint Wow!
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