<http://www.stgemmagalgani.com/2009/01/st-gemma-and-passion.html>St 
Gemma and the 
<http://www.stgemmagalgani.com/2009/01/st-gemma-and-passion.html>Passion

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(Reprinted below is an article from November 1959 
issue of the Passionist magazine "The Sign". The 
webmaster would like to thank the Passionist 
Historical Archives, of Union City, New Jersey, 
who have kindly given permission to reprint it here. Glenn Dallaire -webmaster)

St Gemma and the Passion
By: Hilary Sweeney, C.P.

In the pictures we usually see of her, Saint 
Gemma wears the Passionist badge. She was not, 
however, a Pas­sionist Nun. Although she had 
begged permission to enter the convent of the 
Passionist Nuns at Corneto (Italy), she was not 
even allowed to make a few days' retreat there 
with other young ladies of Lucca. In fact, the 
letter is pre­served in which the Superior's 
refusal contains the cruel words: "We will not 
have our convent contaminated by her."

It would be wrong to condemn this nun 
out-of-hand. She was not referring to Gemma's 
moral character. Rather, in her solicitude for 
the health of her community, she was giving voice 
to a fear which everybody had in those days of 
the dread disease still nervously called "T.B." 
[Tuberculosis -editor]. Gemma was a consump­tive, 
a carrier of a highly infectious disease, and, 
for that reason, she had eventually to be removed 
from her adopted family. Even then, it was only 
with great difficulty that a room was found for 
her in a dilapidated, three-­story tenement house 
where she died practically in quarantine.

Fear is a perfectly normal emotion caused by the 
presence or approach of evil. Like the emotion of 
love, which can become the virtue of charity, 
fear too can become a virtue. Indeed, fear is 
born of love, as Hamlet's Player Queen reminds us:
"Where love is great, the littlest doubts are fear;
Where little fears grow great, great , love grows there."
In fact, fear is one of the seven special Gifts 
of the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of Love, and is 
rightly called in Sacred Scripture "the beginning of Wisdom."

Now, among all the evils to which we are exposed, 
what is the worst? The pope who canonized Gemma 
made this quite clear on one occasion a few years 
ago. At a public audience, Pope Pius XII said 
that the worst of all evils is not that whole 
nations could be wiped out by atomic explosions, 
nor that untold suffering would follow the 
poisonous radiation of "fall-out," nor that the 
earth itself might be blasted from its axis and 
sent sizzling into space as a cinder. No, he 
said, the worst of all evils is already at work 
in the world. It is not sin, not any kind of sin, 
nor all sins put together. The worst of all 
evils, he said, is the loss of the sense of sin.

Saint Gemma was brought to ex­traordinary 
sanctity through holy fear, through a keen 
awareness of the evil that sin is. For, although 
she enjoyed the almost continuous visible 
presence of her guardian angel, although she was 
seen in conversation with an appari­tion of the 
Mother of God, although Christ Himself appeared 
many times to her, Gemma testified that "the 
greatest grace Jesus has given me is-horror for sin."

What Gemma learned of sin, it seems that God 
intended her to teach us ­not by anything she 
said or did, but just by what she suffered. I do 
not mean the sufferings she bore in her flesh: 
that marvelous renewing of Christ's Passion when, 
every Friday for two years, she bled from wounds 
in her hands and feet and side. I do not mean her 
likeness to Jesus scourged, when great purple 
welts and ugly bleeding stripes suddenly covered 
her whole body. I do not mean her crowning with 
the very thorns of Our Lord, when her scalp was 
horribly punctured and blood, matting her hair, 
oozed down her cheeks and neck. No .. I mean the 
sufferings Gemma endured in her soul-the same 
kind of sufferings that come to all of us from 
time to time: the sense of failure, of loss, of 
loneli­ness, of misunderstanding; the unclean 
images that enter our minds; the sud­den, illicit 
desires that assail our hearts; the' doubts we 
sometimes have about the mysteries of our Holy 
Faith; the depression of spiritual aridity, when 
it seems impossible to pray, when we begin to 
think that even the reception of the sacraments 
is a waste of time. I mean, especially, the temptation to give up.

Gemma suffered all this in her soul, even when 
her poor body was renewing the sacred mystery of 
Jesus scourged, Jesus crowned, or Jesus 
crucified. In­deed, Our Lord had forewarned her 
that He would prove her love for Him by the way 
of "aridity, affliction, and temptation; when all 
my senses would rebel and become like so many 
hungry wild beasts; when I would be always 
inclined toward evil, when the pleas­ures of 
earth would preoccupy my mind, when my memory 
would recall things I did not desire, things 
contrary to God, and I would no longer relish the 
things of God .... Jesus told me that He wished 
to treat me in the same way that His Heavenly 
Father had treated Him." (words of St Gemma)

Obviously this does not mean that Our Lord 
suffered any of the tempta­tions which arise from 
human nature as fallen-temptations which have 
their origin in "the kindling wood of sin," as 
the theologians call concupis­cence. The 
comparison between Jesus' temptations and Gemma's 
is "in the same way"-not "in the same things." 
That there was, in Our Lord, a very real sense of 
desolation on the cross is undeniable. Perhaps 
the only way we can explain it is on the analogy 
of the "dark night" both of the senses and of the 
soul itself. Certainly, in a context even more 
directly concerned with assailments of rebellious 
flesh, Our Lord told St. Catherine of Siena that 
it is God's way to try His servants "in the same 
way" that He permitted Him to suffer. The 
comparison is real, but it looks rather to the 
apparent withdrawal of divine help than to any specific kind of temptation.

In this sense, we share Gemma's opportunity to 
renew in our souls the Passion of Jesus Christ. 
For tempta­tions of all kinds come to each of us 
every day. They may come in the holiest places, 
perhaps even at the very moment of receiving Holy 
Com­munion. They came to Gemma. She knew that she 
had nothing to fear from them, as such. But, with 
every temptation, there grew in her soul a fear, 
a horror of committing the least sin to which 
these temptations were soliciting her. She knew 
that in this way she was renewing in her soul, 
much more painfully than in her stigma­tized 
flesh, the very agony of Jesus in Gethsemani. 
For, when He was tempted, the Evangelist tells 
us, "He began to feel dread and to be exceed­ingly troubled."

Do we experience anything like that holy fear when we are tempted?
Do we foolishly think that there is something 
wrong with us, just because we have these 
temptations? Do we fear that this temptation is 
too much for us, forgetting the dear statement of 
Saint Paul that "God will not per­mit you to be 
tempted beyond your strength, but with the 
temptation will give you a way out . . ."? If we 
do, then we are missing an excellent op­portunity 
to supply "what is lacking of the sufferings of 
Christ . . . for His body which is the Church."

Do we make light of temptation, put­ting 
ourselves deliberately in the way of it? Even 
though we know that we have fallen before, do we 
continue to keep company that has already proved 
dangerous for us? Do we still nourish the 
grievances that have led us to re­taliations and 
sometimes even to more cruel silences and 
omissions? Do we resent the spiritual comfort 
that is denied us? Do we parade our petty 
calvaries of sighs and scowls upon our faces?

If we do, then we are indeed renew­ing the 
Passion of Jesus in our souls­ not by sharing 
with Gemma and with Jesus a holy fear and horror 
of sin­ but, as the Scripture says, by 
"crucify­ing again to (ourselves) the Son of God 
and (making) a mockery of Him."

May God grant that, through the temptations that 
come to us, we may co-operate with the Gift of 
Fear which has been infused into our souls by the 
Holy Spirit of God. May Saint Gemma obtain for us 
an this growth in true fear, so that we may make 
the most of these opportunities to share, with 
her, the Passion of Christ "from whom the whole 
body (the Church), supplied. and built up by 
joints and ligaments, attains a growth that is of God."


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Lord, may everything we do begin with Your 
inspiration and continue with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.




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