Mio Dio, la tua gloria!

http://vultus.stblogs.org/2009/04/mio-dio-la-tua-gloria.html

By <http://vultus.stblogs.org>Father Mark on 
April 21, 2009 6:55 PM | 
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Emacs!


Ut Unum Sint

Although the Roman Martyrology notes the day of 
her death on April 23, 1939, the Cistercian and 
Trappist calendars commemorate Blessed Maria 
Gabriella, a nun of Grottaferrata in Italy, on 
April 22. Pope John Paul II beatified Blessed 
Maria Gabriella dell'Unità in 1983 and in his 
Encyclical on Christian unity, Ut Unum Sint, 
presented her again to the whole Church as a 
model of "the total and unconditional offering of 
one's life to the Father, through the Son, in the 
Holy Spirit." Her monastic life was brief: three 
and a half years. She died after fifteen months 
of tuberculosis at the age of twenty-five.

The Dilated Heart

Blessed Maria Gabriella is, in many ways, a woman 
to whom anyone touched by suffering and 
disability can relate, and for many reasons. The 
physical limitations that reduced her "doing" 
expanded her "being" until, at length, the Holy 
Ghost dilated her heart to the dimensions of the 
Heart of Jesus, the Good Shepherd. How can I not 
think here of my esteemed friend Vincent Uher at 
<http://tonusperegrinus.blogspot.com/>Tonus Peregrinus?

<http://vultus.stblogs.org/Maria-Gabriella-ab.JPG>
Maria-Gabriella-ab.JPG


Silence Turned to Praise

Blessed Maria-Gabriella is one of those who, 
having heard the Word, held it in silence: in the 
silence of wonderment, in the silence that 
confesses God present, in the silence that allows 
the Word to sink into the deep and secret places 
of the soul. For Maria-Gabriella, this silence 
turned to praise: a sublime praise uttered by 
Christ the Eternal High Priest in the seventeenth 
chapter of Saint John's Gospel. At the end of 
life, she confided: "I cannot say but these words, 'My God, your Glory.'"

Pages Become Transparent

Maria Sagghedù, leaving her native Sardinia for 
Grottaferrata, entered a monastery that was 
economically and culturally poor, although 
governed by Mother Maria Pia Gulini, an abbess 
who believed in keeping a window open onto the 
wider Church. Maria Gabriella lived a hidden life 
circumscribed by the cloister, by silence and by 
obedience. Her monastic life was short; she 
crossed the threshold of the Abbey of 
Grottaferrata in 1935 and died in 1939, a mere 
three and a half years later. It was Good 
Shepherd Sunday at the hour of Vespers, the 
Church's evening sacrifice of praise. The Gospel 
that day had been from Saint John: "There will be 
one fold, and one shepherd" (Jn 10:16). After 
Maria Gabriella's death, her sisters found that 
her little pocket edition of the New Testament, 
worn from use, opened by itself to the 
seventeenth chapter of Saint John's Gospel. Those 
few pages of Jesus' Priestly Prayer, so often 
touched by Mother Maria Gabriella's feverish 
hands, had become almost transparent.

The Unity of the Mystical Body

Blessed Maria Gabriella's offering for Christian 
unity witnesses to the fundamental thrust of 
every monastic life, both in its canonical form 
within the enclosure walls, or in its interior 
expression, without cloister or habit, in the 
world. Monastic conversion is a movement from the 
divided, fragmented self to the whole self, 
healed and unified in the love of Christ. The 
restoration of unity is the great monastic work; 
it is the end and fruit of every Eucharistic 
Sacrifice. Saint Thomas Aquinas teaches the end 
proper to the Sacrament of the Eucharist is the 
unity of the Mystical Body. Let us then go to the 
altar, letting go of things that fragment that 
unity, and ready to receive the gifts by which unity is repaired.

Read more about Blessed Maria Gabriella 
dell'Unità 
<http://mt.stblogs.org/cgi/mt-search.cgi?search=Gabriella&IncludeBlogs=21>here 
and <http://www.mariagabriella.org/inglese.htm>here.


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