<http://irishcatholichumanist.blogspot.com/2009/04/st-catherine-of-siena-1347-1380.html>St<http://irishcatholichumanist.blogspot.com/2009/04/st-catherine-of-siena-1347-1380.html>.
 
Catherine of Siena (1347-1380)

<http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_vjlTTnUPlbc/SfhhjWuq05I/AAAAAAAABJ4/-WCWfJhZzzU/s1600-h/Saint%2520Catherine%2520of%2520Siena%5B1%5D.jpg>
[]


Throughout the 1300’s, the Church was facing 
schism and division as the Popes moved to 
Avignon. It was a woman, St. Catherine of Siena, 
who used her personal influence to bring the 
popes back to Rome. Gregory XI wanted to bring 
the papacy back to Rome, but he was afraid of 
what the French King and the French cardinals 
would do. Catherine traveled to Avignon and 
persuaded him to return. She told him:

Even if you have not been very faithful in the 
past, begin now to follow Christ, whose vicar you 
are, in real earnest. And do not be afraid… 
Attend to things spiritual, appointing good 
shepherds and good rulers in the cities under 
your jurisdiction… Above all, delay no longer in returning to Rome.

Catherine died in 1380 at age 33, but she was one 
of the most remarkable women in the history of 
the Church. (In 1970 she and Teresa of Avila were 
the first two women to be declared Doctor of the 
Church. The third was Therese of Lisieux in 
1997.) Like Teresa, she was a profound mystic who 
wasn’t afraid to speak her mind: “It is through 
silence that the world is lost.”

The 25th child of a wool dyer in northern Italy, 
St. Catherine started having mystical experiences 
when she was only 6, seeing guardian 
<http://www.catholic.org/saints/angel.php>angels 
as clearly as the people they protected. She 
became a Dominican tertiary when she was 16, and 
continued to have 
<http://www.catholic.org/encyclopedia/view.php?id=12111>visions 
of Christ, Mary, and the saints. St. Catherine 
was one of the most brilliant theological minds 
of her day, although she never had any formal 
education. In 1375 she received the Stigmata, 
which was visible only after her death. Her 
Dialogues are some of the most profound spiritual writing in Church History.
Posted by Pat McNamara at 
<http://irishcatholichumanist.blogspot.com/2009/04/st-catherine-of-siena-1347-1380.html>10:16
 
AM 
<http://www.blogger.com/email-post.g?blogID=2433923231159178842&postID=944546741474529331>
[]


<http://irishcatholichumanist.blogspot.com/2009/04/st-catherine-of-siena-1347-1380.html>http://irishcatholichumanist.blogspot.com/2009/04/st-catherine-of-siena-1347-1380.html
 



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