Pray with usThis is the
greatest action we can take in addressing the issues we face with our
children's Catholic education. Below are the daily prayers we are
using to gain the intercession of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton and St. Catherine
of Siena, the patron saints we've selected to help with this cause. We
invite you to select one or both of these prayers for a 9-day novena.
Novena to St. Elizabeth Ann Seton
O Father, the
first rule of our dear Savior's life was to do Your
Will. Let His Will of the
present moment be the first rule of our daily life and work, with no other
desire but for its most full and complete accomplishment. Help us to follow
it faithfully, so that doing what You wish we will be pleasing to You,
especially regarding this intention I bring before you now...(Make your
request)...Amen.
Our Father, Hail Mary, Glory Be... [Pray for nine consecutive
days]
Novena to St. Catherine of Siena
Heavenly Father, your glory is in your saints. We praise your glory in
the life of the admirable St. Catherine of Siena, virgin and doctor of the
Church. Her whole life was a noble sacrifice inspired by an ardent love of
Jesus, your unblemished Lamb. In troubled times she strenuously upheld the
rights of His beloved spouse, The Church. Father, honor her merits and hear
her prayers for each of us, and for our whole parish family dedicated to
her. Help us to pass unscathed through the corruption of this world, and to
remain unshakably faithful to the church in word, deed, and example. Help us
always to see in the Vicar of Christ an anchor in the storms of life, and a
beacon of light to the harbor of your Love, in this dark night of your times
and men's souls. Grant also to each of us our special petition . . . (pause
to pray for your own intentions). We ask this through Jesus, your Son, in
the bond of the Holy Spirit. Amen. [Pray for nine consecutive
days]
About these Saints
Saint
Elizabeth Ann Seton
Saint
Elizabeth Ann Seton was the first saint who was born in the
United States of America. She
was beatified in 1963 and declared a saint in 1975. Saint Elizabeth Ann
Seton's feast day is January 4. She is a patron saint of children near death
and persons rejected for their Catholic faith.
Elizabeth
Ann Bayley was born on August 28, 1775, in New York City to Richard Bayley,
the anatomy professor at Columbia, and his wife, Catherine Charlton,
daughter of an Anglican minister. The mother died three years later. Mr.
Bayley not only taught at the university, but took charge of his daughter's
education. Elizabeth was well-read, but her favorite book was always the
Bible.
In 1794,
Elizabeth married
William Seton and the two enjoyed much prosperity and happiness in their
marriage's early years. Their years of trial started in 1798, when William's
father passed away, leaving the young Setons not only the family's thriving
import business, but also William's seven half-brothers and sisters to care
for. William's business and health both failed. Leaving four of their five
children in the States with William's sister, Rebecca, the Seton couple went
to Italy where the family had business associates. Hoping for reversals in
business and health, the couple were disappointed to obtain neither. Mr.
Seton passed away of tuberculosis in 1803. Elizabeth and her daughter
delayed in returning to the United States until the following summer because
of their own health problems.
While in
Italy, Elizabeth
was grateful for the hospitality and care that her Catholic friends and
neighbors offered and she began to learn about the Catholic faith. Because
of the loss of her own mother, Elizabeth found particular comfort in the
teachings about the motherhood of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Elizabeth
and her youngest daughter rejoined their family in the United States in the
summer of 1804, and Elizabeth joined the Catholic Church in 1805 in St.
Peters Church, Barclay St., New York. She did this despite her need for
financial support from her family as she was a young widow with five
children of her own and other relatives to care for. She knew that support
from her family would be less than forthcoming upon her conversion.
Elizabeth
tried to start a Catholic school in New York City with friends, but the
effort was not a success. They were condemned in the community as
"proselytizers."
After a few
years of searching for a place to serve in the Church and to provide for her
family, Elizabeth
was encouraged to move to Baltimore, Maryland, to start a school. With two
other young women, she started the first Catholic school in the United
States. On March 25, 1809, she took vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience
and began to be called Mother Seton.
Elizabeth
and the two other young women attracted others to their work and began a
Sisterhood (Sisters of Charity in the U.S.) based on the Rule of St. Vincent
de Paul for the Daughters of Charity in France. By 1818, they still
maintained the original school, but had added another school and two
orphanages to their work. Elizabeth
suffered with illness during the last three years of her life and passed
away in 1821 in Maryland.
Saint
Elizabeth Ann Seton is credited with starting the parochial system in the
United States and
today six orders of sisters trace their roots to her work. She did this
while raising her five children. Quite an accomplishment!!!
St. Catherine of Siena
She was the youngest but one of a very large
family. Her father,
Giacomo di Benincasa, was a dyer; her mother, Lapa, the daughter of a local
poet. They belonged to the lower middle-class faction of tradesmen and petty
notaries, known as "the Party of the Twelve", which between one revolution
and another ruled the
Republic of Siena from 1355 to 1368. From her earliest childhood
Catherine began to see
visions and to practice extreme austerities.
At the age of seven she consecrated her virginity to
Christ; in her
sixteenth year she took the habit of the Dominican Tertiaries, and renewed
the life of the anchorites of the desert in a little room in her father's
house. After three years of celestial visitations
and familiar conversation with Christ, she underwent the mystical experience
known as the "spiritual espousals", probably during the carnival of 1366.
She now rejoined her family, began to tend the sick, especially those
afflicted with the most repulsive diseases, to serve the poor, and to labor
for the conversion of sinners. Though always suffering terrible physical
pain, living for long intervals on practically no food save the Blessed Sacrament,
she was ever radiantly happy and full of practical wisdom no less than the
highest spiritual insight.
All her contemporaries bear witness to her extraordinary personal charm,
which prevailed over the continual persecution to which she was subjected
even by the friars of her own order and by her sisters in religion. She
began to gather disciples round her, both men and women, who formed a
wonderful spiritual fellowship, united to her by the bonds of mystical love.
During the summer of 1370 she received a series of special manifestations of
Divine mysteries, which culminated in a prolonged trance, a kind of mystical
death, in which she had a vision of
Hell,
Purgatory, and
Heaven, and heard a Divine command to leave her cell and enter the public
life of the world.
She began to dispatch letters to men and women in every condition of
life, entered into correspondence with the princes and republics of Italy,
was consulted by the papal legates about the affairs of the Church, and set
herself to heal the wounds of her native land by staying the fury of civil
war and the ravages of faction. She implored the pope,
Gregory XI, to
leave Avignon, to reform the clergy and the administration of the Papal
States, and ardently threw herself into his design for a
crusade, in the
hopes of uniting the powers of Christendom against the infidels, and
restoring peace to Italy by delivering her from the wandering companies of
mercenary soldiers. While at Pisa, on the fourth Sunday of
Lent, 1375, she
received the Stigmata,
although, at her special prayer, the marks did not appear outwardly in her
body while she lived.
In the meanwhile the
Great Schism had broken out in the Church. From the outset Catherine
enthusiastically adhered to the Roman claimant,
Urban VI, who in
November, 1378, summoned her to Rome. In the
Eternal City she
spent what remained of her life, working strenuously for the reformation of
the Church, serving the destitute and afflicted, and dispatching eloquent
letters in behalf of
Urban to high and low in all directions.
Her strength was rapidly being consumed; she besought her Divine
Bridegroom to let her bear the punishment for all the sins of the world, and
to receive the sacrifice of her body for the unity and renovation of the
Church; at last it seemed to her that the Bark of Peter was laid upon her
shoulders, and that it was crushing her to death with its weight. After a
prolonged and mysterious agony of three months, endured by her with supreme
exultation and delight, from
Sexagesima Sunday
until the Sunday before the Ascension, she died. Her last political work,
accomplished practically from her death-bed, was the reconciliation of
Pope Urban VI with
the Roman Republic (1380).
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