(4 Min. Version) Poor Clares & COR AMORIS: Funding Construction of St. Joseph Monastery
Available for pre-order now:
https://www.tanbooks.com/index.php/COR-AMORIS-Collection
Join the Friends of the Poor Clares movement:
http://www.facebook.com/FriendsOfThePoorClares
COR AMORIS is a 5-volume collection of classic Catholic writings presented in the highest-quality hand-bound leather with gold trim, gold-stamped covers, classic Dore and Old Master artwork, marker ribbons, silk end sheets, and more.
All proceeds from the sale of this collection will be used to fund the building of the new St. Joseph Monastery for the Poor Clares of Perpetual Adoration who currently have temporary residence at St. Ann’s Catholic Parish in Charlotte, NC.
Please share this wonderful opportunity with your family and friends. There are many willing supporters of the Poor Clares who have not yet heard of their need for a monastery or this beautiful COR AMORIS collection through which their monastery can be funded.
The COR AMORIS Collection:
————————————-
THE STORY OF A SOUL
– St. Therese of Lisieux
IMITATION OF CHRIST
– Thomas a’Kempis
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE DEVOUT LIFE
– St. Francis de Sales
THE INTERIOR CASTLE
– St. Teresa of Avila
ABANDONMENT TO DIVINE PROVIDENCE
– Jean-Pierre de Caussade
(7 Min. Version) Poor Clares & COR AMORIS: Funding Construction of St. Joseph Monastery
Available for pre-order now:
https://www.tanbooks.com/index.php/COR-AMORIS-Collection
Join the Friends of the Poor Clares movement:
http://www.facebook.com/FriendsOfThePoorClares
COR AMORIS is a 5-volume collection of classic Catholic writings presented in the highest-quality hand-bound leather with gold trim, gold-stamped covers, classic Dore and Old Master artwork, marker ribbons, silk end sheets, and more.
All proceeds from the sale of this collection will be used to fund the building of the new St. Joseph Monastery for the Poor Clares of Perpetual Adoration who currently have temporary residence at St. Ann’s Catholic Parish in Charlotte, NC.
Please share this wonderful opportunity with your family and friends. There are many willing supporters of the Poor Clares who have not yet heard of their need for a monastery or this beautiful COR AMORIS collection through which their monastery can be funded.
The COR AMORIS Collection:
————————————-
THE STORY OF A SOUL
– St. Therese of Lisieux
IMITATION OF CHRIST
– Thomas a’Kempis
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE DEVOUT LIFE
– St. Francis de Sales
THE INTERIOR CASTLE
– St. Teresa of Avila
ABANDONMENT TO DIVINE PROVIDENCE
– Jean-Pierre de Caussade
(15 Min. Version) Poor Clares & COR AMORIS: Funding Construction of St. Joseph Monastery
Available for pre-order now:
https://www.tanbooks.com/index.php/COR-AMORIS-Collection
Join the Friends of the Poor Clares movement:
http://www.facebook.com/FriendsOfThePoorClares
COR AMORIS is a 5-volume collection of classic Catholic writings presented in the highest-quality hand-bound leather with gold trim, gold-stamped covers, classic Dore and Old Master artwork, marker ribbons, silk end sheets, and more.
All proceeds from the sale of this collection will be used to fund the building of the new St. Joseph Monastery for the Poor Clares of Perpetual Adoration who currently have temporary residence at St. Ann’s Catholic Parish in Charlotte, NC.
Please share this wonderful opportunity with your family and friends. There are many willing supporters of the Poor Clares who have not yet heard of their need for a monastery or this beautiful COR AMORIS collection through which their monastery can be funded.
The COR AMORIS Collection:
————————————-
THE STORY OF A SOUL
– St. Therese of Lisieux
IMITATION OF CHRIST
– Thomas a’Kempis
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE DEVOUT LIFE
– St. Francis de Sales
THE INTERIOR CASTLE
– St. Teresa of Avila
ABANDONMENT TO DIVINE PROVIDENCE
– Jean-Pierre de Caussade
Did You Know? Saint Catherine of Siena (Feast Day: April 29)
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
https://www.TANBooks.com/StCatherine
Did You Know? Saint Catherine of Siena (Feast Day: April 29)
The third episode in an ongoing series of brief videos filled with interesting details regarding the lives and miracles of well-known and lesser-known saints, and the devotions and traditions that have developed around them over time.
More “Did You Know?”:
– St. Joseph (Feast Day: March 19)
https://www.TANBooks.com/SaintJoseph
– St. Bernadette Soubirous (Feast Day: April 16)
https://www.TANBooks.com/StBernadette
TRANSCRIPT
St. Catherine of Siena
Saint Catherine of Siena was an Italian Doctor of the Church and Dominican tertiary who experienced her first divine vision at the age of 6 and has two final resting places. Born Catherine Benincasa on March 25, 1347 to her parents Giacomo and Lapa, she was one of 26 children, but sadly half of her siblings had already died from the Black Death and even Catherine’s twin sister, Giovanna, passed away shortly after birth. But, Catherine was healthy and was such a happy child that her family called her Euphrosyne, the Greek word for “JOYOUS”.
One day while walking home, 6-year old Catherine stopped in the road, gazing up to the sky. Her brother, noticing that she had fallen behind, returned and took Catherine by the hand, but she burst into tears, for she had been in ecstasy, experiencing a vision of Christ seated in glory with the Apostles Peter, Paul, and John, and it was now gone.
At the age of 12, Catherine’s mother wished for her to marry. So, Catherine began fixing her hair and dressing in brightly jeweled gowns. But she soon repented of such vanity and resolutely declared that she would never marry, defiantly chopping off her beautiful hair when her parents persisted.
Finally, Catherine’s father realized her unwavering intentions and arranged a small room for her where she offered prayers, fasted and slept on a wooden board. Catherine soon became a Dominican tertiary, which was an unusual privledge for such a young girl. For the next three years, she devoted herself completely to prayer, speaking only to her confessor, never venturing out except to church, and consuming little more than the Blessed Sacrament.
In 1366 while praying in solitude, Catherine received a vision of Christ, the Virgin Mary and a multitude of angels. Our Lady held Catherine’s hand before Christ, who then espoused her to Himself by placing a ring on her finger. Though the ring was invisible to others, Catherine could see it at all times and it served as the sign that her period of solitude was now complete and her faith could overcome all temptations.
Catherine began helping in the city hospitals, choosing to aid those with the most difficult conditions, which is one reason she was named the Patron Saint of Nurses. She inspired many conversions, continually aiding victims of the plague, preparing the sick for death and personally laying them to rest, but many of her patients survived as well including Blessed Raymund of Capua, her confessor and eventual biographer.
In February, 1375, Catherine visited Pisa where she experienced another spiritual vision in the church of Santa Christina. While gazing in ecstasy at the crucifix, five red rays of light suddenly descended from it, piercing her hands, feet and heart, so painfully that she fainted. Catherine quietly retained the wounds of stigmata the rest of her life, but they became visible to all after her death.
During her life, Catherine’s beautiful writing was compared to the great Italian literary figures Dante and Petrarch: most notably, her “Dialogue” and over 400 letters she wrote, including one that urged Pope Gregory XI to return the papacy from Avignon, France to Rome, in which she bluntly stated: “Courage father! Be a man! It is your duty to come back to Rome: therefore come!” And so he did, even going as far as to summon Catherine to Rome to be a personal advisor.
Catherine passed away on April 29, 1380, eight days after suffering a paralytic stroke. Her body is revered in the Basilica of Saint Mary above Minerva in Rome, but her incorrupt head and finger are enshrined in St. Dominic’s Basilica in Siena, believed to have been smuggled back there by the people of Siena.
Pope Pius II canonized Catherine in 1461 and along with St. Francis of Assisi, she was named Patron Saint of Italy. And that is how a six year old mystic became the saint we know today!
Did You Know? Saint Bernadette (Feast Day: April 16)
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
www.TANBooks.com/SaintBernadette
Did You Know? Saint Bernadette (Feast Day: April 16)
The second episode in an ongoing series of brief videos filled with interesting details regarding the lives and miracles of well-known and lesser-known saints, and the devotions and traditions that have developed around them over time.
TRANSCRIPT
——————————
Saint Bernadette Soubirous, who was born in Lourdes, France on January 7, 1844, almost lived in a padded cell and did live in a jail cell…That’s right! Due to hard times for the Subirous family, Bernadette spent her youth in a single-room basement-level home that formerly housed prisoners, known as “the dungeon”. And the padded cell? Well, that was nearly the result of her fascinating story.
From February 11 to July 16, 1858, 14 year-old Bernadette experienced 18 visions of “a beautiful Lady” in a local grotto and by the time of her final apparition, as many as 20,000 people had traveled to witness the events. During one vision, the Lady asked Bernadette to drink from a spring in the ground, only there was no spring. So, a confused Bernadette used her bare hands to dig up the ground before finally splashing some damp mud to her mouth.
This prompted many locals, who could not see the Lady, to claim Bernadette had gone insane, but within days, a powerful spring began to flow from the muddy hole and reports of miraculous healings soon followed. Further vindicating the visions, the Lady revealed her name to Bernadette as “The Immaculate Conception”: an 1854 dogma defined by Pope Pius IX, and a phrase that Bernadette had never even heard before.
To escape her newfound and undesired fame, 22-year old Bernadette left Lourdes to join the Sisters of Charity convent in Nevers, but upon her arrival, even the mistress of novices complained: “If the Blessed Virgin wanted to appear on Earth, why would she choose a coarse and uneducated peasant, rather than a learned and virtuous religious?”
Bernadette spent the rest of her life there, working primarily as an infirmary assistant. But after years of difficult health issues, including asthma, Bernadette died from tuberculosis in 1879 at only 35 years old. Amazingly, Bernadette then joined a small group of saints, known as The Incorruptibles, whose bodies have refused to decompose after death.
St. Bernadette’s visions in Lourdes have inspired dozens of books, and four major motion pictures…including 1943′s Oscar-winning film, Song of Bernadette.
Today, in France, only Paris has more hotels than Lourdes, and more than 5 million pilgrims seeking healing and renewed faith visit the small town every year…To-date, 67 people have experienced cures that the Lourdes Medical Bureau has classified as inexplicable. But, St. Bernadette herself said that only faith and prayer can cure, which is probably why she was named the patron saint of the sick.
Bernadette was beatified in 1925, then canonized by Pope Pius XI in 1933…and while the Vatican declared the apparitions of Our Lady of Lourdes “worthy of belief”, Bernadette’s canonization was not founded on the visions, but rather on the holiness she exhibited in her life.
…and that’s how a shy, young French girl became the saint we know today.
Poor Clares & COR AMORIS: Funding Construction of St. Joseph Monastery
Available for pre-order now:
https://www.tanbooks.com/index.php/COR-AMORIS-Collection
Join the Friends of the Poor Clares movement:
http://www.facebook.com/FriendsOfThePoorClares
COR AMORIS is a 5-volume collection of classic Catholic writings presented in the highest-quality hand-bound leather with gold trim, gold-stamped covers, classic Dore and Old Master artwork, marker ribbons, silk end sheets, and more.
All proceeds from the sale of this collection will be used to fund the building of the new St. Joseph Monastery for the Poor Clares of Perpetual Adoration who currently have temporary residence at St. Ann’s Catholic Parish in Charlotte, NC.
Please share this wonderful opportunity with your family and friends. There are many willing supporters of the Poor Clares who have not yet heard of their need for a monastery or this beautiful COR AMORIS collection through which their monastery can be funded.
The COR AMORIS Collection:
————————————-
THE STORY OF A SOUL
– St. Therese of Lisieux
IMITATION OF CHRIST
– Thomas a’Kempis
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE DEVOUT LIFE
– St. Francis de Sales
THE INTERIOR CASTLE
– St. Teresa of Avila
ABANDONMENT TO DIVINE PROVIDENCE
– Jean-Pierre de Caussade