The BENEDICTINES have more Saints and Doctors of the Church than any other religious group, largely because their history stretches back to the 6th century. But the number of saints begins to thin out in the latter part of the Middle Ages, as the emphasis shifts to more active orders, and then dries up almost altogether in the modern period, apart from the martyrs of the Reformation and French Revolution.
Somewhere I once read that many in the cloister are unknown, whereas saints who were in active apostolates were visible to the church and laity.Needless to say, in the last five hundred years the other major religious orders have very many more canonized saints.
This may be
starting to change as there are a good number of Benedictines on the path to
canonization, showing the enduring power of the Benedictine charism. Here is a
list of those Benedictines (we include Cistercians/Trappists as part of the
Benedictine family and also priest and lay oblates) who have been beatified,
declared venerable, or whose cause has been opened on the diocesan level with
the title Servant of God.
In past Blogs we mentioned:
Bl. Gertrude Prosper
(Religious) -. Blog October 25, 2018
Bl. Maria
Gabriella Sagheddu, (Religious)- January 2019
Bl. Hanna
Helena Chrzanowska (Oblate)-, April 6, 2018
Venerable Itala Mela (Oblate) -
2016
Servant of God Dorothy Day (Oblate) Blog 2010
Interestingly enough, it is the woman who are now in the " race" for sainthood. We consider another woman.
BL. MARIA ADEODATA PISANI, OSB was born into a noble family in
Her
father was an alcoholic and this led to marital problems, so much so that while Maria was still a small child
her mother left the home, entrusting the child's care to her
mother-in-law, Elisabeth Mamo Mompalao, who lived in
In 1821 her
father was involved in the uprising in
When she turned 21, she entered the Benedictine Community in St. Peter's Monastery and took the name Maria Adeodata. She made her solemn profession two years later.
In the cloister, Maria was a seamstress, sacristan, porter, teacher and novice mistress. Her fellow nuns and many people outside the cloister benefited from her charity.Bl. Maria Adeodata wrote various works, the most well-known of these is a collection of her personal reflections between the years 1835 and 1843 titled “The Mystical Garden of the Soul That Loves Jesus and Mary”.
The miracle required
for her beatification (November 24,1897)
in which Abbess Giuseppina Damiani from
the Monastery of Saint John the Baptist in Subiaco
was suddenly healed of a stomach tumor following
her request for Maria Adeodata’s intervention.
“Sister Adeodata’s holy example certainly helped to promote the renewal of religious life in her own Monastery. I therefore wish to commend to her intercession a special intention of my heart. Much has been done in recent times to adapt religious life to the changed circumstances of today, and the benefit of this can be seen in the lives of very many men and women religious. But there is need for a renewed appreciation of the deeper theological reasons for this special form of consecration. We still await a full flowering of the teaching of the Second Vatican Council on the transcendent value of that special love of God and others which leads to the vowed life of poverty, chastity and obedience. I commend to all consecrated men and women the example of personal maturity and responsibility which was wonderfully evident in the life of Blessed Adeodata."
Pope John Paul II, from the beatification Mass of Blessed Maria, 9 May 2001.
Her feast
is celebrated February 25.