The Patience and Charity of Saint Frances
Through the
premature deaths of her sons whom she loved dearly, Frances proved her
constancy. With peace of soul she always reconciled herself to the will of God
and gave him thanks for all that happened. With the same constancy she endured
the slander of those who abused and reviled her and her way of life. She did
not show the least hint of aversion toward them, even though she knew that they
judged her rashly and spoke falsely of her way of life. Rather, returning good
for evil, she habitually prayed to God for them.
God had not chosen
her to be holy merely for her own advantage. Rather, the gifts he conferred
upon her were to be for the spiritual and physical advantage of her neighbor.
For this reason he made her so lovable that anyone with whom she spoke would
immediately feel captivated by love for her and ready to help her in everything
she wanted. Divine power was present and working in her words, so that in a few
sentences she could bring consolation to the afflicted and the anxious, calm
the restless, pacify the angry, reconcile enemies and extinguish long-standing
hatreds and animosities. Again and again she would prevent a planned revenge
from being carried out. She seemed able to subdue the passions of every type of
person with a single word and lead them to do whatever she asked.
For this reason
people flocked to Frances from all directions, as to a safe refuge. No one left
her without being consoled, although she openly rebuked them for their sins and
fearlessly reproved them for what was evil and displeasing to God.
Many different
diseases were rampant in Rome. Fatal diseases and plagues were everywhere, but
the saint ignored the risk of contagion and displayed the deepest kindness
toward the poor and the needy. Here empathy would first bring them to atone for
their sins. Then she would help them by her eager care, and urge them lovingly
to accept their trials, however difficult, from the hand of God. She would
encourage them to endure their sufferings for love of Christ, since he had
previously endured so much for them.
Frances was not
satisfied with caring for the sick she could bring into her home. She would
seek them out in their cottages and in public hospitals, and would refresh
their thirst, smooth their beds, and bind their sores. The more disgusting and
sickening the stench, the greater was the love and care with which she treated
them.
She used to go to
the Campo Santo with food and rich delicacies to be distributed to the needy.
On her return home she would bring pieces of worn-out clothes and unclean rags
which she would wash lovingly and mend carefully, as if they were to be used
for God himself. Then she would fold them carefully and perfume them.
For thirty years
Frances continued this service to the sick and the stranger. While she was in
her husband’s house, she made frequent visits to Saint Mary’s and Saint
Cecilia’s hospitals in Trastevere, and to the hospital of the Holy Spirit in
Sassia and to a fourth hospital in the Campo Santo. During epidemics like this
it was not only difficult to find doctors to care for the body but even priests
to provide remedies for the soul. She herself would seek them out and bring
them to those who were disposed to receive the sacraments of penance and the
Eucharist. In order to have a priest more readily available to assist her in
her apostolate, she supported, at her own expense, a priest who would go to the
hospitals and visit the sick whom she had designated.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From the life of Saint Francis of Rome by Mary
Magdalene AnguillariaPhoto taken from Wikimedia Commons
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