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St. Frances of Rome
Feastday: March 9
Frances was born in the city of Rome in 1384 to a
wealthy, noble family. From her mother she inherited a quiet manner
and a pious devotion to God. From her father, however, she inherited
a strong will. She decided at eleven that she knew what God wanted
for her -- she was going to be a nun.
And that's where her will ran right up against her
father's. He told Frances she was far too young to know her mind
-- but not too young to be married. He had already promised her
in marriage to the son of another wealthy family. In Rome at that
time a father's word was law; a father could even sell his children
into slavery or order them killed.
Frances probably felt that's what he was doing by
forcing her to marry. But just as he wouldn't listen to her, Frances
wouldn't listen to him. She stubbornly prayed to God to prevent
the marriage until her confessor pointed out, "Are you crying because
you want to do God's will or because you want God to do your will?"
She gave in to the marriage -- reluctantly. It was
difficult for people to understand her objection. Her future husband
Lorenzo Ponziani was noble, wealthy, a good person and he really
cared for her. An ideal match -- except for someone who was determined
to be a bride of Christ.
Then her nightmare began. This quiet, shy thirteen
year old was thrust into the whirl of parties and banquets that
accompanied a wedding. Her mother-in-law Cecilia loved to entertain
and expected her new daughter-in-law to enjoy the revelry of her
social life too. Fasting and scourging were far easier than this
torture God now asked her to face.
Frances collapsed from the strain. For months she
lay close to death, unable to eat or move or speak.
At her worst, she had a vision of St. Alexis. The
son of a noble family, Alexis had run away to beg rather than marry.
After years of begging he was so unrecognizable that when he returned
home his own father thought he was just another beggar and made
him sleep under the stairs. In her own way, Frances must have felt
unrecognized by her family -- they couldn't see how she wanted to
give up everything for Jesus. St. Alexis told her God was giving
her an important choice: Did she want to recover or not?
It's hard for us to understand why a thirteen-year-old
would want to die but Frances was miserable. Finally, she whispered,
"God's will is mine." The hardest words she could have said -- but
the right words to set her on the road to sanctity.
St. Alexis replied, "Then you will live to glorify
His Name." Her recovery was immediate and complete. Lorenzo became
even more devoted to her after this -- he was even a little in awe
of her because of what she'd been through.
But her problems did not disappear. Her mother-in-law
still expected her to entertain and go on visits with her. Look
at Frances' sister-in-law Vannozza --happily going through the rounds
of parties, dressing up, playing cards. Why couldn't Frances be
more like Vannozza?
In a house where she lived with her husband, his parents,
his brother and his brother's family, she felt all alone. And that's
why Vannozza found her crying bitterly in the garden one day. When
Frances poured out her heart to Vannozza and it turned out that
this sister-in-law had wanted to live a life devoted to the Lord
too. What Frances had written off as frivolity was just Vannozza's
natural easy-going and joyful manner. They became close friends
and worked out a program of devout practices and services to work
together.
They decided their obligations to their family came
first. For Frances that meant dressing up to her rank, making visits
and receiving visits -- and most importantly doing it gladly. But
the two spiritual friends went to mass together, visited prisons,
served in hospitals and set up a secret chapel in an abandoned tower
of their palace where they prayed together.
But it wasn't fashionable for noblewomen to help the
poor and people gossiped about two girls out alone on the streets.
Cecilia suffered under the laughter of her friends and yelled at
her daughters-in-law to stop theirs spiritual practices. When that
didn't work Cecilia then appealed to her sons, but Lorenzo refused
to interfere with Frances' charity.
The beginning of the fifteenth century brought the
birth of her first son, Battista, after John the Baptist. We might
expect that the grief of losing her mother-in-law soon after might
have been mixed with relief -- no more pressure to live in society.
But a household as large as the Ponziani's needed someone to run
it. Everyone thought that sixteen-year-old Frances was best qualified
to take her mother-in-law's place. She was thrust even more deeply
into society and worldly duties. Her family was right, though --
she was an excellent administrator and a fair and pleasant employer.
After two more children were born to her -- a boy,
Giovanni Evangelista, and a girl, Agnes -- a flood brought disease
and famine to Rome. Frances gave orders that no one asking for alms
would be turned away and she and Vannozza went out to the poor with
corn, wine, oil and clothing. Her father-in-law, furious that she
was giving away their supplies during a famine, took the keys of
the granary and wine cellar away from her.
Then just to make sure she wouldn't have a chance
to give away more, he sold off their extra corn, leaving just enough
for the family, and all but one cask of one. The two noblewomen
went out to the streets to beg instead.
Finally Frances was so desperate for food to give
to the poor she went to the now empty corn loft and sifted through
the straw searching for a few leftover kernels of corn. After she
left Lorenzo came in and was stunned to find the previously empty
granary filled with yellow corn. Frances drew wine out of their
one cask until one day her father in law went down and found it
empty. Everyone screamed at Frances. After saying a prayer, she
led them to cellar, turned the spigot on the empty cask, and out
flowed the most wonderful wine. These incidents completely converted
Lorenzo and her father-in-law.
Having her husband and father-in-law completely on
her side meant she could do what she always wanted. She immediately
sold her jewels and clothes and distributed money to needy. She
started wearing a dress of coarse green cloth.
Civil war came to Rome -- this was a time of popes
and antipopes and Rome became a battleground. At one point there
were three men claiming to be pope. One of them sent a cruel governor,
Count Troja, to conquer Rome. Lorenzo was seriously wounded and
his brother was arrested. Troja sent word that Lorenzo's brother
would be executed unless he had Battista, Frances's son and heir
of the family, as a hostage. As long as Troja had Battista he knew
the Ponzianis would stop fighting.
When Frances heard this she grabbed Battista by the
hand and fled. On the street, she ran into her spiritual adviser
Don Andrew who told her she was choosing the wrong way and ordered
her to trust God. Slowly she turned around and made her way to Capitol
Hill where Count Troja was waiting. As she and Battista walked the
streets, crowds of people tried to block her way or grab Battista
from her to save him. After giving him up, Frances ran to a church
to weep and pray.
As soon as she left, Troja had put Battista on a soldier's
horse -- but every horse they tried refused to move. Finally the
governor gave in to God's wishes. Frances was still kneeling before
the altar when she felt Battista's little arms around her.
But the troubles were not over. Frances was left alone
against the attackers when she sent Lorenzo out of Rome to avoid
capture. Drunken invaders broke into her house, tortured and killed
the servants, demolished the palace, literally tore it apart and
smashed everything. And this time God did not intervene -- Battista
was taken to Naples. Yet this kidnapping probably saved Battista's
life because soon a plague hit -- a plague that took the lives of
many including Frances' nine-year-old son Evangelista.
At this point, her house in ruins, her husband gone,
one son dead, one son a hostage, she could have given up. She looked
around, cleared out the wreckage of the house and turned it into
a makeshift hospital and a shelter for the homeless. One year after
his death Evangelista came to her in a vision and told her that
Agnes was going to die too. In return God was granting her a special
grace by sending an archangel to be her guardian angel for the rest
of her life. She would always been able to see him. A constant companion
and spiritual adviser, he once commanded her to stop her severe
penances (eating only bread and water and wearing a hair shirt).
"You should understand by now," the angel told her, "that the God
who made your body and gave it to your soul as a servant never intended
that the spirit should ruin the flesh and return it to him despoiled."
Finally the wars were over and Battista and her husband
returned home. But though her son came back a charming young man
her husband returned broken in mind and body. Probably the hardest
work of healing Frances had to do in her life was to restore Lorenzo
back to his old self.
When Battista married a pretty young woman named Mabilia
Frances expected to find someone to share in the management of the
household. But Mabilia wanted none of it. She was as opposite of
Frances and Frances had been of her mother-in- law. Mabilia wanted
to party and ridiculed Frances in public for her shabby green dress,
her habits, and her standards. One day in the middle of yelling
at her, Mabilia suddenly turned pale and fainted, crying, "Oh my
pride, my dreadful pride." Frances nursed her back to health and
healed their differences as well. A converted Mabilia did her best
to imitate Frances after that.
With Lorenzo's support and respect, Frances started
a lay order of women attached to the Benedictines called the Oblates
of Mary. The women lived in the world but pledged to offer themselves
to God and serve the poor. Eventually they bought a house where
the widowed members could live in community.
Frances nursed Lorenzo until he died. His last words
to her were, "I feel as if my whole life has been one beautiful
dream of purest happiness. God has given me so much in your love."
After his death, Frances moved into the house with the other Oblates
and was made superior. At 52 she had the life she dreamed of when
she was eleven. She had been right in discerning her original vocation
-- she just had the timing wrong. God had had other plans for her
in between.
Frances died four years later. Her last words were
"The angel has finished his task -- he beckons me to follow him."
In Her Footsteps:
Do you have a spiritual friend who helps you on your journey, someone
to pray with and serve with? If you don't have one now, ask God
to send you such a companion. Then look around you. This friend,
like Frances' Vannozza, may be near you already. Try sharing some
of your spiritual hopes and desires with those closest to you. You
may be surprised at their reaction. (But don't force your opinions
on others or get discouraged by lack of interest. Just keep asking
God to lead you.)
Prayer:
Saint Frances of Rome, help us to see the difference between what
we want to do and what God wants us to do. Help us to discern what
comes from our will and what comes from God's desire. Amen
©1996 Terry Matz. All Rights Reserved.
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