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St. Mary Magdalene de Pazzi
Feastday: May 25
It would be easy to concentrate on the mystical experiences
God gave this saint, rather than on her life. In fact, it would
be difficult to do differently, so overwhelming were those gifts
from God. The temptation for many modern readers (including the
author) would be to see little to identify with in these graces
and walk away without seeing more. The other temptation would be
to become so fascinated with these stories that one would neglect
to dig deeper and learn the real lessons of her life.
But Mary Magdalene de Pazzi is not a saint because
she received ecstasies and graces from God. Many have received visions,
ecstasies, and miracles without becoming holy. She is a saint because
of her response to those gifts -- a lifelong struggle to show love
and gratitude to the God who gave her those graces.
In fact Mary Magdalene saw her ecstasies as evidence
of a great fault in her, not a reward for holiness. She told one
fellow sister that God did not give this sister the same graces
"because you don't need them in order to serve him." In her eyes,
God gave these gifts to those who were too weak to become holy otherwise.
That Mary Magdalene received these gifts proved, in her mind, how
unworthy she was.
Born in Florence on April 2, 1566, Mary Magdalene
(baptized Catherine) was taught mental prayer when she was nine
years old at the request of her mother. Her introduction at this
age to this form of prayer which involves half an hour of meditation
did not seem to be unusual. And yet today we often believe children
incapable of all but the simplest rote prayers.
At twelve years old she experienced her first ecstasy
while looking at a sunset which left her trembling and speechless.
With this foundation in prayer and in mystical experience,
it isn't surprising that she wanted to enter a contemplative monastery
of the Carmelite Order. She chose the monastery of St. Mary's of
the Angels because the nuns took daily Communion, unusual at the
time.
In 1583 she had her second mystical experience when
the other nuns saw her weeping before the crucifix as she said,
"O Love, you are neither known nor loved."
Mary Magdalene's life is a contradiction of our instinctive
thought that joy only comes from avoiding suffering. A month after
being refused early religious profession, she was refused she fell
deathly ill. Fearing for her life the convent had her professed
from a stretcher at the altar. After that she experienced forty
days of ecstasies that coexisted with her suffering. Joy from the
graces God gave were mixed with agony as her illness grew worse.
In one of her experiences Jesus took her heart and hid it in his
own, telling her he "would not return it until it is wholly pure
and filled with pure love." She didn't recover from her illness
until told to ask for the intercession of Blessed Mary Bagnesi over
three months later.
What her experiences and prayer had given her was
a familiar, personal relationship with Jesus. Her conversations
with Jesus often take on a teasing, bantering tone that shocks those
who have a formal, fearful image of God. For example, at the end
of her forty days of graces, Jesus offered her a crown of flowers
or a crown of thorns. No matter how often she chose the crown of
thorns, Jesus kept teasingly pushing the crown of flowers to her.
When he accused her, "I called and you didn't care," she answered
back, "You didn't call loudly enough" and told him to shout his
love.
She learned to regret the insistence on the crown
of thorns. We might think it is easy to be holy if God is talking
to you every day but few of us could remain on the path with the
five year trial that followed her first ecstasies. Before this trial,
Jesus told her, "I will take away not the grace but the feeling
of grace. Though I will seem to leave you I will be closer to you."
This was easy for her to accept in the midst of ecstasy but, as
she said later, she hadn't experienced it yet. At the age of nineteen
she started five years of dryness and desolation in which she was
repelled by prayer and tempted by everything. She referred to her
heart as a pitch-dark room with only a feeble light shining that
only made the darkness deeper. She was so depressed she was found
twice close to suicide. All she could do to fight back was to hold
onto prayer, penance, and serving others even when it appeared to
do no good.
Her lifelong devotion to Pentecost can be easily understood
because her trial ended in ecstasy in 1590. At this time she could
have asked for any gifts but she wanted two in particular: to look
on any neighbor as good and holy without judgment and to always
have God's presence before her.
Far from enjoying the attention her mystical experiences
brought her, she was embarrassed by it. For all her days, she wanted
a hidden life and tried everything she could to achieve it. When
God commanded her to go barefoot as part of her penance and she
could not walk with shoes, she simply cut the soles out of her shoes
so no one would see her as different from the other nuns. If she
felt an ecstasy coming on, she would hurry to finish her work and
go back to her room. She learned to see the notoriety as part of
God's will. When teaching a novice to accept God's will, she told
her, "I wanted a hidden life but, see, God wanted something quite
different for me."
Some still might think it was easy for her to be holy
with all the help from God. Yet when she was asked once why she
was weeping before the cross, she answered that she had to force
herself to do something right that she didn't want to do. It's true
that when a sister criticized her for acting so different, she thanked
her, "May God reward you! You have never spoken truer words!" but
she told others it hurt her quite a bit to be nice to someone who
insulted her.
Mary Magdalene was no pale, shrinking flower. Her
wisdom and love led to her appointment to many important positions
at the convent including mistress of novices. She did not hesitate
to be blunt in guiding the women under her care when their spiritual
life was at stake. When one of the novices asked permission to pretend
to be impatient so the other novices would not respect her so much,
Mary Magdalene's answer shook this novice out of this false humility:
"What you want to pretend to be, you already are in the eyes of
the novices. They don't respect you nearly as much as you like to
think."
Mary Magdalene's life offers a great challenge to
all those who think that the best penance comes from fasting and
physical discomfort. Though she fasted and wore old clothes, she
chose the most difficult penance of all by pretending to like the
things she didn't like. Not only is this a penance most of us would
shrink from but, by her acting like she enjoyed it, no one knew
she was doing this great penance!
In 1604, headaches and paralyzation confined her
to bed. Her nerves were so sensitive that she could not be touched
without agonizing pain. Ever humble, she took the fact that her
prayers were not granted as a sure sign that God's will was being
done. For three years she suffered, before dying on May 25, 1607
at the age of forty-one.
Prayer:
Saint Mary Magdalene de Pazzi, pray that we will make a commitment
to seek the presence of God in prayer the way you did. Guide us
to see the graces God gives us as gifts not rewards and to respond
with gratitude and humility, not pride and selfishness. Amen
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