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St. Scholastica
b.? d.543
Feastday February 10
St. Scholastica, sister of St. Benedict, consecrated her life to
God from her earliest youth. After her brother went to Monte Cassino,
where he established his famous monastery, she took up her abode
in the neighborhood at Plombariola, where she founded and governed
a monastery of nuns, about five miles from that of St. Benedict,
who, it appears, also directed his sister and her nuns. She visited
her brother once a year, and as she was not allowed to enter his
monastery, he went in company with some of his brethren to meet
her at a house some distance away. These visits were spent in conferring
together on spiritual matters. On one occasion they had passed the
time as usual in prayer and pious conversation and in the evening
they sat down to take their reflection. St. Scholastica begged her
brother to remain until the next day. St. Benedict refused to spend
the night outside his monastery. She had recourse to prayer and
a furious thunderstorm burst so that neither St. Benedict nor any
of his companions could return home. They spent the night in spiritual
conferences. The next morning they parted to meet no more on earth.
Three days later St. Scholastica died, and her holy brother beheld
her soul in a vision as it ascended into heaven. He sent his brethren
to bring her body to his monastery and laid it in the tomb he had
prepared for himself. She died about the year 543, and St. Benedict
followed her soon after. Her feast day is February 10th.
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