Talk About Network

Google


Register and Login
Nick
Password
Register create new account Sign up is FREE and you can post replies, new topics, bookmark posts and more!
Recover lost password


Religion > Connection with Jesus > December 27th -...
Latest [ Topics | Posts ] Archive Post A New Topic Post a Reply
<< Topic < Post Post 1 of 1 Topic 1269 of 1367
Post > Topic >>

December 27th - Fabiola of Rome

by "Waldtraud" <richarra@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Dec 26, 2007 at 03:30 PM

December 27th - Fabiola of Rome, Widow (AC)

Died c. 400. Not even a bad marriage can stop us from becoming saints. In 
fact, it may be the impetus to reach for Christian perfection. Fabiola was

divorced, remarried, explained, praised by Saint Jerome. Fabiola was a
Roman 
patrician of the Fabii family who married a very young man of equal rank
but 
of debauched habits. She divorced him. Then she united herself to another 
man, causing great scandal in Rome, because this was contrary to the 
ordinances of the Church. Both men died soon after and Fabiola was 
re-admitted into communion after she performed public penance. Not only
did 
she complete the required penance, Fabiola completely changed her life.
She 
forsook her luxurious lifestyle and devoted her great wealth to good
works. 
With the help of Saint Paula's widowed son-in-law Saint Pammachius,
Fabiola 
founded the first hospital of its kind to care for indigent patients
brought 
in from the streets and alleyways of Rome. Here Fabiola personally tended
to 
the needs of the sick.

In 395, she visited her friend Saint Jerome in the Holy Land with the 
intention of entering the convent at Bethlehem and sharing in Jerome's 
biblical work. Whether she returned to Rome because Jerome dissuaded her 
from staying or because she was temperamentally unsuited for the quiet
life, 
we don't know. Jerome says that her idea of the solitude of the stable of 
Bethlehem was that it should not be cut off from the crowded inn. 
Nevertheless, she travelled with Jerome and his companions when they fled
to 
Jaffa to escape the dissension building among the leading Palestinian 
Christians and the threatened invasion of the Huns.

Upon his advice, she returned to Rome from Jaffa and founded and 
enthusiastically superintended a hostel for sick and needy pilgrims near
the 
city at Porto. This is another of Fabiola's innovations; one which Jerome 
says soon became known from Parthia to Britain. Apparently not even this 
undertaking was enough to sap Fabiola's abundant energies. At the time of 
her death she was planning a new enterprise that would take her abroad.
The 
veneration in which she is held in Rome was demonstrated by the great 
multitudes that followed her funeral with chants of Alleluia.

Jerome dedicated to Fabiola a treatise on Aaron's priesthood and another
on 
the 'stations' of the Israelites in the desert. This wandering of the
chosen 
people seemed to him a type of Fabiola's life and death (Attwater, 
Benedictines, Delaney, Encyclopedia, Farmer).


Saint Quote:
Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do? Here is the true token of a soul 
absolutely perfect: when one has succeeded in leaving behind his own will
to 
such a degree as no longer to seek, to aim, or to desire to do what he
would 
will, but only what God wills.
-St. Bernard

Bible Quote
26 For what doth it profit a man, if he gain the whole world, and suffer
the 
loss of his own soul? Or what exchange shall a man give for his soul? 
(Matthew 16:26)


Also Today:
December 27th - St. John, Apostle, Evangelist, and Prophet
(d. 103)

Saint John, brother of Saint James the Greater, the Apostle of Spain, is
the 
beloved disciple. He was privileged, with his brother and Saint Peter, to 
behold the Saviour raise up a dead child to life, then saw Him
transfigured 
on the mountaintop; he alone reposed his head on His breast at the Last 
Supper. After the crucifixion it is he who, with Saint Peter, hastened to 
the empty tomb on the morning of the Resurrection. Standing beside Mary at

the Cross, he had heard his Master confide that Blessed Mother to him to
be 
henceforth his Mother also. He took his precious treasure for refuge to 
Ephesus when the persecution of the Jerusalem Christians became too
intense; 
and from there he went out to evangelize Asia Minor, of which he became
the 
first Archbishop. He was later exiled to the Island of Patmos, where he 
wrote the Apocalypse, but afterwards returned to Ephesus.

Compared with an eagle by his flights of elevated contemplation, Saint
John 
is the supreme Doctor of the Divinity of Jesus of Nazareth. Endowed with
an 
astounding memory, he was able even in his later years, to reproduce the 
discourses of Christ in such a way as to make the reader experience their 
power and impact on their audiences as if present to hear them. He is the 
author of five books of the New Testament, his Gospel, three Epistles, and

the last canonical prophecy, the Apocalypse or Revelation of Saint John - 
all of which were composed after the ruin of Jerusalem in 70 A.D.

In his extreme old age he continued to visit the churches of Asia, and
Saint 
Jerome relates that when age and weakness grew upon him so that he was no 
longer able to preach to the people, he would be carried to the assembly
of 
the faithful by his disciples, with great difficulty; and every time said
to 
his flock only these words: "My dear children, love one another."

Saint John died in peace at Ephesus in the third year of Trajan, that is, 
the hundredth of the Christian era, or the sixty-sixth from the
crucifixion 
of Christ, Saint John then being about ninety-four years old, according to

Saint Epiphanus.

Reflection: Saint John is a living proof of Our Lord's beatitude: "Blessed

are the pure of heart, for they shall see God." (Matthew 5:8)


<><><><>
In Time of Suffering

A thought of Sister Faustina:

Oh, if only the suffering soul knew how much God loves it, it would die of
joy and excess of happiness! Some day, we will know the value of
suffering,
but then we will no longer be able to suffer. The present moment is ours.

Jesus, do not leave me alone in suffering. You know, Lord, how weak I am.
I
am an abyss of wretchedness, I am nothingness itself; so what will be so
strange if You leave me alone and I fall? I am an infant, Lord, so I
cannot
get along by myself. However, beyond all abandonment I trust, and in spite
of my own feeling I trust, and I am being completely transformed into
trust-often in spite of what I feel. Do not lessen any of my sufferings,
only give me strength to bear them. Do with me as You please, Lord, only
give me the grace to be able to love You in every event and circumstance.
Lord, do not lessen my cup of bitterness, only give me strength that I may
be able to drink it all. - Amen.




 1 Posts in Topic:
December 27th - Fabiola of Rome
"Waldtraud" <  2007-12-26 15:30:48 

Post A Reply:
  Go here to Signup

AddThis Feed Button


About - Advertising - Contact - Frequently Asked Questions - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use - Signup

Contact
tan13V112 Fri Jul 4 14:12:37 CDT 2008.