Saint Catherine of Siena
- Doctor of the Church
The 25th child of a wool dyer in
northern Italy, St. Catherine
started having mystical
experiences when she was only 6,
seeing guardian angels as clearly
as the people they protected.
She became a Dominican tertiary
when she was 16, and continued to
have visions of Christ, Mary, and
the saints. St. Catherine
was one of the most brilliant
theological minds of her day,
although she never had any formal
education.
She persuaded the Pope to go
back to Rome from Avignon, in
1377, and when she died she was
endeavoring to heal the Great
Western Schism. In 1375 Our
Lord gave her the Stigmata, which
was visible only after her death.
Her spiritual director was Blessed
Raymond of Capua.
St. Catherine's letters, and a
treatise called "a dialogue" are
considered among the most
brilliant writings in the history
of the Catholic Church. She
died when she was only 33, and her
body was found incorrupt in 1430.
|