Saint Catherine of Genoa

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Rob2

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St Catherine of Genoa
Code:
Celebrated on September 15th
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Born in Genoa in 1447, Catherine Fieschi entered into an arranged marriage with a wealthy young man named Julian when she was just 16. He turned out to be a foul-tempered womanizer and she endured his bad behaviour for several years, until in 1473, she underwent some kind of conversion experience which changed her life, and that of her husband too. For the next 20 years the couple devoted themselves to caring for the sick in the Pammatone hospital and eventually went to live there. At one point Catherine contracted the plague herself and nearly died. Julian eventually became a Franciscan tertiary, dying 13 years before his wife.

From the time of her conversion, Catherine lead an intensely religious life - receiving Communion each day when the practice was not usual. She spent much time in fasting and prayer as well as being very industrious. She has been described as an example of a religious contemplative who managed to combine ‘other-worldliness’ with a very practical streak. She wrote a treatise on Purgatory and a dialogue between the body and the soul.

Catherine was very ill for the last three years of her life and died in 1510.

She is the patron of Genoa and of Italian hospitals.
(from ICN)
 
‘Only once, as they pass from this life, do the souls see the cause of the Purgatory they endure; never again do they see it for in another sight of it there would be self. Being then in charity from which they cannot now depart by any actual fault, they can no longer will nor desire save with the pure will of pure charity. Being in that fire of Purgatory, they are within the divine ordinance, which is pure charity, and in nothing can they depart thence for they are deprived of the power to sin as of the power to merit.’ - St Catherine of Genoa (from Treatise on Purgatory)
 
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