Lutgardis
Saint Lutgardis | |
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Santa Lutgarda by Goya, 1787. Monasterio de San Joaquín y Santa Ana, Valladolid. | |
Born |
1182 Tongeren, Belgium |
Died |
June 16, 1246 Aywieres, Belgium |
Honored in | Roman Catholic Church |
Feast | June 16 |
Attributes | as Christ shows her His wounded side; blind Cistercian abbess; Cistercian nun being blinded by the Heart of Jesus; Cistercian to whom Christ extends his hand from the cross; in attendance when Christ shows his Heart to the Father |
Patronage | birth; blind people; blindness; childbirth; disabled people; handicapped people; physically challenged people; Flanders; Flemish National Movement |
Saint Lutgardis (also known as Ludgardis; Lutgard; Luitgard; Ludgard; Lutgart; Lutgarde of the Sacred Heart; Lutgarde of Tongres; Lutgarde; Lutgardis of Aywieres; Lutgarde of Aywieres; Luthgard) (Dutch: Sint-Ludgardis) (1182 – 16 June 1246) was a Flemish saint. She was born in Tongeren in Belgium, and entered into religious orders at the age of twelve. During her life various miracles were attributed to her, and she is known to have experienced religious ecstasies. Her feast day is June 16.
Life
Lutgardis was born at Tongeren in 1182, and appears to have been frivolous as a child. She was admitted into a Benedictine monastery of St. Catherine near Sint-Truiden at the age of twelve, not for any vocation but because her dowry had been lost in a failed business venture. She was attractive, fond of nice clothes and liked to enjoy herself. For Lutgarde, as for so many other women of her time, the cloister represented a socially acceptable alternative to the disgrace of unmarried life in the world.[1] She lived in the convent for several years without having much interest in religious life. She could come and go as she pleased; and received visitors of both sexes.[2]
According to her Vita, it was in the parlour, a welcome break in the monotony of monastic observance, that she was visited with a vision of Jesus showing her his wounds, and at age twenty became a Benedictine nun.[3] Some of the sisters predicted that her change in behavior wouldn't last. Instead, she became even more devout. Over the next dozen years, she had many visions of Jesus, Mary and several saints.[2] Robert Bellarmine relates a wrote a story of that Innocent III, when recently deceased, appeared to St. Lutgardis in her monastery to thank her for the prayers and sacrifices she had offered for him during his reign as Roman Pontiff.
Accounts of her life state that she experienced ecstasies, levitated, and dripped blood from her forehead and hair when entranced. She refused the honor of serving as abbess. However, in 1205, she was chosen to be prioress of her community.
In 1208, at Aywieres (Awirs), near Liège, she joined the Cistercians, a stricter order, at the advice of her friend Saint Christina the Astonishing. The nuns of Aywières spoke French, not Lutgarde’s native Flemish. Despite her efforts, she found the French tongue impossible to master. Living, working, and praying in the midst of her sisters she experienced a loneliness and solitude that she had never known before.[1]
The prolific multiplication of Cistercian-Benedictine monasteries of women in the Low Countries obliged the White Nuns to turn to the newly founded friars, disciples of Francis and Dominic, rather than to their brother monks, for spiritual and sacramental assistance. Lutgarde was a friend and mother to the early Dominicans and Franciscans, supporting their preaching by her prayer and fasting, offering them hospitality, ever eager for news of their missions and spiritual conquests. Her first biographer relates that the friars named her mater praedicatorum, the mother of preachers.[1]
Lutgardis was one of the great precursors of the devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. She was a contemporary of St. Francis, the first recorded stigmatic, and she too had received a mystical wound in her heart which historians have not hesitated to class as a stigma. According to Merton, Lutgardis "...entered upon the mystical life with a vision of the pierced Heart of the Saviour, and had concluded her mystical espousals with the Incarnate Word by an exchange of hearts with Him."[4] When, in a visitation, Christ came to Lutgarde, offering her whatever gift of grace she should desire, she asked for a better grasp of Latin, that she might better understand the Word of God and lift her voice in choral praise. Christ granted her request and, after a few days, Lutgarde’s mind was flooded with the riches of psalms, antiphons, readings and responsories. However,a painful emptiness persisted. With disarming candour she returned to Christ, asking to return His gift, and wondering if she might, just possibly, exchange it for another. “And for what would you exchange it?” Christ asked. “Lord, said Lutgarde, I would exchange it for your Heart.” Christ then reached into Lutgarde and, removing her heart, replaced it with His own, at the same time hiding her heart within His breast.[1]
During this time she is known to have shown gifts of healing and prophecy, and was an adept at teaching the Gospels.[3] She was blind for the last eleven years of her life, and died of natural causes at Aywieres. According to tradition, she experienced a vision in which Christ informed her of her death. She died on June 16, 1246, the day after the Feast of the Holy Trinity, the age of 64.
Veneration
St. Lutgardis is considered one of the leading mystics of the 13th century.[2] A life of Lutgardis, Vita Lutgardis, was composed less than two years after her death by Thomas of Cantimpre, a Dominican friar and a theologian of some ability.[4] She was venerated at Aywières for centuries, and her relics were exhumed in the 16th century. On December 4, 1796, as a result of the French Revolution, her relics were sheltered at Ittre, where they remain. Works of art depicting Lutgardis include a masterpiece baroque statue on the Charles Bridge by Matthias Braun in Prague and a painting by Goya. The statue on Charles Bridge (socha sv. Luitgardy) was sculpted by Matthias Braun in 1710 as a commission from Evžen Tyttl, the abbot of the Cistercian monastery in Plasy.
Patronage
St. Lutgardis is the patron saint of the blind and physically disabled.[3]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Kirby, Dom Mark Daniel. "Draw Me to Thy Piercèd Side", June 15, 2008, Silverstream Priory, Stamullen, County Meath, Ireland
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Staley, Tony. "From fancy clothes to visions and levitation", The Compass News, 11 June 2004, Diocese of Green Bay Wisconsin
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 "St. Lutgardis", Catholic News Agency
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Merton, Thomas. What are These Wounds? the Life of a Cistercian Mystic, Saint Lutgarde of Aywieres, Clonmore and Reynolds Ltd., Dublin, 1948
Further reading
- Thomas Merton, The Life of a Cistercian Mystic: Saint Lutgarde of Aywieres, (Milwaukee: Bruce Publishing Company, 1950)
See also
External links
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