Saint Rose of Lima
Virgin
(1586-1617)
This
lovely flower of sanctity, the first canonized Saint of the New World,
was born at Lima, Peru, in 1586. She was christened Isabel, but the
beauty of her infant face earned for her the title of Rose, which she
thereafter bore. As a child still in the cradle, her silence during a
painful surgical operation seemed to foretell the thirst for suffering
which would consume her heart.
At
an early age she engaged herself as a servant to support her
impoverished parents, then worked day and night. In spite of hardships
and austerities her beauty ripened with increasing age, and she was
openly much admired. Fearing vanity would enter her heart, she cut off
her hair, blistered her face with pepper and her hands with lime. She
never left the interior of her parents' house in Canta, for four years,
not even to walk in an inviting garden just beyond its walls. She
finally obtained her parents' permission to be enrolled in the Third
Order of Saint Dominic; from her childhood she had taken Saint Catherine
of Siena as her model, and she then redoubled her penance. The Blessed
Sacrament seemed virtually her only food. Her love for it was intense.
Her fasting was near miraculous; during Lent in particular, she denied
herself her former single piece of bread each day, to consume only a few
orange seeds. Her disciplines were of an almost incredible severity,
and her hair shirt reached from her shoulders to her wrists and knees;
not satisfied with its rudeness, she armed it with iron nails.
The
cell of Saint Rose was a garden hut, her couch a box of broken tiles.
Concealed by her veil, a silver crown armed with ninety sharp points
encircled her head. More than once, when she shuddered at the prospect
of a night of torture, a voice said, My cross was yet more painful. The
demon tormented her for fifteen years with insupportable temptations;
but God sustained His spouse against them, though she would gladly have
died rather than live any longer in their clutches. When a Dutch fleet
prepared to attack the city of Lima, Rose took her place before the
tabernacle, and wept because she felt unworthy to die in its defense, as
she hoped she might; the enemy weighed anchor soon afterwards and
departed without attempting a siege. All of Saint Rose's sufferings were
offered for the conversion of sinners, and the thought of the
multitudes in hell was ever before her soul. She died in 1617, at the
age of thirty-one.
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