The front cover of our Sunday Bulletin today is of St. Veronica Giuliani. Today, July 9th, is her feast-day. The red roses adorning our altars are given by a parishioner out of special devotion to her. Here are some of the details of her life, as we find them in Fr. Thurston’s edition of Butler’s Lives of the Saints.
St. Veronica Giuliani’s baptismal name was “Ursula”. She was born at Mercatello in Urbino.
She is said to have begun to show signs of unusual piety at a very early age; at six and seven she was concerned to give away her own food and clothing to the needy, and at eleven devotion to Our Lord’s Passion had begun to color her own life…
In consequence of a vision of Our Lady, Ursula made a vow to become a nun, but met with strong opposition from her father, Francis Giuliani: he not only wanted her to marry, but insisted on presenting eligible suitors. This worried her into an illness; Francis gave way, and in 1677 she was clothed a Capuchiness in the convent of Città di Castello, in Umbria, taking the name [in religion] of Veronica.
After her Profession her absorption in the Passion deepened, she had a vision of Our Lord bearing the Cross, and she began to have acute pain over her heart. In 1693, she experienced another vision in which the chalice of Christ’s sufferings was offered to her; after a great struggle she accepted it, and henceforth reproduced in her own body and soul something of the sufferings of the Divine Master.
In the following year the imprint of the Crown of Thorns appeared on her head, and on Good Friday, 1697, the impress of the Five Sacred Wounds. These physical manifestations were subjected to medical treatment, but without any effect on them.
The Bishop was informed of this and he referred the matter to the Holy Office of the Inquisition for guidance. Sister Veronica ended up being put under the strictest surveillance in order to eliminate any chance for fraud.
She was forbidden to receive Holy Communion, to mix with the other nuns, or to have any sort of communication with the outside world; and she was to be day and night under the eye of a lay sister. The bishop, moreover, ordered that the wounds were to be dressed and bandaged, and her hands put into gloves with the fastenings sealed with his signet. Veronica suffered these prudent precautions with exemplary patience. They made no difference at all to the phenomena, and the bishop having communicated this and the nun’s obedient and humble demeanor to the Holy Office, it was ordered that she should be allowed to return to the normal life of her community.
St. Veronica was of the type of St. Teresa of Avila and all the greatest contemplatives, adding to her devotion and supernatural gifts common sense and ability in affairs. She was novice mistress of her convent for thirty-four years, which itself shows how well she fulfilled the office, and eleven years before her death was elected abbess.
At the end of her life this “spouse of the Lord” who for nearly fifty years had suffered with patience, resignation and joy, was afflicted with apoplexy, and she died of this disorder on July 9, 1727. She left an account of her life and spiritual experiences, written by order of her confessor, and this was much used in the process of beatification; she was canonized in 1839. Long before her death she had told her confessor that the instruments of Our Lord’s Passion were imprinted on her heart, giving him more than once, for they, as she averred, shifted their position, a rough plan of a heart on which they were sketched. A post-mortem examination in the presence of the bishop, the mayor, the surgeons, and other witnesses, revealed in the right ventricle a number of minute objects corresponding to those she had drawn.
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes is Newton and Needham Massachusetts' oldest Roman Catholic Parish. Founded as Saint Mary Parish in 1870, it was renamed "Mary Immaculate of Lourdes" when the new Church was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1910. In addition to being a regular territorial parish of the Archdiocese of Boston it is also a "Mission Parish" since 2007 with a special apostolate for the Traditional Latin Mass (1962 Missal).
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes Church
270 Elliot Street
Newton, MA 02464
USA
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