Dear Saint Clare, and all the Poor Clares, pray for us!

Happy Feast! Please join me today in praying an Ave for the intentions of our dear friend, Nurse Claire.


St. Clare, who in 1215 had, much against her will been made superior at San Damiano by St. Francis, continued to rule there as abbess until her death, in 1253, nearly forty years later. There is no good reason to believe that she ever once went beyond the boundaries of San Damiano during all that time. It need not, therefore, be wondered at if so comparatively few details of St. Clare’s life in the cloister “hidden with Christ in God”, have come down to us. We know that she became a living copy of the poverty, the humility, and the mortification of St. Francis; that she had a special devotion to the Holy Eucharist, and that in order to increase her love for Christ crucified she learned by heart the Office of the Passion composed by St. Francis, and that during the time that remained to her after her devotional exercises she engaged in manual labour. Needless to add, that under St. Clare’s guidance the community of San Damiano became the sanctuary of every virtue, a very nursery of saints. Clare had the consolation not only of seeing her younger sister Beatrix, her mother Ortolana, and her faithful aunt Bianca follow Agnes into the order, but also of witnessing the foundation of monasteries of Clares far and wide throughout Europe. It would be difficult, moreover, to estimate how much the silent influence of the gentle abbess did towards guiding the women of medieval Italy to higher aims. In particular, Clare threw around poverty that irresistible charm which only women can communicate to religious or civic heroism, and she became a most efficacious coadjutrix of St. Francis in promoting that spirit of unworldliness which in the counsels of God, “was to bring about a restoration of discipline in the Church and of morals and civilization in the peoples of Western Europe”. Not the least important part of Clare’s work was the aid and encouragement she gave St. Francis. It was to her he turned when in doubt, and it was she who urged him to continue his mission to the people at a time when he thought his vocation lay rather in a life of contemplation. When in an attack of blindness and illness, St. Francis came for the last time to visit San Damiano, Clare erected a little wattle hut for him in an olive grove close to the monastery, and it was here that he composed his glorious “Canticle of the Sun”. After St. Francis’s death the procession which accompanied his remains from the Porziuncula to the town stopped on the way at San Damiano in order that Clare and her daughters might venerate the pierced hands and feet of him who had formed them to the love of Christ crucified–a pathetic scene which Giotto has commemorated in one of his loveliest frescoes. So far, however, as Clare was concerned, St. Francis was always living, and nothing is, perhaps, more striking in her after-life than her unswerving loyalty to the ideals of the Poverello, and the jealous care with which she clung to his rule and teaching.

When, in 1234, the army of Frederick II was devastating the valley of Spoleto, the soldiers, preparatory to an assault upon Assisi, scaled the walls of San Damiano by night, spreading terror among the community. Clare, calmly rising from her sick bed, and taking the ciborium from the little chapel adjoining her cell, proceeded to face the invaders at an open window against which they had already placed a ladder. It is related that, as she raised the Blessed Sacrament on high, the soldiers who were about to enter the monastery fell backward as if dazzled, and the others who were ready to follow them took flight. It is with reference to this incident that St. Clare is generally represented in art bearing a ciborium. https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04004a.htm

Saint Clare, pray for us!

One thought on “Dear Saint Clare, and all the Poor Clares, pray for us!”

  1. This brings me to inform you how far some Franciscan priests and nuns have fallen away from Christ. A month ago I received an EIGHT PAGE letter asking for $$$$$$$ to support the order’s missons. Not once – not even ONE TIME – was Christ mentioned in the 8 pages – not His name, no reference to Him. Nothing. Zip. The letter was filled with jokes from the new Minister General directed mostly at himself in stupid silliness, as if he were a comedian not a priest…his shoe size, his beard, his sandals, speeding tickets, sleeping through homilies and other c – -p he thinks hilarious.

    That was the first page, where his introductory paragraph hints that it has “been a very trying time for many people around the world” which I took to mean Biden out, Trump in. (One of the nuns attached to this place said a few years ago that I should be killed for my political views. Previously I had met this nun who I had thought was sweet and kind but that was only until I disagreed with her political views. Then it was to be death for me. This was in an email sent to a few monetary contributors on an email list.)

    (I once attended a fund raising Mass in a Florida hotel where this Minister General used a Dixie Cup paper bowl for the Ciborium.)

    Two pages were then devoted to the order’s charitable missions around the world and how the Minister General had visited every one of them jetting across the globe. Page 4 mentioned Our Lady of Fatima and a May Crowning in the lobby of the monastery with the nun who wishes death on others. Pages 5 and 6 were about Leo XIII citing various historical REVOLUTIONS – don’t get me started on that. Pages 7 and 8 were about various activities of the monastery (admittedly, they do actually do some good works) and then arrived the push to give money in the form of Charitable Annuities, Donor Advised Funds, a Giving Account, then the letter gave their Federal ID Number, office phone numbers, people to contact, their website, etc. Also mentioned was a fund-raising dinner in NYC @ $550 per dinner where Gov and Mrs George Pataki were honored as well as a few other lesser known Catholics.

    A far cry from St Francis and St Claire….

    I have been to the monastery, personally met the current Minister General as well as the former one. The office girls are quite nice, the monsatery beautiful, they do some good work but I would never give them monetary support.

    Admittedly he ended the letter with “God bless”.

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