St. Elizabeth of the Trinity
Posted on November 18, 2018 by admin No comments
Born: 18 July 1880 Avord, Farges-en-Septaine, (Cher), France
Died: 9 November 1906 (aged 26) Dijon, France
Venerated: in Roman Catholic Church
Beatified: 25 November 1984, Paris, France by Pope John Paul II
Canonized: 16 October 2016, Saint Peter’s Square, Vatican City by Pope Francis
Feast: 8 November
Attributes: Religious habit Patronage Sick people Loss of parents Against illness
Saint Elizabeth of the Trinity, O.C.D. born Élisabeth Catez (18 July 1880 – 9 November 1906), was a French Discalced Carmelite professed religious in addition to being a mystic and a spiritual writer. She was known for the depth of her spiritual growth as a Carmelite as well as bleak periods in which her religious calling was perceived to be unsure according to those around her; she however was acknowledged for her persistence in pursuing the will of God and in devoting herself to the charism of the Carmelites.
Elizabeth was a gifted pianist and had strong feelings for the Carmelite charism. Of that experience as a professed religious she wrote in a letter: “I can’t find words to express my happiness. Here there is no longer anything but God. He is All; He suffices and we live by Him alone” (Letter 91).
Pope John Paul II celebrated her beatification in Paris on 25 November 1984; Pope Francis approved her canonization on 3 March 2016, the date was decided at a gathering of cardinals on 20 June 2016 and she was canonized as a saint on 16 October 2016.
Life
She was born on 18 July 1880 as Élisabeth Catez in the military base at Avord in Cher as the first child of Captain Joseph Catez and Marie Rolland. She was baptized at the camp’s chapel on the following 22 July. Elizabeth’s father died unexpectedly on 2 October 1887 and as a result the family moved to Dijon. During that same year she made her first confession. Her First Communion was on 19 April 1891 at Saint-Michel , and her Confirmation was at Notre-Dame on the following 8 June.
Elizabeth had a terrible temper as a child. After receiving her First Communion in 1891 she gained more self-control and had a deeper understanding of God and the world. She also gained a profound understanding of the Most Holy Trinity to which she cultivated an ardent devotion. Elizabeth visited the sick, sang in the church choir and taught religion to children who worked in factories.
As she grew older Elizabeth became interested in entering the Discalced Carmelite Order, though her mother strongly advised against it. Men had asked for Elizabeth’s hand in marriage, but she declined such offers because her dream was to enter the Discalced Carmelite monastery that was located 200 meters from her home. Elizabeth entered the Dijon Carmel on 2 August 1901. She said: “I find Him everywhere while doing the wash as well as while praying.” Her time in the convent amongst other Carmelites had some high times as well as some very low times. She wrote of when she felt she needed a richer understanding of God’s great love.
At the end of her life, she began to call herself “Laudem Gloriae.” Elizabeth wanted that to be her appellation in Heaven because it means “praise of glory.” She said: “I think that in Heaven my mission will be to draw souls by helping them to go out of themselves in order to cling to God by a wholly simple and loving movement, and to keep them in this great silence within which will allow God to communicate Himself to them and to transform them into Himself.” Her spirituality is considered to be remarkably similar to that of her contemporary and compatriot Discalced Carmelite sister, Saint Thérèse of the Child Jesus, who was cloistered at the Carmel in Lisieux; the two saints share a zeal for contemplation and the salvation of souls.
Elizabeth died at the age of 26 of Addison’s disease, which in the early 20th century had no treatment. Then and still today, there is no cure. Though her death was painful, Elizabeth gratefully accepted her suffering as a gift from God. Her last words were: “I am going to Light, to Love, to Life!”
Sainthood
In Dijon the beatification process started in 1931 in a process that lasted a decade until 1941. Her writings were gathered and after careful investigation were incorporated into the cause and approved as being valid additions in 1944. A second process opened in 1948 and closed in 1950; the official introduction of the cause – under Pope John XXIII – came on 25 October 1961 and bestowed the title of Servant of God on the late nun.
The third and final process was opened in 1963 and closed in 1965 while two decrees ratified both processes in 1969 and on 13 March 1970; this allowed the Congregation of Rites to assume control of the cause to further investigate her life and her spiritual works. After an extensive investigation that spanned more than a decade, on 12 July 1982 she was made Venerable after Pope John Paul II acknowledged the fact that she had lived a full life of heroic virtue.
The miracle needed for her beatification was investigated from 1964 and closed in 1965; it received validation and was deemed to have fulfilled its duties in 1969. John Paul II approved the healing as being a legitimate miracle in 1984, allowing for Elizabeth to be proclaimed “Blessed.”
Pope John Paul II on the occasion of an apostolic visit to Paris beatified Elizabeth on 25 November 1984.
The second miracle needed for sanctification was investigated in the diocese of the healing’s origin from 11 July 2011 until 25
August 2012; it received ratification several months later on 28 June 2013.
Pope Francis on 3 March 2016 approved a second healing as being a miracle attributed to Elizabeth’s intercession and thus approved her canonization as a saint. A date of canonization was determined at a gathering of cardinals on 20 June 2016. Her canonization was celebrated on 16 October 2016.
The postulator of the cause at the time of her canonization was Father Romano Gambalunga.
Feast and patronage
Her liturgical feast is celebrated on an annual basis on 8 November. Her most famous prayer is: “Holy Trinity Whom I Adore” and she wrote this out of her love of the Most Blessed Trinity. Elizabeth of the Trinity is a patron against illness, of sick people, and of the loss of parents.
Prayers of St. Elizabeth of the Trinity
O my God, Trinity whom I adore, let me entirely forget myself that I may abide in You, still and peaceful as if my soul were already in eternity; let nothing disturb my peace nor separate me from You, O my unchanging God, but that each moment may take me further into the depths of Your mystery ! Pacify my soul! Make it Your heaven, Your beloved home and place of Your repose; let me never leave You there alone, but may I be ever attentive, ever alert in my faith, ever adoring and all given up to Your creative action.
O my beloved Christ, crucified for love, would that I might be for You a spouse of Your heart! I would anoint You with glory, I would love You – even unto death! Yet I sense my frailty and ask You to adorn me with Yourself; identify my soul with all the movements of Your soul, submerge me, overwhelm me, substitute Yourself in me that my life may become but a reflection of Your life. Come into me as Adorer, Redeemer and Saviour.
O Eternal Word, Word of my God, would that I might spend my life listening to You, would that I might be fully receptive to learn all from You; in all darkness, all loneliness, all weakness, may I ever keep my eyes fixed on You and abide under Your great light; O my Beloved Star, fascinate me so that I may never be able to leave Your radiance.
O Consuming Fire, Spirit of Love, descend into my soul and make all in me as an incarnation of the Word, that I may be to Him a super-added humanity wherein He renews His mystery; and You O Father, bestow Yourself and bend down to Your little creature, seeing in her only Your beloved Son in whom You are well pleased.
O my `Three’, my All, my Beatitude, infinite Solitude, Immensity in whom I lose myself, I give myself to You as a prey to be consumed; enclose Yourself in me that I may be absorbed in You so as to contemplate in Your light the abyss of Your Splendour! Amen.
Novena to St. Elizabeth of the Trinity
Day 1
Oh, may the Master reveal to you His Divine presence, it is so suave and sweet, it gives so much strength to the soul; to believe that God loves us to the point of dwelling in us, to make Himself the Companion of our exile, the Confidant, the Friend of every moment.
O Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity, In your great love for God, You were always close to your friends in their needs. Now that you are in heaven before the face of the Lord, Intercede with him for the intentions we now commend to you.
Teach us, in faith and love, To live with the Holy Trinity In the depths of our heart. Teach us to radiate the love of God to others In our daily lives, as you did In order to be a Praise of His Glory.
Our Father…Hail Mary…Glory Be…
Day 2
Oh, give yourself without ceasing to His immense love, It is the consuming Fire that divinizes all. In the center of your soul, in a profound silence, Beneath the anointing of the Holy One recollect yourself often; Thus you will arrive at that resemblance, You will be no longer yourself, but only Christ.
O Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity, In your great love for God, You were always close to your friends in their needs. Now that you are in heaven before the face of the Lord, Intercede with him for the intentions we now commend to you.
Teach us, in faith and love, To live with the Holy Trinity In the depths of our heart. Teach us to radiate the love of God to others In our daily lives, as you did In order to be a Praise of His Glory.
Our Father…Hail Mary…Glory Be…
Day 3
It seems to me that nothing speaks more of the love that is in the Heart of God than the Eucharist: it is union, consummation; it’s He in us, us in Him, and isn’t this Heaven on earth? It is Heaven in faith while waiting the face-to-face vision so much desired.
O Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity, In your great love for God, You were always close to your friends in their needs. Now that you are in heaven before the face of the Lord, Intercede with him for the intentions we now commend to you.
Teach us, in faith and love, To live with the Holy Trinity In the depths of our heart. Teach us to radiate the love of God to others In our daily lives, as you did In order to be a Praise of His Glory.
Our Father…Hail Mary…Glory Be…
Day 4
The Master called the hour of His passion “His hour,” the one He had come for, the one He invoked with all His desire! When a great suffering or some very little sacrifice is offered us, oh, let us think very quickly that “this is our hour,” the hour when we are going to prove our love for Him who has “loved us exceedingly,” as Saint Paul says.
O Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity, In your great love for God, You were always close to your friends in their needs. Now that you are in heaven before the face of the Lord, Intercede with him for the intentions we now commend to you.
Teach us, in faith and love, To live with the Holy Trinity In the depths of our heart. Teach us to radiate the love of God to others In our daily lives, as you did In order to be a Praise of His Glory.
Our Father…Hail Mary…Glory Be…
Day 5
If anyone were to ask me the secret of happiness, I would say it is to no longer think of self, to deny oneself always. That is a good way to kill pride: let it starve to death! You see, pride is love of ourselves; well, love of God must be so strong that it extinguishes all our self-love. St. Augustine says we have two cities within us, the city of God and the city of me. To the extent that the first increases, the second will be destroyed.
O Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity, In your great love for God, You were always close to your friends in their needs. Now that you are in heaven before the face of the Lord, Intercede with him for the intentions we now commend to you.
Teach us, in faith and love, To live with the Holy Trinity In the depths of our heart. Teach us to radiate the love of God to others In our daily lives, as you did In order to be a Praise of His Glory.
Our Father…Hail Mary…Glory Be…
Day 6
It seems to me that the attitude of the Virgin during the months that elapsed between the Annunciation and the Nativity is the model for interior souls, those whom God has chosen to live within, in the depths of the bottomless abyss. In what peace, in what recollection Mary lent herself to everything she did! How even the most trivial things were divinized by her! For through it all the Virgin remained the adorer of the gift of God! This did not prevent her from spending herself outwardly when it was a matter of charity; the Gospel tells us that Mary went in haste to the mountains of Judea to visit her cousin Elizabeth. Never did the ineffable vision that she contemplated within herself in any way diminish her outward charity.
O Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity, In your great love for God, You were always close to your friends in their needs. Now that you are in heaven before the face of the Lord, Intercede with him for the intentions we now commend to you.
Teach us, in faith and love, To live with the Holy Trinity In the depths of our heart. Teach us to radiate the love of God to others In our daily lives, as you did In order to be a Praise of His Glory.
Our Father…Hail Mary…Glory Be…
Day 7
This Queen of virgins is also Queen of martyrs; but again it was in her heart that the sword pierced, for with her everything took place within! Oh! How beautiful she is to contemplate during her long martyrdom, so serene, enveloped in a kind of majesty that radiates both strength and gentleness. She learned from the Word Himself how those must suffer whom the Father has chosen as victims, those whom He has decided to associate with Himself in the great work of redemption, those whom He “has foreknown and predestined to be conformed to His Christ,” crucified by love.
O Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity, In your great love for God, You were always close to your friends in their needs. Now that you are in heaven before the face of the Lord, Intercede with him for the intentions we now commend to you.
Teach us, in faith and love, To live with the Holy Trinity In the depths of our heart. Teach us to radiate the love of God to others In our daily lives, as you did In order to be a Praise of His Glory.
Our Father…Hail Mary…Glory Be…
Day 8
“Dwell in me.” It is the Word of God who gives this order, who expresses this desire. Dwell in me, not for a few moments, a few hours that must pass, but “dwell…” in a manner that is permanent, habitual. Dwell in me, pray in me, adore in me, love in me, work, act in me. Dwell in me to present yourself to all, penetrate ever more deeply in this profundity. It is truly there the “solitude where God wants to draw the soul in order to speak to it,” as the prophet sang.
O Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity, In your great love for God, You were always close to your friends in their needs. Now that you are in heaven before the face of the Lord, Intercede with him for the intentions we now commend to you.
Teach us, in faith and love, To live with the Holy Trinity In the depths of our heart. Teach us to radiate the love of God to others In our daily lives, as you did In order to be a Praise of His Glory.
Our Father…Hail Mary…Glory Be…
Day 9
I think that in Heaven my mission will be to draw souls by helping them to go out of themselves to cling to God by a wholly simple and loving movement, and to keep them in this great silence within that will allow God to communicate Himself to them and transform them into Himself.
O Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity, In your great love for God, You were always close to your friends in their needs. Now that you are in heaven before the face of the Lord, Intercede with him for the intentions we now commend to you.
Teach us, in faith and love, To live with the Holy Trinity In the depths of our heart. Teach us to radiate the love of God to others In our daily lives, as you did In order to be a Praise of His Glory.
Our Father…Hail Mary…Glory Be…
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