donderdag 3 juni 2021

baij 2

The manuscript was completed before Baij’s death in 1766... 

but remained unknown until a Benedictine monk, Dom Willibrord van Heteren, found Baij’s writings in 1900 in St. Peter’s convent in Montefiascone, Italy, and published some excerpts.

Twenty years later, a local priest, Msgr. Peter Bergamschi, took an interest in Baij’s writings in the convent archive and presented them to Pope Benedict XV in a private audience on March 17, 1920, during the month of St. Joseph. The pope encouraged Bergamaschi to publish them.



Maria Cecilia Baij was born in 1694 in Montefiascone... 

a hilltown about 60 miles north of Rome located on the shores of Lake Bolsena

At the age of 20, she took her religious vows with the Benedictine community of Montefiascone. She was named abbess in 1743, and remained in the post until her death at the age of 72.

In her prayers at the convent, Baij received both attacks from the devil and mystical revelations about the life of Christ, St. Joseph, the Holy Family, and St. John the Baptist, which she wrote down in lengthy manuscripts in obedience to her confessor.

Her Benedictine convent, St. Peter’s, remains active today more than 250 years after her death. The sisters welcome pilgrims who walk the Via Francigena, a medieval pilgrimage route that passes through their town. The sisters also still possess all of Baij’s original manuscripts.

Baij is believed to have completed her account of St. Joseph’s life in December 1736. Throughout the text, Joseph is often depicted in prayer, speaking praises to God on his own and together with the Virgin Mary and Jesus.



Baij wrote: 

“Sometimes, when Joseph worked very strenuously [energiek,onverdroten], he would approach his spouse and ask her to condescend [af te dalen, naar beneden te komen] to sing for him a hymn in praise of God, and thereby relieve his weariness [vermoeidheid, afmatting]. The holy virgin would readily comply with his requests. Her singing of the hymns of divine exaltation was so delightful that Joseph often was carried into ecstasy.”

“He once remarked to Mary: ‘My spouse, your singing alone is enough to bring comfort to every afflicted heart! What consolation you gave me through it! What relief for my weariness! What a great joy it is for me to hear you speak or sing!’”

“For the most holy Virgin, these words were the occasion for giving additional praise to God, the Source of all that is good. ‘God has poured these graces into my heart,’ she told him, ‘in order that you might be comforted and obtain relief in your tribulations and affiliations.’ The saint’s love and gratitude to God expanded steadily, and he continued to wonder at the virtue of his most holy spouse.”


[bron]

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