St. Scholastica

Patronage:
School; Tests; Books; Reading; Convulsive Children; Nuns; Invoked Against Storms and Rain; Le Mans
Saint Scholastica is a saint of the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Churches. Born in Italy, according to a ninth-century tradition, she was the twin sister of Benedict of Nursia. Her feast day is 10 February.
St. Gregory tells us that St. Scholastica was the sister of St. Benedict, and consecrated herself to God at an early age. Under her brother’s direction, she founded and governed a large community near Monte Casino. She died about the year 543.
Comments:
St. Scholastica was the sister of St. Benedict, and she developed a work that was closely linked to his since she was the foundress of the Benedictine Sisters. In a similar way, St. Clare was linked to the work of St. Francis.
Paul VI made St. Benedict the patron of Europe. The idea of giving Europe one patron and the choice of St. Benedict for that honour corresponds to some of the realities to be explained here.
Geographically speaking, Europe is a peninsula of Asia. This peninsula which, in size, represents only a small part of the world, was nonetheless the theatre where the most important events in history took place.
And what was the most important thing that happened in Europe? It was the correspondence of its peoples in times past to the teachings of the Catholic Church. Europe was a continent that was, to a large extent, faithful to the Catholic Church. From this came the establishment of Christian Civilization, which means that the temporal order was saturated with the supernatural energies of grace received through the Catholic Church.
This is the way things work: Only the Catholic Church teaches the true Morals, and only the Catholic Church gives men the necessary strength to practice true Morals by means of the Sacraments. Now, it is only through these Morals that order can be established in human society. Therefore, perfect order only exists where the Catholic Church exists and is accepted. Only the Catholic Church is, therefore, the foundation of true order.
The social order can be compared in some ways to the human body. If everything is in order, the body works well and one can expect a good response from its movements, reactions, defence system, etc. But if something is wrong – a small bone in the wrist that is out of place – it causes pain, poor responses, inflammation, the danger of gangrene – all kinds of disturbances.
So it is with civilization. If as a whole it is based on Catholic Morals, one can expect all kinds of good from it, even in its details. But when it moves away from Catholic Civilization, even in details that can seem insignificant one can expect all kinds of misery and evils.
Now then, St. Benedict, through his monks, was par excellence the missionary who brought Christian Civilization to the German barbarians. On one hand, he gave a great impulse to the evangelization that conquered the peoples of Western and Central Europe, as well as those of the Scandinavian Peninsula and Eastern Europe.
On the other hand, he established a network of monasteries throughout Europe that spread Catholic Morals and the Catholic mentality. Because of this, a new world was born out of the barbarian invasions. Grace penetrated the roots of the social tree and gave the marvellous fruit that was Europe. And for a long time, Europe realized the ideals of Counter-Revolution. We turn toward Europe with eyes filled with nostalgia, admiration, and affection. The Revolution reared up to destroy that Catholic Europe.
At the base of everything good in European Civilization, we find St. Benedict, and by the merits of her prayers and contemplation, St. Scholastica.
St. Scholastica founded an order of religious who were not turned to social work, nor to teaching Catechism. They did not do any useful work according to the modern mentality. However, they did a thing that was much more important. They prayed and they sacrificed themselves. By their example, they sent this message: If the apostolate of the masculine branch was so fecund, it was because there was a feminine branch that prayed, contemplated and offered sacrifices. This was the role of the feminine branch.
Then we can see the extraordinary, irreplaceable and incomparable role of St. Scholastica. We can find a few willing to act, fewer yet willing to fight, but there is only a small handful willing to suffer. I do not have words enough to express my admiration for the apostolate of those who suffer – for those who accept their crosses, and even more, who ask for the crosses of others and ask to suffer in order to make the apostolate of others fecund. One of the themes that most raises my admiration and my veneration is the fecundity of the apostolate of suffering.
Nothing can be more glorious than someone who takes upon himself suffering, who offers his happiness and fortune in order to give the victory to another. Only God knows this hero.
This is how I see the life of St. Scholastica, a life that should be spoken of with great veneration.
St. Scholastica – Pray for us
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