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Born
in 1235 at Viterbo in the domains of the Papal States, Rose was gifted
with a profound spirituality even as a young child. Endowed by God with
the gift of miracles, at the age of three she raised her maternal aunt
to life. Her great love for the poor compelled her to assist them in
every possible way. From her earliest years she gave herself over to
prayer and penance for the conversion of sinners and at seven she
retired to a little cell within her parents’ home. Rose’s health
succumbed under the severe penances she imposed upon herself and the
following year she fell gravely ill. During her illness Our Lady
appeared to her in a dream and cured her. She was instructed by the
Mother of God to be clothed in the habit of St. Francis as a tertiary,
but to remain at home and be an example to her neighbors.
At
this particular time, the city of Viterbo was occupied by the
twice-excommunicated Emperor Frederick II. Frederick was at war with the
Papacy and had sworn to conquer all of the Papal States. Inspired by
Divine Providence, Rose would issue forth from her seclusion and preach
in the streets and public squares of her city. With a crucifix in her
hand, the young missionary would describe for the growing crowds the
sufferings of Our Lord during His Passion, thereby showing them the
heinousness of sin.
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With
deep concern she exhorted them to repent of their sins and to convert.
Urging them to be faithful to the authority of the Pope, Rose likewise
admonished those who yielded to the Emperor. Before long, crowds began
to gather in the vicinity of her home, hoping for a glimpse of her. When
her father, frightened by all the attention his daughter attracted,
forbade her to even leave the house to preach under pain of physical
punishment, the local parish priest intervened and convinced him to
withdraw his prohibition. For two years the child Franciscan preached
conversion to her fellow citizens. Her ardent words were often
accompanied by prodigies that stunned the crowds. The stone on which she
stood to speak, for example, was seen to rise up off the ground and
sustain her in midair during her preaching. While the general population
was moved to conversion and penance by her words and example, the
partisans of the Emperor were incensed against the young preacher and
actively clamored for her death. The civil authorities, however, while
they were alarmed by her public exhortations, they would not go so far
as to condemn a mere child to death and instead exiled her and her
parents from Viterbo. In January, 1250 they took refuge first in
Soriano, where, on December 5 of the same year Rose prophesied the
imminent death of the emperor. Her prediction came to pass on December
13 and soon after, Pope Innocent IV regained control of the Papal States
through a stipulation in the emperor’s own will which directed that all
lands he had taken from the Church be returned. Soon afterwards, Rose
and her parents went to Vitorchiano. A sorceress there had greatly
influenced the citizens of this hillside town and the young apostle set
about her public preaching once more. Her exhortations moved the people
but failed with the sorceress herself. Undaunted, Rose had an immense
wooden pyre built in the public square and climbing to the top, she had
it set on fire. For three hours she stood unscathed in the midst of the
devouring flames singing the praises of God. Sincerely moved by the
miracle, the repentant sorceress fell to her knees.
With the
restoration of the papal authority in Viterbo in 1251, Rose and her
parents returned to their native city. She sought admittance to the Poor
Clares at the Monastery of St. Mary of the Roses but was turned away
for lack of a dowry. Humbly submitting to this decision, she foretold
her admission to the convent after her death. A mere fifteen years of
age, her subsequent attempts to establish a religious community near the
monastery with the help of her parish priest proved equally
disappointing. She therefore retired once more to a cell in her family
home where she died two years later on March 6, 1252. She was first
buried in the Church of Santa Maria in Podio and later in the church of
the Monastery where she had once requested admission.
Her last
prophesy was fulfilled on September 4, 1258 but the many miracles
attributed to her intercession continue to this day. Not least among the
numerous favors granted to St. Rose of Viterbo by Almighty God is the
ongoing incorrupt preservation of her body. As recently as 2010,
scientific research on her incorrupt body revealed that she had died of a
rare heart condition known as Cantrell’s Syndrome and not of
tuberculosis as had been previously thought.
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