St.
Clelia Barbieri is the youngest founder of a religious order in the
entire history of the Catholic Church. However, of all the recently
canonized saints, she is one of whom the least is known.
Clelia
Mary Rachel was born in the small northern town of Budrie in Italy on
February 13, 1847. Her parents, Joseph Barbieri and Hyacinthia Nanetti,
were a pious couple who lived a very modest life. Joseph Barbieri died
in 1855, when Clelia was only nine years old; and soon after, the
intelligent young girl had to find work to help support her family.
Pious
and unusually devout from a very early age, Clelia found new depths of
spirituality and zeal when she was confirmed in 1856. She was further
renewed and strengthened in her faith two years later, as was then the
custom, when she first received the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist.
Clelia
began to dedicate herself to the work of propagating the faith in her
own parish, and shortly thereafter became a catechist. Her remarkable
piety and humble dedication brought her to the attention of her parish
priest, Fr. Gaetano Guidi, who began to see great potential in her. He
urged her and her close friend, Teodora Baraldi, to undertake the
education of the young girls of the parish whose families were too poor
to have them otherwise educated. They were soon joined by Orsola Donati
who is considered along with Clelia to be one of the true founders of
the Little Sisters of Our Lady of Sorrows. This name was given them by
the Archbishop of Bologna, Cardinal Lucinda Maria Parocchi, whose
blessing and support they enjoyed from the outset of their vocations.
The Archbishop also suggested that they put their congregation under the
patronage of St. Francis of Poala. Clelia was twenty-one.
Though
young in years, Clelia’s piety and devotion, especially to Christ
present in the Blessed Eucharist, was profoundly deep. From her
childhood, she had been drawn to prayer and the practice of the virtues
and also the mortification of her body. She was seen in ecstasy and
often credited with the ability to read hearts. She became seriously ill
shortly after the Congregation was established and for some time
appeared close to death. Miraculously though, she recovered; but shortly
thereafter she once more became ill. Clelia died on July 13, 1870, at
twenty-three years old.
Clelia Barbieri was canonized in St.
Peter’s Basilica, Rome, on August 9, 1989, by Pope John Paul II, who
held her up as an example of how the Faith should be nourished, first in
the family and then in the parish.
Tuesday, July 13, 2021
St. Clelia Barbieri
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