Subj : December 11th - Blessed Franco of Siena To : All From : rich Date : Tue Dec 10 2019 08:08:56 From: rich December 11th - Blessed Franco of Siena FRANCO Lippi was a native of Grotti, near Siena, and was born in 1211. As a youth he was violent, insubordinate and lazy, and after the death of his father he spent all his time and money in gambling and debauchery. To avoid a prosecution for murder he joined a band of condottieri wherein his evil propensities had full scope, and by middle age his excesses had ruined his health and more than once brought him nearly to death. When he was fifty he lost his eyesight, and the shock of this sudden deprivation occasioned a complete change in him. He made a general confession and set out on a long and painful pilgrimage to the shrine of St James at Compostela. There his blindness was healed, but his spiritual sight remained and he made a further pilgrimage, barefooted, from Compostela to Rome. =C2 While praying in a Carmelite church Franco had a vision of our Lady in which he was told he must make public reparation for the endless scandals he had caused in Siena. He accordingly went about the streets clothed in sackcloth and beating himself with a whip, and eventually asked to be admitted into the Carmelite Order. But his age--he was now sixty-five-- and his appalling reputation made the friars dubious of such a postulant, and they told him to try again in five years' tim= e. Franco persisted, and at last he was allowed to join as a lay-brother. He lived for ten years in Carmel, and not only his brethren but the whole city was amazed and edified by his fervour and the austerity of his penance. Visions and miracles were accorded him, and after his death on December 11, 1291, there was a spontaneous recognition of him as a very holy penitent. His cultus was confirmed in 1670. No early separate biography seems to be known, but G. Lombardelli published in 1590, La vita del b. Franco Sanese da Grotti, and another account by S. Grassi appeared in 1680. For a more modern setting see Il Monte Carmelo (1917), pp. 300 Quote: Thou knowest well how to excuse and color thine own deeds; but thou art not willing to receive the excuses of others. It were more just that thou shouldest accuse thyself, and excuse thy brother. --Thomas =C3 Kempis Bible Quote: And there are three who give testimony in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost. And these three are one.=C2 (1 John 4:7) <><><><> Our Morning Offering Grant us Your light O Lord so that the darkness of our hearts may wholly pass away and we may come at last to the light of Christ. For Christ is that Morning Star who when the night of this world has passed brings to His saints the promised light of life and opens to them everlasting day. Amen by St Bede from =E2=80=9COn the Apocalypse=E2=80=9D --- NewsGate v1.0 gamma 2 * Origin: News Gate @ Net396 -Huntsville, AL - USA (1:396/4) .