We've had enough exhortations to be silent. Cry out with a thousand tongues - I see the world is rotten because of silence. - Catherine of Siena

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We've had enough exhortations to be silent. Cry out with a thousand tongues - I see the world is rotten because of silence.

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About Catherine of Siena

Saint Catherine of Siena (March 25, 1347 – April 29, 1380) was a Dominican Tertiary (lay affiliate) of the Dominican Order.

Biography information from Wikiquote

Also Known As

Alternative Names: Catherine de Sienne Caterina van Siena Santa Caterina di Siena Saint Catherine of Siena Chaterina da Siena Caterina da Siena Catharina Senensis Katharina von Siena Chatarina da Siena Caterina Benincasa Catalina de Siena Catherine of Sienna Catharine of Sienna
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St. Catherine of Genoa's life combined the noblest forms of Christian service with the highest levels of contemplative prayer. May her life and her doctrine help us, too, to live out our Christian discipleship, inspired by the love of God she taught and exemplified.

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has three steps, of which two were made with the wood of the most Holy Cross, and the third still retains the great bitterness He tasted, when He was given gall and vinegar to drink. In these three steps you will recognize three states of the soul, which I will explain to thee below. The feet of the soul, signifying her affection, are the first step, for the feet carry the body as the affection carries the soul. Wherefore these pierced Feet are steps by which thou canst arrive at His Side, which manifests to thee the secret of His Heart, because the soul, rising on the steps of her affection, commences to taste the love of His Heart, gazing into that open Heart of My Son, with the eye of the intellect, and finds It consumed with ineffable love. I say consumed, because He does not love you for His own profit, because you can be of no profit to Him, He being one and the same substance with Me. Then the soul is filled with love, seeing herself so much loved. Having passed the second step, the soul reaches out to the third — that is — to the Mouth, where she finds peace from the terrible war she has been waging with her sin. On the first step, then, lifting her feet from the affections of the earth, the soul strips herself of vice; on the second she fills herself with love and virtue; and on the third she tastes peace.

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