Colette of Corbie
Saint Colette of Corbie, P.C.C. | |
---|---|
Abbess and foundress | |
Born | Nicole Boellet 13 January 1381 Corbie, County of Amiens, Duchy of Burgundy |
Died | 6 March 1447 Ghent, County of Flanders, Duchy of Burgundy | (aged 66)
Venerated in | Roman Catholicism (Franciscan Order, especially the Colettine Poor Clares) |
Beatified | 23 January 1740 by Pope Clement XII |
Canonized | 24 May 1807 by Pope Pius VII |
Major shrine | Monastery of Bethlehem, Ghent, Belgium |
Feast | 6 March |
Patronage | Women seeking to conceive, expectant mothers and sick children |
Colette of Corbie, P.C.C., (13 January 1381 – 6 March 1447) was a French abbess and the foundress of the Colettine Poor Clares, a reform branch of the Order of Saint Clare, better known as the Poor Clares. She is honored as a saint in the Catholic Church. Due to a number of miraculous events during her life, she is venerated as the patron saint of women seeking to conceive, expectant mothers, and sick children. She was known to have healed many people, had visions of Christ, once fasted for 40 days and ultimately received the stigmata.
Life
Early life
She was born Nicole Boellet (or Boylet) in the village of Corbie, in the Picardy region of France, on 13 January 1381[1] to Robert Boellet, a poor carpenter at the noted Benedictine Abbey of Corbie, and to his wife, Marguerite Moyon.[2] Her contemporary biographers say that her parents had grown old without having children, before praying to Saint Nicholas for help in having a child. Their prayers were answered when, at the age of 60, Marguerite gave birth to a daughter. Out of gratitude, they named the baby after the saint to whom they credited the miracle of her birth.[3] She was affectionately called Nicolette by her parents, which soon came to be shorted to Colette, by which name she is known.
After her parents died in 1399, Colette joined the Beguines but found their manner of life unchallenging.[2] Joining a Benedictine order as a lay sister, most likely to avoid an arranged marriage,[2] she again became dissatisfied. In September 1402, Colette received the habit of the Third Order of St. Francis[4] and became a hermit under the direction of the Abbot of Corbie, living near the abbey church.[5] After four years of following this ascetic way of life (1402–1406), through several dreams and visions, she came to believe that she was being called to reform the Franciscan Second Order and to return it to its original Franciscan ideals of absolute poverty and austerity.
Foundress
In October 1406, she turned to the Antipope Benedict XIII of Avignon who was recognized in France as the rightful pope. Benedict received her in Nice, in southern France, and allowed her to transfer to the Order of Poor Clares. Additionally, he empowered her through several papal bulls, issued between 1406 and 1412, to found new monasteries and to complete the reform of the Order.[4]
With the approval of the Countess of Geneva and the aid of the Franciscan itinerant preacher, Henry de Beaume (her confessor and spiritual director), Colette began her work at Beaune, in the Diocese of Geneva. She remained there only a short time. In 1410, she opened her first monastery at Besançon, in an almost-abandoned house of Urbanist Poor Clares. From there, her reform spread to Auxonne (1412), to Poligny (1415), to Ghent (1412), to Heidelberg (1444), to Amiens, to Pont-à-Mousson in Lorraine, and to other communities of Poor Clares. During her lifetime 18 monasteries of her reform were founded. For the monasteries which followed her reform, she prescribed extreme poverty, going barefoot, and the observance of perpetual fasting and abstinence.[6]
During her lifetime, Colette's piety was well known and even venerated; a crowd would often gather to watch her. So important was receiving holy Communion to her religious life that she attended Mass every day -- very rare at the time -- and would receive Communion frequently. She preferred, however, to do so in private because she could not control her ecstasies and would sometimes weep with joy. She frequently saw Christ in visions when the priest held the host aloft during the consecration (the moment that the bread and wine are turned into the Body and Blood of Jesus). She could remain in ecstasy for many hours after receiving Communion and wouldn't eat food, offering a prolonged fast. Once, when the celebrating priest filled the chalice with water instead of wine by mistake, she knew interiorly that God was not present at the moment of consecration. On another occasion, when the priest forgot to consecrate a host for her, Christ brought holy Communion to her personally, offering it to her from his own hand. [7] According to her hagiographer, Peter of Vaux, she spent 40 days and nights without any food or drink. [8] Later in life she received the stigmata, the wounds of Christ, in her body. [9]
In addition to the strict rules of the Poor Clares, the Colettines follow their special Constitutions, approved in 1434 by the Minister General of the friars, William of Casale, and approved in 1448 by Pope Nicholas V, again in 1458 by Pope Pius II, and in 1482 by Pope Sixtus IV.
Colette died at Ghent in March 1447.[10]
Veneration
Colette was beatified 23 January 1740 by Pope Clement XII and was canonized on 24 May 1807 by Pope Pius VII.[11] She is invoked by childless couples desiring to become parents and is also the patroness of expectant mothers and sick infants.[12]
Legacy
Colettine nuns
Currently (2011) outside France the Colettine nuns are found in Belgium, Germany, Ireland, Japan, Norway, the Philippines, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States.[13]
Colettine friars
Together with friar Henry of Beaume, Colette also inaugurated a reform among the Franciscan friars (who were known as the Coletans), not to be confounded with the Observants. These friars formed a unique branch of the Order of Friars Minor under Henry's authority but remained obedient to the authority of the Minister Provincial of the Observant Franciscan friars in France and never attained much importance, even there. In 1448, they had only thirteen friaries, all attached to monasteries of the Colettine nuns. Together with other small branches of the Friars Minor, they were merged into the wider Observant branch in 1517 by Pope Leo X.
Miracles
According to biographers, Colette performed numerous miracles, too many to list in this section, and became so famous during her lifetime that onlookers would gawk. According to Holy Feast and Holy Fast (Caroline Walker Bynum), Colette "miraculously multiplied food or wine for her monasteries. Moreover, she effected cures with food, putting bread she had chewed into the mouths of two sick sisters, or, on another occasion, curing with a crumb of bread. Her kiss healed a leper; she herself was cured by receiving the Virgin's kiss in a vision; a sick nun once recovered because Colette appeared to her in a vision and offered her a 'beautiful fruit' to eat." [14] On another occasion, Colette healed a woman by blowing water she had held in her mouth over the woman's cancerous face. Another nun who was possessed by the devil and could not eat or drink was cured by Colette. After her death, water that oozed from her relics cured a woman who had hardly eaten for 13 years, granting her, in essence, new life.[15]
Helping a mother in childbirth
While traveling to Nice to meet Pope Benedict, Colette stayed at the home of a friend. His wife was in labor at that time with their third child, and was having major difficulties in the childbirth, leaving her in danger of death. Colette immediately went to the local church to pray for her.
The mother gave birth successfully and survived the ordeal. She credited Colette's prayers for this. The child born, a girl named Petronilla, later entered a monastery founded by Colette. She would become Colette's secretary and biographer.
Saving a sick child
After the pope had authorized Colette to establish a regimen of strict poverty in the Poor Clare monasteries of France, she started with that of Besançon. The local populace was suspicious of her reform, with its total reliance on them for the sustenance of the monastery. One incident helped turn this around.
According to legend, a local peasant woman gave birth to a stillborn child. In desperation, out of fear for the child's soul, the father took the baby to the local parish priest for baptism. Seeing that the child was already dead, the priest refused to baptize the body. When the man became insistent, out of frustration, the priest told him to go to the nuns, which he did immediately. When he arrived at the monastery, Mother Colette was made aware of his situation by the portress. Her response was to take off the veil given to her by the Pope, when he gave her the habit of the Second Order, and told the portress to have the father wrap the child's body in it and for him to return to the priest. By the time he arrived at the parish church with his small bundle, the child was conscious and crying. The priest immediately baptized the baby.[16]
Pictures
-
Habit of Saint Colette
Ghent, Belgium -
Remains of Saint Colette Ghent, Belgium
-
Saint Colette
by Charles Crauk, 1859 Corbie, France -
Statue of Saint Colette
by Albert Roze, 1925 Corbie, France -
Stained glass window in a Franciscan chapel
Paris, France -
Stained glass window in Our Lady of the Rosary Church
Saint-Ouen, France
See also
References
- ^ David Farmer,Oxford Dictionary of Saints (Oxford University Press, 1996), p105.
- ^ a b c Roest 2013, p. 169.
- ^ Ty Mam Duw Monastery "St Colette's life" Archived 2012-04-05 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Farmer 1997, p. 96.
- ^ Roest 2013, p. 170.
- ^ Bihl, Michael. "St. Colette." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 4. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1908. 16 Apr. 2013
- ^ Holy Feast and Holy Fast, Caroline Walker Bynum, p. 139.
- ^ De Eucharistia, Septililium B. Drotheae, Chapter 6, p. 418
- ^ Holy Feast and Holy Fast, Caroline Walker Bynum, p. 138.
- ^ David Farmer,Oxford Dictionary of Saints (Oxford University Press, 1996), p105.
- ^ Foley O.F.M., Leonard. Saint of the Day, Lives, Lessons, and Feast, (revised by Pat McCloskey O.F.M.), Franciscan Media ISBN 978-0-86716-887-7
- ^ "Saint Colette of Corbie", Poor Clares, Belleville, Illinois
- ^ Status as of 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia: Saint Colette
- ^ Holy Feast and Holy Fast, Caroline Walker Bynum, p. 138
- ^ Holy Feast and Holy Fast, Caroline Walker Bynum, p. 138
- ^ Ty Mam Duw Monastery "St Colette and the babies!" Archived 2012-02-28 at the Wayback Machine
External links
Bibliography
- Farmer, David (1997). "Colette". Oxford Dictionary of Saints. Oxford University Press.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Roest, Bert (2013). Order and Disorder: The Poor Clares Between Foundation and Reform. Brill.
{{cite book}}
: Invalid|ref=harv
(help) - Colette of Corbie (1381 - 1447): Learning and Holiness, Franciscan Institute Publications, 2010. ISBN 978-1-57659-217-5
- 1381 births
- 1447 deaths
- People from Amiens
- Beguines and Beghards
- Franciscan hermits
- Members of the Third Order of Saint Francis
- Founders of Catholic religious communities
- Poor Clare abbesses
- Medieval French saints
- 14th-century Christian saints
- 15th-century Christian saints
- Wonderworkers
- Female saints of medieval France
- Belgian Roman Catholic saints
- French Roman Catholic saints
- Franciscan saints
- 14th-century French people
- 14th-century French women
- 14th-century Christian nuns
- French hermits