|
DOMINICAN VOCATIONS PROVINCE OF THE ASSUMPTION |
| Site
map |
Dominican
Saints, Blesseds and Servants of God |
Blessed
Imelda Lambertini |
|
Home
News -------------------------- Welcome Benedict XVI Master -------------------------- History Introduction St Dominic's gift Australia --------------------------- Order Discernment Formation Dominican habit Novitiate Studentate --------------------------- Life Introduction Four pillars Apostolate --------------------------- People Dominican saints Our brethren --------------------------- Resources Lectio Divina Links Prayer Reading --------------------------- Site dedication |
Blessed
Imelda was born at Bologna in Italy, in the early 14th century.
Still a child, she arranged a little oratory in her house, where she
often would pray. She resolved to enter a monastery and make
the vows of religion, and to give herself entirely to her Saviour.
Her parents permitted her entry into a Dominican convent at
Valdipietra, near Bologna. She practiced mortifications above
her age, and manifested a very tender love for the Queen of Angels
and the Holy Eucharist, though she could not yet receive Holy
Communion. But God was soon to manifest that it is not age
which wins His favor, but virtue. On the day of the Ascension in 1333, when Imelda was twelve years old, she alone remained unable to advance to receive Holy Communion. She raised her eyes to heaven and prayed to her Lord: "Come, for I am languishing with love and dying with desire for Your adorable presence." When He did not come, she continued to pray and weep. Suddenly, a miraculous Host came forth from the tabernacle, crossed the grill separating the choir, and stopped in the air before her. The nuns, amazed, hardly dared raise their eyes, but soon they realized there was no illusion: the miracle continued, a sudden brightness and a sweet fragrance filled the church, while an invisible hand continued to hold the mystical Bread in the air before the young girl. She herself seemed an Angel in adoration. Her confessor was told to come, and saw all that the Sisters were seeing. He placed the Sacred Host on a paten, and then gave it to the child. She seemed to lose consciousness. But soon the sisters grew anxious; they called her by name, told her to rise, touched her, but Saint Imelda was no longer of this world; she had expired in an ecstasy of pure love. ![]() |
![]() |