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The Life of Catherine of Sienna
Life of St. Catherine of Sienna
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Introduction
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Manuel
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Jul 01, 2018 01:01AM

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No one need aspire to anything better!


He does contradict himself in saying at the start that her parents were so good, and then telling how they treated her as a servant when she refused to marry.
Jill wrote: "I don't see how anyone who venerates her so thoroughly can possibly be a good confessor; the role of a confessor must include correcting over-scrupulosity and harsh judgments of other people. As ot..."
As far as I could make out, the biography is written several years after her death. Given the flood of miracles associated with her at the time of her death, I guess it isn't that surprising that his view of her would be strongly influenced by feeling.
JPII confessed daily. I suspect that the closer one is to God and the holier one is, the greater one feels the remaining gap, however small.
But I did note thet conflict between Raymond's reference to her at one point as sinless (?!) and through the rest the description of her intense confessions and penances. Whether or not she was scrupulous, she was certainly not sinless, by definition.
As far as I could make out, the biography is written several years after her death. Given the flood of miracles associated with her at the time of her death, I guess it isn't that surprising that his view of her would be strongly influenced by feeling.
JPII confessed daily. I suspect that the closer one is to God and the holier one is, the greater one feels the remaining gap, however small.
But I did note thet conflict between Raymond's reference to her at one point as sinless (?!) and through the rest the description of her intense confessions and penances. Whether or not she was scrupulous, she was certainly not sinless, by definition.