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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251016
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251017
DTSTAMP:20260511T231750
CREATED:20251012T140755Z
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UID:14023-1760572800-1760659199@laycisterciansofgethsemani.org
SUMMARY:Vigils Reading - St Hedwig
DESCRIPTION:ST HEDWIG OF SILESIA \nFrom Butler’s Lives of the Saints \n◊◊◊ \nHedwig was born in Bavaria about the year 1174\, the daughter of \nBerthold\, count of Andechs. When she was only twelve she was married to \nHenry\, duke of Silesia. Together they founded a large number of religious \nhouses\, the best known of which was a convent for Cistercian nuns at Trebnitz\, \nnear Breslau in modern Poland\, the first convent for women in Silesia. These \nfoundations helped both to develop the religious life of the people and to spread \na common German culture throughout their lands. They also established \nhospitals and a house for lepers. \nTheir seventh and last child was born in 1209\, and Hedwig persuaded her \nhusband to take a mutual vow of chastity. They lived apart\, with Hedwig taking \nup residence close to the nunnery at Trebnitz\, and often sharing the austere life \nof the nuns. She recommended fasting to those who wanted to live holier lives\, \nsaying that it could “master concupiscence\, lift up the soul\, confirm it in the \npaths of virtue\, and prepare a fine reward for the Christian”. \nMuch of the rest of Hedwig’s life was spent in trying to keep peace \nbetween her warring sons Henry and Conrad and in attempts to make peace \nbetween her husband and his enemies. When Henry died in 1238\, she \ncomforted those who mourned him with the words\, “Would you oppose the will \nof God? Our lives are his; our will is whatever he is pleased to ordain\, whether \nour own death or that of our friends.” She took the habit at Trebnitz but did not \ntake any religious vows\, remaining free to administer her property for the good \nof the poor. We are told that she took great care to instruct the uneducated in \ntheir religion\, on one occasion having an old woman share a room with her so \nthat they could go through the Our Father together whenever there was a free \nmoment. After ten weeks of patient teaching\, the old woman could repeat and \nunderstand the prayer. \nWhen her son Henry II was killed in 1240 fighting the Tartar invaders\, \nHegwig knew of his death three days before a messenger arrived from the \nbattlefield. Other miracles were attributed to her; she cured a blind man\, for \nexample\, and had the gift of prophecy\, foretelling her own death in October \n1243. She was canonized in 1267\, and her feast was extended to the Western \nChurch in 1706.
URL:https://laycisterciansofgethsemani.org/event/vigils-reading-st-hedwig-2/
CATEGORIES:Vigils Readings
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