Pietro Tedeschi (circa 1750-died after 1805)
Coronazione di spine di S.Veronica / Crowning of Thorns of St Veronica
Oil on canvas
Chiesa delle Cappuccine, Mercatello sul Metauro
Province of Pesaro and Urbino
Tedeschi was born in Pesaro. In 1777 he went to Rome and remained there until his death.
He painted a large number of
religious works for churches, monasteries, convents and the like and
they can be seen in Bologna, Macerata, Ascoli PIceno, Viterbo, Pesaro
and Imola as well as many other places
Many of his commissions came
through the good offices of his patron Cardinal Alessandro Albani who
was a patron of many artists from The Marche
The subject of the painting above was the subject of the Pope`s latest address on Wednesday last about great woman mystics: St Veronica Giuliani (Veronica de Julianis) (1660 – July 9, 1727)
She has been described as one of
the greatest of the Catholic mystical writers. All the bishops of
Umbria in Italy have petitioned the Pope to have her declared as a
Doctor of the Church
She spent fifty years of her
life in the enclosed Capuchin Poor Clare Convent in Città di Castello:
novice, cook, nurse, mistress of novices and then, finally, abbess
She had revelations and received
the stigmata. We would not know about Saint Veronica and her
experiences and thought if it was not for the fact that after she
received the stigmata, her confessor ordered her to keep a diary and
write out her experiences. She did so for thirty years. The result was
22,000 pages which was published as «Tesoro nascosto» ("Hidden
Treasure") published in ten volumes between 1825 and 1928.
The details of her life are quickly told in The Catholic Encyclopaedia of 1913
In his speech the Pope said that
the saint`s writings should be used as a guide for going deeper into
Scripture. St. Veronica Giuliani, he says, brought Scripture to life in
herself.
He said that she had a "markedly
Christ-centered and spousal spirituality," and that "Hers is the
experience of being loved by Christ, the faithful and sincere Spouse,
and of wanting to correspond with an ever more involved and impassioned
love. She interpreted everything in a key of love, and this infuses in
her a profound serenity. Everything is lived in union with Christ, for
love of him, and with the joy of being able to demonstrate to him all
the love of which a creature is capable."
He said that she had an "intense
and suffering love for the Church, and the twofold way of prayer and
offering. The saint lived from this point of view: She prays, suffers,
seeks 'holy poverty,' as 'dispossessed,' loss of self, precisely to be
like Christ, who gave his whole self."
On the question of her being a
guide to Scripture, the Pope pointed out that her writings were filled
with direct and indirect Biblical quotations. Her mystical experiences
were always related to the events celebrated in the Liturgy`s readings
from Scripture. Her experience was rooted and anchored in Scripture. She
lived Scripture. Scripture became her life.
For more about St Veronica see The St Veronica Giuliani website
An English language biography of the saint is in the Internet Archive: The lives of S. Veronica Giuliani, Capuchin nun : and, of the Blessed Battista Varani of the Order of S. Clare (January 1, 1874) by Filippo Maria Salvatori, 1740-1820
The Pope`s speech in the General Audience in full is as follows:
"Dear brothers and sisters,
Today I would like to present a
mystic who is not of the Medieval Age; it is St. Veronica Giuliani, a
Capuchin Poor Clare. The reason is that December 27 is the 350th
anniversary of her birth. Citta di Castello, the place where she lived
the longest and where she died, as well as Mercatello -- her native
country -- and the Diocese of Urbino celebrate this event joyfully.
Veronica was born precisely on
Dec. 27, 1660, in Mercatello, in the valley of Metauro, to Francesco
Giuliani and Benedetta Mancini. She was the last of seven sisters, an
additional three of whom embraced the monastic life. She was given the
name Ursula. She lost her mother at 7, and her father moved to Piacenza
as superintendent of customs of the duchy of Parma. In this city, Ursula
felt a growing desire to dedicate her life to Christ.
The call was ever more pressing,
so much so that at 17 she entered the strict cloister of the monastery
of the Capuchin Poor Clares of Citta di Castello, where she would remain
the whole of her life.
There she received the name
Veronica, which means "true image," and, in fact, she would become a
true image of Christ Crucified. A year later she made her solemn
religious profession.
The journey began for her
configuration to Christ through much penance, great suffering and
certain mystical experiences linked with the Passion of Jesus: the
crowning of thorns, the mystical espousal, the wound in her heart and
the stigmata. In 1716, at 56, she became abbess of the monastery and was
confirmed in this role until her death, which occurred in 1727, after a
most painful agony of 33 days that culminated in a profound joy, so
much so that her last words were:
"I have found Love, Love has allowed Himself to be seen! This is the cause of my suffering. Tell it to everyone, tell it to everyone!" (Summarium Beatificationis, 115-120).
She left her earthly dwelling on
July 9 for her encounter with God. She was 67 years old; 50 of those
years she spent in the monastery of Citta di Castello. She was
proclaimed a saint on May 26, 1893, by Pope Gregory XVI.
Veronica Giuliani wrote much:
letters, autobiographical reports, poems. However, the main source to
reconstruct her thought is her "Diary," begun in 1693: a good 22,000
handwritten pages, which cover an expanse of 34 years of cloistered
life.
The writing flows spontaneously
and continuously. There are no cancellations or corrections, punctuation
marks or distribution of the material in chapters or parts according to
a pre-established plan. Veronica did not wish to compose a literary
work; instead, she was obliged to put her experiences into writing by
Father Girolamo Bastianelli, a religious of the Filippini, in agreement
with the diocesan bishop Antonio Eustachi.
St. Veronica has a markedly
Christ-centered and spousal spirituality: Hers is the experience of
being loved by Christ, the faithful and sincere Spouse, and of wanting
to correspond with an ever more involved and impassioned love.
She interpreted everything in a
key of love, and this infuses in her a profound serenity. Everything is
lived in union with Christ, for love of him, and with the joy of being
able to demonstrate to him all the love of which a creature is capable.
The Christ to whom Veronica is
profoundly united is the suffering Christ of the passion, death and
resurrection; it is Jesus in the act of offering himself to the Father
to save us. From this experience derives also the intense and suffering
love for the Church, and the twofold way of prayer and offering. The
saint lived from this point of view: She prays, suffers, seeks "holy
poverty," as "dispossessed," loss of self (cf. ibid., III, 523), precisely to be like Christ, who gave his whole self.
In every page of her writings
Veronica entrusts someone to the Lord, strengthening her prayers of
intercession with the offering of herself in every suffering. Her heart
dilated to all "the needs of the Holy Church," living with longing the
desire of the salvation of "the whole world" (ibid., III-IV, passim).
Veronica cried out:
"O sinners ... come to Jesus' heart; come to the cleansing of his most precious blood ... he awaits you with open arms to embrace you" (Ibid., II, 16-17).
Animated by an ardent charity,
she gave care, understanding and forgiveness to the sisters of the
monastery. She offered her prayers and sacrifices for the Pope, her
bishop, priests and for all needy persons, including the souls in
Purgatory. She summarized her contemplative mission in these words:
"We cannot go preaching around the world to convert souls, but we are obliged to pray continually for all those souls who are offending God ... particularly with our sufferings, that is with a principle of crucified life" (Ibid., IV, 877).
Our saint conceived this mission as a "being in the middle" between men and God, between sinners and Christ Crucified.
Veronica profoundly lived participation in the suffering love of Jesus, certain that "to suffer with joy" is the "key of love" (cf. ibid., I, 299.417; III, 330.303.871;IV, 192).
She evidences that Jesus suffers for men's sins, but also for the
sufferings that his faithful servants had to endure in the course of the
centuries, in the time of the Church, precisely because of their solid
and coherent faith.
She wrote:
"The Eternal Father made him see and feel at that point all the sufferings that his elect would have to endure, his dearest souls, that is, those who would know how to benefit from his Blood and from all his sufferings" (ibid., II, 170).
As the Apostle Paul says of himself:
"Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the Church" (Colossians 1:24).
Veronica even asks Jesus to be crucified with him.
"In an instant," she wrote, "I saw issue from his most holy wounds five shining rays; and all came to my face. And I saw these rays become as little flames. In four of them were the nails; and in one of them was the lance, as of gold, all red hot: and it pierced my heart, from one side to the other ... and the nails went through the hands and feet. I felt great pain; but, in the very pain I saw myself, I felt myself all transformed in God" (Diary, I, 897).
The saint was convinced she was
participating already in the Kingdom of God, but at the same time she
invoked all the saints of the Blessed Homeland to come to her aid on the
earthly journey of her self-giving, while awaiting eternal blessedness;
this was the constant aspiration of her life (cf. ibid., II, 909; V, 246).
In regard to preaching of the time, not rarely centered on "saving
one's soul" in individual terms, Veronica shows a strong "sense of
solidarity," a sense of communion with all brothers and sisters on the
way to heaven, and she lives, prays and suffers for all.
The earthly, penultimate things,
instead, although appreciated in the Franciscan sense as gift of the
Creator, were always relative, altogether subordinate to the "taste" of
God and under the sign of a radical poverty. In the communio sanctorum,
she clarifies her ecclesial donation, as well as the relationship
between the pilgrim Church and the heavenly Church.
"All the saints," she wrote, "are up there through the merits and the Passion of Jesus; but they cooperated with all that the Lord did, so that their life was all ordered ... regulated by (his) very works" (ibid., III, 203).
In Veronica's writings we find
many biblical quotations, at times indirectly, but always precise: She
shows familiarity with the sacred text, from which her spiritual
experience is nourished. Revealed, moreover, is that the intense moments
of Veronica's mystical experience are never separated from the salvific
events celebrated in the liturgy, where the proclamation and hearing of
the Word of God has a particular place.
Hence, sacred Scripture illumines, purifies and confirms Veronica's experience, rendering it ecclesial.
On the other hand, however,
precisely her experience, anchored in sacred Scripture with an uncommon
intensity, guides one to a more profound and "spiritual" reading of the
text itself, to enter into the hidden profundity of the text. She not
only expresses herself with the words of sacred Scripture, but she also
really lives from these words, they become life in her.
For example, our saint often quotes the expression of the Apostle Paul: "If God is for us, who is against us?" (Romans 8:31; cf. Diary, I, 714; II, 116.1021; III, 48). In her, the assimilation of this Pauline text, her great trust and profound joy, becomes a fait accompli in her very person:
"My soul," she wrote, "was connected to the divine will and I was truly established and fixed in the will of God. It seems to me that I could never again be separated from this will of God and turn to myself with these precise words: nothing will be able to separate me from the will of God, not anxieties, or sorrows, or toil, or contempt, or temptations, or creatures, or demons, or darkness, and not even death itself, because, in life and in death, I will everything and in everything, the will of God" (Diary, IV, 272).
Thus we have the certainty that death is not the last word, we are fixed in the will of God and so, really, in everlasting life.
In particular, Veronica shows
herself to be a courageous witness of the beauty and the power of Divine
Love, which draws, pervades and inflames her. It is crucified Love that
imprinted itself on her flesh, as in that of St. Francis of Assisi,
with the stigmata of Jesus.
"My Bride," the crucified Christ whispers to me, "the penances you do for those who are in my disgrace are dear to me ... Then, detaching an arm from the cross, he made a sign to me to draw near to his side ... and I found myself in the arms of the Crucified. What I experienced at that point I cannot recount: I would have liked to remain always in his most holy side" (ibid.., I, 37).
This is also an image of her
spiritual journey, of her interior life: to be in the embrace of the
Crucified and thus to be in Christ's love for others.
Also with the Virgin Mary,
Veronica lived a relationship of profound intimacy, attested by the
words she heard Our Lady say one day and which she reports in her Diary:
"I will make you rest on my breast, you are united with my soul, and from it you were taken as in flight to God" (IV, 901).
St. Veronica Giuliani invites us
to make our Christian life grow, our union with the Lord in being for
others, abandoning ourselves to his will with complete and total trust,
and to union with the Church, Bride of Christ; she invites us to
participate in the suffering love of Jesus Crucified for the salvation
of all sinners; she invites us to fix our gaze on Paradise, the goal of
our earthly journey, where we will live together with so many brothers
and sisters the joy of full communion with God; she invites us to
nourish ourselves daily from the Word of God to warm our hearts and give
direction to our life. The last words of the saint can be considered
the synthesis of her passionate mystical experience:
"I have found Love, Love has let himself be seen!" "
(Above from http://idlespeculations-terryprest.blogspot.com/2010/12/st-veronica-giuliani.html)
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