November 17: St Elizabeth of
When
There
is also a small room dedicated to St Elizabeth. When I visited this room, I
copied a notice written by the Lutherans that reveals a deep understanding of
the Saint. It reads like this:
Elizabeth's
entry into the Secular Franciscan Order was not equivalent to entering into a
form of life which meant retiring into a
convent. On the contrary, it would be truer to say that she removed the
distance between her position and the poor, and that she went out among
ordinary people.
It
was not her leaving but her entering the world, her love for Christ and for her
fellow-man that made this Hungarian daughter of a king, born in 1207, Countess
of Thuringia and saint, become one of the most significant women of the German
Middle Ages, whose popularity has endured to the present day.
Her
activity was closely bound up with the Wartburg, where she lived from earliest
childhood and where in 1221 she became the wife of Ludwig IV, Count of
Thuringia.
Following
as her model Saint Francis of
One
of the tragedies of the Protestant Reformation involves the relics of St
Elizabeth of
Now
the tomb, in the Lutheran
But
the lively spirit of St Elizabeth continues to inspire the Franciscan Family in
our following of Jesus Christ and his gospel. The Secular Franciscans worldwide
are especially dedicated to their patroness.