St Mary Magdalen dei Pazzi (1566-1607) Florentine Carmelite mystic
St
Mary Magdalen dei Pazzi was a Carmelite mystic.
Though she suffered a
lot herself, she remained faithful to her prayer life and cared for her
fellow-sisters and others in her convent.
Of the dei Pazzi family in Florence
Born into the
famous and wealthy family of dei Pazzi in Florence, she was christened
Catherine.
Her ancestors had fought in the Crusades and her parents were
close to the Medici.
She grew up to be a beautiful young woman and at
sixteen against family opposition, she decided to become a Carmelite nun
and took the name Mary Magdalen.
Illness and aridity
Professed in 1584, Mary
Magdalen went on to become novice mistress and sub-prioress.
From 1604
onwards she was bed-ridden, suffering physical pain, such as violent
headaches and paralysis, spiritual aridity and temptations to suicide.
She often alternated between being lifeless and being in lively
conversation with Christ and the saints.
She continued to be able to
do practical things like embroidery during her ecstasies.
She sometimes
prophesied future events and could read the secrets of the hearts of
those who consulted her.
"Love is not loved"
One of her most
memorable sayings is: "O Love, love is not loved, not known by his own
creatures. O my Jesus! If I had a voice sufficiently loud and strong to
be heard in every part of the world, I would cry out to make this love
known, loved and honoured by all people as the one immeasurable good".
Death and canonisation
When Mary Magdalen dei
Pazzi came close to death, she encouraged her religious sisters to love
and trust Jesus.
She died on May 25, 1607 at the age of forty-one and
was canonised in 1669.
Her incorrupt body is at the Church of Santa
Maria degli Angeli, Florence.
Her feast is on 25th May.