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St. Scholastica, Virgin
c. 543 A.D.
February 10
This saint was sister to the great St. Benedict. She consecrated herself to God from her earliest youth,
as St. Gregory testifies. Where her first monastery was situated is not mentioned, but after her
brother removed to Mount Cassino, she chose her retreat at Plombariola, in that neighborhood where
she founded and governed a nunnery about five miles to the south of St. Benedict’s monastery.
St. Bertharius, who was abbot of Cassino three hundred years after, says that she instructed in virtue
several of her own sex. And whereas St. Gregory informs us that St. Benedict governed nuns as well as
monks, his sister must have been their abbess under his rule and direction. She visited her holy brother
once a year, and as she was not allowed to enter his monastery, he went out with some of his monks to
meet her at a house at some small distance. They spent these visits in the praises of God and in
conferring together on spiritual matters. St. Gregory relates a remarkable circumstance of the last of
these visits. Scholastica having passed the day as usual in singing psalms and in pious discourse,
they sat down in the evening to take their refection. After it was over, Scholastica, perhaps foreknowing
it would be their last interview in this world, or at least desirous of some further spiritual
improvement, was very urgent with her brother to delay his return till the next day that they might
entertain themselves till morning upon the happiness of the other life. St. Benedict, unwilling to
transgress his rule, told her he could not pass a night out of his monastery and so desired her not
to insist upon such a breach of monastic discipline. Scholastica, finding him resolved on going home,
laying her hands joined upon the table and her head upon them, with many tears begged of Almighty God
to interpose in her behalf. Her prayer was scarce ended when there happened such a storm of rain,
thunder, and lightning, that neither St. Benedict nor any of his companions could set a foot out of
doors. He complained to his sister, saying, God forgive you, sister. What have you done?
She answered, I asked you a favor, and you refused it me. I asked it of Almighty God, and He
has granted it me. St. Benedict was therefore obliged to comply with her request, and they spent
the night in conferences on pious subjects, chiefly on the felicity of the blessed, to which both most
ardently aspired and which she was shortly to enjoy. The next morning they parted, and three days after,
St. Scholastica died in her solitude. St. Benedict was then alone in contemplation on Mount Cassino,
and lifting up his eyes to heaven, he saw the soul of his sister ascending thither in the shape of a
dove. Filled with joy at her happy passage, he gave thanks for it to God and declared her death to
his brethren, some of whom he sent to bring her corpse to his monastery where he caused it to be laid
in the tomb which he had prepared for himself. She must have died about the year 543. Her relics are
said to have been translated to France together with those of St. Bennet in the seventh century,
according to the relation given by the monk Adrevald. They are said to have been deposited at Mans
and kept in the collegiate church of St. Peter in that city in a rich silver shrine. In 1562, this
shrine was preserved from being plundered by the Huguenots, as is related by Chatelain. Her principal
festival at Mans is kept a holyday on the 11th of July, the day of the translation of her relics. She
was honored in some places with an office of three lessons in the time of St. Louis, as appears from
a calendar of Longchamp, written in his reign.
Lewis of Granada, treating on the perfection of the love
of God, mentions the miraculous storm obtained by St. Scholastica to show with what excess of goodness
God is always ready to hear the petitions and desires of his servants. This pious soul must have
received strong pledges and most sensible tokens of His love, seeing she depended on receiving so
readily what she asked of him. No child could address himself with so great confidence to his most
tender parent. The love which God bears us and His readiness to succor and comfort us, if we humbly
confess and lay before him our wants, infinitely suprasses all that can be found in creatures. Nor
can we be surprised that He so easily heard the prayer of this holy virgin since at the command of
Joshua he stopped the heavens, God obeying the voice of man! He hears the most secret desires of those
that fear and love Him and does their will. If He sometimes seems deaf to their cries, it is to grant
their main desire by doing what is most expedient for them, as St. Austin frequently observes. The
short prayer by which St. Scholastica gained this remarkable victory over her brother, who was one of
the greatest saints on earth, was doubtless no more than a single act of her pure desires which she
continually turned toward and fixed on her Beloved. It was enough for her to cast her eye interiorly
upon Him with Whom she was closely and inseparably united in mind and affections to move Him so suddenly
to change the course of the elements in order to satisfy her pious desire. By placing herself as a docile
scholar continually at the feet of the Divine Majesty, Who filled all the powers of her soul with the
sweetness of His heavenly communications, she learned that sublime science of perfection in which she
became a mistress to so many other chaste souls by this divine exercise. Her life in her retirement
up to that happy moment which closed her mortal pilgrimage was a continued uniform contemplation by
which all her powers were united to and transformed into God.
from Lives of the Saints by Rev. Alban Butler, 1895
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