The Choate Center Feast of St. Christina the Astonishing, July 24
St. Christina (1150-1224) was born to a peasant family in Belgium. She
was orphaned as a child and raised by her two older sisters. When she
was 21 she had what was believed to be a severe seizure, and was
pronounced dead. At her funeral she suddenly revived and levitated
before the bewildered congregation. She said that during her coma she
had been to heaven, hell, and purgatory and had been given the option to
either die and enter heaven, or return to earth to suffer and pray for
the holy souls in purgatory. Christina chose the greater act of charity.
From then on she lived in extreme poverty: wearing rags, sleeping on
rocks, and begging for her food. She is called "Astonishing" because she
did the most bizarre things and suffered the pains of
inhuman feats without being physically harmed by them. She would roll
in fire and hide in hot ovens; she would stand in freezing water for
hours in the dead of winter; she allowed herself to be dragged under
water by a mill wheel; she spent much time in graveyards. She would also
climb trees to escape the strong odor of sin in those she met. Many
thought her to be possessed by demons or insane, but many devout people
recognized and vouched for her sincerity, obedience, and sanctity. They
believed that she was a living witness to the pains that souls
experience in purgatory, willingly suffering with them and for them.
Christina the Astonishing is the patron of those with mental illness and
disorders, mental health workers, psychiatrists, and therapists.
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