Saint Margaret of Hungary
Feast
day: January 19th
Profile
Margaret, the daughter
of King Bela IV, champion of Christendom, and Queen Mary Lascaris of Hungary,
was offered to God before her birth, in petition that the country would be
delivered from the terrible scourge of the Tartars. The prayer having been
answered, the king and queen made good their promise by placing the rich and
beautiful three-year-old in the Dominican convent at Vesprim. Here, in company
with other children of nobility, she was trained in the arts thought fitting for
royalty.
Margaret was not content with simply living in the house of God; she demanded
the religious habit--and received it--at the age of four. Furthermore, she took
upon herself the austerities practiced by the other sisters--fasting, hairshirts,
the discipline (scourge), and night vigils. She soon learned the Divine Office
by heart and chanted it happily to herself as she went about her play. She chose
the least attractive duties of the nuns for herself. She would starve herself to
keep her spirit humble. No one but Margaret seemed to take seriously the idea
that she would one day make profession and remain as a sister, for it would be
of great advantage to her father if she were to make a wise marriage.
This question arose seriously when Margaret was 12. She responded in surprise.
She said that she had been dedicated to God, even before her birth, and that she
intended to remain faithful to that promise. Some years later her father built
for her a convent on the island in the Danube between Buda and Pest. To settle
the matter of her vocation, here she pronounced her vows to the master general
of the order, Blessed Humbert of the Romans, in 1255, and took the veil in 1261.
Again, when Margaret was 18, her father made an attempt to sway her from her
purpose, because King Ottokar of Bohemia, hearing of her beauty, had come
seeking her hand. He even obtained a dispensation from the pope and approached
Margaret with the permission. Margaret replied as she had previously, "I esteem
infinitely more the King of Heaven and the inconceivable happiness of possessing
Jesus Christ than the crown offered me by the King of Bohemia." Having
established that she was not interested in any throne but a heavenly one, she
proceeded with great joy to live an even more fervent religious life than she
had before.
Margaret's royal parentage was, of course, a matter of discussion in the
convent. But the princess managed to turn such conversation away from herself to
the holy lives of the saints who were related to her by blood--King Saint
Stephen, Saint Hedwig, Saint Elizabeth of Hungary, and several others. She did
not glory in her wealth or parentage, but strove to imitate the saints in their
holiness. She took her turn in the kitchen and laundry, seeking by choice much
heavy work that her rank might have excused her from doing. She was especially
welcome in the infirmary, which proves that she was not a sad-faced saint, and
she made it her special duty to care for those who were too disagreeable for
anyone else to tend.
Margaret's austerities seem excessive to us of a weaker age. The mysteries of
the Passion were very real to her and gave reason for her long fasts, severe
scourgings, and other mortifications detailed in the depositions of witnesses
taken seven years after her death (of which records are still in existence).
Throughout Lent she scarcely ate or slept. She not only imitated the poverty-
striken in their manual labor and hunger, but also in their lack of
cleanliness--a form of penance at that time. Some of her acts of self-immolation
have been described as "horrifying" and verging on fanaticism, and there seems
to have been an element of willfulness in her mortifications.
She had a tender devotion to Our Lady, and on the eve of her feasts, Margaret
said a thousand Hail Mary's. Unable to make the long pilgrimage to the Holy
Land, to Rome, or to any of the other famous shrines of Christendom, the saint
developed a plan by which she could go in spirit: she counted up the miles that
lay between herself and the desired shrine, and then said an Ave Maria for every
mile there and back. On Good Friday she was so overcome at the thoughts of Our
Lord's Passion that she wept all day. She was frequently in ecstasy, and very
embarrassed if anyone found her so and remarked on her holiness.
A number of miracles
were performed during Margaret's lifetime and many more after her death because
Margaret had an implicit faith in the power and efficacy of prayer. The princess
nun was only 28 when she died. Most of the particulars of her life are recorded
in existing depositions of witnesses taken in 1277. Her friends and
acquaintances petitioned for her to be acclaimed a saint almost immediately
after her death. Among them was her own servant, Agnes, who rightly observed
that this daughter of a monarch showed far more humility than any of the
monastery's maids. Although their testimony expressed Margaret's overpowering
desire to allow nothing to stand between her and God, the process of
canonization was not complete until 1943. The island where her convent stood,
called first the "Blessed Virgin's Isle," was called "Isle of Margaret" after
the saint (Attwater, Attwater2, Benedictines, Bentley, Coulson, Dorcy, Farmer).
Born: 1242
Died:
January 18, 1271 at Budapest,
Hungary; remains given to the Poor Clares at Pozsony when the Dominican Order
was dissolved; most relics were destroyed in 1789, but portions still preserved
at Gran, Gyor, Pannonhalma
Beatified:
July 28, 1789
Canonized:
1943 by Pope Pius XII
Representation:
In art Saint Margaret is a crowned Dominican nun with the stigmata. Sometimes
she is shown (1) as a crowned Dominican with a processional cross; (2) as a
crowned Dominican with a nun at her feet; or (3) with the stigmata, cross, lily,
and book; the crown at her feet. She can be distinguished from the Dominican
Saint Catherine of Siena by her crown, which is never absent. Saint Catherine
may have three crowns, but never just one. Venerated in Budapest (Roeder).
Prayers/Commemorations
First Vespers:
Ant.
Blessed Margaret emulating the purity of the angels, dedicated herself as the
bride of Him who is the spouse of perpetual virginity and the Son of the
perpetual Virgin.
V.
Pray for us, Blessed Margaret.
R.
That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ
Lauds:
Ant. O
Most holy spouse of Christ, adorn with the diadem of virgins, honored with the
grace of healing, endowed with the heavenly gift of reading hearts, consumed
with the fire of divine love!
V.
Virgins shall be lead to the King after her.
R. Her
companions shall be presented to thee.
Second Vespers:
Ant. O
Blessed Margaret, who here on earth didst give to all the afflicted the solace
of charity, help us from heaven in our miseries and obtain for us life with the
saints in heaven.
V.
Pray for us, Blessed Margaret.
R.
That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.
Prayer:
Let
us pray: O God, the lover and guardian of chastity, by whose gifts Thy
handmaid Margaret united the beauty of virginity and the merit of good works,
grant we pray, that through the spirit of salutary penance we may be able to
recover integrity of soul. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
This documents is coutercy of http://www.willingshepherds.org/MArgaret Hungary.html
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