Nope, there's no need for any of that. All you need to do it turn to your local Encyclopedia of Catholic Saints and turn to Saint Francis de Sales.
Francis de Sales was born in 1567 to a noble family in France. He was the first of six children so he was given the best choices of schools, education, and his father expected him to hold a position in politics. However, while he was in university, Francis had a crisis of faith and became severely depressed after a discussion about predestination that lead the young man to firmly determine he was going to hell and he was irrevocably, eternally damned. However, his depression was short lived after he spent time in prayer and dedicated his life to God and realized that he wasn't damned and that whatever destiny God had in store for him was good, because God is good.
After graduating from university as a Doctor of Law and Theology, Francis eventually declined the path his father had laid out for him (military and political careers and an arranged marriage) and went back to university to study for a career with the church. He eventually became a bishop and did a lot of work with the church, patching up the holes caused by the Protestant Reformation. During this time, Francis' claim to fame became very apparent. He wrote numerous pamphlets, letters, essays, missives, and other writings for the church. He was also the first to write books about the faith and church for the common man; the practice of the day was to write for other bishops, priests, and those who were very learned people, and write it in Latin. Francis wrote for the less educated people of the time, and wrote it in plain
Francis died in 1622 and was beatified in 1667. He was finally canonized, or made a saint, in 1877. There are multiple steps to becoming a saint, which can take many decades, if not centuries to complete. Francis was finally made a saint 255 years after he died. Whenever there are statues of the saint, he is shown either holding a book, the bible, or a quill and scroll, forever ready to write new spiritual nuggets of wisdom for those seeking guidance.
I grew interested in the idea of divine inspiration for my writing skills a few years ago when I was stuck in a massive bout of writer's block while working on my current Work In Progress, Magic & Destiny. Being of the Christian faith, Lutheran in particular, I had been exposed to the various forms of Christianity. Namely, the Catholic
My wall plaque of St. Francis |
The medallion I wear |
What could be the explanation for this sudden increase of writing activity? Could it be the plaque and medallion? The fortunate byproduct of the power of suggestion? Maybe I have fallen victim of the placebo affect. Or... am I another one of the many people who have found guidance and power through the holy writing influence of St. Francis?
The world may never know.
This post was inspired by my sister, a landscape designer and plant fanatic, who wrote a post about Saint Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of her profession. Check out her blog over at http://yesitalktoplants.blogspot.com if plants interest you, too!
You're welcome for the inspiration, and thanks for the shameless plug!
ReplyDeletebtw, how is his name pronounced? Sahl? Sah-lay? I'm terrible at French.
I want to say it's pronounced Say-Ll. Just because the French tend to not pronounce every letter in the word. Type it into Google Translate and see if it will speak it to you.
ReplyDelete