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Blessed Elizabeth of Reute
Member of the Third Order of St. Francis, born 25 November, 1386, at Waldsee
in Swabia, of John and Anne Acheer; died 25 November, 1420. From her earliest
days the good Betha
, as she was called, showed a rare piety, and under the
learned and devout Conrad Kugelin, her confessor, provost of the Canons Regular
of St. Augustine at St. Peter's in Waldsee, she made extraordinary progress
towards perfection. When fourteen she received the habit of the third order, but
continued to live at home. Finding the life uncongenial, she secured the consent
of her parents after long entreaties to leave home. Receiving no support from
them she remained at the house of a pious tertiary, and the two worked at
weaving; but the remuneration was small and they frequently suffered from hunger
and other privations. After three years Conrad Kugelin established a house for
tertiaries at Reute on the outskirts of Waldsee and Elizabeth entered it
together with some others.
Here she took up her work in the kitchen, and now began her wonderful life of
seclusion, fasting, and prayer. There was no clausura at the convent, still she
led so retired a life that she was called the Recluse.
She spent many hours in
a little garden, kneeling on a stone or prostrate on the ground in contemplation.
So pure was her life that her confessor could scarcely find matter for
absolution. She had much to suffer from attacks of the evil spirit, from
suspicions of her sisters in religion, from leprosy, and other sicknesses, but
in all her trials she showed a heavenly patience. This she learned from the
Passion of Christ, which she made the continual subject of meditation, the
object of her love, and the rule of her life. In consequence God permitted her
to bear the marks of the Passion on her body; her head often showed the marks of
the Thorns, and her body those of the Scourging. The stigmata appeared only now
and then, but her pains never ceased. She was shown the happiness of the blessed
and the souls in the state of purgation; the secrets of hearts and of the future
were unveiled to her. She foretold the election of Martin V and the end of the
Western Schism. Though so much favoured by Divine Providence she always
preserved a great humility. After her death she was buried in the church of
Reute. Her life was written by her confessor and sent to the Bishop of Constance,
but it was only after 1623, when her tomb was opened by the provost of Waldsee,
that her popular veneration spread in Swabia. After several miracles had been
wrought through her intercession the Holy See was asked to ratify her cult. This
was done 19 June, 1766, by Clement XIII. The Franciscans celebrate her feast on
25 November.
LEO, Lives of the Saints and Blessed of the Three Orders of St Francis (Taunton, 1885); DUNBAR, A Dictionary of Saintly Women (London, 1904); DOLFINGER, Die selige gute Betha von Reute (Freiburg im Br., 1901).
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