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St. Margaret, QUEEN OF SCOTLAND, WIDOW, A.D. 1093.

by VP


Posted on Monday June 10, 2024 at 12:00AM in Saints



"She was grand-daughter of Edmund Ironside, and married to Malcolm, king of Scotland. By the most tender complaisance and condescending behaviour, she gained a great influence over her husband; but this she exerted only to make religion and justice reign, and to render her subjects happy. In the midst of the cares of a kingdom, St. Margaret always kept her heart disengaged from the love of the world, and recollected in God. The continual attention of her soul to him in all her actions, assiduous prayer, and the constant practice of self-denial, were the chief means by which she attained to this perfection. Her greatness was not in enjoying, but despising the greatness of this world. She was a Christian wife, in her respect and obedience to her husband; a Christian mother, in the holy education of her children, ever endeavouring by example, advice, and tears, to arm them against the false pleasures of the world, and to quicken in them the love of God. She was a Christian queen, in discouraging all injustice in her subjects, in her zeal for reforming abuses, in her great charity to the poor, and employing persons to seek out such as were in distress. For the government of her own soul, she desired her director at all times, with freedom to put her in mind of whatever he observed amiss either in her words or actions. In this method of sanctity she lived, and in the same she died, in the eleventh century.

Whatever your condition be, you have lessons for improvement in this holy queen. A soul zealous for heaven cannot be barren, but will make all circumstances serviceable to a better life. Do you make this use of your authority, of your riches, of your charge? By fidelity in these, you may advance by large steps towards heaven. The surest means for going right, is to desire some discreet friend to point out all your false steps, and freely put you in mind of all your errors. Such a request will show your sincerity and humility; and there is no danger of failure, where these have the guidance." The Catholic Year by Fr. John Gother



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