
Also
known as Elena Kowalska ,Faustina Kowalska ,Helena Kowalska ,Maria Faustina Kowalska,
Sister Faustina Memorial 5 October Profile
Third of ten children, she attended only three years of school. As a teenager,
she worked as a domestic servant for other families. After being rejected by several
religious orders, she became a nun in the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady
of Mercy in Warsaw, Poland on 1 August 1925; the order is devoted to care and
education of troubled young women. She changed her name to Sister Maria Faustina
of the Most Blessed Sacrament. During her 13 years in various houses, she was
a cook, gardener, and porter. She had a special devotion to Mary Immaculate, to
the Sacrament, and to Reconciliation, which led to a deep mystical interior life.
She began to have visions, receive revelations, and experience hidden stigmata.
She began recording these mystical experiences in a diary; being nearly illiterate,
it was written phonetically, without quotation marks or punctuation, and runs
to nearly 700 pages. A bad translation reached Rome in 1958, and was labelled
heretical. However, when Karol Wojtyla (Pope John Paul II) became Archbishop of
Krakow, he was beseiged by requests for a reconsideration. He ordered a better
translation made, and Vatican authorities realized that instead of heresy, the
work proclaimed God's love. It was published as Divine Mercy in my Soul. In the
1930's, Sister Faustina received a message of mercy from Jesus that she was told
to spread throughout the world, a message of God's mercy to each person individually,
and for humanity as a whole. Jesus asked that a picture be painted of him with
the inscription: "Jesus, I Trust in You." She was asked to be a model of mercy
to others, to live her entire life, in imitation of Christ's, as a sacrifice.
She commissioned this painting in 1935, showing a red and a white light shining
from Christ's Sacred Heart. Apostles of Divine Mercy is a movement of priests,
religious, and lay people inspired by Faustina's experiences; they spread knowledge
of the mystery of Divine Mercy, and invoke God's mercy on sinners. Approved in
1996 by the Archdiocese of Krakow, it has spread to 29 countries.
Born 25 August 1905 at Glogowiec, Poland as Elena (Helena) Kowalska
Died 5 October 1938 at Krakow, Poland of tuberculosis Venerated
7 March 1992 by Pope John Paul II Beatified 18 April 1993
by Pope John Paul II her beatification miracle involved the cure of Maureen Digan
who suffered Milroy's disease, a hereditary form of lymphedema that cost her a
leg Canonized 30 April 2000 by Pope John Paul II her canonization
miracle involved the cure of Father Ronald P. Pytel's heart condition Patronage
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