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mail : englishspoken@clairval.com
February 2, 2003
Presentation
of Our Lord
Dear Friend of Saint Joseph Abbey,
«In whatever form,
suffering seems to be, and is, almost inseparable from
man's earthly existence... Human suffering evokes
compassion; it also evokes respect, and
in its own way it intimidates. For in suffering
is contained the greatness of a specific mystery...
Down through the centuries and generations it has been
seen that in suffering there is concealed a
particular power that draws a person interiorly close
to Christ, a special grace. To this grace many
saints, such as Saint Francis of Assisi, Saint
Ignatius of Loyola and others, owe their profound
conversion. A result of such a conversion is not only
that the individual discovers the salvific meaning of
suffering but above all that he becomes a completely
new person» (Apostolic Letter Salvifici doloris,
SD, John Paul II, February 11, 1984 nos. 3, 4,
26). The life of Blessed Anna Schäffer singularly
illustrates this observation by the Holy Father.
Anna Schäffer was born in Mindelstetten, a village in
Lower Bavaria in the diocese of Regensburg, in
southern Germany, on February 18, 1882, into a large
family, the father of which worked as a joiner. The
Schäffers were good Christians. Faithful to their
morning, midday, and evening prayers, they went to
church every Sunday and feast day, but also during the
week when possible. Anna was a quiet, gentle, and shy
child, a gifted student and skillful at manual work.
In 1896, her father died at the age of forty, leaving
the family in terrible poverty. Anna, who wished to
become a nun, and in a missionary congregation if
possible, had to work so as to build up her dowry (a
financial contribution one had to make at that time in
order to enter a convent.) When she was fourteen, she
started working as a «gofer,» first in Regensburg at
a pharmacy, then in Landshut in the office of a
councilor to the magistrates' court. There, one night
in June 1898, she received a message from Heaven for
the first time—a Saint appeared to her (she did not
know his name) and told her, «Before you turn twenty,
you will begin to suffer a great deal. Say the Rosary.»
She would later speak of dangers to her virginal
purity that she was able to overcome during these
years, thanks to the Holy Rosary.
The evening of February 4, 1901, the young woman,
working at the forester house in Stammham, was doing
the laundry with a female companion, Wally Kreuzer.
The stove pipe that went above the boiler became
detached from the wall. To repair it, Anna climbed on
a low wall jutting out. Suddenly, she lost her balance
and fell up to her knees in the boiling laundry water.
Panic-stricken, Wally, instead of helping her
companion, went running for help. A coachman ran up
and pulled the injured girl from the boiler. She was
taken in a cart to the nearest hospital, seven
kilometers away. At eleven o'clock that night, she was
finally seen to by a doctor who operated on her for
two hours. The weeks that followed were terrible—it
was necessary to constantly cut away pieces of
gangrenous flesh.
More than thirty
operations
Three months later, the medical insurance Anna
was under stopped paying coverage. Mrs. Schäffer
could not take on responsibility for hospitalization,
and so had to bring her poor child back home. Upon
Doctor Wäldin's entreaties, an institution for
invalids took care of the sick girl. Anna would be
hospitalized at the clinic at the University of
Erlangen (close to Nuremberg) from August 1901 till
May 1902. Yet the treatments did not have any effect.
Upon her return home, Anna was competently cared for
by Dr. Wäldin. This doctor tried in vain to perform
skin grafts through over thirty operations. Since he
was unable to bring the sick girl relief, he finally
resigned himself to wrapping her legs in sterile
bandages. For the remaining twenty years of Anna's
life, care would be limited to the weekly changing of
these dressings.
Anna Schäffer's plan to enter religious life was
unfeasible from that point on. The young woman did not
resign herself to her fate without difficulty—she
complained of her suffering and clinged to the hope of
being cured. Nevertheless, her soul matured in the
difficult school of the Cross. The parish priest in
Mindelstetten, Father Rieger, who would be her
spiritual father, was to testify that he had never
heard a word of complaint fall from her lips. In her
constant suffering, Anna was strengthened and consoled
by the living God and especially by the Holy Eucharist.
«[P]eople react to suffering in different ways,»
wrote Pope John Paul II. «But in general it can be
said that almost always the individual enters
suffering with a typically human protest and
with the question 'why?' He asks the meaning of
his suffering and seeks an answer to this question on
the human level. Certainly he often puts this question
to God, and to Christ. Furthermore, he cannot help
noticing that the One to whom he puts the question is
Himself suffering and wishes to answer him from
the Cross, from the heart of His own suffering. Nevertheless,
it often takes time, even a long time, for this answer
to begin to be interiorly perceived... Christ does not
explain in the abstract the reasons for suffering, but
before all else He says: 'Follow me! Come! Take part
through your suffering in this work of saving the
world, a salvation achieved through My suffering!
Through my Cross.' Gradually, as the individual takes
up his cross, spiritually uniting himself to
the Cross of Christ, the salvific meaning of suffering
is revealed before him» (SD, no. 26).
From 1910 to 1925, Anna Schäffer wrote her thoughts
in twelve notebooks. One hundred eighty-three of her
letters or notes are also intact. Her language is
quite simple, yet the originality and personal
character of her writings strike the reader, who
discovers in them a soul firmly established in faith
in Jesus Christ dead and resurrected, and in the
living Communion with all God's elect. This unfailing
confidence in God, this certainty in His infinite love
manifesting itself to her through her sufferings,
shone on those who approached her to entrust to her
their intentions or to ask her for encouragement or
advice. These visitors, at first just a handful,
slowly grew in number. Those who were the most
prejudiced against Anna did not fail to be impressed
by her patience and her kindness.
Anna's «revenge»
Her brother Michael, a poor soul who took to
drink, was not the last when he drank to mock «the
Saint.» Anna took her «revenge» by making a point
of converting him with gentleness. Nevertheless,
Michael's behavior forced Mrs. Schäffer to rent a
little apartment in the village to move into with her
daughter. Anna wrote to this admirable mother who
assisted her daughter until her death and whom she
would outlive four years, «Oh my dear mother, what a
grace it is to have you constantly by my side! Our
dear Lord sends His children help in the hour of need,
when we ask it of Him in confidence, and it is often
when a trial or affliction most overwhelms us that He
is closest to us with His help and His blessing.»
Accessible by an extremely steep staircase, the only
decorations in the sick woman's room were a crucifix,
an «Ecce Homo,» and pictures of saints. Anna hardly
left her room and her bed (which she also called her
bed-cross.) On rare occasions, she was brought to
church in an armchair. As soon as Pope Saint Pius X
permitted daily communion, Father Rieger brought her
the Eucharist every day, from which she drew her
strength.
Anna did not care much for being famous. Her days
passed in prayer, manual labor and writing. «I have
three keys to heaven,» she said. «The biggest is
made out of pig iron and is heavy—it is my suffering.
The second is the sewing needle, and the third is the
penholder. With these different keys, I strive each
day to open the door to Heaven. Each of them must be
decorated with three little crosses, which are prayer,
sacrifice, and selflessness.» Often, the children in
the village came to visit Anna. They were attracted to
her. The sick woman spoke to them about the Savior,
the Blessed Virgin, and the saints. She explained to
them how people go to Heaven. The whole town of
Mindelstetten was by and large sympathetic towards her.
People loved her and pitied her, and sought to please
her. On feast days, a delegation from the village came
to visit her; sometimes the whole village band offered
her a serenade while passing under her window.
It was charity towards her neighbor who was also
suffering that brought Anna out of her usual silence.
As soon as she saw a person experiencing difficulty,
she found a thousand cheery and friendly words to
comfort him or her, and seemed herself to be the
happiest of creatures. She treasured all the prayer
intentions that were entrusted to her, and presented
them tirelessly to God. All of Anna's writings give
evidence of a profound submission to Divine Providence
and a joyous acceptance of crosses. Quite often, her
letters bear a little pen and ink illumination in two
or three colors, representing the Cross, a chalice
surrounded with thorns, or some other scene from the
Passion. «Dear Fanny,» she wrote to a friend on
December 14, 1918, «we must consider our sufferings
to be our dearest friends who wish to accompany us
constantly, day and night, to remind us to look on
high, to the Holy Cross of Christ.»
Job is not guilty
In every age, men and women have searched for
the meaning of suffering. «In the Book of Job the
question has found its most vivid expression,» Pope
John Paul II remarks. «The story of this just man,
who without any fault of his own is tried by
innumerable sufferings, is well known... In this
horrible situation three old acquaintances come to his
house, and each one in his own way tries to convince
him that since he has been struck down by such varied
and terrible sufferings, he must have done something
seriously wrong... Job however challenges the truth of
the principle that identifies suffering with
punishment for sin... In the end, God Himself reproves
Job's friends for their accusations and recognizes
that Job is not guilty. His suffering is the suffering
of someone who is innocent and it must be accepted as
a mystery, which the individual is unable to penetrate
completely by his own intelligence... While it is true
that suffering has a meaning as punishment, when it is
connected with a fault, it is not true that all
suffering is a consequence of a fault and has the
nature of a punishment...
«But in order to perceive the true answer to the 'why'
of suffering, we must look to the revelation of divine
love... For God so loved the world that He gave His
only Son, that whoever believes in Him should not
perish but have eternal life (Jn. 3:16). Man 'perishes'
when he loses 'eternal life'... The only-begotten Son
was given to humanity primarily to protect man against
this definitive evil and against definitive suffering...
«Christ suffers voluntarily and suffers innocently...
Human suffering has reached its culmination in the
Passion of Christ. And at the same time it has entered
into a completely new dimension and a new order: it
has been linked to love, ... to that love which
creates good, drawing it out by means of suffering,
just as the supreme good of the Redemption of the
world was drawn from the Cross of Christ...In [the
Cross of Christ] we must also pose anew the question
about the meaning of suffering, and read in it, to its
very depths, the answer to this question» (SD,
nos. 10, 11, 13, 14, 18).
How quickly the time goes
by!
Anna had been a member of the Third Order of
St. Francis for a long time. Beginning on October 4,
1910, the feast of St. Francis, she bore the stigmata
of the Passion for a time, but she begged God to make
these mystical wounds inapparent, which was granted
her. It does not seem that she read Holy Scripture a
great deal, but as a daughter of the Catholic Church,
she laid claim to its doctrine and liturgy, which she
went over in the course of the year with the help of
her childhood memories. «To pray for the holy Church
and her pastors is the most important thing for me,»
she affirmed. She understood her life as an invalid as
a participation in the Cross of Christ. «In the hours
of suffering and in the many sleepless nights, I have
the wonderful opportunity to place myself in spirit
before the tabernacle and to offer expiation and
reparation to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Oh, how
quickly the time goes by for me then! Sacred Heart of
Jesus, hidden in the Blessed Sacrament, I thank You
for my cross and my sufferings, in union with the
thanksgivings of Mary, the Mother of Sorrows.»
«The Redeemer suffered in place of man and for man...
Each one is also called to share in that suffering through
which the Redemption was accomplished... In bringing
about the Redemption through suffering, Christ has also
raised human suffering to the level of the Redemption.
Thus each man, in his suffering, can also become a
sharer in the redemptive suffering of Christ... Whoever
suffers in union with Christ completes what is
lacking in Christ's afflictions (Col. 1:24)... The
sufferings of Christ created the good of the world's
Redemption. This good in itself is inexhaustible and
infinite. No man can add anything to it. But at the
same time, in the mystery of the Church as His Body,
Christ has in a sense opened His own redemptive
suffering to all human suffering... This Redemption
lives and develops as the Body of Christ, the Church,
and in this dimension every human suffering, by reason
of the loving union with Christ, completes the
suffering of Christ. It completes that suffering just
as the Church completes the redemptive work of Christ»
(SD, nos. 19, 24).
Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Blessed Virgin and the
Saints spoke frequently to Anna in her dreams at
night, and these messages from Heaven were for her a
refreshment and a foretaste of Paradise. But these
consolations never gave her a superhuman impassiveness.
Until the very end, she accepted with gratitude the
limited relief that medicine brought her. Over the
course of the twenty-five years of her «martyrdom,»
she improved in the interior acceptance of her trials.
She gradually discovered the secret of interior peace,
which she thus expressed in her quite simple language:
«Oh! What happiness and what love are hidden in the
cross and suffering!... I do not spend fifteen minutes
without suffering, and for some time I have not known
what it is to be without pain... I often suffer so
much that I can hardly say a word—when this happens,
I think that my Father of the Heavens must
particularly love me.» As in the words of Saint Paul:
I am overflowing with joy all the more because of
all our affliction (2 Cor. 7:4), she suffered with
a mysterious, subtle joy.
A source of joy
«A source of joy is found in the overcoming of
the sense of the uselessness of suffering... This
feeling not only consumes the person interiorly, but
seems to make him a burden to others. The person feels
condemned to receive help and assistance from others,
and at the same time seems useless to himself. The
discovery of the salvific meaning of suffering in
union with Christ transforms this depressing
feeling... In the spiritual dimension of the work of
Redemption the person who is suffering is serving, like
Christ, the salvation of his brothers and sisters.
Therefore he is carrying out an irreplaceable
service... Those who share in the sufferings of Christ
preserve in their own sufferings a very special
particle of the infinite treasure of the
world's Redemption, and can share this treasure with
others» (SD, no. 27).
Three and a half years before her death, Anna had to
stop her sewing work, which provided her relaxation
and an opportunity to be useful. In addition, it
became absolutely impossible to carry her to the
neighboring parish church to attend Mass, and this
renunciation was very painful for her. She wrote, «My
life is fading away little by little in suffering...
Eternity is ever approaching. Soon, I will live from
God, Who is Life itself. Heaven has no price, and I
rejoice every minute in the Lord's call to the
infinitely beautiful homeland» (March 16, 1922). On
October 5, 1925, after having received Holy Communion
and made the sign of the cross, murmuring, «Lord
Jesus, I love You,» Anna Schäffer died peacefully,
at the age of 43. Her body lies in the cemetery in
Mindelstetten, awaiting the «resurrection of the
flesh,» (cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church,
988-1019). «Christ has overcome the world
definitively by His Resurrection. Yet, because of the
relationship between the Resurrection and His Passion
and Death, He has at the same time overcome the world
by His suffering. Yes, suffering has been singularly
present in that victory over the world which was
manifested in the Resurrection. Christ retains in His
risen body the marks of the wounds of the Cross in His
hands, feet and side. Through the Resurrection, He
manifests the victorious power of suffering» (SD,
no. 25).
As the Good Samaritan did
The power of suffering is also left to men and
women so as to bring about the «civilization of love»:
«The first and second parts of Christ's words about
the Final Judgment (Mt. 25:34-45) unambiguously show
how essential it is, for the eternal life of every
individual, to 'stop,' as the Good Samaritan did, at
the suffering of one's neighbor, to have 'compassion'
for that suffering, and to give some help. In the
messianic program of Christ, which is at the same time
the program of the Kingdom of God, suffering is
present in the world in order to release love, in
order to give birth to works of love towards neighbor,
in order to transform the whole of human civilization
into a 'civilization of love.' In this love the
salvific meaning of suffering is completely
accomplished and reaches its definitive dimension» (SD,
no. 30).
The Pope thus concludes his apostolic exhortation: «And
we ask all you who suffer to support us. We ask
precisely you who are weak to become a source of
strength for the Church and humanity. In the
terrible battle between the forces of good and evil,
revealed to our eyes by our modern world, may your
suffering in union with the Cross of Christ be
victorious!» (SD, no. 31). Blessed Anna Schäffer
was victorious thanks to Jesus' Cross. Even before the
official judgment of the Church, a number of people in
Bavaria, then throughout Europe, came to her grave to
beseech her help. In 1998, 551 graces obtained through
her intercession were registered with the parish in
Mindelstetten. Since 1929, more than 15,000 graces
attributed to her prayer have been reported.
During her beatification on March 8, 1999, the Pope
said, «If we look to Blessed Anna Schäffer, we read
in her life a living commentary on what Saint Paul
wrote to the Romans: Hope does not disappoint,
because the love of God has been poured out into our
hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to
us (Rom. 5:5). She most certainly was not spared
the struggle to abandon herself to the will of God.
But she was given to grow in the correct understanding
that weakness and suffering are the pages on which God
writes His Gospel... Her sickbed became the cradle of
an apostolate that extended to the whole world.»
Be it in her letters or in her handiwork, Blessed Anna
Schäffer wished to represent the Heart of Jesus,
symbol of Divine Love. We recommend to her all those
who are suffering, that she might help them to unite
themselves to the Heart of Christ as they await a
glorious eternity.
Dom Antoine Marie osb
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