Consolata Betrone
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Born | Saluzzo, Piedmont, Italy | 6 April 1903
Died | 18 July 1946 Turin, Italy | (aged 43)
Venerated in | Catholic Church |
Patronage | Franciscan Order of Friars Minor Capuchin |
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Maria Consolata Betrone (6 April 1903 – 18 July 1946),
Consolata Betrone was known for the intense propagation of the
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Pierina Lorenzina Giovanna Betrone was the daughter of Pietro Betrone and Giuseppina Nirino, the owners of a bakery in Saluzzo (Cuneo) and then managers of a restaurant in Airasco (Turin). Pierina was the second of six daughters born of her father's second marriage.[2] She joined the association of the Company of the Daughters of Mary in the parish of San Massimo in Turin. After a visit to the tomb of Don Bosco in Valsalice, Pierina decided it was time to embark on a religious vocation. Her reading of The Story of a Soul attracted her to Thérèse of Lisieux's "little way".[3]
On 26 January 1925, Betrone joined the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians, but after a little over a year, she became convinced that this was not her calling. She then enrolled in the Italian League of Teaching and became involved in the local Catholic Action group. She tried a community founded by Giuseppe Benedetto Cottolengo, but returned to her family in August 1928 and continued her work with "Catholic Action". The superior of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd of Angers suggested that she might join the Franciscans.[4]
On 28 February 1930, Betrone joined the Capuchin Poor Clares in Turin, taking the name Maria Consolata.
In 1938, Betrone was assigned to the new monastery of Moriondo (Testona-Turin) not far from the Turin-Genoa railway. There she performed the services of secretary and nurse until 1945. Her confessor, Fr. Lorenzo Sales, a Consolata Missionary, suggested she write a short autobiography. On 25 October 1945 Betrone was diagnosed with pulmonary tuberculosis and shortly thereafter left for a sanatorium. Her condition being diagnosed as terminal, she returned to the monastery of Moriondo on 3 July 1946.[4]
Consolata Betrone died at the convent of Moriondo, in Testona, Italy at the age of forty-three on 18 July 1946. Her remains rest in the monastery of the Sacred Heart in Moncalieri.
After her death, Lorenzo Sales wrote the book Jesus Appeals to the World based on her reported messages.[6] Betrone is known for her prayer: "Jesus, Mary, I love you: Save souls".[7] Betrone spent her life attempting to bring to perfection this Very Little Way.
In 1995, Cardinal Giovanni Saldarini started the canonical process of beatification for Maria Consolata Betrone.[2] "The Servant of God distinguished herself for her tireless work in the service of the community, where she carried out the humblest tasks and cultivated an intense life of prayer and constant sacrifices."[3]
"A mystic is always placed in the context of his historical time...There is revealed a spirituality of reparation, perfectly in harmony with that desire for penance which animated the beginnings of her vocation."[8]
On 6 April 2019 Pope Francis authorized the Congregation for the Causes of Saints to promulgate the decree recognising the heroic virtues of Betrone giving her the title Venerable.[3][9][10] 6 April is also the date of her birth.
References
- ISBN 0-87973-454-X
- ^ a b c A Life For Love, Monastery of the Sacred Heart
- ^ a b c Becciu, Angelo. "Servae Dei Consolata Betrone", Dicastero delle Causa dei Santi, April 6, 2019
- ^ a b c "Risso, Paolo. Sister Consolata Betrone, 2001". Archived from the original on 25 May 2016. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
- ^ "Vénérable Consolata Betrone", Nominis
- ISBN 0-8189-0069-5
- ^ "The Message of the Sacred-Heart of Jesus to Sister Consolata", Le Sel de la Terre 74, Autumn 2010
- ^ Micchiardi, Pier Giorgio. "Suor M. Consolata Betrone", Basilica di Santa Chiara in Assisi, May 4, 2013
- ^ "Presto Beato un sacerdote brasiliano che aiutava gli immigrati italiani". Vatican News. 8 April 2019. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
- ^ "Promulgation of Decrees of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints", Holy See Press Office, April 8, 2019