ST PAUL OF THE CROSS
THIS WEBSITE IS DEVOTED TO ST PAUL OF THE CROSS, THE
EXTRAORDINARY MYSTIC AND FOUNDER OF THE PASSIONIST ORDER.
THIS WEBSITE CONTAINS MANY OFFICIAL ACCOUNTS OF HIS HOLY LIFE
ALONG WITH NUMEROUS PHOTOGRAPHS. THE AUTHOR ENDEAVORS
ALWAYS TO BE IN COMMUNION WITH THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
AND ITS TEACHINGS.
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St Paul of the Cross devotion to the Passion of Jesus
St Paul of the Cross and devotion to the Passion
St Vincent Mary Strambi, a fellow Passionist and friend of Paul’s in the last few years of his life wrote
the first Biography of Paul only 11 years after his death. He stated that the “God raised up Paul of
the Cross to help people find God in their hearts”. It was Paul’s deep lifelong conviction that
God is most easily found by us in the Passion of Jesus. He saw the Passion as being the most
overwhelming sign and pledge of God’s infinite love for us, and at the same time the door to union
with Him. Thus Paul’s life was devoted to bringing this message of God’s love as revealed in the
Passion to all, and to founding a Congregation devoted to the Passion of Jesus and spreading its
message of love.
Through extraordinary mystical graces God gave Paul a deep experience of the Passion. Rosa
Calabresi, a spiritual friend of Paul’s tells it this way: "His devotion to the most holy Passion of Jesus
Christ was so singular that I never heard him speak of it without being deeply moved interiorly.
His words, especially when he spoke of the Passion, seemed to be fiery darts. He managed to speak
of it on all occasions, and further he exhorted others with great ardor and effectiveness to speak of
it always and meditate on the most atrocious sufferings of Jesus to move hearts to compassion. He
did this with such an abundant flow of tears, with a countenance so lighted up, with such lively
expressions, that it seemed that he wanted to stamp it on the hearts of all.”
"One day he confided to me in deepest secrecy that one Good Friday while he was at prayer before
the holy sepulchre, that Jesus deigned to stamp and impress on his heart His most holy Passion.
Three of his ribs near the heart raised. 'If they had not been raised,' he said to me, 'I could not
have endured it or stayed alive. All all the instruments of his Passion were carved in
my heart, and in the midst was the most holy sign, the Passion of Jesus Christ. Along
with His own Passion, He printed on my heart the sorrows of His dear Mother.
Daughter, he said to me, oh what sorrows I experienced, oh what love! A mixture of
extreme pain and excessive love.' "
St Paul also told her of another beautiful experience he had of Jesus crucified. While meditating on
the Passion of Jesus, he remained in prayer at the foot of a large Crucifix. He said to the
Lord, 'Lord, hide me in Your wounds, because I cannot stand without showing the
sorrow.' Then the most holy Crucifix before which I was praying, detached His arm
from the cross and embraced me closely, very closely and put me in His most holy
Side where He held me for three hours, and it seemed to me that I was in paradise.’
For his Canonization, a large picture of this miracle was painted, showing Paul raised in mid-air
before Jesus on the Cross, with Jesus embracing him and holding him with one arm, and drawing
him to the wound in His sacred side. Also in the picture, the holy Angels are all around, holding the
instruments of the Passion.
Truly, what means could be more efficacious than devotion to the Passion of our Redeemer? In
contemplating His infinite sufferings, when His every member and every sense was horribly afflicted,
do we not find our own senses and perceptive faculties sympathizing with Him? What is more
capable of moving our hearts than the consideration of another undergoing pain for our sakes, and
pleading for a return of love in every pang which afflicts Him? This is the message that Saint Paul of
the Cross felt himself sent for, and the history of his life shows us how he fulfilled his mission. It is
for us to reflect on his life and devotion to the Passion, for it is precisely this that will be most
powerful in persuading us to follow his example.
Concerning our own sufferings, in his diary on Dec 21, 1720 Paul writes:
“I would like to make everyone understand the great grace that God in his mercy bestows when he
sends us suffering, especially suffering de¬void of consolation. Then indeed the soul is purified like
gold in the furnace; without knowing it. It becomes radiant and is set free to take flight to its Good,
that is to the blessed transformation. It carries the cross with Jesus and knows it not ... I
understand that this is a great and fruitful way of suffering most pleasing to God, because the soul
thereby becomes indifferent to such an extent that it no longer thinks of sorrow or joy but solely of
remaining conformed to the holy will of its beloved Spouse, Jesus.”
Going back to the subject of God’s infinite love for us as revealed in His Passion, in his diary Paul
writes-
“I know that I also held colloquies on the sorrowful Passion of my beloved Jesus.
When I speak to Him of His sufferings, for example, I say: 'Ah, my Supreme Good.
What were the sentiments of your Sacred Heart when you were scourged? My
beloved Spouse, how greatly did the sight of my grievous sins and my ingratitude
afflict You! Oh, my only Love, why do I not die for You? Why am I not overwhelmed
with sorrow? And then I feel that sometimes my spirit can say no more but remains
thus in God with His sufferings infused into the soul- and sometimes it seems as if my
heart would break.” -Diary of St Paul of the Cross, Nov 26, 1720
This loving and sorrowful contemplation was the core of his spirituality and the means by which the
Congregation was to accomplish its mission. In the Rule for the Poor of Jesus, Paul had written:
“Dearly beloved, you must know that the main object in wearing black (according to
the special inspiration that God gave me) is to be clothed in mourning for the Passion
and Death of Jesus. For this purpose let us never forget to have always with us a
constant and sorrowful remembrance of Him. And so let each of the Poor of Jesus
take care to instill in others meditation on the suffering of our Jesus.” -St Paul of the
Cros