A Beguine in Delft in the 14th century, Gertrude van Oosten led a life of humility and manual labor after forgiving her unfaithful fiancé. Favored with visions and marked by the stigmata of the Passion in 1340, she was renowned for her gifts of prophecy and her devotion to the Holy Childhood.
Guided reading
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LA V. GERTRUDE VAN OOSTEN, VIERGE
Historical context and sources
Gertrude's life took place in the 14th century under the pontificate of Innocent VI and the reign of John II the Good, documented by the Acta Sanctorum.
1358. — Pope: I nnocent VI. Innocent VI Pope reigning at the time of the saint's death. — King of France: J ohn II, the Goo Jean II, le Bon King of France, contemporary of Gertrude. d.
"To serve God, it is enough to have good will and five fingers that know how to hold a spindle." Acta S anctorum, Life Acta Sanctorum Monumental hagiographic collection by the Bollandists. of the Venerable Gertrude.
Origins and youth in Delft
Born in Voorburch to peasant parents, Gertrude became a domestic servant in Delft where she earned her nickname 'van Oosten' by singing hymns.
The Venerable Gertrud La vénérable Gertrude 14th-century Dutch Beguine virgin, stigmatist, and mystic. e was born in Voorburch, a town in Holland situated at an equal distance from Delft and The Hague; her parents were simple peasants. Upon leaving childhood, she entered into service in Delft to provide for her subsistence. There she made the acquaintance of two other young domestic servants, as pious as she. When they had leisure time, the three friends would spend it singing on the city bridges a pious hymn beginning with these words: The Day rises in the East, in Dutch — Het daghet in den Oosten. — It is from the first noun of her hymn to God that the holy musician was called Gheertrude van Oosten, Gertrude of the East. Gheertrude van Oosten 14th-century Dutch Beguine virgin, stigmatist, and mystic.
The Trial of Abandonment and Forgiveness
After being abandoned by her fiancé, she obtained through prayer the healing of her rival, marking her transition to a life consecrated to Christ.
She had been betrothed to a young man who soon after abandoned her for a more fortunate rival. Our Saint returned good for evil: having indeed learned that she who had stolen the heart of her fiancé was being led to the gates of death by the pains of childbirth, she obtained from heaven both her delivery and her healing.
How many graces are attached to the forgiveness of offenses! Who knows if Gertrude of Oosten did not owe to this heroic forgetting of a particularly cruel kind of abandonment the exchange of her title as the wife of a perishable man for that of the bride of Jesus Christ?
Commitment to the Beguines
She joined the Beguines, living in extreme poverty and frequent ecstasies while advising servants on the spiritual value of work.
Be that as it may, she entered the Begui nes and Béguines Lay religious community that Gertrude joined. began a way of life even more perfect than the one she had led until then. Poor, she reduced herself to begging for her bread out of humility rather than necessity. Her needs, moreover, were reduced to very little, for early on she was favored with heavenly ecstasies, and more than once she remained for six weeks in a row in her little room, enraptured in heaven, a stranger to the earth. When she went out, the sweet odor of her virtues followed her. She took pleasure in visiting the servants whose condition she had shared and in speaking words of consolation as well as edification to them. When those whom she encouraged to lead a pure and fervent life said to her: "How are we to live?" she would answer them: "To serve God, it is enough to have good will and fingers that know how to hold a spindle."
Temptations and devotions
Gertrude endured physical attacks from the demon and developed a deep devotion to the Passion and the Holy Childhood of Jesus.
She had thus lived for seven years in vigils and fasting. The demon could not see such persevering virtue without jealousy; having been unable to disturb her mind with impure thoughts and images, he attacked her in a tangible way: he went so far as to strip her of her cloak, to shake her violently by the arms, to lift her into the air and let her fall back down. But the arm of the Lord sustained her in these falls. Gertrude passionately loved little children; once, therefore, the devil took the form of one of these earthly angels and appeared to her all in tears; but the servant of God recognized the trap and repelled the tempter.
She practiced meditating every day on the Passion of Jesus Christ and the principal mysteries of our faith, according to the order of the times in which the Church celebrates them. She especially delighted in contemplating Jesus in the mysteries of his childhood.
This devotion to the Holy Childhood, which was to be renewed three c enturies later by the community of communauté des Carmélites de Beaune Community cited for its devotion similar to the Holy Childhood. the Carmelites of Beaune, and which was to receive its full flowering in the 19th century, earned the little servant of Jesus Christ, Gertrude van Oosten, the most signal favors of the divine child.
The miracle of the stigmata
In 1340, she received the stigmata of Christ; faced with the influx of curious onlookers, she obtained that the wounds become invisible while retaining the scars.
And wonders followed wonders in this humble existence that delighted the choirs of Angels with admiration. On the evening of Maundy Thursday in the year 1340, she was immersed, with Jesus in Gethsemane, in the contemplation of the sufferings of her Savior, when suddenly she felt five pricks in both hands, both feet, and her side, then a stream of vermilion blood flowed from these five wounds: these were the stigmata of H is Passion with which J stigmates de sa Passion Mystical marks of the Passion of Christ received by the saint. esus Christ had just marked His servant. The next day and the following days, the blood flowed seven times in the same day: the flow coincided with the seven canonical hours. This marvel attracted a large number of pilgrims and an even greater number of curious onlookers to the cell of the poor Beguine. Fearing therefore that a feeling of vain complacency might slip into her soul, she prayed to her Lord and her God to put an end to these visits, by withdrawing these sacred wounds from her. Our Lord granted her request and only the imprint of the stigmata remained on Gertrude. She lived for another eighteen years from that moment; but her body remained so weak that she had to take three breaks to get from her cell to the church.
Gifts of prophecy and passing
Endowed with the gifts of clairvoyance and prescience, she predicted the siege of Delft before dying in 1358, aspiring to the heavenly dwelling.
It was in the final period of her life that she had the prescience of the future and a distinct view of events occurring far from her, for example, the battle fought in 1351, on the banks of the Meuse, between the Empress-Duchess and her son William. She read into consciences and more than once she used this gift of clear sight to bring back sinners or to reassure newly converted souls about their state. Her confessor—a holy man—intended to buy a house in Delft: "Do not be in a hurry," Gertrude told him, "for it will not Delft City in Holland where Gertrude lived, served, and is buried. be long before there are many houses for sale here, and at a low price." Indeed, a year after the death of the Saint, who was born for heaven on January 6, 1358, Albert of Bavaria came to lay siege to this city and caused the price of pr operties to drop. Albert de Bavière Noble who besieged Delft in 1359, confirming Gertrude's prophecy. This prophecy was fulfilled in 1359. At the moment of expiring, she cried out: "My sisters, I am going home." As it was pointed out to her that she was already there, she replied: "It is not of this one that I speak, but of the house whose paving stones are of gold." She was buried in the parish cemetery, at the foot of the tower of the old church of Delft, on the south side.
We have extracted this Life from the Acta Sanctorum.
Annexes & related entities
Structured data for exploration: events, miracles, quotes, places, attributes, patronages, and important entities cited in the text.
Key Events
- Entered service in Delft as a domestic servant
- Breaking off her engagement and forgiving her rival
- Joined the Beguines of Delft
- Reception of the stigmata on Maundy Thursday 1340
- Prophecy regarding the siege of Delft by Albert of Bavaria
Miracles
- Healing and deliverance of a woman in childbirth (her rival)
- Miraculous stigmatization in 1340
- Prolonged ecstasies of six weeks
- Gift of prophecy and reading of consciences
Quotes
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To serve God, it is enough to have good will and five fingers that know how to hold a spindle.
Acta Sanctorum -
My sisters, I am going home... to the one whose streets are paved with gold.
Dying words