Cristobal of Saint Catherine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
25 July 1638
Mérida, Badajoz, Habsburg Spain
Córdoba, Habsburg Spain
Cristóbal of Saint Catherine | |
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| Born | Cristóbal López de Valladolid Orea 25 July 1638 Mérida, Badajoz, Habsburg Spain |
| Died | 21 July 1690 (aged 51) Córdoba, Habsburg Spain |
| Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church |
| Beatified | 7 April 2013, Córdoba Cathedral, Spain by Cardinal Angelo Amato |
| Feast | 21 July |
Cristóbal of Saint Catherine (25 July 1638 – 21 July 1690) – born Cristóbal López de Valladolid Orea – was a Roman Catholic Spanish priest and a professed member of the Third Order of Saint Francis.[1] He was the founder of the Franciscan Hospitallers of Jesus of Nazareth which paid careful attention to both religious and social needs of the faithful.[2]
He was beatified on 7 April 2013 in a celebration that Cardinal Angelo Amato presided over on the behalf of Pope Francis.
Cristóbal López de Valladolid Orea was born in 1638 as the son of poor laborers (he had five brothers) and was baptized in the church of Santa Eulalia.[1] In either 1645 or 1646 he fled from his home in an effort to join the Order of Friars Minor but he soon returned home after his worried mother sent his brothers to bring him home. He served as an altar server and worked as a nurse in a hospital that the Order of Saint John of God managed.[2]
He was ordained to the priesthood on 20 March 1663 in Badajoz and after was made a chaplain to armed services fighting in Portugal though he had to return home after falling ill. In 1667 he retired to a hermitage in the mountains of El Bañuelo but his desire to follow the Rule and the teachings of Francis of Assisi prompted him to pursue the Franciscan charism in a concrete manner. It was for this reason he became a professed member of the Third Order of Saint Francis in 1671 and he assumed the religious name of "Cristóbal of Saint Catherine".[1] He established the Franciscan Hospitallers of Jesus of Nazareth in Córdoba on 11 February 1673 which pushed the boundaries of a range of both religious and social issues.
He died in 1690 clutching a crucifix due to a cholera epidemic in which he tended to the victims; it was said not long after his death several miracles were attributed to his direct intercession.[2] His order received papal approval from Pope Benedict XIV in 1746.
