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On His Life
Saint Gabriel was born at Assisi
in 1838. He was guided by Our Lady into the
Passionist Order founded by Saint Paul of the Cross,
and became a veritable Apostle of Her Sorrows. He
was a very great and truly contemplative soul, whose
only preoccupation was to unite himself to God at
all times. He allowed no distractions to enter his
spirit, and even though Italy, his country, was in a
state of ferment when he entered religion, he wanted
to know nothing of it.
The way to attain union with our
Saviour and our God was, for Saint Gabriel, as for
Saint Louis de Montfort, his Heavenly Mother. He
wrote home to his father, from the first month of
his noviciate, “Believe your son, whose heart is
speaking by his lips; no, I would not exchange one
single quarter of an hour spent near the Most
Blessed Virgin Mary, our consolatrix, our
protectress and our hope, for a year or several
years spent in the diversions and spectacles of the
earth.” Among his resolutions was that of visiting
Jesus in the Most Blessed Sacrament each day, and
praying for the gift of a tender and efficacious
devotion to His Most Holy Mother. He wrote a
beautiful Credo, worthy to be printed in letters of
gold, expressing all that he believed of the Mother
of God.
At twenty-four years of age
Saint Gabriel died of tuberculosis, having already
attained heroic sanctity by a life of self-denial
and great devotion to our Lord’s Passion and the
Compassion of His Mother.
Although his life was without
any miraculous event, after his death in 1862 many
miracles occurred at his tomb in Isola di Gran Sasso,
Italy. He was canonized by Pope Benedict XV in 1920,
and his feast was extended to the entire church by
Pope Pius XI in 1932. He is the patron of youth, and
especially of young religious. |