Maria of the Apostles
Festa: February 25
Italian laywoman whose hidden life of prayer and service supported missionary apostolates worldwide.
Patronato
General intercession, domestic workers, African missions
Virtù e caratteristiche
Biografia
Maria of the Apostles was an Italian laywoman of humble origin whose spiritual depth and devotion exemplified the sanctifying power of prayer and domestic service. Born Vittoria Strambi in 1844 in Viterbo, Italy, she adopted the spiritual name Maria of the Apostles after joining a community devoted to missionary support through prayer and labor. Though she never traveled to distant missions herself, she lived a life consecrated to sustaining missionary work through intercessory prayer, manual work, and support of missionaries. Her spiritual autobiography reveals a soul wholly united to Christ through the contemplative dimension of ordinary tasks. She maintained intense Eucharistic devotion and practiced severe mortification balanced with charity toward others. She died in 1894. Though not yet formally canonized by the Church, she is venerated in certain Italian and missionary communities for her model of spiritual fruitfulness achieved through humble domestic life dedicated to apostolic intentions. Her life demonstrates that all vocations, however seemingly humble, participate in the Church's universal missionary mission through prayer and sacrifice.