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Saint Mary Ann de Paredes: The Lily of Quito (In Spanish)
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This program discusses
the possibility of
breatharianism, or living
without eating food, and
is not a full instruction.
For your safety,
please do not attempt to
cease eating without
proper expert guidance.
For your safety,
please do not attempt to
cease eating without
proper expert guidance.
In scriptures,
the human body
is often referred to
as the temple of God.
Yet, it is quite
an uncommon privilege
for any soul to
attain this sacred abode
that houses the Divine,
as it is truly a blessing
to be reborn
as a human being.
On several occasions,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has spoken about the rarity
of this phenomenon:
To be reincarnated in
the human world is hard.
You have to have
enough Human Quality.
You have to have
affinity with the parents
and with the society,
with the people around
which you are born.
Very difficult.
To be a human,
you need some merit.
You have done
something good
in the past
in order to be able
to pick a human birth.
As a living temple of God,
the human body
is fully equipped
with miraculous wonders
that can be awakened
in those who
are spiritually conscious
and have complete faith
in the Creator of all life.
Inedia,
Latin for “fasting,”
is the human ability
to live without food.
Since time immemorial,
there have always been
individuals who
can sustain themselves
on prana,
or the vital life force.
Through the grace of
the Providence, inediates,
people who follow
a food-free lifestyle,
can draw the energy
from nature
to nourish themselves:
They live on the chi
from the ground,
or from the forest,
and from the sun
and from the air.
They make use
of all that.
Or they live on love,
on faith alone.
These individuals are
known as breatharians (pranarians or inediates),
solarians, or waterians,
and they come from
all walks of life, from
different cultures, and
all corners of the world.
Indeed, the possibilities
and miracles in this life
as our benevolent Creator
has designed for us
are endless;
we only need to connect
within to recognize
our abounding largess
as God’s children.
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has lovingly
recommended
a weekly series on
Supreme Master Television
to introduce
those individuals
of the past and present
who have chosen to
live food-free on Earth.
May their spiritual stories
enthrall you;
may hearts be opened,
and horizons be expanded.
We now invite you to
join us for our program,
“Saint Mary Ann
de Paredes:
The Lily of Quito,”
on Between Master
and Disciples.
“In the last years of her life
it was so evident
that the Eucharistic bread
was her only food,
that everyone believed it,
and it had ceased to be
a matter of surprise.”
Hallo, blessed viewers.
Welcome to Between
Master and Disciples
on Supreme Master
Television.
Today we go back in time
to the 17th century
to meet Saint Mary Ann
de Paredes,
also renowned as
“The Lily of Quito,”
who was a revered saint
from Quito, Ecuador.
Respected for her ability
to exist without food,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
lived for many years
solely on the wafer-thin
Holy Communion,
relying on her divine love
of Jesus to sustain
her physical body.
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
was born
on October 31, 1618,
to a family
with a noble lineage
in Quito, Viceroyalty
of New Granada,
a Spanish colony which
later became Ecuador.
Her father,
Don Jerónimo Flores Zenel
de Paredes, was a noble
from Toledo, Spain,
while her mother was
Doña Mariana Granobles
y Jaramillo,
who was likewise of
an aristocratic ancestry.
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
was the youngest
of their eight children.
Her parents
were considered
to be devoted Christians,
much respected
by the townspeople.
In fact, whenever
their fellow citizens talked
about the Paredes family,
they called them
“the house of prayer”
or “the house of saints.”
According to
the Saint Mary Ann
de Paredes’ biography,
“The Life of the Blessed
Mary Ann of Jesus,
de Paredes Y Flores,
an American Virgin
Called the Lily of Quito,”
author Father Boero
revealed that
as soon as she was born,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
was already a source
of wonder: she refused
to take any milk
from her mother
for an entire day.
It marked the beginning
of Saint Mary Ann
de Paredes’ inclination
towards a food-free life.
“The very same thing
happened two or three
times in succession;
nor could the mother
with all her endeavors
ever induce
the dear little babe
to take nourishment
more than twice a day
and at determinate hours,
viz. towards midday
and about midnight….
and was observed
moreover that
on Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays
of every week
it commenced and
always continued to
take nourishment but once
and that at midday.
Then at last they perceived
that it was not an effect
of the badness
of the nourishment, but
the virtue of abstinence
which operated
unpremeditatedly and
as it were by a prodigy
in this soul.”
After she was weaned,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
continued to eat
very little food.
Indeed, she reduced
her food consumption
even further,
abstaining from food
three days a week.
Her widowed mother
and the entire household
tried to tempt her with all
kinds of delicious meals,
yet Saint Mary Ann
de Paredes remained firm
in her resolve not to eat.
Extraordinarily, unlike
other young children,
at four years of age she
was already giving away
any sweet treats
she received
as presents to others.
As a young child,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
was very much
influenced by
her mother’s piety, often
imitating her in prayers
and supplications to God.
Even after her mother
passed away when
she was five years old,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes’
remarkable faith
became stronger.
Living with
her older sister,
Doña Jerónima,
and her family,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
was often found
to be absorbed
in her devotion to Jesus.
“She spent all the time,
which was not employed
in these
innocent occupations
in exercises of piety:
retiring to places
set apart for prayer,
reading good books
and the Lives of Saints,
and in vocal prayers.
She erected a little altar
in her chamber
and upon it
placed a little statue
in bass-relief of
the most Blessed Virgin
and another likewise
of the Infant Jesus.
Here she passed
many hours, either in
adorning the two images,
or in praying before them….
She, although
she was younger
than her three nieces,
still by her wisdom and
maturity beyond her age,
had acquired such
authority and reverence,
that they all regarded her
as their guide and mistress.”
In addition to
the daily prayers,
the young
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
often spent her time
in solitude doing penances
that were often
too extreme for a child
not yet ten years old.
Impressed by
her devotion and worship
of Jesus, Father Camachio,
her confessor,
agreed to allow her
to take part in the
Holy Communion service,
which was unheard of
for one so young.
Prior to her first
Holy Communion,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
renounced her title
of Doña,
vowing to remain chaste
for the rest of her life.
By the time
she reached ten years old,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
renewed her vow
of chastity, as well as
adding two more:
the vows of poverty
and obedience.
Subsequent to making
the vows of poverty,
she gave away all her
property and possessions
bequeathed to her
by her parents.
Two years later,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
persuaded her sister
and her confessor
to allow her
to live as a hermit.
According to
Catholic tradition,
a hermit was a person
who worshiped God
in an environment
that was secluded
from the rest of society.
A hermit was a Christian
living as an eremitic
as a result of
his religious conviction
for the purpose of changing
and expanding his heart.
Receiving their consent,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
moved to a chamber
separated from
the rest of the house,
decorating
her living quarter with
a few pieces of furniture
of the poorest quality.
“From the moment
the blessed child,
at the age of twelve,
voluntarily shut herself up
in her retirement,
she lived in the midst
of the world,
within the walls
of her paternal home, and
in a thickly crowded city,
no otherwise than
if she had been
in the most remote
and forsaken solitude
of the desert.
She no longer allowed
any one from without
to enter her rooms;
nay, not even her nearest
relatives of the house,
except very rarely,
or on business; desiring
to live solely to herself,
and completely aloof
from the world, which
she had renounced forever.”
Once in seclusion,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
continued her abstinence
of food, relying solely
on the Eucharist
as sustenance.
In a note
to her confessor,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
outlined her weekly
schedule which included:
“In time of
Advent and Lent,
on Mondays, Wednesdays,
and Fridays,
I will make my prayer
from ten to twelve
at night, on the cross.
On Fridays, I will,
moreover, place peas
in my shoes, wear a
crown made of thistles…
and I will fast
the whole week,
without tasting a morsel
of anything.
On Sundays, I will take
an ounce of bread; and
every day communicates
with the grace of God.”
Eventually,
her food-free lifestyle
spread throughout the city.
Those who questioned
the veracity
of her inediate state
soon became convinced
by the firsthand accounts
of those who knew her.
“All who gave testimony
in the different processes,
either as eye-witnesses or
who spoke to their own
certain knowledge
of Mary Ann's fasts,
all without exception
agreed in affirming,
that by a special favor
of Almighty God
she lived for many years,
and was entirely
supported by that
heavenly and spiritual food,
which she received
every day
in holy communion,
having no longer
any need of material
or earthly food.”
Religious authorities
in the city of Quito
further affirmed
her ability to be nourished
by the grace of God
and her love for Jesus.
“That she really lived
on holy communion,
the testimony of
Fathers John Camaccio,
Antonio Monosalvas,
and Alfonso Roxas,
who, from having been
her confessors,
were acquainted with
her every action, even
the most insignificant,
although hidden
and interior,
leaves no room for doubt.”
In addition to her fame
as an inediate,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
was much loved by
the city’s less fortunate.
With permission from her
sister and brother-in-law,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
generously distributed
food to the poor,
as well as joined the
household servants daily
in kneading
and baking bread
which she later
gave away the same day.
Similar to other
well known inediates
in history, such as
Blessed Alphais of Cudot,
Saint Mary Ann
de Paredes’ entire being
also emitted a fragrance,
as well as any possession
associated with her.
“Finally, I am persuaded
that that most delicious
odor which the body
of Mary Ann exhaled,
and which communicated
itself to everything
which she used, was
the effect or demonstration
of her immaculate purity.
Such at least was
the unanimous opinion
of all the witnesses
who gave evidence
in the different processes.
They said
that both her person
as well as her clothes,
sent forth almost always
such a fragrant odor…”
After she passed away
in 1645, at the age of 26,
her body was still
exuding a fragrance
noticeable to all those
who paid their last respects.
Indeed, the fragrance
permeated her coffin
and was still present
when it was opened
three years later.
Additionally,
soon after her death,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
became widely known
as the Lily of Quito
when a pure white lily
suddenly grew overnight
upon her death
from a hole in which
her attending servant
usually buried
Saint Mary Ann
de Paredes’ blood
after her acts
of severe penance
when she was still alive.
Over two hundred years
later,
on November 10, 1853,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
was beatified by
Pope Pius IX.
Subsequently,
a century later,
she was canonized by
Pope Pius XII
on July 9, 1950.
Similar to many others
throughout the centuries,
Saint Mary Ann de Paredes
once more demonstrates
the human body’s ability
to survive solely
on God’s grace.
Her faith and love for God
not only uplifted her spirit
but also nourished
her physical body.
Courageous viewers,
we appreciate
your company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television for
Good People, Good Works,
coming up after
Noteworthy News.
May Heavens
grace your life
with an abundance of joy
and loving kindness!
November 24, 1878
The New York Sun
DEAD AND
YET ALIVE!
The Extraordinary Case
of Miss Fancher
of Brooklyn.
FACTS VERIFIED
BY ABUNDANT
TESTIMONY.
A Mental Sight that is not
the Clap-Trap
of Clairvoyance.
Lying for Thirteen Years
Almost Motionless,
and at Times
Cold with the Chill
of Death and Pulseless;
Blind, yet Reading with
Perfect Ease; Seeing and
Describing Acts and
Persons Far Removed
from her Bedside—
Mental Phenonema that
Might Seem Incredible
Except for THE
Testimony of Physicians,
Clergymen, Teachers,
AND Trustworthy
Friends—Without Food
FOR Months at a Time—
Seeming Never to Sleep.
Tune in to
Supreme Master Television
on Sunday, February 20,
for our program,
“Mary J. Fancher:
The Brooklyn Enigma,”
on Between Master
and Disciples.
Tune in to
Supreme Master Television
today for our program,
“Mary J. Fancher: The Brooklyn Enigma,”
on Between Master
and Disciples.
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