Suffering Serenely - The Life of Servant of God Sister Dalisay Lazaga
Servant of God Sister Dalisay Lazaga |
What we're going to discover in this blogpost is also an ongoing cause for beatification and canonization of a simple religious of the Canossian Sisters of Charity - Sister Dalisay Lazaga. Sister Dalisay may not found any religious congregation or sought reforms in her congregation, her holiness that she exemplified during her suffering made her cause to be worthy to be considered by the Holy See, just like our recently declared Servant of God Darwin Ramos.
Early Life
Sister Dalisay Lazaga was born in Santa Rosa, Laguna on March 17, 1940. In her early age, she got a preview of her vocation - suffering. At age of eight she lost both parents that her eldest sister took care of her. Consequently from her early childhood she knew the suffering of a motherless child. In this painful suffering that she went through, she grew up to be a good and virtuous girl and was loved by everybody. At twenty years of age, she obtained her education degree and took up a teaching profession with love and enthusiasm.
Emblem of the Canossian Daughters of Charity of St. Magdalene of Canossa |
Dalisay became an esteemed teacher by her peers and she is flocked by admirers. Despite of the admiration she received, she felt the call to religious life that she fostered since her childhood. Her choice did not please her family, who cherished the idea of another kind of life for her but she persisted.
She entered the Canossian Daughters of Charity of St. Magdalene of Canossa and on February 2, 1966 she made her first religious Profession in the Novitiate House of Oxley in Australia. Upon her return, she took up again the demanding task of teaching and realized an enviable, if short, earthly and spiritual career, carrying out her mission among the youth of the Canossian schools.
Her Suffering
In November 1970, Sister Dalisay’s health showed serious symptoms of deterioration that she had to undergo an exploratory operation. The diagnosis is unmistakably fatal, giving her only three months to live. Initially, she had no idea of her actual condition. Yet, with a great longing for life in her heart, she moved unaware towards death dreaming about the beauty of a life spent in bringing many souls to Christ through her sufferings that she endured. When she found out the truth of her condition, she accepted it with an inspiring gentleness of spirit and surrendered to God’s will. This further gave her the grace to offer her sufferings for the conversion of sinners.
Servant of God Sister Dalisay Lazaga |
The Cause for Sainthood
A few decades after her death, numerous favors were reported through her help that prompted the Canossian Congregation to formally open her cause for beatification and canonization. The cause for her sainthood was opened by the Congregation for the Causes of Saints June 28, 2012 and conferred to her the title "Servant of God".
The life of Sister Dalisay may not be dramatic like the famed Filipina foundresses, but they share one common denominator - suffering for the love of God and souls. In the case of Sister Dalisay, she endured much suffering since her childhood until her passing, yet she accepted them as a form of grace in order to bring souls back to God. This heroic act is something that we should imitate as our act of charity and truly deserves a cause for her sainthood May Servant of God Sister Dalisay Lazaga help us to understand the value of suffering, not a a burden, but a grace and an opportunity to offer it to God for the salvation of souls.
For favors granted through her intercession, you can report them to:
Canossian Daughters of Charity
1202 M. Gandhi St.,
Paco, Manila
"Sr. Dalisay Lazaga". canossaphil.org. Retrieved on September 30, 2019.
"Canossiane". canossian.org., Retrieved on September 30, 2019..
Special thanks to the owner of the photographs utilized in this blogpost.
+AM+DG+
My aunt thinks fondly of her since she was the Principal of Cannossa , When Sr. Dalisay died she recalls it was a school foundation day and the celebration was cut short because of Sr. Lazaga's passing
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