Saint Edith of Kemsing: When Fashion Met Faith

They called her too glamorous for God. But Edith’s answer still challenges how we see faith today.

Edith was born in 961, a princess, the daughter of King Edgar of England. She could have grown up in a palace, surrounded by riches and power. But her mother, Wulfthryth, chose differently. She brought her child to Wilton Abbey (a community of nuns who live, study, and pray together). The palace doors closed, and abbey walls became Edith’s world.

Inside, she grew into Sister Edith. While most nuns wore plain habits, she walked in silk robes with embroidered sleeves, her jewelry shining in the candlelight. People criticized her for it, saying she was too glamorous, too stylish to be holy.

Sister Edith didn’t stay silent. She explained her choice with calm confidence:

β€œIf my heart is not proud, what harm is it if I wear gold? God looks at the heart, not the clothes. Beauty itself comes from Him, and it can be used to honor Him.”

Her style wasn’t for show. It was her way of lifting beauty back to God. And her life proved itβ€”she gave generously to the poor, supported her abbey, and even helped restore churches. She carried both grace and humility, royalty and service.

Her time was short. At just twenty-three years old, in 984, Sister Edith died. Yet miracles were reported at her tomb, and she was soon honored as Saint Edith. She was remembered not as the daughter of a king who might have ruled a kingdom, but as the young woman who turned fashion into faith, and beauty into prayer.

ᴛʸᡖⁱⁿᡍ α΄α΅˜α΅— α΅’αΆ  ᡗʰᡉ Κ™Λ‘α΅˜α΅‰ α΅ˆα΅ƒΚ³α΅‰α΅ ᡐᡘ˒ⁱᢜ ᡇˑᡒᡍ

Traces of courage, silence, and sacrificeβ€”this is Saints.

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The Cool Guy Saint: Pier Giorgio Frassati

He climbed, laughed, and served with joy. Pier Giorgio Frassati lived faith as a cool guy who turned ordinary days into love for God and others.

Carlo Acutis is called the cool techie saint. Pier Giorgio Frassati is the cool guy saint. Carlo’s story went viral, but Pier’s life is just as aliveβ€”a spark of youth that still speaks today.

The Mountaineer

Born in 1901 in Turin, Italy, Pier loved the outdoors. He hiked, skied, and climbed mountains. In old photos, he smiles with ropes on his shoulder. His motto was β€œVerso l’alto”—toward the heights. For him, every climb was more than sport. It was a way to rise closer to God.

The Barkada (a group of friends)

Pier had a barkada they called the β€œTipi Loschi”—the Shady Ones. It was their crew, full of laughter and shared adventures. Pier gave the group its fire: leading them not only to joy, but also to faith and service.

Joyful and Approachable

People remembered him as cheerful and warm, never stiff or distant. He showed that following Christ can be done with joy, with a smile, with an open heart. Holiness didn’t mean being boringβ€”it meant being alive.

Humble in Service

Though born to a wealthy family, Pier chose the simple road. He rode trams, walked long streets, and gave away his allowance to buy food and medicine for the poor. When he died of polio in 1925 at age 24, thousands of the poor came to his funeral. Only then did his family see how far his hidden love had reached.

Pier was not a priest. He lived as a layman, an engineering student, a mountaineer, a friend. His sainthood was built not on titles, but on the way he lived his daysβ€”full of faith, joy, and love.

Carlo built websites and wore sneakers. Pier climbed mountains and lifted the poor. Two different paths, one same fire.

On September 7, 2025, they were canonized together by Pope Leo XIV.

πšƒπš’πš™πš’πš—πš π™Ύπšžπš 𝚘𝚏 πšπš‘πšŽ π™±πš•πšžπšŽ β€’ 𝖽𝖺𝗋𝖾𝗆.π—†π—Žπ—Œπ—‚π–Ό.π–»π—…π—ˆπ—€

Saints β€’ Darem Placer

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