Solemnity
of All Saints
The earliest certain observance of a feast in
honour of all
the saints is an early fourth-century commemoration of "all the
martyrs." In the early seventh century, after successive waves of
invaders plundered the catacombs, Pope Boniface IV
gathered up some 28
wagonloads of bones and reinterred them beneath the Pantheon, a Roman
temple dedicated to all the gods. The pope rededicated the shrine as a
Christian church. According to Venerable Bede, the pope intended "that
the memory of all the saints might in the future be honoured in the
place which had formerly been dedicated to the worship not of gods but
of demons" (On the Calculation of Time). But the rededication of the
Pantheon, like the earlier commemoration of all the martyrs, occurred
in May. Many Eastern Churches still honour all the saints in the spring,
either during the Easter season or immediately after Pentecost. How the
Western Church came to celebrate this feast in November is a puzzle to
historians. The Anglo-Saxon theologian Alcuin observed the feast on
November 1 in 800, as did his friend Arno, Bishop of Salzburg. Rome
finally adopted that date in the ninth century.
This feast first honoured martyrs. Later,
when
Christians were free to worship according to their conscience, the
Church acknowledged other paths to sanctity. In the early centuries the
only criterion was popular acclaim, even when the bishop's approval
became the final step in placing a commemoration on the calendar. The
first papal canonization occurred in 993; the lengthy process now
required to prove extraordinary sanctity took form in the last 500
years. Today's feast honours the obscure as well as the famous — the
saints each of us have known.
“After this I had a vision of a great multitude,
which no
one could count, from every nation, race, people, and tongue. They
stood before the throne and before the Lamb, wearing white robes and
holding palm branches in their hands.... [One of the elders] said to
me, ‘These are the ones who have survived the time of great distress;
they have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the
Lamb’” (Revelation 7:9,14).
(AmericanCatholic.org)
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St. Victorinus of Pettau Bishop and
martyr.
Originally a Greek, he became bishop of Pettau, in Pannonia (later
Styria, Austria). He was martyred during the persecutions of Emperor Diocletian
(r. 284-305). Victorinus was also the author of several biblical commentaries,
although he may have been an adherent of Millenarianism, a heresy of that time.
(www.catholic.org)
The Faithful Departed
The Church has encouraged prayer for the dead from the earliest times as an
act of Christian charity. "If we had no care for the dead," Augustine noted,
"we would not be in the habit of praying for them." In the early Middle Ages
monastic communities began to mark an annual day of prayer for the departed
members. In the middle of the 11th century, St. Odilo, abbot of Cluny
(France), decreed that all Cluniac monasteries offer special prayers and
sing the Office for the Dead on November 2, the day after the feast of All
Saints. The custom spread from Cluny and was finally adopted throughout the
Roman Church. The theological underpinning of the feast is the
acknowledgment of human frailty. Since few people achieve perfection in this
life but, rather, go to the grave still scarred with traces of sinfulness,
some period of purification is necessary before a soul comes face-to-face
with God. The Council of Trent affirmed this purgatory state and insisted
that the prayers of the living can speed the process of purification.
(AmericanCatholic.org)
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St. Martin de Porres
(1579-1639)
"Father
unknown" is the cold legal phrase sometimes used on baptismal records.
"Half-breed" or "war souvenir" is the cruel name inflicted by those of
"pure" blood. Like many others, Martin might have grown to be a bitter
man, but he did not. It was said that even as a child he gave his heart
and his goods to the poor and despised. He was the illegitimate son of
a freed woman of Panama, probably black but also possibly of Native
American stock, and a Spanish grandee of Lima, Peru. He inherited the
features and dark complexion of his mother. That irked his father, who
finally acknowledged his son after eight years. After the birth of a
sister, the father abandoned the family. Martin was reared in poverty,
locked into a low level of Lima’s society. At 12 his mother apprenticed
him to a barber-surgeon. He learned how to cut hair and also how to
draw blood (a standard medical treatment then), care for wounds and
prepare and administer medicines.
After a few years in this medical
apostolate, Martin applied to the Dominicans to be a "lay helper," not
feeling himself worthy to be a religious brother. After nine years, the
example of his prayer and penance, charity and humility led the
community to request him to make full religious profession. Many of his
nights were spent in prayer and penitential practices; his days were
filled with nursing the sick and caring for the poor. It was
particularly impressive that he treated all people regardless of their
color, race or status. He was instrumental in founding an orphanage,
took care of slaves brought from Africa and managed the daily alms of
the priory with practicality as well as generosity. He became the
procurator for both priory and city, whether it was a matter of
"blankets, shirts, candles, candy, miracles or prayers!" When his
priory was in debt, he said, "I am only a poor mulatto. Sell me. I am
the property of the order. Sell me." Side by side with his daily work
in the kitchen, laundry and infirmary, Martin’s life reflected God’s
extraordinary gifts: ecstasies that lifted him into the air, light
filling the room where he prayed, bilocation, miraculous knowledge,
instantaneous cures and a remarkable rapport with animals. His charity
extended to beasts of the field and even to the vermin of the kitchen.
He would excuse the raids of mice and rats on the grounds that they
were underfed; he kept stray cats and dogs at his sister’s house. He
became a formidable fundraiser, obtaining thousands of dollars for
dowries for poor girls so that they could marry or enter a convent.
Many of his fellow religious took him as their spiritual director, but
he continued to call himself a "poor slave." He was a good friend of
another Dominican saint of Peru, Rose of Lima.
Racism is a sin almost nobody confesses. Like
pollution, it is a "sin of the world" that is everybody's
responsibility but apparently nobody's fault. One could hardly imagine
a more fitting patron of Christian forgiveness (on the part of those
discriminated against) and Christian justice (on the part of reformed
racists) than Martin de Porres.
Pope John XXIII remarked at the canonization of
Martin (May 6, 1962), "He excused the faults of others. He forgave the
bitterest injuries, convinced that he deserved much severer punishments
on account of his own sins. He tried with all his might to redeem the
guilty; lovingly he comforted the sick; he provided food, clothing and
medicine for the poor; he helped, as best he could, farm labourers and
Negroes, as well as mulattoes, who were looked upon at that time as
akin to slaves: thus he deserved to be called by the name the people
gave him: 'Martin of Charity.'"
(AmericanCatholic.org)
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Saint Charles Borromeo,
bishop (1538-1584)
The name of
St. Charles Borromeo is associated with reform. He lived during the
time of the Protestant Reformation, and
had a hand
in the reform of the whole Church during the final years of the Council
of Trent. Although he belonged to a noble Milanese family and was
related to the powerful Medici family, he desired to devote himself to
the Church. When his uncle, Cardinal de Medici, was elected pope in
1559 as Pius IV, he made Charles cardinal-deacon and administrator of
the Archdiocese of Milan while he was still a layman and a young
student. Because of his intellectual qualities he was entrusted with
several important offices connected with the Vatican and later
appointed secretary of state with full charge of the administration of
the papal states. The untimely death of his elder brother brought
Charles to a definite decision to be ordained a priest, despite
relatives’ insistence that he marry. He was ordained a priest at the
age of 25, and soon afterward he was consecrated bishop of Milan.
Because of his work at the Council of Trent he was not allowed to take
up residence in Milan until the Council was over. Charles had
encouraged the pope to renew the Council in 1562 after it had been
suspended 10 years before. Working behind the scenes, St. Charles
deserves the credit for keeping the Council in session when at several
points it was on the verge of breaking up. He took upon himself the
task of the entire correspondence during the final phase. Eventually
Charles was allowed to devote his time to the Archdiocese of Milan,
where the religious and moral picture was far from bright. The reform
needed in every phase of Catholic life among both clergy and laity was
initiated at the provincial council of all his suffragan bishops.
Specific regulations were drawn up for bishops and other clergy: If the
people were to be converted to a better life, these had to be the first
to give a good example and renew their apostolic spirit. Charles took
the initiative in giving good example. He allotted most of his income
to charity, forbade himself all luxury and imposed severe penances upon
himself. He sacrificed wealth, high honours, esteem and influence to
become poor. During the plague and famine of 1576 he tried to feed
60,000 to 70,000 people daily. To do this he borrowed large sums of
money that required years to repay. When the civil authorities fled at
the height of the plague, he stayed in the city, where he ministered to
the sick and the dying, helping those in want. Work and the heavy
burdens of his high office began to affect his health. He died at the
age of 46.
St. Charles made his own the words of Christ: "...I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, a stranger and you welcomed me, naked and you clothed me, ill and you cared for me, in prison and you visited me" (Matthew 25:35-36). Charles saw Christ in his neighbour and knew that charity done for the least of his flock was charity done for Christ. "Christ summons the Church, as she goes her pilgrim way, to that continual reformation of which she always has need, insofar as she is an institution of men here on earth. Consequently, if, in various times and circumstances, there have been deficiencies in moral conduct or in Church discipline, or even in the way that Church teaching has been formulated — to be carefully distinguished from the deposit of faith itself — these should be set right at the opportune moment and in the proper way" (Decree on Ecumenism, 6, Austin Flannery translation). (AmericanCatholic.org)
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Venerable Solanus Casey
(1870-1957)
Barney Casey became one of Detroit’s best-known priests even though he
was not allowed to preach formally or to hear confessions! Barney came
from a large family in Oak Grove, Wisconsin. At the age of 21, and
after he had worked as a logger, a hospital orderly, a streetcar
operator and a prison guard, he entered St. Francis Seminary in
Milwaukee — where he found the studies difficult. He left there and, in
1896, joined the Capuchins in Detroit, taking the name Solanus. His
studies for the priesthood were again arduous. On July 24, 1904, he was
ordained, but because his knowledge of theology was judged to be weak,
Father Solanus was not given permission to hear confessions or to
preach. A Franciscan Capuchin who knew him well said this annoying
restriction "brought forth in him a greatness and a holiness that might
never have been realized in any other way." During his 14 years as
porter and sacristan in Yonkers, New York, the people there recognized
him as a fine speaker. "For, though he was forbidden to deliver
doctrinal sermons," writes his biographer, James Derum, "he could give
inspirational talks, or feverinos, as the Capuchins termed them"
(18:96). His spiritual fire deeply impressed his listeners. Father
Solanus served at parishes in Manhattan and Harlem before returning to
Detroit, where he was porter and sacristan for 20 years at St.
Bonaventure Monastery. Every Wednesday afternoon he conducted
well-attended services for the sick. A co-worker estimates that on the
average day 150 to 200 people came to see Father Solanus in the front
office. Most of them came to receive his blessing; 40 to 50 came for
consultation. Many people considered him instrumental in cures and
other blessings they received.
Father Solanus’ sense of God’s providence inspired many of his
visitors. "Blessed be God in all his designs" was one of his favorite
expressions. The many friends of Father Solanus helped the Capuchins
begin a soup kitchen during the Depression. Capuchins are still feeding
the hungry there today. In 1946 in failing health, he was transferred
to the Capuchin novitiate in Huntington, Indiana, where he lived until
1956 when he was hospitalized in Detroit. He died on July 31, 1957. An
estimated 20,000 people passed by his coffin before his burial in St.
Bonaventure Church in Detroit.
At the funeral Mass, Father Gerald, the provincial, said: "His was a
life of service and love for people like me and you. When he was not
himself sick, he nevertheless suffered with and for you that were sick.
When he was not physically hungry, he hungered with people like you. He
had a divine love for people. He loved people for what he could do for
them — and for God, through them." In 1960 a Father Solanus Guild was
formed in Detroit to aid Capuchin seminarians. By 1967 the guild had
5,000 members — many of them grateful recipients of his practical advice
and his comforting assurance that God would not abandon them in their
trials. He was declared Venerable in 1995.
James Patrick Derum, his biographer, writes that eventually Father
Solanus was weary from bearing the burdens of the people who visited
him. "Long since, he had come to know the Christ-taught truth that pure
love of God and one’s fellowmen as children of God are in the final
event all that matter. Living this truth ardently and continuously had
made him, spiritually, a free man — free from slavery to passions, from
self-seeking, from self-indulgence, from self-pity — free to serve wholly
both God and man" (The Porter of St. Bonaventure’s, page 199).
Father Maurice Casey, a brother of Father Solanus, was once in a
sanitarium near Baltimore and was annoyed at the priest-chaplain there.
Father Solanus wrote his brother: "God could have established his
Church under supervision of angels that have no faults or weaknesses.
But who can doubt that as it stands today, consisting of and under the
supervision of poor sinners — successors to the ‘poor fishermen of
Galilee’ #151; the Church is a more outstanding miracle than any other
way?" (AmericanCatholic.org)
St. Sylvia, mother of St. Gregory the Great The Church venerates the sanctity of Sylvia and Gordian, the parents of St. Gregory the Great, as well as his two aunts, Tarsilla and Emiliana. St. Sylvia was a native of the region of Sicily while St. Gordian, her husband, came from the vicinity of Rome. They had two sons: Gregory and another whose name has not survived the ages. Gordian died about 573 and Gregory converted his paternal home into a monastery. Sylvia therefore retired to a solitary and quasi-monastic life in a little abode near the Church of St. Sava on the Aventine. It became her custom frequently to send fresh vegetables to her son on a silver platter. One day, when Gregory found himself with nothing to give a poor beggar, he presented him with the platter. St. Sylvia is thought to have gone on to her heavenly reward between 592 and 594. After her death, the holy Pontiff had a picture of both his parents depicted in the Church of St. Andrew. In the sixteenth century, Pope Clement VIII had St. Sylvia inscribed in the Roman Martyrology. (Catholic Online)
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St. Nicholas Tavelic
and Companions (d. 1391)
Nicholas and his three companions are
among the 158 Franciscans who have been martyred in the Holy Land since
the friars became custodians of the shrines in 1335. Nicholas was born
in 1340 to a wealthy and noble family in Croatia. He joined the
Franciscans and was sent with Deodat of Rodez to preach in Bosnia. In
1384 they volunteered for the Holy Land missions and were sent there.
They looked after the holy places, cared for the Christian pilgrims and
studied Arabic. In 1391 Nicholas, Deodat, Peter of Narbonne and Stephen
of Cuneo decided to take a direct approach to converting the Muslims.
On November 11, 1391, they went to the huge Mosque of Omar in Jerusalem
and asked to see the Qadi (Muslim official). Reading from a prepared
statement, they said that all people must accept the gospel of Jesus.
When they were ordered to retract their statement, they refused. After
beatings and imprisonment, they were beheaded before a large crowd.
Nicholas and his companions were canonized in 1970. They are the only
Franciscans martyred in the Holy Land to be canonized.
Francis presented two missionary
approaches for his friars. Nicholas and his companions followed the
first approach (live quietly and give witness to Christ) for several
years. Then they felt called to take the second approach of preaching
openly. Their Franciscan confreres in the Holy Land are still working
by example to make Jesus better known. In the Rule of 1221, Francis
wrote that the friars going to the Saracens (Muslims) "can conduct
themselves among them spiritually in two ways. One way is to avoid
quarrels or disputes and 'be subject to every human creature for God's
sake' (1 Peter 2:13), so bearing witness to the fact that they are
Christians. Another way is to proclaim the word of God openly, when
they see that is God's will, calling on their hearers to believe in God
almighty, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, the Creator of all, and in the
Son, the Redeemer and Saviour, that they may be baptized and become
true and spiritual Christians" (Ch. 16). (AmericanCatholic.org)
St Leonard and St Bertile
St. Leonard
According to unreliable sources, he was a Frank courtier who was
converted by St. Remigius, refused the offer of a See from his
godfather, King Clovis I, and became a monk at Micy. He lived as a
hermit at Limoges and was rewarded by the king with all the land he
could ride around on a donkey in a day for his prayers, which were
believed to have brought the Queen through a difficult delivery safely.
He founded Noblac monastery on the land so granted him, and it grew
into the town of Saint-Leonard. He remained there evangelizing the
surrounding area until his death. He is invoked by women in labour and
by prisoners of war because of the legend that Clovis promised to
release every captive Leonard visited. His feast day is November 6.
(Catholic Online)
St. Bertille was
born of one of the most illustrious families in the territory of
Soissons, in the reign of Dagobert I. As she grew up she learned
perfectly to despise the world, and earnestly desired to renounce it.
Not daring to tell this to her parents, she first consulted St. Ouen,
by whom she was encouraged in her resolution. The Saint's parents were
then made acquainted with her desire, which God inclined them not to
oppose. They conducted her to Jouarre, a great monastery in Brie, four
leagues from Meaux, where she was received with great joy and trained
up in the strictest practice of monastic perfection. By her perfect
submission to all her sisters she seemed every one's servant, and
acquitted herself with such great charity land edification that she was
chosen prioress to assist the abbess in her administration. About the
year 646 she was appointed first abbess of the abbey of Chelles, which
she governed for forty-six years with equal vigour and discretion,
until she closed her penitential life in 692.
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St. Didacus (1400-1463)
Didacus is living proof that God "chose
what is foolish in the world to shame the wise;
God chose what is weak
in the world to shame the strong" (1 Corinthians 1:27). As a young man
in Spain, Didacus joined the Secular
Franciscan Order and lived for
some time as a hermit. After Didacus became a Franciscan brother, he
developed a reputation for great insight into God’s ways. His penances
were heroic. He was so generous with the poor that the friars sometimes
grew uneasy about his charity. Didacus volunteered for the missions in
the Canary Islands and laboured there energetically and profitably. He
was also the superior of a friary there. In 1450 he was sent to Rome to
attend the canonization of St. Bernardine of Siena. When many friars
gathered for that celebration fell sick, Didacus stayed in Rome for
three months to nurse them. After he returned to Spain, he pursued a
life of contemplation full-time. He showed the friars the wisdom of
God’s ways. As he was dying, Didacus looked at a crucifix and said: "O
faithful wood, O precious nails! You have borne an exceedingly sweet
burden, for you have been judged worthy to bear the Lord and King of
heaven" (Marion A. Habig, O.F.M., The Franciscan
Book of Saints, p. 834). San Diego, California, is
named for this Franciscan, who was canonized in 1588.
"He was born in Spain and gained no
outstanding reputation for learning, but like our first teachers and
leaders unlettered as men count wisdom, an unschooled person, a humble
lay brother in religious life. [God chose Didacus] to show in him the
abundant riches of his grace to lead many on the way of salvation by
the holiness of his life and by his example and to prove over and over
to a weary old world almost decrepit with age that God's folly is wiser
than men, and his weakness is more powerful than men" (Bull of
Canonization).
(AmericanCatholic.org)
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Blessed John Duns
Scotus (c. 1266-1308)
A humble man, John Duns Scotus has been one of the
most influential Franciscans through the centuries. Born at Duns in the
county of Berwick, Scotland, John was descended from a wealthy farming
family. In later years he was identified as John Duns Scotus to
indicate the land of his birth; Scotia is the Latin name for Scotland.
John received the habit of the Friars Minor at Dumfries, where his
uncle Elias Duns was superior.
After novitiate John studied at Oxford
and Paris and was ordained in 1291. More studies in Paris followed
until 1297, when he returned to lecture at Oxford and Cambridge. Four
years later he returned to Paris to teach and complete the requirements
for the doctorate. In an age when many people adopted whole systems of
thought without qualification, John pointed out the richness of the
Augustinian-Franciscan tradition, appreciated the wisdom of Aquinas,
Aristotle and the Muslim philosophers — and still managed to be an
independent thinker. That quality was proven in 1303 when King Philip
the Fair tried to enlist the University of Paris on his side in a
dispute with Pope Boniface VIII. John Duns Scotus dissented and was
given three days to leave France. In Scotus’s time, some philosophers
held that people are basically determined by forces outside themselves.
Free will is an illusion, they argued. An ever practical man, Scotus
said that if he started beating someone who denied free will, the
person would immediately tell him to stop. But if Scotus didn’t really
have a free will, how could he stop? John had a knack for finding
illustrations his students could remember! After a short stay in Oxford
he returned to Paris, where he received the doctorate in 1305. He
continued teaching there and in 1307 so ably defended the Immaculate
Conception of Mary that the university officially adopted his position.
That same year the minister general assigned him to the Franciscan
school in Cologne where John died in 1308. He is buried in the
Franciscan church near the famous Cologne cathedral.
Drawing on the work of John Duns Scotus,
Pope Pius IX solemnly defined the Immaculate Conception of Mary in
1854. John Duns Scotus, the "Subtle Doctor," was beatified in 1993.
Father Charles Balic, O.F.M., the foremost
20th-century authority on Scotus, has written: "The whole of Scotus's
theology is dominated by the notion of love. The characteristic note of
this love is its absolute freedom. As love becomes more perfect and
intense, freedom becomes more noble and integral both in God and in
man" (New Catholic Encyclopaedia, Vol. 4, p. 1105).
Intelligence hardly guarantees holiness. But John Duns Scotus was not
only brilliant, he was also humble and prayerful—the exact combination
St. Francis wanted in any friar who studied. In a day when French
nationalism threatened the rights of the pope, Scotus sided with the
papacy and paid the price. He also defended human freedom against those
who would compromise it by determinism. Ideas are important. John Duns
Scotus placed his best thinking at the service of the human family and
of the Church. (AmericanCatholic.org)
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St. Benignus
Bishop of Ireland, the son of Sechnaa, the psalm singer of St, Patrick.
Sechnan was a chief in Meath, Ireland, converted by St. Patrick. Benignus became
a disciple of St. Patrick and succeeded him as the chief bishop of Ireland. He
converted the Irish in Clare, Kerry, and Connaught. Benignus served as the
superior of an abbey at Drumlease, erected by St. Patrick. (www.catholic.org)
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St. Leo the Great (d.
461)
With apparent strong conviction of the
importance of the Bishop of Rome in the Church, and of the Church as
the ongoing sign of Christ’s presence in the world, Leo the Great
displayed endless dedication in his role as pope. Elected in 440, he
worked tirelessly as
"Peter’s
successor," guiding his fellow bishops as "equals in the episcopacy and
infirmities." Leo is known as one of the best administrative popes of
the ancient Church. His work branched into four main areas, indicative
of his notion of the pope’s total responsibility for the flock of
Christ. He worked at length to control the heresies of Pelagianism,
Manichaeism and others, placing demands on their followers so as to
secure true Christian beliefs. A second major area of his concern was
doctrinal controversy in the Church in the East, to which he responded
with a classic letter setting down the Church’s teaching on the nature
of Christ. With strong faith, he also led the defence of Rome against
barbarian attack, taking the role of peacemaker. In these three areas,
Leo’s work has been highly regarded. His growth to sainthood has its
basis in the spiritual depth with which he approached the pastoral care
of his people, which was the fourth focus of his work. He is known for
his spiritually profound sermons. An instrument of the call to
holiness, well-versed in Scripture and ecclesiastical awareness, Leo
had the ability to reach the everyday needs and interests of his
people. One of his Christmas sermons is still famous today.
At a time when there is widespread
criticism of Church structures, we also hear criticism that bishops and
priests — indeed, all of us — are too preoccupied with administration of
temporal matters. Pope Leo is an example of a great administrator who
used his talents in areas where spirit and structure are inseparably
combined: doctrine, peace and pastoral care. He avoided an "angelism"
that tries to live without the body, as well as the "practicality" that
deals only in externals. (AmericanCatholic.org)
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St. Martin of Tours
(316?-397)
A conscientious
objector who wanted to be a monk; a monk who was manipulated into being
a bishop; a bishop who fought paganism as well as pleaded for mercy to
heretics — such was Martin of Tours,
one of the most popular of saints
and one of the first not to be a martyr. He was born of pagan parents
in what is now Hungary and was raised in Italy. The son of a veteran,
he was forced to serve in the army against his will at the age of 15.
He became a Christian catechumen and was baptized at 18. It was said
that he lived more like a monk than a soldier. At 23 he refused a war
bounty from the emperor with the words, "I have served you as a
soldier; now let me serve Christ. Give the bounty to those who are
going to fight. But I am a soldier of Christ and it is not lawful for
me to fight." After great difficulties, he was discharged and went to
be a disciple of Hilary of Poitiers. He was ordained an exorcist and
worked with great zeal against the Arians. He became a monk, living
first at Milan and later on a small island. When Hilary was restored to
his see after exile, Martin returned to France and established what may
have been thefirst French monastery near Poitiers. He lived there for
10 years, forming his disciples and preaching throughout the
countryside. The people of Tours demanded that he become their bishop.
He was drawn to that city by a ruse — the need of a sick person — and was
brought to the church, where he reluctantly allowed himself to be
consecrated bishop. Some of the consecrating bishops thought his
rumpled appearance and unkempt hair indicated that he was not dignified
enough for the office. Along with St. Ambrose, Martin rejected Bishop Ithacius’s principle of putting heretics to death — as well as the
intrusion of the emperor into such matters. He prevailed upon the
emperor to spare the life of the heretic Priscillian. For his efforts,
Martin was accused of the same heresy, and Priscillian was executed
after all. Martin then pleaded for a cessation of the persecution of
Priscillian’s followers in Spain. He still felt he could cooperate with
Ithacius in other areas, but afterwards his conscience troubled him
about this decision. As death approached, his followers begged him not
to leave them. He prayed, "Lord, if your people still need me, I do not
refuse the work. Your will be done."
Martin's
worry about cooperation reminds us that almost nothing is either all
black or all white. The saints are not creatures of another world: They
face the same perplexing decisions that we do. Any decision of
conscience always involves some risk. If we choose to go north, we may
never know what would have happened had we gone east, west or south. A
hypercautious withdrawal from all perplexing situations is not the
virtue of prudence; it is, in fact, a bad decision, for "not to decide
is to decide." (AmericanCatholic.org)
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St. Josaphat
(1580?-1623), bishop and martyr
In 1967, newspaper photos of Pope Paul VI embracing Athenagoras I, the
Orthodox patriarch of Constantinople, marked a significant step toward
the healing of a division in Christendom that has spanned nine
centuries. In 1595,
when today’s saint was a boy, the Orthodox bishop
of Brest-Litovsk (famous in World War I) in Belarus and five other
bishops representing millions of Ruthenians, sought reunion with Rome.
John Kunsevich (Josaphat became his name in religious life) was to
dedicate his life and suffer his death in the same cause. Born in what
was then Poland, he went to work in Wilno and was influenced by clergy
adhering to the Union of Brest (1596). He became a Basilian monk, then
a priest, and soon was well known as a preacher and as an ascetic. He
became bishop of Vitebsk (now in Russia) at a relatively young age, and
faced a difficult situation. Most monks, fearing interference in
liturgy and customs, did not want union with Rome. By synods,
catechetical instruction, reform of the clergy and personal example,
however, Josaphat was successful in winning the greater part of the
Orthodox in that area to the union. But the next year a dissident
hierarchy was set up, and his opposite number spread the accusation
that Josaphat had "gone Latin" and that all his people would have to do
the same. He was not enthusiastically supported by the Latin bishops of
Poland. Despite warnings, he went to Vitebsk, still a hotbed of
trouble. Attempts were made to foment trouble and drive him from the
diocese: A priest was sent to shout insults to him from his own
courtyard. When Josaphat had him removed and shut up in his house, the
opposition rang the town hall bell, and a mob assembled. The priest was
released, but members of the mob broke into the bishop’s home. He was
struck with a halberd, then shot and his body thrown into the river. It
was later recovered and is now buried at St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome.
He was the first saint of the Eastern Church to be canonized by Rome.
His death brought a movement toward Catholicism and unity, but the
controversy continued, and the dissidents, too, had their martyr. After
the partition of Poland, the Russians forced most Ruthenians to join
the Russian Orthodox Church.
The seeds of separation were sown in the fourth century when the Roman
Empire was divided into East and West. The actual split came over
relatively unimportant customs (unleavened bread, Saturday fasting,
celibacy). No doubt the political involvement of religious leaders on
both sides was a large factor, and doctrinal disagreement was present.
But no reason was enough to justify the present tragic division in
Christendom, which is 64 percent Roman Catholic, 13 percent Eastern
Churches (mostly Orthodox) and 23 percent Protestant, and this when the
71 percent of the world that is not Christian should be getting the
witness of unity and Christlike charity from Christians! (AmericanCatholic.org)
-----------------------------------Return to Index to Saints-----------------------------------
Saint Frances Xavier
Cabrini, virgin (1850-1917)
Frances Xavier Cabrini was the first
United States citizen to be canonized. Her deep trust in the loving
care of her God gave her the
strength
to be a valiant woman doing the work of Christ. Refused admission to
the religious order which had educated her to be a teacher, she began
charitable work at the House of Providence Orphanage in Cadogno, Italy.
In September 1877, she made her vows there and took the religious
habit. When the bishop closed the orphanage in 1880, he named Frances
prioress of the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart. Seven young
women from the orphanage joined with her. Since her early childhood in
Italy, Frances had wanted to be a missionary in China but, at the
urging of Pope Leo XIII, Frances went west instead of east. She
travelled with six sisters to New York City to work with the thousands
of Italian immigrants living there. She found disappointment and
difficulties with every step. When she arrived in New York City, the
house intended to be her first orphanage in the United States was not
available. The archbishop advised her to return to Italy. But Frances,
truly a valiant woman, departed from the archbishop’s residence all the
more determined to establish that orphanage. And she succeeded. In 35
years Frances Xavier Cabrini founded 67 institutions dedicated to
caring for the poor, the abandoned, the uneducated and the sick. Seeing
great need among Italian immigrants who were losing their faith, she
organized schools and adult education classes. As a child, she was
always frightened of water, unable to overcome her fear of drowning.
Yet, despite this fear, she travelled across the Atlantic Ocean more
than 30 times. She died of malaria in her own Columbus Hospital in
Chicago.
The compassion and dedication
of Mother Cabrini is still seen in hundreds of thousands of her fellow
citizens, not yet canonized, who care for the sick in hospitals,
nursing homes and state institutions. We complain of increased medical
costs in an affluent society, but the daily news shows us millions who
have little or no medical care, and who are calling for new Mother
Cabrinis to become citizen-servants of their land. At her canonization
on July 7, 1946, Pius XII said, "Although her constitution was very
frail, her spirit was endowed with such singular strength that, knowing
the will of God in her regard, she permitted nothing to impede her from
accomplishing what seemed beyond the strength of a woman." (AmericanCatholic.org)
-----------------------------------Return to Index to Saints-----------------------------------
St. Gertrude
(1256?-1302)
Gertrude, a Benedictine nun in Helfta (Saxony),
was one of the great mystics of the 13th century. Together with her
friend and teacher St. Mechtild, she practiced a spirituality called
"nuptial mysticism," that is, she came to see herself as the bride of
Christ. Her spiritual life was a deep personal union with Jesus and his
Sacred Heart, leading her into the very life of the Trinity. But this
was no individualistic piety. Gertrude lived the rhythm of the liturgy,
where she found Christ. In the liturgy and Scripture, she found the
themes and images to enrich and express her piety. There was no clash
between her personal prayer life and the liturgy. Gertrude's life is
another reminder that the heart of the Christian life is prayer:
private and liturgical, ordinary or mystical, always personal.
"Lord, you have granted me your secret friendship by opening
the sacred ark of your divinity, your deified heart, to me in so many
ways as to be the source of all my happiness; sometimes imparting it
freely, sometimes as a special mark of our mutual friendship. You have
so often melted my soul with your loving caresses that, if I did not
know the abyss of your overflowing condescensions, I should be amazed
were I told that even your Blessed Mother had been chosen to receive
such extraordinary marks of tenderness and affection" (Adapted from The
Life and Revelations of Saint Gertrude).
(AmericanCatholic.org)
SAINT GERTRUDE Abbess of Eisleben (1264-1334)
Saint
Gertrude of Eisleben is the most celebrated of several Saints of the same name,
and for this reason the ancient authors named her Gertrude the Great. She was
born in the year 1264 of a noble Saxon family, and placed at the age of five for
education with the Benedictines of Helfta. She dwelt there
as a simple
religious, very mistrustful of herself, under the direction of an Abbess having
the same name as herself. The Abbess’ sister was Saint Mechtilde of Hackeborn;
and she was the mistress and friend of the young Saint Gertrude, who consulted
her excellent teacher whenever she was tempted by vain and useless thoughts, or
troubled by doubts suggested by the ancient enemy.
Saint Gertrude learned Latin in her youth, as in those days was customary for
persons of her sex who consecrated themselves to God, and she wrote Latin with
unusual elegance and force. She also had an uncommon knowledge of Holy Scripture
and of all the branches of learning having religion as their object; but one day
Our Lord reproached her with having too great a taste for her studies.
Afterwards she could find in them nothing but bitterness; but soon Our Lord came
to instruct her Himself. For many years she never lost His amiable Presence,
save for eleven days when He decided to test her fidelity. Prayer and
contemplation were her principal exercise, and to those she consecrated the
greater part of her time.
Zeal for the salvation of souls was ardent in the heart of Gertrude. Thinking of
the souls of sinners, she would shed torrents of tears at the foot of the cross
and before the Blessed Sacrament. She especially loved to meditate on the
Passion and the Eucharist, and at those times, too, could not restrain the tears
that flowed in abundance from her eyes. When she spoke of Jesus Christ and His
mysteries, she ravished those who heard her. One day while in church the Sisters
were singing, I have seen the Lord face to face, Saint Gertrude beheld what
appeared to be the divine Face, brilliant in beauty; His eyes pierced her heart
and filled her soul and flesh with inexpressible delights. Divine love, ever the
unique principle of her affections and her actions, was the principle by which
she was crucified to the world and all its vanities.
She was the object of a great number of extraordinary graces; Jesus Christ
engraved His wounds in the heart of His holy spouse, placed rings on her
fingers, presented Himself to her in the company of His Mother, and in her
spirit acted as though He had exchanged hearts with her. All these astonishing
graces only developed her love for suffering. It was impossible for her to live
without some kind of pain; the time she spent without suffering seemed to her to
be wasted.
During the long illness of five months from which she would die, she gave not
the slightest sign of impatience or sadness; her joy, on the contrary, increased
with her pains. When the day of her death arrived in 1334, she saw the Most
Blessed Virgin descend from heaven to assist her, and one of her Sisters
perceived her soul going straight to the Heart of Jesus, which opened to receive
it. Saint Gertrude is one of the great mystics of the Church; the book of her
Revelations, recorded out of obedience, remains celebrated. In it she traces in
words of indescribable beauty the intimate converse of her soul with Jesus and
Mary. She was gentle to all, most gentle to sinners; filled with devotion to the
Saints of God, to the souls in purgatory, and above all to the Passion of Our
Lord and to His Sacred Heart. (magnificat.ca)
-----------------------------------Return to Index to Saints-----------------------------------
St. Albert the Great
(1206-1280)
Albert the Great was a 13th-century
German Dominican who influenced decisively the stance of the Church
toward Aristotelian philosophy brought to Europe by the spread of
Islam. Students of philosophy know him as the master of Thomas Aquinas.
Albert’s attempt to understand Aristotle’s writings established the
climate in which Thomas Aquinas
developed his synthesis of Greek wisdom
and Christian theology. But Albert deserves recognition on his own
merits as a curious, honest and diligent scholar. He was the eldest son
of a powerful and wealthy German lord of military rank. He was educated
in the liberal arts. Despite fierce family opposition, he entered the
Dominican novitiate. His boundless interests prompted him to write a
compendium of all knowledge: natural science, logic, rhetoric,
mathematics, astronomy, ethics, economics, politics and metaphysics.
His explanation of learning took 20 years to complete. "Our intention,"
he said, "is to make all the aforesaid parts of knowledge intelligible
to the Latins." He achieved his goal while serving as an educator at
Paris and Cologne, as Dominican provincial and even as bishop of
Regensburg for a time. He defended the mendicant orders and preached
the Crusade in Germany and Bohemia. Albert, a Doctor of the Church, is
the patron of scientists and philosophers.
An information glut faces us Christians today in all branches of
learning. One needs only to read current Catholic periodicals to
experience the varied reactions to the findings of the social sciences,
for example, in regard to Christian institutions, Christian life-styles
and Christian theology. Ultimately, in canonizing Albert, the Church
seems to point to his openness to truth, wherever it may be found, as
his claim to holiness. His characteristic curiosity prompted Albert to
mine deeply for wisdom within a philosophy his Church warmed to with
great difficulty.
"There are some who desire knowledge merely for its own sake;
and that is shameful curiosity. And there are others who desire to know, in
order that they may themselves be known; and that is vanity, disgraceful too.
Others again desire knowledge in order to acquire money or preferment by it;
that too is a discreditable quest. But there are also some who desire knowledge,
that they may build up the souls of others with it; and that is charity. Others,
again, desire it that they may themselves be built up thereby; and that is
prudence. Of all these types, only the last two put knowledge to the right use"
(St. Bernard, "Sermon on the Canticle of Canticles").
(AmericanCatholic.org)
-----------------------------------Return to Index to Saints-----------------------------------
St. Margaret of
Scotland (1050?-1093)
Margaret of Scotland
was a truly
liberated woman in the sense that she was free to be herself. For her,
that meant freedom to love God and serve others. Margaret was not
Scottish by birth. She was the daughter of Princess Agatha of Hungary
and the Anglo-Saxon Prince Edward Atheling. She spent much of her youth
in the court of her great-uncle, the English king, Edward the
Confessor. Her family fled from William the Conqueror and was
shipwrecked off the coast of Scotland. King Malcolm befriended them and
was captivated by the beautiful, gracious Margaret. They were married
at the castle of Dunfermline in 1070. Malcolm was good-hearted, but
rough and uncultured, as was his country. Because of Malcolm’s love for
Margaret, she was able to soften his temper, polish his manners and
help him become a virtuous king. He left all domestic affairs to her
and often consulted her in state matters. Margaret tried to improve her
adopted country by promoting the arts and education. For religious
reform, she instigated synods and was present for the discussions which
tried to correct religious abuses common among priests and others, such
as simony, usury and incestuous marriages. With her husband, she
founded several churches. Margaret was not only a queen, but a mother.
She and Malcolm had six sons and two daughters. Margaret personally
supervised their religious instruction and their other studies.
Although she was very much caught up in the affairs of the household
and country, she remained detached from the world. Her private life was
austere. She had certain times for prayer and reading Scripture. She
ate sparingly and slept little in order to have time for devotions. She
and Malcolm kept two Lents, one before Easter and one before Christmas.
During these times she always rose at midnight for Mass. On the way
home she would wash the feet of six poor persons and give them alms.
She was always surrounded by beggars in public and never refused them.
It is recorded that she never sat down to eat without first feeding
nine orphans and 24 adults. In 1093, King William Rufus made a surprise
attack on Alnwick castle. King Malcolm and his oldest son, Edward, were
killed. Margaret, already on her deathbed, died four days after her
husband.
There are two ways to be charitable: the "clean
way" and the "messy way." The "clean way" is to give money or clothing
to organizations that serve the poor. The "messy way" is dirtying your
own hands in personal service to the poor. Margaret's outstanding
virtue was her love of the poor. Although very generous with material
gifts, Margaret also visited the sick and nursed them with her own
hands. She and her husband served orphans and the poor on their knees
during Advent and Lent. Like Christ, she was charitable the "messy
way."
"When [Margaret] spoke, her conversation was with the salt
of wisdom. When she was silent, her silence was filled with good
thoughts. So thoroughly did her outward bearing correspond with the
staidness of her character that it seemed as if she has been born the
pattern of a virtuous life" (Turgot, St. Margaret's confessor). (AmericanCatholic.org)
-----------------------------------Return to Index to Saints-----------------------------------
St. Elizabeth of
Hungary (1207-1231)
In her short life Elizabeth manifested such great love for the poor and
suffering that she has become the patroness of Catholic charities and
of the Secular Franciscan Order. The daughter of the King of Hungary,
Elizabeth chose a life of penance and asceticism when a life of leisure
and luxury could easily have been hers. This choice endeared her in the
hearts of the common people throughout Europe. At the age of 14
Elizabeth was married to Louis of Thuringia (a German principality),
whom she
deeply loved; she bore three children. Under the spiritual
direction of a Franciscan friar, she led a life of prayer, sacrifice
and service to the poor and sick. Seeking to become one with the poor,
she wore simple clothing. Daily she would take bread to hundreds of the
poorest in the land, who came to her gate. After six years of marriage,
her husband died in the Crusades, and she was grief-stricken. Her
husband’s family looked upon her as squandering the royal purse, and
mistreated her, finally throwing her out of the palace. The return of
her husband’s allies from the Crusades resulted in her being
reinstated, since her son was legal heir to the throne. In 1228
Elizabeth joined the Secular Franciscan Order, spending the remaining
few years of her life caring for the poor in a hospital which she
founded in honour of St. Francis. Elizabeth’s health declined, and she
died before her 24th birthday in 1231. Her great popularity resulted in
her canonization four years later.
Elizabeth understood
well the lesson Jesus taught when he washed his disciples' feet at the
Last Supper: The Christian must be one who serves the humblest needs of
others, even if one serves from an exalted position. Of royal blood,
Elizabeth could have lorded it over her subjects. Yet she served them
with such a loving heart that her brief life won for her a special
place in the hearts of many. Elizabeth is also an example to us in her
following the guidance of a spiritual director. Growth in the spiritual
life is a difficult process. We can play games very easily if we don't
have someone to challenge us or to share experiences so as to help us
avoid pitfalls.
"Today, there is an inescapable duty to
make ourselves the neighbour of every individual, without exception,
and to take positive steps to help a neighbour whom we encounter,
whether that neighbour be an elderly person, abandoned by everyone, a
foreign worker who suffers the injustice of being despised, a refugee,
an illegitimate child wrongly suffering for a sin of which the child is
innocent, or a starving human being who awakens our conscience by
calling to mind the words of Christ: 'As long as you did it for one of
these, the least of my brethren, you did it for me' (Matthew 25:40)" (Pastoral
Constitution on the Church in the Modern World, 27,
Austin Flannery translation). (AmericanCatholic.org)
Saint Elizabeth of Hungary, religious, widow (1207-1231)
Elizabeth was the daughter of the just and pious Andrew II, king of Hungary,
the niece of Saint Hedwig, and the sister of the virtuous Bela IV, king of
Hungary, who became the father of Saint Cunegundes and
of Saint Margaret of
Hungary, a Dominican nun. Another of her brothers was Coloman, King of
Galicia and prince of Russia, who led an angelic life amid the multiple
affairs of the world and the troubles of war.
She was betrothed in infancy to Louis, Landgrave of Thuringia, and brought
up from the age of four in his father’s court. Never could she bear to adopt
the ornaments of the court for her own usage, and she took pleasure only in
prayer. She would remove her royal crown when she entered the church, saying
she was in the presence of the Saviour who wore a crown of thorns. As she
grew older, she employed the jewels offered her for the benefit of the poor.
Not content with receiving numbers of them daily in her palace, and
relieving all in distress, she built several hospitals, where she herself
served the sick, bathing them, feeding them, dressing their wounds and
ulcers. The relatives of her fiancé tried to prevent the marriage, saying
she was fit only for a cloister; but the young prince said he would not
accept gold in the quantity of a nearby mountain, if it were offered him to
abandon his resolution to marry Elizabeth.
Once as she was carrying in the folds of her mantle some provisions for the
poor, she met her husband returning from the hunt. Astonished to see her
bending under the weight of her burden, he opened the mantle and found in it
nothing but beautiful red and white roses, though it was not the season for
flowers. He told her to continue on her way, and took one of the marvellous
roses, which he conserved all his life. She never ceased to edify him in all
of her works. One of her twelve excellent Christian maxims, by which she
regulated all her conduct was, “Often recall that you are the work of the
hands of God and act accordingly, in such a way as to be eternally with
Him.”
When her pious young husband died in Sicily on his way to a Crusade with the
Emperor Frederick, she was cruelly driven from her palace by her
brother-in-law. Those whom she had aided showed nothing but coldness for
her; God was to purify His Saint by harsh tribulations. She was forced to
wander through the streets with her little children, a prey to hunger and
cold. The bishop of Bamberg, her maternal uncle, finally forced the cruel
prince to ask pardon for his ill treatment of her, but she voluntarily
renounced the grandeurs of the world, and went to live in a small house she
had prepared in the city of Marburgh. There she practised the greatest
austerities. She welcomed all her sufferings, and continued to be the mother
of the poor, distributing all of the heritage eventually conceded to her,
and converting many by her holy life. She died in 1231, at the age of
twenty-four. (magnificat.ca)
-----------------------------------Return to Index to Saints-----------------------------------
St. Odo
Odo was born near Le Mans, France. He was raised in the
households of Count Fulk II of Anjou and Duke William of Aquitaine, received the
tonsure when he was nineteen, received a canonry at St. Martin's in Tours, and
then spent several years studying at Paris, particularly music, under Remigius
of Auxerre. Odo became a monk under Berno at Baume-les-Messieurs near Besancon
in 909, was named director of the Baume Monastery school by Berno, who became
abbot of the newly founded Cluny, and in 924 was named abbot of Baume. He
succeeded Berno as second abbot of Cluny in 927, continued Berno's work of
reforming abbeys from Cluny, and in 931 was authorized by Pope John XI to reform
the monasteries of northern France and Italy. Odo was called to Rome by Pope Leo
VII in 936 to arrange peace between Alberic of Rome and Hugh of Provence, who
was besieging the city, and succeeded temporarily by negotiating a marriage
between Alberic and Hugh's daughter; Odo returned to Rome twice in the next six
years to reconcile Alberic and Hugh. Odo spread Cluny's influence to monasteries
all over Europe, encountering and overcoming much opposition, and successfully
persuaded secular rulers to relinquish control of monasteries they had been
illegally controlling. He died at Tours on the way back to Rome on November 18.
He wrote hymns, treatises on morality, an epic poem on the Redemption, and a
life of St. Gerald of Aurillac. (www.catholic.org)
-----------------------------------Return to Index to Saints-----------------------------------
St. Agnes of Assisi
(1197-1253)
Agnes was the sister of St. Clare and her first
follower. When Agnes left home two
weeks after Clare’s departure, their
family attempted to bring Agnes back by force. They tried to drag her
out of the monastery, but all of a sudden her body became so heavy that
several knights could not budge it. Her uncle Monaldo tried to strike
her but was temporarily paralysed. The knights then left Agnes and
Clare in peace. Agnes matched her sister in devotion to prayer and in
willingness to endure the strict penances which characterized their
lives at San Damiano. In 1221 a group of Benedictine nuns in Monticelli
(near Florence) asked to become Poor Clares. St. Clare sent Agnes to
become abbess of that monastery. Agnes soon wrote a rather sad letter
about how much she missed Clare and the other nuns at San Damiano.
After establishing other Poor Clare monasteries in northern Italy,
Agnes was recalled to San Damiano in 1253 when Clare was dying. Agnes
followed Clare in death three months later. Agnes was canonized in 1753.
God must love irony; the world is so full of it.
In 1212, many in Assisi surely felt that Clare and Agnes were wasting
their lives and were turning their backs on the world. In reality,
their lives were tremendously life-giving, and the world has been
enriched by the example of these poor contemplatives.
Charles de Foucald, founder of the Little Brothers
and Sisters of Jesus, said: "One must pass through solitude and dwell
in it to receive God’s grace. It is there that one empties oneself,
that one drives before oneself all that is not God, and that one
completely empties this little house of our soul to leave room for God
alone. In doing this, do not fear being unfaithful toward creatures. On
the contrary, that is the only way for you to serve them effectively"
(Raphael Brown, Franciscan Mystic,
p. 126).
(AmericanCatholic.org)
-----------------------------------Return to Index to Saints-----------------------------------
St. Rose Philippine Duchesne (1769-1852)
Born in Grenoble, France, of a family that was among the new rich, Philippine
learned political skills from her father and a love of the poor from her mother.
The dominant feature of her temperament was a strong and dauntless will, which
became the material — and the battlefield — of her holiness. She entered the convent
at 19 without telling her parents
and remained despite their opposition. As the
French Revolution broke, the convent was closed, and she began taking care of
the poor and sick, opened a school for street urchins and risked her life
helping priests in the underground. When the situation cooled, she personally
rented her old convent, now a shambles, and tried to revive its religious life.
The spirit was gone, and soon there were only four nuns left. They joined the
infant Society of the Sacred Heart, whose young superior, St. Madeleine Sophie Barat, would be her lifelong friend. In a short time Philippine was a superior
and supervisor of the novitiate and a school. But her ambition, since hearing
tales of missionary work in Louisiana as a little girl, was to go to America and
work among the Indians. At 49, she thought this would be her work. With four
nuns, she spent 11 weeks at sea en route to New Orleans, and seven weeks more on
the Mississippi to St. Louis. She then met one of the many disappointments of
her life. The bishop had no place for them to live and work among Native
Americans. Instead, he sent her to what she sadly called "the remotest village
in the U.S.," St. Charles, Missouri. With characteristic drive and courage, she
founded the first free school for girls west of the Mississippi. It was a
mistake. Though she was as hardy as any of the pioneer women in the wagons
rolling west, cold and hunger drove them out — to Florissant, Missouri, where she
founded the first Catholic Indian school, adding others in the territory. "In
her first decade in America Mother Duchesne suffered practically every hardship
the frontier had to offer, except the threat of Indian massacre — poor lodging,
shortages of food, drinking water, fuel and money, forest fires and blazing
chimneys, the vagaries of the Missouri climate, cramped living quarters and the
privation of all privacy, and the crude manners of children reared in rough
surroundings and with only the slightest training in courtesy" (Louise Callan,
R.S.C.J., Philippine Duchesne). Finally, at 72, in poor health and retired, she
got her lifelong wish. A mission was founded at Sugar Creek, Kansas, among the
Potawatomi. She was taken along. Though she could not learn their language, they
soon named her "Woman-Who-Prays-Always." While others taught, she prayed. Legend
has it that Native American children sneaked behind her as she knelt and
sprinkled bits of paper on her habit, and came back hours later to find them
undisturbed. She died in 1852 at the age of 83.
Divine grace channeled her iron will and determination
into humility and selflessness, and to a desire not to be made superior. Still,
even saints can get involved in silly situations. In an argument with her over a
minor change in the sanctuary, a priest threatened to remove her tabernacle. She
patiently let herself be criticized by younger nuns for not being progressive
enough. Through it all, 31 years, she hewed to the line of a dauntless love and
an unshakable observance of her religious vows.
“We cultivate a very small field for Christ, but we
love it, knowing that God does not require great achievements but a heart that
holds back nothing for self.... The truest crosses are those we do not choose
ourselves.... He who has Jesus has everything.” (AmericanCatholic.org)
-----------------------------------Return to Index to Saints-----------------------------------
St. Gelasius I, Pope
Gelasius was born in Rome, in the fifth century, the son of an
African named Valerius. Later, ordained a priest, he was elected Pope on March
1st, 492. Gelasius had a reputation for learning, justice, holiness, and
charity. However, he was burdened with difficulties caused by a conflict with
Euphemius, the Patriarch of Constantinople, over the Acacian heresy. He also
protested the encroachments by Constantinople on Alexandria and Antioch.
Gelasius was influential in setting aside Roman pagan festivals. Moreover, in
opposition to the Manichaeans, he ordered reception of the Eucharist under both
species. Gelasius is known to have composed liturgical Prefaces and Orations for
Sacramentaries, which may be part of the Leonine Sacramentary. However, he had
nothing to do with the Gelasian Sacramentary or the Gelasian Decree (listing the
Canonical books of the Bible) - which have been erroneously attributed to him.
He died at Rome on November 21, 496. (www.catholic.org)
-----------------------------------Return to Index to Saints-----------------------------------
Saint Cecilia, virgin
and martyr (3rd century)
Although Cecilia is one of the most famous of the Roman martyrs, the
familiar stories about her are apparently not founded on authentic
material. There is no trace of honour being paid her in early times. A
fragmentary inscription of the late fourth century refers to a church
named after her, and her feast was celebrated at least in 545.
According to legend, Cecilia was a young Christian
of high rank
betrothed to a Roman named Valerian. Through her influence Valerian was
converted, and was martyred along with his brother. The legend about
Cecilia’s death says that after being struck three times on the neck
with a sword, she lived for three days, and asked the pope to convert
her home into a church. Since the time of the Renaissance she has
usually been portrayed with a viola or a small organ. Like any good
Christian, Cecilia sang in her heart, and sometimes with her voice. She
has become a symbol of the Church's conviction that good music is an
integral part of the liturgy, of greater value to the Church than any
other art. In the present confused state of Church music, it may be
useful to recall the following words of Vatican II: “Liturgical action
is given a more noble form when sacred rites are solemnized in song,
with the assistance of sacred ministers and the active participation of
the people.... Choirs must be diligently promoted, but bishops and
other pastors must ensure that, whenever the sacred action is to be
celebrated with song, the whole body of the faithful may be able to
contribute that active participation which is rightfully theirs....
Gregorian chant, other things being equal, should be given pride of
place in liturgical services. But other kinds of sacred music,
especially polyphony, are by no means excluded.... Religious singing by
the people is to be skilfully fostered, so that in devotions and sacred
exercises, as also during liturgical services, the voices of the
faithful may ring out” (Constitution on the Liturgy,
112-118). (AmericanCatholic.org)
Saint Cecelia, virgin and martyr (died 177) It is
under the emperor Alexander Severus that this young Saint, one of the most
fragrant flowers of Christian virginity and martyrdom, suffered for the
Faith she had chosen; to choose it was at that moment as certain an end to
earthly felicity
as it is a guarantee, at every epoch, of the eternal
felicity of those who remain faithful to it. Cecilia was the daughter of an
illustrious patrician, and was the only Christian of her family; she was
permitted to attend the reunions held in the catacombs by the Christians,
either through her parents’ condescension or out of indifference. She
continually kept a copy of the holy Gospel hidden under her clothing over
her heart. Her parents obliged her, however, despite her vow of virginity,
which most probably they knew nothing of, to marry the young Valerian, whom
she esteemed as noble and good, but who was still pagan.
During the evening of the wedding day, with the music of the nuptial feast
still in the air, Cecilia, this intelligent, beautiful, and noble Roman
maiden, renewed her vow. When the new spouses found themselves alone, she
gently said to Valerian, “Dear friend, I have a secret to confide to you,
but will you promise me to keep it?” He promised her solemnly that nothing
would ever make him reveal it, and she continued, “Listen: an Angel of God
watches over me, for I belong to God. If he sees that you would approach me
under the influence of a sensual love, his anger will be inflamed, and you
will succumb to the blows of his vengeance. But if you love me with a
perfect love and conserve my virginity inviolable, he will love you as he
loves me, and will lavish on you, too, his favors.” Valerian replied that if
he might see this Angel, he would certainly correspond to her wishes, and
Cecilia answered, “Valerian, if you consent to be purified in the fountain
which wells up eternally; if you will believe in the unique, living and true
God who reigns in heaven, you will be able to see the Angel.” And to his
questions concerning this water and who might bestow it, she directed him to
a certain holy old man named Urban.
That holy Pontiff rejoiced exceedingly when Valerian came to him the same
night, to be instructed and baptized; his long prayer touched the young man
greatly, and he too rejoiced with an entirely new joy in his new-found and
veritable faith, so far above the religion of the pagans. He returned to his
house, and on entering the room where Cecilia had continued to pray for the
remainder of the night, he saw the Angel waiting, with two crowns of roses
and lilies, which he would place on the head of each of them. Cecilia
understood at once that if the lilies symbolized their virginity, the roses
foretold for them both the grace of martyrdom. Valerian was told he might
ask any grace at all of God, who was very pleased with him; and he requested
that his brother Tiburtius might also receive the grace he had obtained; and
the conversion of Tiburtius soon afterwards became a reality.
The two brothers, who were very wealthy, began to aid the families which had
lost their support through the martyrdom of the fathers, spouses, and sons;
they saw to the burial of the Christians, and continually braved the same
fate as these victims. In effect they were soon captured, and their
testimony was such as to convert a young officer chosen to conduct them to
the site of their martyrdom. He succeeded in delaying it for a day, and took
them to his house, where before the day was ended he had decided to receive
Baptism with his entire family and household. The two brothers offered their
heads to the sword; and soon afterward the officer they had won for Christ
followed them to the eternal divine kingdom. It was Cecilia who saw to the
burial of all three martyrs. She then distributed to the poor all the
valuable objects of her house, in order that the property of Valerian might
not be confiscated according to current Roman law, and knowing that her own
time was close at hand.
She was soon arrested and arraigned, but having asked a delay after her
interrogation, she assembled those who had heard her with admiration
and instructed them in the faith; the Pontiff Urban baptized a large
number of them. The death appointed for her was suffocation by steam.
Saint Cecilia remained unharmed and calm, for a day and a night, in the
calderium, or place of hot baths, in her own palace, despite a fire
heated to seven times its ordinary violence. Finally, an executioner
was sent to dispatch her by the sword; he struck with trembling hand
the three blows which the law allowed, and left her still alive. For
two days and nights Cecilia would lie with her head half severed, on
the pavement of her bath, fully sensible and joyfully awaiting her
crown. When her neophytes came to bury her after the departure of the
executioner, they found her alive and smiling. They surrounded her
there, not daring to touch her, for three days, having collected the
precious blood from her wounds. On the third day, after the holy
Pontiff Urban had come to bless her, the agony ended, and in the year
177 the virgin Saint gave back her glorious soul to Christ. It was the
Supreme Pontiff who presided at her funeral; she was placed in a coffin
in the position in which she had lain, as we often see her pictured,
and interred in the vault prepared by Saint Callixtus for the Church’s
pontiffs. The authentic acts of her life and martyrdom were prepared by
Pope Anteros in the year 235. When the tomb was opened in 1599 her body was
entire!
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Blessed Miguel Agustín
Pro (1891-1927)
ˇViva
Cristo Rey! (Long live Christ the
King!) were the last words Father Pro uttered before he was executed
for being a Catholic priest and serving his flock. Born into a
prosperous, devout family in Guadalupe de Zacatecas, he entered the
Jesuits in 1911 but three years later fled to Granada, Spain, because
of religious persecution in Mexico. He was ordained in Belgium in 1925.
He immediately returned to Mexico, where he served a Church forced to
go “underground.” He celebrated the Eucharist clandestinely and
ministered the other sacraments to small groups of Catholics. He and
his brother Roberto were arrested on trumped-up charges of attempting
to assassinate Mexico’s president. Roberto was spared but Miguel was
sentenced to face a firing squad on November 23, 1927. His funeral
became a public demonstration of faith. He was beatified in 1988.
In 1927 when Father Miguel Pro was executed, no one could have
predicted that 52 years later the bishop of Rome would visit Mexico, be
welcomed by its president and celebrate open-air Masses before
thousands of people. Pope John Paul II made additional trips to Mexico
in 1990, 1993 and 1999. Those who outlawed the Catholic Church in
Mexico did not count on the deeply rooted faith of its people and the
willingness of many of them, like Miguel Pro, to die as martyrs.
During his homily at the beatification
Mass, Pope John Paul II said that Father Pro “is a new glory for the
beloved Mexican nation, as well as for the Society of Jesus. His life
of sacrificing and intrepid apostolate was always inspired by a
tireless evangelizing effort. Neither suffering nor serious illness,
neither the exhausting ministerial activity, frequently carried out in
difficult and dangerous circumstances, could stifle the radiating and
contagious joy which he brought to his life for Christ and which
nothing could take away (see John 16:22). Indeed, the deepest root of
self-sacrificing surrender for the lowly was his passionate love for
Jesus Christ and his ardent desire to be conformed to him, even unto
death.” (AmericanCatholic.org)
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Saint
Andrew Dung-Lac, priest and martyr, and his companions, martyrs
St. Andrew was one of 117 martyrs who
met death in Vietnam between 1820 and 1862. Members of this group were
beatified on four different occasions between 1900 and 1951. Now all
have been
canonized
by Pope John Paul II. Christianity came to Vietnam (then three separate
kingdoms) through the Portuguese. Jesuits opened the first permanent
mission at Da Nang in 1615. They ministered to Japanese Catholics who
had been driven from Japan. The king of one of the kingdoms banned all
foreign missionaries and tried to make all
Vietnamese apostatize by
trampling on a crucifix. Like the priest-holes in Ireland during
English persecution, many hiding places were offered in homes of the
faithful. Severe persecutions were again launched three times in the
19th century. During the six decades after 1820, between 100,000 and
300,000 Catholics were killed or subjected to great hardship. Foreign
missionaries martyred in the first wave included priests of the Paris
Mission Society, and Spanish Dominican priests and tertiaries.
Persecution broke out again in 1847 when the emperor suspected foreign
missionaries and Vietnamese Christians of sympathizing with the
rebellion of one of his sons. The last of the martyrs were 17
laypersons, one of them a 9-year-old, executed in 1862. That year a
treaty with France guaranteed religious freedom to Catholics, but it
did not stop all persecution. By 1954 there were over a million and a
half Catholics—about seven percent of the population — in the north.
Buddhists represented about 60 percent. Persistent persecution forced
some 670,000 Catholics to abandon lands, homes and possessions and flee
to
the south. In 1964, there were still 833,000 Catholics in
the north,
but many were in prison. In the south, Catholics were enjoying the
first decade of religious freedom in centuries, their numbers swelled
by refugees. During the Vietnamese war, Catholics again suffered in the
north, and again moved to the south in great numbers. Now the whole
country is under Communist rule.
It may help a people who associate
Vietnam only with a recent war to realize that the cross has long been
a part of the lives of the people of that country. Even as we ask again
the unanswered questions about United States involvement and
disengagement, the faith rooted in Vietnam's soil proves hardier than
the forces which would destroy it.
“The Church in Vietnam is alive and
vigorous, blessed with strong and faithful bishops, dedicated
religious, and courageous and committed laypeople.... The Church in
Vietnam is living out the gospel in a difficult and complex situation
with remarkable persistence and strength” (statement of three U.S.
archbishops returning from Vietnam in January 1989). (AmericanCatholic.org)
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St.
Columban (543?-615)
Columban was the greatest of the Irish
missionaries who worked on the European continent. As a young man he
was greatly tormented by temptations of the flesh, and sought the
advice of a religious woman who had lived a hermit’s life for years. He
saw in her answer a call to leave the world. He went first to a monk on
an island in Lough Erne, then to the great monastic seat of learning at
Bangor. After many years of seclusion and prayer, he travelled to Gaul
with 12 companion missionaries. They won wide respect for the rigor of
their discipline, their preaching, and their commitment to charity and
religious life in a time characterized by clerical slackness and civil
strife. Columban established several monasteries in Europe which became
centres of religion and culture. Like all saints, he met opposition.
Ultimately he had to appeal to the pope against complaints of Frankish
bishops, for vindication of his orthodoxy and approval of Irish
customs. He reproved the king for his licentious life, insisting that
he marry. Since this threatened the power of the queen mother, Columban
was ordered deported back to Ireland. His ship ran aground in a storm,
and he continued his work in Europe, ultimately arriving in Italy,
where he found favour with the king of the Lombards. In his last years
he established the famous monastery of Bobbio, where he died. His
writings include a treatise on penance and against Arianism, sermons,
poetry and his monastic rule.
Now that public sexual license is
approaching the extreme, we need the Church's jolting memory of a young
man as concerned about chastity as Columban. And now that the
comfort-captured Western world stands in tragic contrast to starving
millions, we need the challenge to austerity and discipline of a group
of Irish monks. They were too strict, we say; they went too far. How
far shall we go?
Writing to the pope about a doctrinal
controversy in Lombardy, Columban said: “We Irish, living in the
farthest parts of the earth, are followers of St. Peter and St. Paul
and of the disciples who wrote down the sacred canon under the Holy
Spirit. We accept nothing outside this evangelical and apostolic
teaching.... I confess I am grieved by the bad repute of the chair of
St. Peter in this country.... Though Rome is great and known afar, she
is great and honoured with us only because of this chair.... Look after
the peace of the Church, stand between your sheep and the
wolves.” (AmericanCatholic.org)
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St.
Catherine of Alexandria (c. 310)
According
to the Legend of St. Catherine, this young woman converted to
Christianity after receiving a vision. At the age of 18, she debated 50
pagan philosophers. Amazed at her wisdom and debating skills, they
became Christians — as did about 200 soldiers and members of the
emperor’s family. All of them were martyred. Sentenced to be executed
on a spiked wheel, Catherine touched the wheel and it shattered. She
was beheaded. Centuries later, angels are said to have carried the body
of St. Catherine to a monastery at the foot of Mt. Sinai.
Devotion to her spread as a result of the Crusades. She was invoked as
the patroness of students, teachers, librarians and lawyers. Catherine
is one of the 14 Holy Helpers, venerated especially in Germany and
Hungary.
The pursuit of God's wisdom may not lead
to riches or earthly honours. In Catherine's case, this pursuit
contributed to her martyrdom. She was not, however, foolish in
preferring to die for Jesus rather than live only by denying him. All
the rewards that her tormenters offered her would rust, lose their
beauty or in some other way become a poor exchange for Catherine's
honesty and integrity in following Jesus Christ.
“Therefore I [King Solomon] prayed, and
prudence was given me; I pleaded, and the spirit of Wisdom came to me.
I preferred her to sceptre and throne, and deemed riches nothing in
comparison with her, nor did I liken any priceless gem to her; Because
all gold, in view of her, is a little sand, and before her, silver is
to be accounted mire. Beyond health and comeliness I loved her, and I
chose to have her rather than the light, because the splendour of her
never yields to sleep. Yet all good things together came to me in her
company, and countless riches at her hands; and I rejoiced in them all,
because Wisdom is their leader, though I had not known that she is the
mother of these” (Wisdom 7:7-12).
(AmericanCatholic.org)
SAINT CATHERINE of ALEXANDRIA Virgin and Martyr
(† Fourth Century)
Catherine was a noble virgin of Alexandria, born in the fourth century. Before
her Baptism, she saw in a dream the Blessed Virgin asking Her Son to receive her
among His servants, but the Divine Infant turned away, saying she was not yet
regenerated by the waters of Baptism. She made haste to receive that sacrament,
and afterwards, when
the dream was repeated, Catherine saw that the Saviour
received her with great affection, and espoused her before the court of heaven,
with a fine ring. She woke with it on her finger.
She had a very active intelligence, fit for all matters, and she undertook the
study of philosophy and theology. At that time there were schools in Alexandria
for the instruction of Christians, where excellent Christian scholars taught.
She made great progress and became able to sustain the truths of our religion
against even very subtle sophists. At that time Maximinus II was sharing the
empire with Constantine the Great and Licinius, and had as his district Egypt;
and this cruel Christian-hater ordinarily resided in Alexandria, capital of the
province. He announced a gigantic pagan sacrifice, such that the very air would
be darkened with the smoke of the bulls and sheep immolated on the altars of the
gods. Catherine before this event strove to strengthen the Christians against
the fatal lures, repeating that the oracles vaunted by the infidels were pure
illusion, originating in the depths of the lower regions.
She foresaw that soon it would be the Christians’ turn to be immolated, when
they refused to participate in the ceremonies. She therefore went to the emperor
himself, asking to speak with him, and her singular beauty and majestic air won
an audience for her. She said to him that it was a strange thing that he should
by his example attract so many peoples to such an abominable cult. By his high
office he was obliged to turn them away from it, since reason itself shows us
that there can be only one sovereign Being, the first principle of all else. She
begged him to cease so great a disorder by giving the true God the honour due
Him, lest he reap the wages of his indifference in this life already, as well as
in the next. The consequences of her hardy act extended over a certain time; he
decided to call in fifty sophists of his suite, to bring back this virgin from
her errors. A large audience assembled to hear the debate; the emperor sat on
his throne with his entire court, dissimulating his rage.
Catherine began by saying she was surprised that he obliged her to face, alone,
fifty individuals, but she asked the grace of him, that if the true God she
adored rendered her victorious, he would adopt her religion and renounce the
cult of the demons. He was not pleased and replied that it was not for her to
lay down conditions for the discussion. The head of the sophists began the
orations and reprimanded her for opposing the authority of poets, orators and
philosophers, who unanimously had revered Jupiter, Juno, Neptune, Minerva and
others. He cited their writings, and said she should consider that these persons
were far anterior to this new religion she was following. She listened carefully
before answering, then spoke, showing that the ridiculous fables which Homer,
Orpheus and other poets had invented concerning their divinities, and the fact
that many offered a cult to them, as well as the abominable crimes attributed to
them, proved them to be gods only in the opinion of the untutored and credulous.
And then she proved that the prophecies of the Hebrew Scriptures had clearly
announced the time and the circumstances of the life of the future Saviour, and
that these were now fulfilled. Prodigy; the head of the sophists avowed that she
was entirely correct and renounced his errors; the others said they could not
oppose their chief. Maximinus had them put to death by fire, but the fire did
not consume their remains. Thus they died as Christians, receiving the Baptism
of blood.
The story of Saint Catherine continues during the time of the emperor’s
efforts to persuade her to marry him; he put to death his converted
wife and the captain of his guards who had received Baptism with two
hundred of his soldiers. He delivered Catherine up to prison and then
to tortures as a result of her firmness in refusing his overtures. The
famous wheel of Saint Catherine — in reality several interacting wheels
— which he invented to torment her, was furnished with sharp razor
blades and sharp points of iron; all who saw it trembled. But as soon
as it was set in movement it was miraculously disjointed and broken
into pieces, and these pieces flew in all directions and wounded the
spectators. The barbaric emperor finally commanded that she be
decapitated; and she offered her neck to the executioner, after praying
that her mortal remains would be respected.
The story of Saint Catherine continues with the discovery of the intact
body of a young and beautiful girl on Mount Sinai in the ninth century,
that is, four centuries later. The Church, in the Collect of her feast
day, bears witness to the transport of her body. A number of proofs
testified to the identity of her mortal remains found in the region of
the famous monastery existing on that mountain since the fifth century.
Her head is today conserved in
Rome. (magnificat.ca)
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St.
Francesco Antonio Fasani 1681-1742
Born in
Lucera (southeast Italy), Francesco
entered the Conventual Franciscans
in 1695. After his ordination 10 years later, he taught philosophy to
younger friars, served as guardian of his friary and later became
provincial. When his term of office ended, Francesco became master of
novices and finally pastor in his hometown. In his various ministries,
he was loving, devout and penitential. He was a sought-after confessor
and preacher. One witness at the canonical hearings regarding
Francesco’s holiness testified, "In his preaching he spoke in a
familiar way, filled as he was with the love of God and neighbour;
fired
by the Spirit, he made use of the words and deed of Holy Scripture,
stirring his listeners and moving them to do penance." Francesco showed
himself a loyal friend of the poor, never hesitating to seek from
benefactors what was needed. At his death in Lucera, children ran
through the streets and cried out, "The saint is dead! The saint is
dead!" Francesco was canonized in 1986.
Eventually we become what we choose. If
we choose stinginess, we become stingy. If we choose compassion, we
become compassionate. The holiness of Francesco Antonio Fasani resulted
from his many small decisions to cooperate with God’s grace.
During his homily at the canonization of
Francesco, Pope John Paul II reflected on John 21:15 in which Jesus
asks Peter if he loves Jesus more than the other apostles and then
tells Peter, "Feed my lambs." The pope observed that in the final
analysis human holiness is decided by love. "He [Francesco] made the
love taught us by Christ the fundamental characteristic of his
existence, the basic criterion of his thought and activity, the supreme
summit of his aspirations" (L'Osservatore Romano, vol. 16, number 3,
1986). (AmericanCatholic.org)
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St. James
of the Marche (1394-1476)
James was born in the Marche of Ancona,
in central Italy along the Adriatic Sea. After earning doctorates in
canon and civil law at the University of Perugia, he joined the Friars
Minor and began a very austere life. He fasted nine months of the year;
he slept three hours a night. St. Bernardine of Siena told him to
moderate his penances. James studied theology with St. John of
Capistrano. Ordained in 1420, James began a preaching career that took
him all over Italy and through 13 Central and Eastern European
countries. This extremely popular preacher converted many people
(250,000 at one estimate) and helped spread devotion to the Holy Name
of Jesus. His sermons prompted numerous Catholics to reform their lives
and many men joined the Franciscans under his influence. With John of
Capistrano, Albert of Sarteano and Bernardine of Siena, James is
considered one of the "four pillars" of the Observant movement among
the Franciscans. These friars became known especially for their
preaching. To combat extremely high interest rates, James established
montes pietatis (literally, mountains of charity) — non-profit credit
organizations that lent money at very low rates on pawned objects. Not
everyone was happy with the work James did. Twice assassins lost their
nerve when they came face to face with him. James was canonized in 1726.
James wanted the word of God to take
root in the hearts of his listeners. His preaching was directed to
preparing the soil, so to speak, by removing any rocks and softening up
lives hardened by sin. God’s intention is that his word take root in
our lives, but for that we need both prayerful preachers and
cooperative listeners.
"Beloved and most holy word of God! You
enlighten the hearts of the faithful, you satisfy the hungry, console
the afflicted; you make the souls of all productive of good and cause
all virtues to blossom; you snatch souls from the devil’s jaw; you make
the wretched holy, and men of earth citizens of heaven" (Sermon of St.
James). (AmericanCatholic.org)
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Servant of
God John of Monte Corvino (1247-1328)
At a time
when the Church was heavily embroiled in nationalistic rivalries within
Europe, it was also reaching across Asia to spread the gospel of Jesus
Christ to the Mongols. John of Monte Corvino went to China about the
same time Marco Polo was returning. John was a soldier, judge and
doctor before he became a friar. Prior to going to Tabriz, Persia
(present-day Iran), in 1278, he was well known for his preaching and
teaching. In 1291 he left Tabriz as a legate of Pope Nicholas IV to the
court of Kublai Khan. An Italian merchant, a Dominican friar and John
travelled to western India where the Dominican died. When John and the
Italian merchant arrived in China in 1294, Kublai Khan had recently
died. Nestorian Christians, successors to the dissidents of the
fifth-century Council of Ephesus’ teaching on Jesus Christ, had been in
China since the seventh century. John converted some of them and also
some of the Chinese, including Prince George from Tenduk, northwest of
Beijing. Prince George named his son after this holy friar. John
established his headquarters in Khanbalik (now Beijing), where he built
two churches; his was the first resident Catholic mission in the
country. By 1304 he had translated the Psalms and the New Testament
into the Tatar language. Responding to two letters from John, Pope
Clement V named John Archbishop of Khanbalik in 1307 and consecrated
seven friars as bishops of neighbouring dioceses. One of the seven never
left Europe. Three others died along the way to China; the remaining
three bishops and the friars who accompanied them arrived there in
1308. When John died in 1328, he was mourned by Christians and
non-Christians. His tomb quickly became a place of pilgrimage. In 1368,
Christianity was banished from China when the Mongols were expelled and
the Ming dynasty began. John’s cause has been introduced in Rome.
When John
of Monte Corvino went to China, he represented the Church’s desire to
preach the gospel to a new culture and to be enriched by it. The
travels of Pope John Paul II have demonstrated the universality of the
Good News and the urgent need to continue the challenging work of
helping the Good News take root in a variety of cultural situations.
In 1975, Pope Paul VI wrote, "The Church
evangelizes when she seeks to convert, solely through the divine power
of the Message she proclaims, both the personal and collective
consciences of people, the activities in which they engage, and the
lives and concrete milieus which are theirs" (Evangelization
in the Modern World, #18). (AmericanCatholic.org)
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St.
Andrew
the Apostle
Andrew was St. Peter’s brother, and was
called with him. "As [Jesus] was walking by the sea of Galilee, he saw
two brothers, Simon who is now called Peter, and his brother Andrew,
casting a net into the sea; they were fishermen. He said to them, ‘Come
after me, and I will make you fishers of men.’ At once they left their
nets and followed him" (Matthew 4:18-20). John the Evangelist presents
Andrew as a disciple of John the Baptist. When Jesus walked by one day,
John said, "Behold, the Lamb of God." Andrew and another disciple
followed Jesus. "Jesus turned and saw them following him and said to
them, ‘What are you looking for?’ They said to him, ‘Rabbi’ (which
translated means Teacher), ‘where are you staying?’ He said to them,
‘Come, and you will see.’ So they went and saw where he was staying,
and they stayed with him that day" (John 1:38-39a). Little else is said
about Andrew in the Gospels. Before the multiplication of the loaves,
it was Andrew who spoke up about the boy who had the barley loaves and
fishes (see John 6:8-9). When the Gentiles went to see Jesus, they came
to Philip, but Philip then had recourse to Andrew (see John 12:20-22).
Legend has it that Andrew preached the Good News in what is now modern
Greece and Turkey and was crucified at Patras.
As in the case of all the apostles
except Peter and John, the Gospels give us little about the holiness of
Andrew. He was an apostle. That is enough. He was called personally by
Jesus to proclaim the Good News, to heal with Jesus' power and to share
his life and death. Holiness today is no different. It is a gift that
includes a call to be concerned about the Kingdom, an outgoing attitude
that wants nothing more than to share the riches of Christ with all
people.
“...The Twelve called together the
community of the disciples and said, ‘It is not right for us to neglect
the word of God to serve at table. Brothers, select from among you
seven reputable men, filled with the Spirit and wisdom, whom we shall
appoint to this task, whereas we shall devote ourselves to prayer and
to the ministry of the word’” (Acts 6:2-4). (AmericanCatholic.org)
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