Feast Day of St. Mary Magdalene Friday, Jul 22 2011 

ST. MARY MAGDALENE

 

“The Apostle to the Apostles”

 

 

Feast Day:  July 22

 

 

St. Mary Magdalene is the only one of Our Lord’s disciples who attended his entire passion and then was blessed to be the first to witness the miracle of the resurrection. For her role in making the resurrection known to the apostles, she is known as “the apostle to the apostles.”  Elsewhere in the Gospel accounts, Mary Magdalene is described as a woman from whom Our Lord cast out seven demons, and who then became the first among his women disciples.  She stood at the foot of the cross, and went to the tomb bearing myrhh, and is often depicted holding a jar of ointment in the iconography.  Traditionally, St. Mary Magdalene was conflated with the woman who “loved much” and wept while anointing Jesus’ feet; for this reason she has long been piously revered as a penitent.  There is also a tradition of identifying St. Mary Magdalene as Mary of Bethany, the sister of Martha.    

 

Reading from Matthew 28:1-10

 

Vespere autem sabbati quae lucescit in primam sabbati venit Maria Magdalene et altera Maria videre sepulchrum et ecce terraemotus factus est magnus angelus enim Domini descendit de caelo et accedens revolvit lapidem et sedebat super eum erat autem aspectus eius sicut fulgur et vestimentum eius sicut nix prae timore autem eius exterriti sunt custodes et facti sunt velut mortui respondens autem angelus dixit mulieribus nolite timere vos scio enim quod Iesum qui crucifixus est quaeritis

non est hic surrexit enim sicut dixit venite videte locum ubi positus erat Dominus et cito euntes dicite discipulis eius quia surrexit et ecce praecedit vos in Galilaeam ibi eum videbitis ecce praedixi vobis et exierunt cito de monumento cum timore et magno gaudio currentes nuntiare discipulis eius et ecce Iesus occurrit illis dicens havete illae autem accesserunt et tenuerunt pedes eius et adoraverunt eum tunc ait illis Iesus nolite timere ite nuntiate fratribus meis ut eant in Galilaeam ibi me videbunt.

 

*

 

And in the end of the sabbath, when it began to dawn towards the first day of the week, came Mary Magdalen and the other Mary, to see the sepulchre. And behold there was a great earthquake. For an angel of the Lord descended from heaven, and coming, rolled back the stone, and sat upon it. And his countenance was as lightning, and his raiment as snow.  And for fear of him, the guards were struck with terror, and became as dead men. And the angel answering, said to the women: Fear not you; for I know that you seek Jesus who was crucified. He is not here, for he is risen, as he said. Come, and see the place where the Lord was laid.  And going quickly, tell ye his disciples that he is risen: and behold he will go before you into Galilee; there you shall see him. Lo, I have foretold it to you. And they went out quickly from the sepulchre with fear and great joy, running to tell his disciples. And behold Jesus met them, saying: All hail. But they came up and took hold of his feet, and adored him. Then Jesus said to them: Fear not. Go, tell my brethren that they go into Galilee, there they shall see me.

 

Reading from John 19: 11-18

 

 

Maria autem stabat ad monumentum foris plorans dum ergo fleret inclinavit se et prospexit in monumentum et vidit duos angelos in albis sedentes unum ad caput et unum ad pedes ubi positum fuerat corpus Iesu dicunt ei illi mulier quid ploras dicit eis quia tulerunt Dominum meum et nescio ubi posuerunt eum haec cum dixisset conversa est retrorsum et videt Iesum stantem et non sciebat quia Iesus est dicit ei Iesus mulier quid ploras quem quaeris illa existimans quia hortulanus esset dicit ei domine si tu sustulisti eum dicito mihi ubi posuisti eum et ego eum tollam. Dicit ei Iesus: Maria. conversa illa dicit ei rabboni quod dicitur magister dicit ei Iesus noli me tangere nondum enim ascendi ad Patrem meum vade autem ad fratres meos et dic eis ascendo ad Patrem meum et Patrem vestrum et Deum meum et Deum vestrum. venit Maria Magdalene adnuntians discipulis quia vidi Dominum et haec dixit mihi.

 

*

But Mary stood at the sepulchre without, weeping. Now as she was weeping, she stooped down, and looked into the sepulchre. And she saw two angels in white, sitting, one at the head, and one at the feet, where the body of Jesus had been laid.  They say to her: Woman, why weepest thou? She saith to them: Because they have taken away my Lord; and I know not where they have laid him. When she had thus said, she turned herself back, and saw Jesus standing; and she knew not that it was Jesus. Jesus saith to her: Woman, why weepest thou? whom seekest thou? She, thinking it was the gardener, saith to him: Sir, if thou hast taken him hence, tell me where thou hast laid him, and I will take him away.  Jesus saith to her: Mary. She turning, saith to him: Rabboni (which is to say, Master).   Jesus saith to her: Do not touch me, for I am not yet ascended to my Father. But go to my brethren, and say to them: I ascend to my Father and to your Father, to my God and your God.  Mary Magdalen cometh, and telleth the disciples: I have seen the Lord, and these things he said to me.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Litany to St. Mary Magdalene

 

 

Lord, have mercy on us.

Christ, have mercy on us.

 

Lord, have mercy on us.  Christ, hear us.

Christ, graciously hear us.

 

Holy Mary, Mother of God,

pray for us.

 

Saint Mary Magdalene,

pray for us.

 

Sister of Martha and Lazarus,

pray for us.

 

Thou who didst enter the Pharisee’s house

to anoint the feet of Jesus,

pray for us.

 

Who didst wash His feet with thy tears,

pray for us.

 

Who didst dry them with thy hair,

pray for us.

 

Who didst cover them with kisses,

pray for us.

 

Who wast vindicated by Jesus before the proud Pharisee,

pray for us.

 

Who from Jesus received the pardon of thy sins,

pray for us.

 

Who before darkness wast restored to light,

pray for us.

 

Mirror of penance,

pray for us.

 

Disciple of Our Lord,

pray for us.

 

Wounded with the love of Christ,

pray for us.

 

Most dear to the Heart of Jesus,

pray for us.

 

Constant woman,

pray for us.

 

Last at the Cross of Jesus, first at His tomb,

pray for us.

 

Thou who wast the first to see Jesus risen,

pray for us.

 

Whose forehead was sanctified by the touch of thy risen Master,

pray for us.

 

Apostle of apostles,

pray for us.

 

Who didst choose the “better part,”

pray for us.

 

Who lived for many years in solitude being miraculously fed,

pray for us.

 

Who wast visited by angels seven times a day,

pray for us.

 

Sweet advocate of sinners, Spouse of the King of Glory,

pray for us.

 

V.  Saint Mary Magdalene,

earnestly intercede for us with thy Divine Master,

R.  That we may share thy happiness in Heaven.

 

Let Us Pray

 

May the glorious merits of blessed Mary Magdalene,

we beseech Thee, O Lord,

make our offerings acceptable to Thee,

for Thine only-begotten Son

vouchsafed graciously to accept the humble service she rendered.

We ask this through Him

Who liveth and reigneth with Thee

and the Holy Ghost,

God forever and ever.

 

Amen.

 

May the prayers of blessed Mary Magdalene help us,

O Lord, for it was in answer to them

that Thou didst call her brother Lazarus,

four days after death,

back from the grave to life,

Who livest and reignest

with the Father and the Holy Ghost,

Unity in Trinity,

world without end.

 

Amen.

 

St. Vincent de Paul Monday, Jul 18 2011 

St. Vincent de Paul

Feast Day:  July 19

Oremus.
Deus, qui ad
evangelizándum paupéribus et ecclesiástici órdinis decórem promovéndum, beátum
Vincéntium apostólica virtúte roborásti : præsta, quæsumus ; ut, cujus pia
mérita venerámur, virtútum quoque instruámur exémplis.  Per Dóminum nostrum, Jesum Christum.
Let us pray.
O God, who
didst endue thy blessed Saint Vincent with apostolic virtue, to the intent that he should preach thy Gospel to the poor, and establish the honour of the
priesthood of thy Church : grant, we beseech thee ; that we may so hold in
reverence his works of righteousness, that we may learn to follow the pattern of
his godly conversation.  Through our Lord, Jesus Christ.

O GLORIOUS St Vincent, heavenly patron of all charitable associations and father of all the unfortunate, who in thy lifetime didst not reject anyone who had recourse to thee; see now by how many evils we areoppressed, and come to our assistance. Obtain from our LORD help for the poor, solace for the sick, consolation for the afflicted, protection for the abandoned, charity for the rich, conversion for sinners, zeal for priests, peace for the Church, tranquillity among nations, and salvation for all. May all feel the effects of thy merciful intercession, so that, sustained by thee in the miseries of this life, we may be able to join thee above, where there will be no more strife, lamentation or sorrow, but joy, exultation, and beatitude for ever. Amen.  [100 days, said daily]

*

The Life of Saint Vincent de Paul

by

Rev. Alban Butler

 from Volume VII: July. The Lives of the Saints.  1866.

July 19

St. Vincent of Paul, Confessor

From his edifying life written by Abelly, bishop of Rodez,

and again by the celebrated continuator of Tournely’s

Theological Lectures, Dr. Peter Collet, in two volumes,

quarto, Nancy, 1748. See also Perrault, Hommes Illustr.

Helyot, Hist. des Ord. Relig. t. 8, p. 64, and the

bull of his canonization, published by Clement XII. in

1737, apud Bened. XIV. de canoniz. t. 4, Append. p. 363.

EVEN in the most degenerate ages, when the true maxims of the gospel seem almost obliterated among the generality of those who profess it, God fails not, for the glory of his holy name, to raise to himself faithful ministers to revive the same in the hearts of many. Having, by the perfect crucifixion of the old man in their hearts, and the gift of prayer, prepared them to become vessels of his grace, he replenishes them with the spirit of his apostles that they may be qualified to conduct others in the paths of heroic virtue, in which the Holy Ghost was himself their interior Master. One of these instruments of the divine mercy was St. Vincent of Paul. He was a native of Pouï, a village near Acqs in Gascony, not far from the Pyrenæan mountains. His parents, William of Paul and Bertranda of Morass, occupied a very small farm of which they were the proprietors, and upon the produce of which they brought up a family of four sons and two daughters. The children were brought up in innocence, and inured from their infancy to the most laborious part of country labour. But Vincent, the third son, gave extraordinary proofs of his wit and capacity, and from his infancy showed a seriousness, and an affection for holy prayer far beyond his age. He spent great part of his time in that exercise when he was employed in the fields to keep the cattle. That he might give to Christ in the persons of the poor all that was in his power, he deprived himself of his own little conveniences and necessaries for that purpose in whatever it was possible for him to retrench from his own use. This early fervent consecration of himself to God, and these little sacrifices which may be compared to the widow’s two mites in the gospel, were indications of the sincere ardour with which he began to seek God from the first opening of his reason to know and love him; and were doubtless a means to draw down upon him from the author of these graces other greater blessings. His father was determined by the strong inclinations of the child to learning and piety, and the quickness of his parts, to procure him a school education. He placed him first under the care of the Cordeliers or Franciscan friars at Acqs, paying for his board and lodging the small pension of sixty French livres, that is, not six pounds English, a year.

  1  Vincent had been four years at the schools when Mr. Commet, a gentleman of that town, being much taken with his virtue and prudence, chose him sub-preceptor to his children, and enabled him to continue his studies without being any longer a burden to his parents. At twenty years of age, in 1596, he was qualified to go to the university of Toulouse, where he spent seven years in the study of divinity, and commenced bachelor in that faculty. In that city he was promoted to the holy orders of sub-deacon and deacon in 1598, and of priesthood in 1600, having received the tonsure and minor orders a few days before he left Acqs. He seemed already endowed with all those virtues which make up the character of a worthy and zealous minister of the altar; yet he knew not the full extent of heroic entire self-denial, by which a man becomes dead and crucified to all inordinate self-will; upon which perfect self-denial are engrafted the total sacrifice of the heart to God, perfect humility, and that purity and ardour of divine charity which constitute the saint. Vincent was a good proficient in theology and other sciences of the schools, and had diligently applied himself to the study of the maxims of Christian virtue in the gospel, in the lives of the saints, and in the doctrine of the greatest masters of a spiritual life. But there remained a new science for him to learn, which was to cost him much more than bare study and labour. This consists in perfect experimental and feeling sentiments of humility, patience, meekness, and charity; which science is only to be learned by the good use of severe interior and exterior trials. This is the mystery of the cross, unknown to those whom the Holy Ghost has not led into this important secret of his conduct in preparing souls for the great works of his grace. The prosperity of the wicked will appear at the last day to have often been the most dreadful judgment, and a state in which they were goaded on in the pursuit of their evil courses; whilst, on the contrary, it will then be manifested to all men, that the afflictions of the saints have been the greatest effects of divine mercy. Thus, by a chain of temporal disasters, did God lay in the soul of Vincent the solid foundation of that high virtue to which by his grace he afterwards raised him.  2  The saint went to Marseilles in 1605, to receive a legacy of five hundred crowns which had been left him by a friend who died in that city. Intending to return to Toulouse, he set out in a feluca or large boat from Marseilles to Narbonne, but was met on the way by three brigantines of African pirates. The infidels seeing the Christians refuse to strike their flag, charged them with great fury, and on the first onset killed three of their men, and wounded every one of the rest; Vincent received a shot of an arrow. The Christians were soon obliged to surrender. The first thing the Mahometans did was to cut the captain in pieces because he had not struck at the first summons, and in the combat had killed one of their men and four or five slaves. The rest they put in chains; and continued seven or eight days longer on that coast, committing several other piracies, but sparing the lives of those who made no resistance. When they had got a sufficient booty they sailed for Barbary. Upon landing they drew up an act of their seizure, in which they falsely declared that Vincent and his companions had been taken on board of a Spanish vessel, that the French consul might not challenge them. Then they gave to every slave a pair of loose breeches, a linen jerkin, and a bonnet. In this garb they were led five or six times through the city of Tunis to be shown; after which they were brought back to their vessel, where the merchants came to see them, as men do at the sale of a horse or an ox. They examined who could eat well, felt their sides, looked at their teeth to see who were of scorbutic habits of body, consequently unlikely for very long life; they probed their wounds, and made them walk and run in all paces, lift up burdens, and wrestle, to judge of their strength. Vincent was bought by a fisherman, who, finding that he could not bear the sea, soon sold him again to an old physician, a great chemist and extractor of essences, who had spent fifty years in search of the pretended philosopher’s stone. He was humane, and loved Vincent exceedingly; but gave him long lectures on his alchemy, and on the Mahometan law, to which he used his utmost efforts to bring him over; promising on that condition to leave him all his riches, and to communicate to him, what he valued much more than his estate, all the secrets of his pretended science. Vincent feared the danger of his soul much more than all the hardships of his slavery, and most earnestly implored the divine assistance against it, recommending himself particularly to the intercession of the Blessed Virgin, to which he ever after attributed his victory over this temptation. He lived with this old man from September 1605 to August 1606, when, by this physician’s death, he fell to the share of a nephew of his master, a true man-hater. By resignation to the divine will, and confidence in providence, he enjoyed a sweet repose in his own heart under all accidents, hardships and dangers; and by assiduous devout meditation on the sufferings of Christ, learned to bear all his afflictions with comfort and joy, uniting himself in spirit with his Divine Redeemer, and studying to copy in himself his lessons of perfect meekness, patience, silence and charity. This new master sold him in a short time to a renegado Christian who came from Nice in Savoy. This man sent him to his temat or farm situate in a hot desert mountain. This apostate had three wives, of which one, who was a Turkish woman, went often to the field where Vincent was digging, and out of curiosity would ask him to sing the praises of God. He used to sing to her with tears in his eyes, the psalm, Upon the rivers of Babylon, &c., the Salve Regina, and such like prayers. She was so much taken with our holy faith, and doubtless with the saintly deportment of the holy slave, that she never ceased repeating to her husband, that he had basely abandoned the only true religion, till, like another Caiphas, or ass of Balaam, without opening her own eyes to the faith, she made him enter into himself. Sincerely repenting of his apostacy, he agreed with Vincent to make their escape together. They crossed the Mediterranean sea in a small light boat which the least squall of wind would overset; and they landed safe at Aigues-Mortes, near Marseilles, on the 28th of June, 1607, and thence proceeded to Avignon. The apostate made his abjuration in the hands of the vice-legate, and the year following went with Vincent to Rome, and there entered himself a penitent in the austere convent of the Fate-Ben-Fratelli, who served the hospitals according to the rule of St. John of God.  3  Vincent received great comfort at the sight of a place most venerable for its pre-eminence in the church, which has been watered with the blood of so many martyrs, and is honoured with the tombs of the two great apostles SS. Peter and Paul and many other saints. He was moved to tears at the remembrance of their zeal, fortitude, humility, and charity, and often devoutly visited their monuments, praying earnestly that he might be so happy as to walk in their steps, and imitate their virtues. After a short stay at Rome, to satisfy his devotion, he returned to Paris, and took up his quarters in the suburb of St. Germain’s. There lodged in the same house a gentleman, the judge of a village near Bourdeaux, who happened to be robbed of four hundred crowns. He charged Vincent with the theft, thinking it could be nobody else; and in this persuasion he spoke against him with the greatest virulence among all his friends, and wherever he went. Vincent calmly denied the fact, saying, “God knows the truth.” He bore the slander six years, without making any other defence, or using harsh words or complaints, till the true thief being taken up at Bourdeaux on another account, to appease his own conscience and clear the innocent he sent for this judge, and confessed to him the crime. St. Vincent related this in a spiritual conference with his priests, but as of a third person; to show that patience, humble silence, and resignation are generally the best defence of our innocence, and always the happiest means of sanctifying our souls under slanders and persecution; and we may be assured that providence will in its proper time justify us, if expedient.  4  At Paris Vincent became acquainted with the holy priest Monsieur de Berulle, who was afterwards cardinal, and at that time was taken up in founding the congregation of the French oratory. A saint readily discovers a soul in which the spirit of God reigns. Berulle conceived a great esteem for St. Vincent from his first conversation with him; and to engage him in the service of his neighbour, he prevailed with him first to serve as curate of the parish of Clichi, a small village near Paris; and soon after to quit that employ, to take upon him the charge of preceptor to the children of Emmanuel de Gondy, count of Joigny, general of the galleys of France. His lady, Frances of Silly, a person of singular piety, was so taken with the sanctity of Vincent, that she chose him for her spiritual director and confessor. In the year 1616, whilst the Countess of Joigny was at a country seat at Folleville, in the diocess of Amiens, Vincent was sent for to the village of Gannes, two leagues from Folleville, to hear the confession of a countryman who lay dangerously ill. The zealous priest, by carefully examining his penitent, found it necessary to advise him to make a general confession, with which the other joyfully complied. The penitent by this means discovered that all his former confessions had been sacrilegious for want of a due examination of his conscience; and afterwards, bathed in tears, he declared aloud, in transports of joy before many persons, and the Countess of Joigny herself, that he should have been eternally lost if he had not spoken to Vincent. The pious lady was struck with dread and horror to hear of such past sacrileges, and to consider the imminent danger of being damned in which that poor soul had been; and she trembled lest some others among her vassals might have the misfortune to be in the like case. Far from the criminal illusion of pride by which some masters and mistresses seem persuaded that they owe no care, attention, or provision to those whose whole life is employed only to give them the fruit of their sweat and labours; she was sensible from the principles both of nature and religion, that masters or lords lie under strict ties of justice and charity towards all committed to their care; and that they are bound, in the first place, as far as it lies in their power, to see them provided with the necessary spiritual helps for their salvation. But to wave the obligation, what Christian heart can pretend to the bowels of charity, and be insensible at the dangers of such persons? The virtuous countess felt in her own breast the strongest alarms for so many poor souls, which she called her own by many titles. She therefore entreated Vincent to preach in the church of Folleville, on the feast of the conversion of St. Paul, in 1617, and fully to instruct the people in the great duty of repentance and confession of sins. He did so; and such crowds flocked to him to make general confessions that he was obliged to call in the Jesuits of Amiens to his assistance. The congregation of the mission dates its first institution from this time, and in thanksgiving for it, keeps the 25th of January with great solemnity.  5  By the advice of Monsieur de Berulle, St. Vincent left the house of the countess in 1617, to employ his talents among the common people in the villages of Bresse, where he heard they stood in great need of instruction. He prevailed upon five other zealous priests to bear him company, and with them formed a little community in the parish of Chatillon in that province. He there converted by his sermons the Count of Rougemont and many others from their scandalous unchristian lives to a state of eminent penance and fervour, and in a short time changed the whole face of the country. 1 The good countess, his patroness, was infinitely pleased with his success, and gave him sixteen thousand livres to found a perpetual mission among the common people in the place and manner he should think fit. But she could not be easy herself whilst she was deprived of his direction and advice; she therefore employed Monsieur de Berulle, and her brother-in-law, Cardinal de Retz, to prevail with him to come to her, and extorted from him a promise that he would never abandon the direction of her conscience so long as she lived, and that he would assist her at her death. But being extremely desirous that others, especially those who were particularly entitled to her care and attention, should want nothing that could contribute to their sanctification and salvation, she induced her husband to concur with her in establishing a company of able and zealous missionaries, who should be employed in assisting their vassals and farmers. This project they proposed to their brother, John Francis of Gondi, the first archbishop of Paris, and he gave the college of Bons Enfans for the reception of the new community. All things being agreed on, St. Vincent took possession of this house in April, 1625. The count and countess gave forty thousand French livres to begin the foundation.  6  St. Vincent attended the countess till her pious death, which happened on the 23d of June the same year; after which he joined his Congregation. He drew up for it certain rules or constitutions, which were approved by Pope Urban VIII. in 1632. King Lewis XIII. confirmed the establishment by letters patent, which he granted in May the same year; and, in 1633, the regular canons of St. Victor gave to this new institute the priory of St. Lazarus, which being a spacious building was made the chief house of the Congregation, and from it the Fathers of the Mission were often called Lazarites or Lazarians. They are not religious men, but a Congregation of secular priests, who after two years’ probation make four simple vows, of poverty, chastity, obedience, and stability. They devote themselves to labour, in the first place, in sanctifying their own souls by the particular holy exercises prescribed in their institute; secondly, in the conversion of sinners to God; and thirdly, in training up clergymen for the ministry of the altar and the care of souls. To attain the first end, their rule prescribes them an hour’s meditation every morning, self-examination thrice every day, spiritual conferences every week, a yearly retreat of eight days, and silence except in the hours allowed for conversation. To comply with the second obligation, they are employed eight months every year in missions among the country people, staying three or four weeks in each place which they visit, every day giving catechism, making familiar sermons, hearing confessions, reconciling differences, and performing all other works of charity. To correspond with the third end which St. Vincent proposed to himself, some of this Congregation undertake the direction of seminaries, and admit ecclesiastics or others to make retreats of eight or ten days with them, to whom they prescribe suitable exercises; and for these purposes excellent rules are laid down by the founder. Pope Alexander VII., in 1662, enjoined by a brief, that all persons who receive holy orders in Rome, or in the six suffragan bishoprics, shall first make a retreat of ten days under the direction of the fathers of this Congregation, under pain of suspension. St. Vincent settled his institute also in the seminary of St. Charles in Paris, and lived to see twenty-five houses of it founded in France, Piedmont, Poland, and other places.  7  This foundation, though so extensive and beneficial, could not satisfy the zeal of this apostolic man. He by every other means studied to procure the relief of others under all necessities, whether spiritual or corporal. For this purpose he established many other confraternities, as that called Of Charity, to attend all poor sick persons in each parish; which institute he began in Bresse, and propagated in other places where he made any missions; one called Of the Dames of the Cross, for the education of young girls; another of Dames to serve the sick in great hospitals, as in that of Hotel Dieu in Paris. He procured and directed the foundation of several great hospitals, as in Paris that of foundlings, or those children who, for want of such a provision, are exposed to the utmost distress, or to the barbarity of unnatural parents; also that of poor old men; at Marseilles the stately hospital for the galley-slaves, who, when sick, are there abundantly furnished with every help both corporal and spiritual. All these establishments he settled under excellent regulations, and supplied with large sums of money to defray all necessary expenses. He instituted a particular plan of spiritual exercises for those who are about to receive holy orders; and others for those who desire to make general confessions, or to deliberate upon the choice of a state of life. He also appointed regular ecclesiastical conferences, on the duties of the clerical state, &c. It must appear almost incredible that so many and so great things could have been effected by one man, and a man who had no advantages from birth, fortune, or any shining qualities which the world admires and esteems. But our surprise would be much greater if we could enter into a detail of his wonderful actions, and the infinite advantages which he procured others. During the wars in Lorrain, being informed of the miseries to which these provinces were reduced, he collected charities among pious persons at Paris, which were sent thither, to the amount of fifteen or sixteen hundred thousand livres, says Abelly; nay, as Collet proves from authentic vouchers, of two millions, that is, according to the value of money at that time, considerably above one hundred thousand pounds sterling; and he did the like on other occasions. He assisted King Lewis XIII. at his death, and by his holy advice and exhortations that monarch expired in perfect sentiments of piety and resignation. Our saint was in the highest favour with the queen regent, Anne of Austria, who nominated him a member of the young king’s Council of Conscience, and consulted him in all ecclesiastical affairs, and in the collation of benefices; which office he discharged ten years.  8  Amidst so many and so great employs his soul seemed always united to God; in the most distracting affairs it kept, as it were, an eye always open to him, in order to converse continually with him. This constant attention to him he often renewed, and always when the clock struck, by making the sign of the cross (at least secretly with his thumb upon his breast) with an act of divine love. Under all crosses, disappointments, and slanders, he always preserved a perfect serenity and evenness of mind, which it did not seem in the power of the whole world to disturb; for he considered all events only with a view to the divine will, and with an entire resignation to it, having no other desire but that God should be glorified in all things. Whether this was to be done by his own disgrace and sufferings, or by whatever other means it pleased the divine majesty, he equally rejoiced. Not that he fell into the pretended apathy or insensibility of the proud Stoics, or into the impious indifference of the false Mystics, afterwards called Quietists, than which nothing is more contrary to true piety, which is always tender, affectionate, and most sensible to all the interests of charity and religion. This was the character of our saint, who regarded the afflictions of all others as his own, sighed continually with St. Paul after that state of glory in which he should be united inseparably to his God, and poured forth his soul before him with tears over his own and others’ spiritual miseries. Having his hope fixed as a firm anchor in God, by an humble reliance on the divine mercy and goodness, he seemed raised above the reach of the malice of creatures, or the frowns of the world; and he enjoyed a tranquillity within his breast which no storms were able to ruffle or disturb. So perfect was the mastery which he had gained over his passions, that his meekness and patience seemed unalterable, whatever provocations he met with. He was never moved by affronts, unless to rejoice secretly under them, because he was sure to find in them a hidden treasure of grace, and an opportunity of vanquishing himself. This is the fruit of the victory which perfect virtue gains over self-love; and it is a more perfect sacrifice to God, a surer test of sincere virtue, a more heroic victory, and a more glorious triumph of the soul to bear a slander, an injurious suspicion, or an unjust insult, in silence and patience, than the most shining exterior act of virtue; a language often repeated, but little understood or practised among Christians. Perfect self-denial, the most profound humility, and an eminent spirit of prayer were the means by which St. Vincent attained to this degree of perfection: and he most earnestly recommended the same to his disciples. Humility he would have them to make the basis of his Congregation, and it was the lesson which he never ceased to repeat to them, that they ought to study sincerely to conceal even their natural talents. When two persons of extraordinary learning and abilities once presented themselves, desiring to be admitted into his Congregation, he gave them both a repulse, telling them, “Your abilities raise you above our low state. Your talents may be of good service in some other place. As for us, our highest ambition is to instruct the ignorant, to bring sinners to a spirit of penance, and to plant the gospel-spirit of charity, humility, meekness, and simplicity in the hearts of all Christians.” He laid it down also as a rule of humility, that, if possible, a man ought never to speak of himself or his own concerns, such discourse usually proceeding from, and nourishing in the heart, pride and self-love. This indeed is a rule prescribed by Confucius, Aristotle, Cato, Pliny, and other philosophers; because, say they, for any one to boast of himself is always the most intolerable and barefaced pride, and modesty in such discourse will be suspected of secret vanity. Egotism, or the itch of speaking always of a man’s self, shows he is intoxicated with the poison of self-love, refers every thing to him self, and is his own centre, than which scarce anything can be more odious and offensive to others. But Christian humility carries this maxim higher, teaching us to love a hidden life, and to lie concealed and buried, as being in ourselves nothingness and sin.  9  St. Vincent exerted his zeal against the novelties concerning the article of divine grace which sprang up in his time. Michael Baius, doctor and professor of divinity at Louvain, advanced a new doctrine concerning the grace conferred on man in the two states before and after Adam’s fall, and some other speculative points; and Pope Pius V., in 1567, condemned seventy-six propositions under his name. Some of these, Baius confessed he had taught, and these he solemnly revoked and sincerely condemned with all the rest in 1580, in presence of F. Francis Toletus, afterwards cardinal, whom Gregory XIII. had sent for that very purpose to Louvain. Cornelius Jansenius and John Verger, commonly called Abbé de St. Cyran, contracted a close friendship together during their studies, first at Louvain, afterwards at Paris, and concerted a plan of a new system of doctrine concerning divine grace, founded, in part, upon some of the condemned errors of Baius. This system Jansenius, by his friend’s advice, endeavoured to establish in a book, which from St. Austin, the great doctor of grace, he entitled, Augustinus. After having been bishop of Ipres from 1635 to 1638, he died of the pestilence, having never published his book, in the close of which he inserted a declaration that he submitted his work to the judgment of the Church. 2 Fromond, another Louvain divine, an abler scholar, and a more polite writer, polished the style of this book, and put it in the press. 3 Verger became director of the nuns of Port-Royal, had read some ancient writers on the books of devotion, and wrote with ease. 4 But his very works on subjects of piety, however neatly written, betray the author’s excessive presumption and forbidding self-sufficiency. He became the most strenuous advocate of Jansenism, and was detained ten years prisoner in the castle of Vincennes. He died soon after he had recovered his liberty, in 1643. This man had by his reputation gained the esteem of St. Vincent; but the saint hearing him one day advance his errors, and add that the Church had failed for five or six hundred years past, he was struck with horror, and from that moment renounced the friendship of so dangerous a person. When these errors were afterwards more publicly spread abroad, he strenuously exerted himself against them; on which account Gerberon, the Jansenistical historian, makes him the butt of his rancour and spleen; but general and vague invectives of the enemies to truth are the commendation of his piety and zeal. 5 Our saint’s efforts to destroy that heresy, says Abelly, never made him approve a loose morality, which on all occasions he no less avoided and abhorred than the errors of the Jansenists. He was particularly careful in insisting on all the conditions of true repentance to render it sincere and perfect; for want of which he used to say with St. Ambrose, that some pretended penitents are rendered more criminal by their sacrilegious hypocrisy in the abuse of so great a sacrament, than they were by all their former sins.  10  In the year 1658 St. Vincent assembled the members of his Congregation at St. Lazarus, and gave to every one a small book of rules which he had compiled. At the same time he made a pathetic exhortation, to enforce the most exact and religious observance of them. This Congregation was again approved and confirmed by Alexander VII. and Clement X. St. Vincent was chosen by St. Francis of Sales director of his nuns of the Visitation that were established at Paris. The robust constitution of the zealous servant of God was impaired by his uninterrupted fatigues and austerities. In the eightieth year of his age he was seized with a periodical fever, and with violent, night sweats. After passing the night almost without sleep, and in an agony of pain, he never failed to rise at four in the morning, to spend three hours in prayer, to say mass every day (except on the three first days of his annual retreat, according to the custom he had established), and to exert, as usual, his indefatigable zeal in the exercises of charity and religion. He even redoubled his diligence in giving his last instructions to his spiritual children; and recited every day after mass the prayers of the Church for persons in their agony, with the recommendation of the soul, and other preparatory acts for his last hour. Alexander VII., in consideration of the extreme weakness to which his health was reduced, sent him a brief to dispense him from reciting his breviary; but before it arrived the servant of God had finished the course of his labours. Having received the last sacraments and given his last advice, he calmly expired in his chair, on the 27th of September, 1660, being fourscore and five years old. He was buried in the church of St. Lazarus in Paris, with an extraordinary concourse and pomp. An account of several predictions of this servant of God, and some miraculous cures performed by him whilst alive, may be read in his life written by Collet, 6 with a great number of miracles wrought through his intercession after his death at Paris, Angiers, Sens, in Italy, &c. Mr. Bonnet, superior of the seminary at Chartres, afterwards general of the Congregation, by imploring this saint’s intercession, was healed instantaneously of an inveterate entire rupture, called by the physicians enteroepiplo-celle, 7 which had been declared by the ablest surgeons absolutely incurable; this miracle was approved by Cardinal Noailles. Several like cures of fevers, hemorrhages, palsies, dysenteries, and other distempers were juridically proved. A girl eight years old, both dumb and lame, was cured by a second Novena or nine days’ devotion performed for her by her mother in honour of St. Vincent. His body was visited by Cardinal Noailles in presence of many witnesses, in 1712, and found entire and fresh, and the linen cloths in the same condition as if they were new. The tomb was then shut up again. This ceremony is usually performed before the beatification of a servant of God, though the incorruption of the body by itself is not regarded as a miraculous proof at Rome or elsewhere, as Collet remarks. 8 After the ordinary rigorous examinations of the conduct, heroic virtues, and miracles of this saint at Rome, Pope Benedict XIII. performed with great solemnity the ceremony of his beatification in 1729. Upon the publication of the brief thereof, the archbishop of Paris caused the grave to be again opened. The lady marechale of Noailles, the marshal her son, and many other persons were present; but the flesh on the legs and head appeared corrupted, which alteration from the state in which it was found twenty-seven years before, was attributed to a flood of water which twelve years before this had overflowed that vault. Miracles continued frequently to be wrought by the relics and invocation of St. Vincent. A Benedictin nun at Montmirel, afflicted with a violent fever, retention of urine, ulcers, and other disorders, her body being swelled to an enormous size, and having been a long time paralytic, was perfectly cured all at once by a relic of St. Vincent applied to her by Monseigneur Joseph Languet, then bishop of Soissons. Francis Richer, in Paris, was healed in a no less miraculous manner. Miss Louisa Elizabeth Sackville, an English young lady at Paris, was cured of a palsy by performing a novena at the tomb of St. Vincent; which miracle was attested in the strongest manner, among others, by Mrs. Hayes, a Protestant gentlewoman, with whom she lodged. Miss Sackville became afterwards a nun in the French abbey called of the Holy Sacrament, in Paris, lived ten years without any return of her former disorder, and died in 1742. St. Vincent was canonized in 1737 by Pope Clement XII.  11  This saint could not display his zeal more to the advantage of his neighbour than by awaking Christians from the spiritual lethargy in which so many live. He set before their eyes the grievous disorder of lukewarmness in the divine service, and explained to them, like another Baptist, the necessity and obligations of sincere repentance; for those certainly can never be entitled to the divine favour who live in an ambiguous, divided, and distracted state of sinning and repenting; of being heathens and Christians by turns. Still more dreadful is the state of those who live in habitual sin, yet are insensible of their danger, and frightful miseries! Into what extravagance, folly, spiritual blindness, and sometimes incredulity, do men’s passions often plunge them! To what a degree of madness and stupidity do men of the finest natural parts sink, when abandoned by God! or rather when they themselves abandon God, and that light which he has set up in the world! Let us by tears and prayers implore the divine mercy in favour of all blind sinners.  12

Note 1. Collect, t. 1, b. 1, pp. 66, 71. [back]

Note 2. This book of Jansenius was condemned by Urban VIII. in 1641, and in 1653 Innocent X. censured five propositions to which the errors contained in this book were principally reduced. Alexander VII. in 1656 confirmed these decrees, and in 1665 approved the formulary proposed by the French clergy for the manner of receiving and subscribing them. Paschasius Quenel, a French oratorian, published in 1671 his book of Moral Reflections on the Gospels, which he afterwards augmented, and added like reflections on the rest of the New Testament, which work he printed complete in 1693 and 1694. In it he craftily insinuated the errors of Jansenius, and a contempt of the censures of the church. Clement XI. condemned this book in 1708; and in 1713, by the constitution Unigenitus, censured one hundred and one propositions, extracted out of it. These decrees were all received and promulgated by the clergy of France, and registered in the parliament of that kingdom, that they might receive the force of a law of the state; and they are adopted by the whole Catholic Church, as Cardinal Bissy, Languet, and other French prelates have clearly demonstrated. The Jansenian heresy is downright Predestinarianism, than which no doctrine can be imagined more monstrous and absurd. The principal errors couched in the doctrine of Jansenists are, that God sometimes refuses, even to the just, sufficient grace to comply with his precepts; that the grace which God affords man since the fall of Adam, is such that if concupiscence be stronger, it cannot produce its effect; but if the grace be more powerful than the opposite concupiscence in the soul, or relatively to it victorious by a necessitating influence, that then it cannot be resisted, rejected, or hindered; and that Christ by his death paid indeed a price sufficient for the redemption of all men, and offered it to purchase some weak insufficient graces for reprobate souls, but not to procure them means truly applicable, and sufficient for their salvation; which is really to confine the death of Christ to the elect, and to deprive the reprobate of sufficient means to attain to salvation. The main-spring or hinge of this system is, that the grace which inclines man’s will to supernatural virtue, since the fall of Adam, consists in a moral pleasurable motion or a delectation infused into the soul inclining her to virtue, as concupiscence carries her to vice; and that the power of delectation, whether of virtue or vice, which is stronger, draws the will by an inevitable necessity, as it were by its own weight. The equivocations by which some advocates of these erroneous principles have endeavoured to disguise or soften their harshness, only discover their fear of the light. A certain modern philosopher is more daring, who, in spite not only of revelation, which he disclaims, but also of reason and experience, openly denies all free-will or election in human actions, pretending to apply this system of a two-fold delectation to every natural operation of the will. (See Hume’s Essay on Free-Will.) Those who obstinately oppose the decrees of the church in these disputes, without adopting any heretical principle condemned as such by the church, but found their unjust exceptions in some points of discipline, or any other weak pretences, cannot be charged with heresy: nevertheless, only invincible ignorance can exempt them from the guilt of disobedience, though they should not proceed to a schismatical separation in communion. [back]

Note 3. See F. Honoré Addit. sur les Observ. p. 241, &c. Languet ep Pastor, &c. [back]

Note 4. Honoré, ibid. pp. 245, 253, &c. [back]

Note 5. See Collet’s life of St. Vincent, l. 3, t. 1, p. 260, and Abelly, l. 2, ch. 12. [back]

Note 6. L. 9. [back]

Note 7. This consists in a prolapse both of the gut and the omentum or caul together. [back]

Note 8. T. 2, p. 546. [back]

St. Camillus de Lellis Monday, Jul 18 2011 

 

St. Camillus de Lellis

Feast Day: July 18

St. Camillus De Lellis The Ex-Trooper—1550-1614

Alban Goodier, S.J.

(from Saints for Sinners, EWTN library:  http://www.ewtn.com/library/mary/sntsin.htm#6)

Camillus de Lellis had a good but timid mother; his father seems to have been
the very opposite. Both were of respectable, some say of noble, families; and
the surname confirms it. But the father, himself the son of a fighting man, had
become such a ne’er-do-well that he had long since dragged the family name in
the mud. He was a soldier all his life, or rather he was an adventurer; he
served in the armies of various monarchs, hiring himself out to whoever would
pay him in the manner common at that time, and was actually in the imperial army
which sacked Rome in 1527. He appears to have been chiefly conspicuous for
having all a soldier’s vices of the period; he was a careless spendthrift and a
persistent gambler. The chief consolation he gave to his wife was that he was
seldom at home.

When Camillus came into the world, he brought only anxiety to his mother. He
was the only child that survived his infancy; even before his birth she had a
dream which she could only interpret as portending misfortune. Her husband gave
her no help, and she had the burden of bringing up her boy as best she could,
with a sorry example before him. As for Camillus, from the first he showed only
signsof taking after his father. As a child he was lank and ungainly, unusually
tall for his years, in appearance anything but attractive, lazy by nature and
hating to be taught. Hehad a violent temper and an obstinate self-will, which
were not improved by the fact that his mother feared him, and for peace’s sake
allowed him his own way so far as she was able. He was only twelve years of age
when she died; what with her reckless husband, and what with her wayward son,
who had learnt thus early to pay no heed to her, life was too much for her, and
she was taken away.

For a time after her death Camillus was placed under the care of relatives,
who took little interest in him; his character was not such as to win sympathy,
and he was allowed to drift very much as he chose. He was sent to school, but he
detested it. When he ought to have been learning he did little but dream of his
father’s adventures, and longed for the day when he would be grown-up enough to
run away and join him; when he was out of school he found low companions for
playmates, and very early became addicted to gambling. One only thing could be
said for him. In spite of his waywardness he learnt from his mother a deep
respect for religion. He believed in prayer, though he seldom prayed; in the
sacraments, though he seldom received them; in later years we shall see how this
pulled him through many a crisis, and in the end was his saving.

At length the day of liberation came. Being so tall, and having early learnt
to swagger as a full-grown man, he could easily pass as being much older than he
was; when he was barely seventeen he shut up his books, joined his father in a
foreign camp, and enlisted as a soldier. There he allowed himself to live as he
would; before he was nineteen he had learnt everything a wicked youth could
learn, and made free use of his knowledge. Under his father’s tuition, in
particular, he became an expert gambler; from that time onward the two together,
father and son, were the center of gambling wherever they went. In fact they
made gambling a profession.

There was plenty of fighting in those days, and soldiers of fortune had
little difficulty in finding occupation; when their funds had run out, and
idling had become a burden, Camillus and his father had only to offer their
services to any general who was in need of men, and because of their previous
experience they were easily accepted. Thus it was that they found themselves in
all sorts of camps, sometimes fighting with friends, sometimes with enemies; an
authority seems to say that at one time they were found even on the side of the
Turks. Fighting to them was fighting, the cause was no affair of theirs. So long
as they were paid their hire, and enjoyed the wild life they desired, the rest
mattered little to them.

But this kind of existence could not go on for ever. Even among the rough
soldiers of their time Camillus and his father were too great a disturbance in
the camp, and once at least were turned out. Their gambling, aggravated by their
own violent tempers, led to quarrels; gambling and quarreling produced only
insubordination. They took to the road, wandering from hamlet to hamlet, earning
what they could by their cards. One day, as they were traveling together on foot
with a view to joining the army in Venice which was being raised to fight the
Turks, both of them fell ill on the road. But the father was the worse of the
two; and Camillus had perforce to put up with his own sickness as best he could
while he found a place where his father could be cared for. Alas! it was too
late. His father’s illness was too far advanced, his worn-out body had no
resistance left. Camillus’s only consolation was—for in spite of the life he was
leading it was to him a strange and abiding consolation—that on his death-bed
the old man broke down in sorrow for his past, received the last sacraments with
true fervor, and died an evidently penitent man. Thus for the first time the
faith he had inherited from his mother served Camillus in good stead.

Left alone in the world, and with this last scene stamped indelibly upon his
memory, Camillus began to reflect. He was reduced by his gambling habit to utter
destitution of both body and soul; death might overtake him at any time, as it
had overtaken his father, and there might be no one to help him in his need. He
would mend his ways; he would escape from all further temptation by hiding
himself in a monastery, if a monastery could be induced to accept him; there and
then he took a vow to become a Franciscan. He remembered that he had a
Franciscan uncle somewhere in Aquila; he would begin with him. As soon as he was
well enough he tramped off, came to his uncle’s door, told him his tale, and
asked that he might be admitted into the Order. His uncle received him kindly
and listened to his story, but was not easily convinced. Vocations did not come
so easily as that; Camillus would need further trial that his constancy might be
proved. Besides, at the moment he was in no fit state to enter on religious
life. Not only was he worn in body, but he had a running wound above his ankle,
which had started long ago with a mere nothing, but had obstinately refused to
be healed. The Franciscans were kind, but they could not think of receiving
Camillus as a postulant, and he was once more sent adrift.

And he did drift; first to old boon companions, with whom he took up again
his gambling habits; then, since the running sore in his leg became a nuisance
to others, he began to wander alone from place to place, scarcely knowing how he
lived. It was indeed a long and trying probation for one who was to become the
apostle of the derelict and dying. At length he found his way to Rome; and here
the thought occurred to him that if he could gain admission to some hospital the
wound in his leg might be tended and cured. He applied at the hospital of S.
Giacomo; as he had no money with which to pay for a bed, he offered himself as a
servant in the place, asking in return that his running sore might be treated.
It is well to remember that at this time, since the Franciscans had rejected
him, his chief ambition was to be cured that he might once more return to the
life of a soldier.

On the conditions he proposed he was received and given a trial. At first all
seemed to go well. Camillus was in earnest, and meant to do his best; away from
his old surroundings the better side of Camillus appeared. He went about his
work with a will, sweeping corridors, cleaning bandages, performing all the most
menial duties of the place, for he was fit for nothing else. The doctors on
their part did theirs, attending to his wound, and giving him hope of a
permanent cure; under this regime one might have trusted that a change had come
in his life at last. But unfortunately for him, in spite of the work allotted to
him, he had many idle hours on his hands; and there were never wanting other
idle servants about him with whom he was able to spend them. In spite of all his
good intentions his old passion for gambling returned and he could not resist.
He secured a pack of cards, and to wile away the time he taught his games to his
companions. But soon the authorities began to notice that something was going
wrong in the servants’ quarters. The men were less ready at their work; they
were dissatisfied among themselves; quarreling became more common, for with the
return of the gambling habit Camillus’s ill-temper returned in its wake. A
search was made of his room; the telltale cards were found hidden in Camillus’s
bed. Without more ado he was pushed into the street, his leg still unhealed, and
without a coin in his pocket.

So for a second time Camillus’s efforts to mend his ways came to nothing. He
became despondent; his evil habits had the better of him and he seemed unable to
control them; he would go back to soldiering again and take his chance. Hence
the next we hear of him is once more in the armies of Venice; he fought in those
ranks against the Turks, while he was still only nineteen years of age. He
continued there for two years, fighting by land and sea. Still even here his
evil genius pursued him. He distinguished himself, it is said, on the
battle-field, but in camp once more got himself into trouble. On one occasion,
at Zara, a gambling quarrel led to a challenge; a duel was arranged between
himself and another soldier, and only the interference of the sergeant of his
company prevented it. In the end, good enough soldier as he was, his seniors
seem to have grown tired of him and he was dismissed.

But dismissal did not cool Camillus’s fighting spirit. Since Venice would not
have him any longer, he went and joined the army of Spain. Later on, in 1574, he
is found in a company of adventurers, under one Fabio; its chief attraction for
Camillus was that every man in it was addicted to gambling. In this company he
fought in North Africa and elsewhere; at last, on their way to Naples from
Palermo, their galleys were so tossed about by a storm that they were given up
for lost, and they finally landed with nothing but the clothes on their backs
and their weapons of war. The company had to be disbanded, and once again
Camillus was a homeless tramp. He went straight to the gambling dens which he
knew well. There he staked all he had—his sword, his gun, his powder flasks, his
soldier’s coat, and he lost them all; he was thankful that at least he had his
shirt on his back, for even that, on a former occasion in that same place, he
had staked and lost, and had been forced to part with in public.

He now sank lower than ever; what was worse, he found a companion in his
misery. The two formed a sort of partnership. Gambling from town to town became
their trade, with begging to make up when they had lost everything. Worst of
all, Camillus in a kind of hopeless despair seemed to have no will left; he went
wherever and did whatever his evil comrade directed him to go and to do. They
had a vague idea that they would travel about and see the world; if fighting
came their way, they would join up again as they had done before, this was
Camillus’s condition in 1574, when he was twenty-four years of age. Just then,
if one had searched all the dens of Italy, it might have been difficult to find
a more hopeless case than that of Camillus de Lellis.

And yet just then the change came. The two tramps had come to Manfredonia.
One morning they were begging, with others of their kind, standing on the steps
outside a church. It chanced that among the passersby was a man of wealth, well
known for his charitable works. He noticed the tall, soldier-like youth among
the beggars. He spoke to him, expressed his surprise that one such as he should
be begging his bread among cripples and other helpless creatures, and told him
that he ought to work. Camillus made the usual excuses; he said that he was a
disbanded soldier and that now no one would employ him. The rich man took him at
his word. At the time he was building a monastery outside the town; he gave
Camillus no money, but sent him with a note of instruction that he should be
given employment on the building.

Camillus accepted the offer, and made up his mind to try, but first he must
take leave of his old companion and dissolve their partnership. His comrade,
when he heard his announcement, could not but burst into laughter at this sudden
conversion. He mocked at Camillus, so quickly turned pious; he showed him the
liberty he was throwing away. He sneered at the idea that Camillus would ever
persevere, he warned him that the old craving would come back again and he would
give way. He would gamble with the other workmen, many of whom would not need to
be taught, he would quarrel as he had done before; he would again be dismissed,
and would be left more destitute than ever. Besides, the work offered him was
only a trap. Under such management he would be watched everywhere; he would be
always under restraint; he might as well go to prison. How much better would it
be for them both to get out of Manfredonia and look for work elsewhere! Then
they could do as much or as little as they liked, and when they were tired of it
could go out once more on the road.

At first Camillus listened to his tempter and yielded. It was true he could
not trust himself; it was also true that he could not easily surrender the free
life he had been living. He turned aside, and went down the street with his
companion, following him blindly as he had done before. They left Manfredonia
and made for the next town, more than twelve miles away. But on the road there
came to Camillus a great grace. He had felt the goodwill of the man who had
offered him work; thought of the Franciscan monastery brought back to him
memories of his early efforts to amend, five or six years before; it seemed to
him that here was an opportunity which should not be missed, and which might
never occur again. With a mighty effort, the greatest he ever made in all his
life, he shook himself free. To the surprise of his companion he suddenly turned
round, and began to run back to Manfredonia as fast as his legs would carry him.
Next morning he found himself enrolled among the laborers on the monastery
building.

Still it was no easy task. As might have been expected from one with a past
like that of Camillus, he found hard work anything but a trifle. He hated the
drudgery; moreover there came upon him the consciousness that he was born for
something better. There followed dreams of the life he had lived. With all its
squalor and misery at least it had been free; however low he had sunk he had not
starved; and there had come occasions when he had had a good time. Then his old
companion discovered his whereabouts, and would come around the place. He would
taunt Camillus with his slave’s life, would contrast his own freedom as he went
to and fro at his pleasure, would provoke in him the temptation to gamble which
Camillus could scarcely resist. And last there was the wound in his leg. The
more he labored the worse it troubled him; the particular task that was assigned
to him only tended to aggravate the pain.

Nevertheless Camillus labored on. The skilled work of the builder was beyond
him, but there were other employments to keep him always occupied. He drove the
donkeys that carried the stones for the building in panniers on their backs; he
took the messages into the town; he brought the other laborers their food and
drink. Curious neighbors could not but observe this tall youth in rags with that
about him which showed that he had seen better days, but he took no heed. The
only remaining sign of his former life was the soldier’s belt he still wore; the
children in the street were quick to notice this and made fun of the trooper
turned donkey-driver. Camillus was stung by these trifles; he could endure many
things, but could not endure to be ridiculed. Still he held on; whatever
happened he must keep to his post; that was almost all his ambition for the
present, and his many past failures had taught him where he must be on his guard
if he would succeed. If he would check his gambling propensity he must keep to
himself and away from danger; if he would conquer his habit of idle dreaming he
must be always occupied; if he would subdue his temper he must submit to
whatever was put upon him; if he would suppress the multitudinous temptations
that surged within him, he must make himself work and work. He could look back
afterwards and recognize that those months spent as a driver of donkeys were the
turning point of his life.

It was a humble beginning, solitary, drab, without sensation of any kind; it
had not even the dramatic climax of a sudden great conversion like that of
Augustine and others. Nevertheless it was the beginning of a saint. Camillus
worked on, and soon two things followed. He began to have more confidence in
himself, and he began to win the good opinion of others; with the first came an
aspiration to rise to better things, with the latter the means to attain them.
We are explicitly told that when first he undertook the work at the building his
only ambition was to get through the winter, and to earn a few crowns with which
to start life again in the spring; after all, even that was something when we
consider what he had been immediately before. But he had no intention, and even
feared, to go further. When some Capuchins, for whom the monastery was being
built, offered him some of their cloth to replace his rags he refused it; he was
afraid lest to accept it might lead to other things, perhaps to his becoming a
friar. But before the winter was over all this had changed. One day, as he was
driving his donkeys back from the town, he received the reward of his
perseverance. He seemed to see himself, and all the life he had hitherto lived,
in an entirely new light. The memory of the vow he had made long ago came back
to him, and he began to ask himself whether his present occupation was not an
opportunity given to him to fulfill it. The thought sank deeper; he remembered
how once he had hoped that this might be an escape from his miserable life. He
spoke of it to one of the friars, and he was encouraged. Encouragement revived
desire, and soon he was at the superior’s feet, asking that he might be
received.

In this way Camillus gained admission into a Franciscan monastery. But his
stay did not last long. No sooner had he begun his novitiate than the wound
above his ankle began to grow worse. He was told that he must go; with this
impediment upon him he could not be received, but for his consolation he was
given the assurance that so soon as ever his running sore was healed he would be
taken back. Armed with this promise Camillus set to work in earnest; he would
begin again where he had begun before and failed, but he would not fail again.
He would go to Rome, to the hospital of S. Giacomo, where he had received so
much benefit before both for body and for soul but from which he had been so
ignominiously, and so deservedly, expelled. He would ask to be given another
chance, to be taken in on the same terms as formerly. For almost a year he had
kept away from gambling; he had learnt to work as he had never worked in all his
life; the Franciscan fathers would give him a good character; he himself would
let the authorities see that they might trust him; perhaps they would let him
try again.

Camillus came to Rome, and all seemed to go well; it was in 1575, a holy
year. He was given another trial at S. Giacomo, and this time there were no
complaints. Camillus had heard of St. Philip Neri, of his wonderful power in
supporting sinners; he made himself known to him, and St. Philip took him in
charge. Under his wise guidance Camillus kept steady; he worked at the hospital
for four years as a menial servant, after which it appeared that the wound in
his leg was healed. Then once more he wished to return to the Capuchins. St.
Philip tried to dissuade him, but he would not listen. He had made a vow; the
Capuchins had promised that when his leg was healed they would have him back and
he would go. But scarcely had he entered than the trouble began again; the wound
broke out afresh and he was told to depart, this time with the emphatic
injunction that he must not hope to try any more. Thus for the third occasion
Camillus’s ambition to become a friar was frustrated. He tried again the next
year, with the Observantines of Ara Coeli, and was again refused; only then did
he give up all hope altogether.

“God bless you, Camillus,” was St. Philip Neri’s welcome when he returned,
“did I not tell you?”

Camillus was thirty years of age when he made his Franciscan experiment. For
the last five years he had served faithfully at S. Giacomo; therefore, when he
had failed at the monastery he was gladly taken back. More than that, he was
appointed superintendent of the servants, and that in those days included the
nurses, who were all men. Now it was that the real Camillus began to appear.
Whether it was his Franciscan experience which had given him new ideals, or
whether it was St. Philip who was training him to better things, from this
moment Camillus became a new man. He had already learnt the value of unceasing
work as a cure for his many temptations; now he discovered that the more he gave
himself to helping others the happier man he became. He began to love the
patients in the hospital, not merely to serve them; and the more he loved them
the more he was troubled by the treatment they received, even in so
comparatively well-regulated a hospital as S. Giacomo. One evening, as he stood
in the middle of a ward, the thought occurred to him that good nursing depended
on love that the more it was independent of mere wages the better it would be;
that if he could gather men about him who would nurse for love, and would leave
the wages to look after themselves, then he might hope to raise nursing to the
standard he desired.

With this object in his mind Camillus carefully selected five men from among
his fellow-servants in the hospital. He told them of his ideal, and of the way
he hoped to attain it; the men rose to his suggestion, and agreed to throw in
their lot with Camillus, pooling all their earnings, and living as much as
possible together. But soon it was found this did not work; living in a public
hospital, part of a general staff, they could not keep separate from the rest.
If they wished to carry out their intention to the full they must have a home of
their own.

Meanwhile another thought had come to Camillus. He had noticed that not only
the servants often failed in their duty to the sick, but the priests failed as
well, if he would have his company of nurses equal to his ambition, then it must
include priests also. He would become one himself; illiterate as he was he set
to work. First he found a chaplain of the hospital who undertook to teach him
Latin during his leisure hours; later, since by this means he made slow
progress, he entered himself as a student at the Roman College, taught by the
Jesuit fathers; and, at the age of thirty-two this lank figure of over six feet
was henceforth to be seen among the little boys learning the elements of
grammar. Naturally the boys were amused; they nicknamed Camillus the “Late
Arrival,” and would offer him their services to help him in his lessons. But
Camillus persevered, and in 1584, when he was thirty-four years of age, he had
the consolation of being ordained.

Now at last it may be said that the life of Camillus really began. He took a
house by the Tiber, in the lowest and most pestilential part of the city, and
there set about the service of the sick wherever he might find them. One
incident here is worthy of mention; it is said to be the only occasion when St.
Philip Neri made a mistake in the diagnosis of anyone entrusted to his spiritual
care. So long as Camillus was safe at his work in the hospital of S. Giacomo,
St. Philip was happy about him; when he heard that he had left the place, and
had taken up his abode in the lowest quarters of the town, he was not a little
distressed. Knowing Camillus’s past, and his propensity for gambling, he was
much afraid that his new surroundings would only revive the old temptation.
Moreover he was convinced that this new departure was only another mark of that
restless and obstinate nature which had already made his penitent seek in vain
for admission among the Franciscans. He spoke sharply to Camillus; he advised
him, for his own security, not to give up the work he was doing at S. Giacomo;
if he disobeyed, Philip would be compelled to give him up. But Camillus held
firm to his project; he knew he had found his true vocation and he would not
yield, even though he loved St. Philip as more than a father, and from that
moment, for a period at least, Philip Neri and Camillus de Lellis parted
company. It is one more instance of the difference that can come even between
the most charitable, and the most understanding, of saints.

It is not our object to speak of the wonderful Order, the Brothers of a Happy
Death, which grew out of these humble beginnings; it is more to our purpose to
watch how the mind of Camillus himself seemed steadily to expand, and how to
each new light he responded without any reserve. At first he had the idea of
founding an institution of hospital nurses; soon he realized that the sick
outside hospitals were in far more need of good nursing than those within, and
at once he made them the object of his special care. Next, in a time of
pestilence, he saw how the stricken were, almost of necessity, neglected and
allowed to die as they might; he bound himself and his followers by vow to visit
pestilential areas whenever there was need, and in fulfillment of that vow
numbers of his disciples gave their lives. Following on this was his care of
those actually dying. When the end was certain, many, especially among the poor,
were left to their fate and nothing more was done for them; Camillus made the
comfort and help of the dying so much his special object of charity that from
that work alone his Order ultimately took its name.

So did his charity expand, and the memory of his own early days spurred him
on, some would say, even to extravagance. No case was too abandoned for him to
help; none too wicked for Camillus to put it away. Once, in 1590, in a time of
famine and distress in the city, when, besides, the winter was exceptionally
severe, Camillus was distributing clothes to the poor in his courtyard. Two of
the recipients, as soon as they had the clothes in their hands, immediately
gambled them away or sold them, and then ran off lest Camillus might discover
what they had done. But Camillus was too quick for them; his old days told him
why they had run away, and he sympathized. He followed after them and caught
them up; then he brought them back and clothed them again as if nothing had
happened. Naturally his friends remonstrated. They thought Camillus had not
noticed what the rascals had done, and told him, bidding him leave them to their
fate. But Camillus did not change.

“What, my brothers,” he replied, “do you see nothing but the rags of these
poor creatures? And do you see nothing beneath the rags but the poor creatures
themselves? St. Gregory gave to a man in rags, but the man was Jesus Christ
Himself.”

This story is only one of many. Of all the great apostles of charity perhaps
there is none of whom so many stories are told of extreme generosity to the
poorest of the poor. And we in modern times have reason to preserve the memory
of Camillus, for we owe him two great debts. In the first place he may be said
to be the founder of the modern nursing spirit; in the second place, without any
doubt, we are indebted to him for the institution of the Red Cross. When the
Order which he founded was formally approved by the Pope, that its members might
be distinguished from other regulars, Camillus asked that they might be
permitted to wear a red cross on their cassock and mantle. By an apostolic
brief, dated 26th June, 1586, the permission was granted; and three days later,
on the Feast of Ss. Peter and Paul, Camillus with a few of his followers came to
St. Peter’s, each wearing the red cross, and there dedicated themselves and
their work to God for all time.

But the charity of Camillus was not confined only to the sick and dying; it
spread out to every phase of wretched humanity, no matter where he found it. As
he grew older he seemed to recall with greater vividness the miseries of his
early days; often enough, when his companions or others ventured to protest
against what seemed to them excess, he would only answer that he himself had
once been in the same or greater need, and would go on as before. When he
traveled, he invariably filled his purse with small coins, to be given to
beggars on the way; sometimes, for the same purpose, he would have bags of bread
tied to his saddle. He would imitate literally the Samaritan in the Gospel; if
he found a sufferer on the road, he would take him to the nearest inn, have him
cared for, and leave behind money for his maintenance while he stayed. Indeed,
this constant habit of paying for the needs of others whom he met anywhere, and
who seemed in any way poorer than himself, was often a source of no small
embarrassment to those who traveled with him. Camillus never seemed to care; he
was always giving; when his stock ran out he would keep an account of the needs
of others and would send them shoes, and clothes, and the like as soon as he was
able. Not even the poverty of his own house would stop him; once when a
father-prefect had forbidden the distribution of bread at the gate, because
there was not enough for the community, Camillus bade him revoke his order.

“Did you sow and reap this bread?” he asked him. “I tell you, that if you
will not do good to the poor, God will not do good to you; in the hour of your
death it shall be measured out to you with the same measure with which you have
measured out to such as these.”

And again, when his disciples were afraid of his seemingly reckless giving,
he said to them:

“Trust in God, O cowards, and cast your bread into the river of life; soon
you shall find it in the ocean of eternity.”

Or when at least they suggested that it was enough to help those who came to
them, he said:

“If no poor could be found in the world, men ought to go in search of them,
and dig them up from underground to do them good, and to be merciful to
them.”

Indeed, if one may distinguish the charity of Camillus from that of any hero
of his class it was specially this: he was for ever “digging out the poor from
underground to do them good.” No one knew the slums or the ghetto of Rome better
than Camillus; and all whom he found there, Christians or Jews or Turks, were
all the same to him. He frequented the prisons; he would shave and wash the
wretched convicts, and bade his companions do the same; he had special care of
those condemned to death. Even the undiscovered poor did not escape him; he
would inquire from neighbors whether they knew of widows or children in
straitened circumstances, and when he found them those widows and children would
find parcels of money and clothes coming to them from they knew not where.

Lastly we must mention his care of the very animals. He once found a newborn
lamb lying in a ditch, apparently forgotten by the shepherds. He got off his
horse, picked up the lamb and carried it in his cloak to the nearest sheepfold,
where he gave it to those who would look after it. Another time he came across a
dog with a broken leg. He cared for it and fed it regularly; when he had to
leave the place he asked others to continue to look after it.

“I, too, have had a bad leg,” he said; “and I know the misery of not being
able to walk. This is a creature of God, and a faithful creature, too. If I am
as faithful to my master as a dog is to his, I shall do very well.”

As we read incidents and sayings like these we seem to see the secret of the
sanctity of Camillus; a depth of human sympathy, and virility, and love of life
itself, which was at once the cause of his early wanderings and of his later
heroism. In all greatness there is a certain disregard of consequences, be it in
good or in evil; we say that the greatest mountains cast the deepest shadows. So
was it with Camillus. In his early years this disregard led him to choose the
life he did; later it would almost seem that it left him without any power to
choose for himself at all. But one day, on a sudden, he seemed to awake. He saw
something he had not seen before; he felt within himself a power to be and do
which was not his own. Up to that time he had often tried and failed; from that
moment he failed no more. He made many mistakes; for years he was compelled to
grope about; feeling his way, not knowing where he would end, perhaps not
altogether caring. Still, during those years of groping it is clear that his
willpower was being strengthened every day. It is not a little significant that
whereas at the age of twenty-three he had not the will to resist a fellow-tramp,
when he was thirty he could hold his own conviction against even a St. Philip
Neri.

Once this willpower had been gained the rest of the growth of Camillus is
comparatively easy to explain. He was a soldier by profession, for whom life had
no surprises, to whom no degree of degradation came as a shock; he had gone
through the worst and he knew. But he also knew that however low a man may fall
he remains still a man; when he himself had been at his lowest he had never
quite lost the memory of better things, nor the vague desire that he might be
other than he was. From his own experience he was sure that the most wretched of
men was more to be pitied than to be condemned; and if to be pitied, then to be
helped if that was possible. With this knowledge, burnt into his soul during ten
bitter years, and with the will now developed to act, the hero latent in
Camillus began to appear. Nothing could stop him; not the anxious warning of a
saint, not the discouragement of religious superiors, not the appeals of
seculars who bade him be content with the good he was doing, not his own want of
education, which seemed to exclude all possibility of the priesthood, not his
naturally passionate nature, signs of which are manifest in him to the end. Like
other saints, he began with nothing; as with them, the bread he gave multiplied
within his hands; even more than has been the case with most saints, the stream
he has set flowing has not been confined within the limits of a religious Order,
but has overflowed its banks, and has materially affected the whole of our
civilization.

Such has been the working of the grace of God in and through Camillus de
Lellis, the trooper, the tramp. He founded his Congregation, and it was
approved, in 1586, when he was thirty-six years of age. It was raised to the
rank of an Order in 1591, and Camillus was appointed its first General. He held
that office till 1607, when he persuaded his brethren, and the ecclesiastical
authorities, to allow him to resign. He lived for seven years more, a humble
subject in the Order which he himself had founded and, as is not uncommon in the
lives of saints, if we may judge from certain signs, they were not the happiest
years of his life. In 1613 it became evident to himself and to his brethren that
he could not live much longer, and at his own request he was taken to Rome, that
he might die in the Holy City. But his preparation for death was characteristic
of his life; so long as he could drag himself about he could not be kept from
visiting the hospitals. When he could no longer go out, he still continued to
visit the sick in his own house; and when that became impossible, then he set
himself to writing many letters, to the many in the world who had helped him
with their alms, and to his own brethren, that they might continue the good
work. For himself, he did not forget what he had been.

“I beseech you on my knees to pray for me,” he said to the General of the
Carmelites, who visited him on his death-bed, “for I have been a great sinner, a
gambler, and a man of bad life.”

As his mind began to wander it always went in the direction of God’s mercy;
he seemed never to tire of thanking Him for all He had done, through the merits
of the Precious Blood of Christ. At length the end came. He stretched out his
arms in the form of a cross, pronounced again his thanksgiving for the Blood of
Christ, and died. It was in the evening of July 14th, 1614.


The Seven Sundays in honor of St. Camillus

The Sovereign Pontiff Pius IX., by a decree of the S. Congr. of
Indulgences, August 8, 1853, granted, at the prayer of the Clerks Regulars,
ministers of the sick, thereby to augment devotion towards this Saint –
i. An indulgence of seven years and seven quarantines, whenever any one shall, at any
time of the year, in public or in private, practise the pious exercise of
keeping seven Sundays in honour of St. Camillus, saying some devout prayer in
honour of this Saint. This Indulgence may be gained on each of these Sundays,
provided the prayer be said with contrite heart.
ii. A plenary indulgence,
instead of the seven years &c., on the seventh Sunday, to all the faithful
who, after Confession and Communion, and having said the prayer as above, shall
visit a church or public oratory and pray there according to the intention of
his Holiness.

 

200 Days, once a day. (See Instructions.) 348 Leo XIII, February 27, 1894.

 

GLORIOUS St Camillus, special protector of poor sick people, who for forty years, with a charity truly heroic, didst devote thyself to alleviating their spiritual and corporal miseries; be pleased to succour them still more generously, now that thou art happy in Heaven and that they have been confided by the Church to thy powerful protection. Obtain for them from GOD either that they may be healed of the evils from which they are suffering, or that by patience and Christian resignation they may be sanctified and strengthened in the hour of their death; and obtain also for us the grace to live and die, after thy example, in the practice of divine love. Amen. PATER, Ave.

 

Feast Day of Saint Bonaventure Thursday, Jul 14 2011 

St. Bonaventure

(1221-1274)

The Seraphic Doctor

Feast Day:  July 14

Oremus.
Deus, qui pópulo tuo ætérnæ salútis
beátum Bonaventúram minístrum tribuísti : præsta, quæsumus ; ut, quem Doctórem
vitæ habúimus in terris, intercessórem habére mereámur in cælis.  Per
Dóminum Christum nostrum. Amen.
Let us pray.
O God, by whose providence
blessed Bonaventure was sent to guide thy people in the way of everlasting
salvation : grant we beseech thee, that as we have learned of him the doctrine
of life on earth, so we may be found worthy to have him for our advocate in
heaven.  Through Jesus Christ, Our Lord. Amen.

A contemporary of St. Thomas Aquinas, a brilliant scholar at the University of Paris, General of the Franciscan Order, and Cardinal of Albano, St. Bonaventure is a major figure in philosophy as well as theology and considered, after St. Francis, the second founder of the Order.

      The two leading Doctors of the Church, Bonaventure and Thomas Aquinas, received their degrees together at the University of Paris,  and were both influenced strongly by Aristotelian and Augustinian philosophy.  While St. Thomas Aquinas worked in a systematic, scientific manner, Bonaventure, his intellectual equal, was drawn to Platonism (known to him through Dionysus) and to the mystical and intuitive
aspects of spiritual apprehension.  His great insight occurred as a result of receiving a mystical vision, as he himself describes in his masterwork, Journey of the Mind to God (Itinerarium mentis in Deum, 1259).  On St. Francis’ feast day, Bonaventure climbed Mount Alverna where, thirty-three years earlier, St. Francis had experienced an ecstacy:

Francis saw a Seraph with six fiery wings descend from the heights of heaven. And when the Seraph (came near) the man of God, there appeared between [the Seraph’s] wings the figure of a man crucified, with his hands and feet extended [as if] fastened to a cross. When Francis saw this, he was overwhelmed with a mixture of joy and sorrow. Francis felt joy because of the gracious way that Christ looked at him, but the fact that Jesus was fastened to a cross pierced Francis’ soul with sorrow.

(Saint Bonaventure, The Life of St. Francis, 1263)

When Bonaventure climbed Mount Alverna to meditate, he miraculously shared and understood the significance of St. Francis’ vision:

I ascended to Mount Alverna as to a quiet place, with the desire of seeking spiritual peace; and staying there, while I meditated on the ascent of the mind to God, amongst other things there occurred that miracle which happened in the same place to the blessed Francis himself, the vision namely of the winged Seraph in the likeness of the Crucified. While looking upon this vision, I immediately saw that it signified the suspension of our Father himself in contemplation and the way by which we come to Him. For by those six wings are rightly to be understood the six stages of illumination by which the soul, as if by steps or progressive movements, is disposed to pass into peace by ecstatic elevations of Christian wisdom. (Saint Bonaventure, The Journey of the Mind to God)

The six wings of the seraphs in Bonaventure’s apprehension indicate the signs by which the mind approaches and enters into the knowledge of God.  Beneath the first and lowest pair of seraph wings are the signature footprints (vestigia) or shadows (umbra) of God’s act of creation; one wing is the sensible or  physical universe, the other is the sentient or biological universe. The second pair of wings frame the image of God in humanity, knowable in two ways, through the natural capacity of the human mind and through the life of grace operating in human activity. These first two pairs of wings guide the mind to God along paths of causality and similitude.  The final and highest pair of wings reveals God Himself, as the divine nature is made known in the twin paths of reason and of faith.  In explicating each aspect of this seraphic vision of theology, Bonaventure synthesizes the achievements reached by physics, phenomenology, theories of cognition and epistemology at his historical moment.  The seraphic vision is not simply metaphysical poetry, but a tremendous philosophical achievement:  “The fullest development of the neoplatonic approach to God stood ready to be realized, when all three routes, the aitiological, illuminationist, and ontological, would be scouted out by one and the same philosophical mind. That mind was not Augustine’s or Anselm’s but Bonaventure’s.”
(Noone, Tim and Houser, R. E., “Saint Bonaventure”, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2010 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.),URL=<http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2010/entries/bonaventure/&gt;.)

At the height of his academic career and at the relatively young age of 35, St. Bonaventure was called to leadership in the order, and from this point onward, his writing necessarily becomes focused on spiritual guidance and instruction for the religious life, but it is no less profound for this.  This moment in history was critical for the development of the Franciscan order, which, even before the end of St. Francis’ life, had become vexed by internal divisions and disputes about the stringency of the vows of poverty.  In addition, the Mendicant Controversy was at its height, preventing St. Thomas Aquinas and St. Bonaventure from receiving their Doctorates and fully participating in the academic life.  Bonaventure was particularly eloquent in defending the Franciscan Order against the “anti-mendicants” (“On the Poverty of the Lord Jesus”) and his leadership as General of the Friars Minor effectively unified the order, which attained its position in the church and spread throughout the world under his guidance.

His preaching on the reunification of the Eastern and Western churches at the Second Council of Lyons was so powerful that he was called the “Voice and Soul” of the Council. An agreement was reached for reunification through St. Bonaventure’s efforts and the Pope offered a special mass of thanksgiving on the feast of Saints Peter and Paul (which occurred during the Council).  At this mass, the Gospel and Creed of the mass were sung in both Latin and Greek and the filioque (the clause in the Nicene Creed that had divided the church) was recited three times by all in unison.  St. Bonaventure’s exertions on behalf of the broken church were so taxing to his health that he succumbed to a sudden illness and died in Lyons before the Council had concluded. He died a heroic champion of the Church, received last rites from the Pope and was attended at his requiem in great pomp and circumstance by the leaders of the church gathered for the Council.  He was canonized within 8 years by Pope Sixtus IV and pronounced the “co-equal” of St. Thomas Aquinas by Pope Sixtus V, who granted him the epithet by which he continues to be known: “the seraphic doctor.”

According to his biographers, as St. Bonaventure lay dying, he gazed steadily at the crucifix, his most beloved spiritual practice which he believed to be the path to wisdom. When St. Thomas Aquinas once asked him where he acquired the spiritual wisdom that graced his erudition, St. Bonaventure replied by pointing to his crucifix.  The revelation of the six-winged seraph containing the form of Our crucified Lord was the foundation of his mystical theology: “He who desires to go on advancing from virtue to virtue, from grace to grace, should meditate continually on the Passion of Jesus. There is no practice more profitable for the entire sanctification of the soul than the frequent meditation of the sufferings of Jesus Christ.”

St. Bonaventure was buried at Lyons until his reliquary was looted, his relics burned and thrown into the River Soane by Calvinists. Those of his relics which had already been translated elsewhere escaped this desecration and destruction.


 

ORATIAE SANCTI BONAVENTURAE

*

PRAYERS OF SAINT BONAVENTURE

 

 

Domine Sancte, Pater Omnipotens (O Holy Lord, Father Almighty)

Domine sancte, Pater omnipotens, aeterne Deus, propter tuam largitatem et Filii tui, qui pro me sustinuit passionem et mortem, et Matris eius excellentissimam sanctitatem, atque omnium Sanctorum merita, concede mihi peccatori, et omni tuo beneficio indigno, ut te solum diligam, tuum amorem semper sitiam, beneficium passionis continuo in corde Domine sancte, Pater omnipotens, aeterne Deus, propter tuam largitatem et Filii tui, qui pro me sustinuit passionemet mortem, et Matris eius excellentissimam sanctitatem, atque omnium Sanctorum merita, concede habeam, meam miseriam recognoscam, et ab omnibus conculari et contemni cupiam;  nihil me contristet nisi culpa. Amen.

O holy Lord, Father almighty, everlasting God, for the sake of Thy bounty and that of Thy Son, who for me endured suffering and death; for the sake of the most excellent holiness of His Mother and the merits of all the Saints, grant unto me a sinner, unworthy of all Thy blessings, that I may love Thee only, may ever thirst for Thy love, may have continually in my heart the benefits of Thy passion, may acknowledge my own wretchedness and may desire to be trampled upon and be despised by all men; let nothing grieve me save guilt. Amen.

 [100 days, said daily]

Prayer After Communion

Transfige, dulcissime Domine Iesu, medullas et viscera animae meae suavissimo ac saluberrimo amoris tui vulnere, vera serenaque et apostolica sanctissima caritate, ut langueat et liquefiat anima mea solo semper amore et desiderio tui, te concupiscat et deficiat in atria tua, cupiat dissolvi et esse tecum.

Da ut anima mea te esuriat, panem Angelorum, refectionem animarum sanctarum; panem nostrum cotidianum, supersubstantialem, habentem omnem dulcedinem et saporem, et omne delectamentum suavitatis. Te, in quem desiderant Angeli prospicere, semper esuriat et comedat cor meum, et dulcedine saporis tui repleantur viscera animae meae; te semper sitiat fontem vitae, fontem sapientiae et scientiae, fontem aeterni luminis, torrentem voluptatis, ubertatem domus Dei.

Te semper ambiat, te quaerat, te inveniat, ad te tendat, ad te perveniat, te
meditetur, te loquatur, et omnia operetur in laudem et gloriam nominis tui, cum humilitate et discretione, cum dilectione, et delectatione, cum facilitate et affectu, cum perseverantia usque in finem; ut tu sis solus semper spes mea, tota fiducia mea, divitiae meae, delectatio mea, iucunditas mea, gaudium meum, quies et tranquillitas mea, pax mea, suavitas mea, odor meus, dulcedo mea, cibus meus, refectio mea, refugium meum, auxilium meum, sapientia mea, portio mea,
possessio mea, thesaurus meus, in quo fixa et firma et immobiliter semper sint radicata mens mea et cor meum. Amen.

Pierce, O most Sweet Lord Jesus, my inmost soul with the most joyous and healthful wound of Thy love, with true, serene, and most holy apostolic charity, that my soul may ever languish and melt with love and longing for Thee, that it may yearn for Thee and faint for Thy courts, and long to be dissolved and to be with Thee.

Grant that my soul may hunger after Thee, the bread of angels, the refreshment of holy souls, our daily and supersubstantial bread, having all sweetness and savor and every delight of taste; let my heart ever hunger after and feed upon Thee, upon whom the angels desire to look, and may my inmost soul be filled with the sweetness of Thy savor; may it ever thirst after Thee, the fountain of life, the fountain of wisdom and knowledge, the fountain of eternal light, the torrent of pleasure, the richness of the house of God.

May it ever compass Thee, seek Thee, find Thee, run to Thee, attain Thee, meditate upon Thee, speak of Thee, and do all things to the praise and glory of Thy name, with humility and discretion, with love and delight, with ease and affection, and with perseverance unto the end; may Thou alone be ever my hope, my entire assurance, my riches, my delight, my pleasure, my joy, my rest and tranquillity, my peace, my sweetness, my fragrance, my sweet savor, my food, my refreshment, my refuge, my help, my wisdom, my portion, my possession and my treasure, in whom may my mind and my heart be fixed and firmly rooted immovably
henceforth and for ever. Amen.


The Twelve Works of our Guardian Angel

by

St. Bonaventure of Bagnoregio, OFM

Doctor of the Church

According to Sacred Scripture there are twelve works of
charity which our guardian Angel does for us.

The first is to rebuke us for our faults. According to the book of Judges, chapter 2, verse 1: The Angel of the Lord ascends from Galgala to the place of those weeping and says: “I have led you forth from theland of Egypt . . .And you have not heard my voice.”

The second is to absolve us from the bonds of our sins. According to book of Acts, chapter 12, verse 7: The Angel stood by. . . and the chains fell from his hands,” yet this must be understood as disposing this to happen.

 The third is to take away from us those things impeding our progress in goodness, which is signified in the book of Exodus, chapter 12, verse 12: where the Angel struck the first born ofEgypt.

The fourth is to constrain those demons afflicting us, according to the book of Tobias, chapter 12, verse 3: “He chased the demon from my wife”, says Tobias of the Archangel St. Raphael.

The fifth is to teach us,  according to the book of Daniel, chapter 9, verse 22: “Now I have entered, to teach you, and so that you might understand.”

The sixth is to reveal secrets, for according to the book of Genesis, chapter 18, verse 17, the three Angels expressed the Mystery of the Trinity and Unity, after which God said: “Can I conceal from Abraham what I am about to do?”

The seventh is to console, according to the book of Tobias, chapter 5, verse 13: “Be of a strong spirit, it is nigh, that you are to be cured by God…”

The eighth is to comfort us on the way to God, according to third book of Kings, chapter 19, verse 7: “Rise and eat, for a grand way remains for you.”

The ninth is to lead us forth on this way and to conduct us back to God, according to the book of Tobias, chapter 5, verse 15: “I shall lead, and I shall lead him back…”

The tenth is to cast down our enemies, according the book of Isaiah, chapter 37, verse 36: Having entered the Angel of the Lord struck upon the camps of the Assyrians…

The eleventh, to mitigate our temptations; and this is signified in the book of Genesis, chapter 32, verse 24, where Jacob wrestled with the Angel, and was comforted after the match, having accepted his blessing, the nerve of his femur withered up.

The twelfth is to pray for us and to carry our prayers to God, according to the book of Tobias, chapter 12, verse 12:  “When you were praying with tears . . . I offered your prayer.”

All of these are the effects of our guardian Angel’s care of us, on account of which we ought to be submissive and grateful both to God and the Holy Angels.


Further online reading about St. Bonaventure:

The most comprehensive  resource for St. Bonaventure’s writings, biographies, prayers:

The Internet Guide to St. Bonaventurehttp://www.franciscan-archive.org/bonaventure

Excellent article in Faith Magazine summarizing St. Bonaventure’s philosophical achievements:

http://www.faith.org.uk/Publications/Magazines/Mar05/Mar05TillYouLiveInLifeSoBrilliant.htm

Stanford University Philosophical Encyclopediahttp://plato.stanford.edu/entries/bonaventure

“The Life of Saint
Bonaventure,” from Butler’s Lives of the Saintshttp://www.bartleby.com/210/7/141.html#txt1

Homily on St. Bonaventure:

http://youtube/UAAOGpiFyGo

St. Bonaventure’s sacrificial dedication to the reunification of the Eastern and Western churches, the cause he preached at the Second Council of Lyons, and in which cause he died, inspires us to ask his continued intercession for this intention today, according to the prayer of Our Lord, “Ut unum sint…”