Quotes in Tamil

சிருஷ்டிகளை எவ்வளவுக்கு அதிகமாய் நேசிப்போமோ அவ்வளவுக்கும் சர்வேஸ்வரனை அற்பமாய் நேசிப்போம்

- அர்ச். பிலிப்புநேரி

"சிருஷ்டிகளில் நின்று உங்களிருதயத்தை யகற்றி, கடவுளைத் தேடுங்கள். அப்போது அவரைக் காண்பீர்கள்

- அர்ச். தெரேசம்மாள் -

சர்வேஸ்வரனுக்குச் சொந்தமாயிராத அற்ப நரம்பிழை முதலாய் என்னிருதயத்தில் இருப்பதாகக் கண்டால் உடனே அதை அறுத்து எறிந்து போடுவேன்

- அர்ச். பிராஞ்சீஸ்கு சலேசியார்

சனி, 22 ஜூன், 2024

Lives of Saints - Saint John Francis Regis

 Jesuit, apostle of Vivarais and Velay (1597–1640)

Celebration on june 16th.

Among the many Saints that the Society of Jesus has donated to the’Church, John Francis Regis is one of the most illustrious. His way was quite different from that of the religious of his Order; certain traits of’ of his career, which are also told of’other Saints, might shock us, but, in the circumstances of time and places where God placed him, he had a misdiction to please; he had to acquit himself with admirable zeal, perfect abnegation and unlimited obedience.

Jean-Francois Regis was born on January 31, 1597 in Fontcouverte, the current diocese of Carcassonne. His parents were people of small nobility, having an easy situation, and enjoying the consideration. His family declared themselves by their loyalty to the Catholic faith in this country turned upside down by the struggles against the Huguesnots, and himself lost a brother to the diocese of Villemur, at the current diocese of Toulouse.

First years.

From his early childhood he knew the sweetness of piety and the love of God. At the age of five he was so deep struck by the thought of the loaves of hell that he expressed to his mother with terror the thought of damnation. He had no taste for the amusements of children his age, preferring serious things and occupying himself only with exercises of piety. Often he would shut himself up in a chapel, and there, giving himself over to the sweetness of contemplation, he would forget himself in the presence of Our Lord.

His parents had given him a tutor with a brusque and gloomy temper; the timid and modest child suffered much from this direction, but the day the master knew how to find the way to the child's heart, he made rapid progress.

Soon, the Jesuits having opened classes in Beziers, he was embedded to them around 1611, and his piety only developed more and more. He had a tender devotion to the Holy Virgin and was promptly received into one of those pious associations erected in religious colleges, and intended to honor the Mother of the Savior. He had great confidence in his guardian angel, to whom he always believed himself unharmed for having escaped from a great peril.

The vocation.

His vocation was revealed early in the gentleman and salvation influence he was able to take over his fellow students, who were scattered in small groups, according to custom, in private houses where they boarded. At first, some mockers ridiculed his religious practices; soon, they recognized the power of his virtue, and far from distancing themselves from their pious companion, they drew so close to them that Jean-Francois won their souls. For the five or six schoolchildren with whom he lived, he composed a written rule, in which the hours of study were fixed, useless conversations forbidden; a book of piety was read during meals, an examination of conscience was made in the evening, and on Sunday all received Holy Communion.

The pious young man was at this time, it seems, tested by a serious illness. Having recovered his health, he thought of giving himself to God in a more complete way and made a retreat to know his vocation. He felt urged to enter the Society of Jesus. His confessor having urged him to follow his inspiration, Jean-Francois entered the novitiate of Toulouse on December 8, 1616.

The novitiate.

From the first days he was admired by the most fervent people. Nothing could disturb his desire for constant union with Our Lord, and he never abandoned the thought of His presence. He applied himself particularly to practising humility, self-hatred, contempl for the world, and the pleasure of procuring the glory of God, a very great charity towards his neighbour.

The lowest jobs were those he cherished most; nothing seemed more pleasing to him than sweating the house and serving at table. His favorite occupation was definitely serving the sick.

He loved to go to hospitals and minister to the sick and the poor, choosing the most attractive ones, because he could see Jesus Christ himself in the person of those who were suffering. He treated his body very harshly, while showing kindness and gentleness to others; so his companions said that he was his own persecutor.

After two years of novitiate, Jean-Francois was sent to Cahors, where he pronounced his first vows, then to Billom, where he was a grammar teacher, and from there to Tournon to study philosophy. The taste for studies in no way weakened his piety and his taste for prayer.

First apostolate.

During his stay in Tournon, he began to evangelize the poor and the servants of the city. This preaching to the little ones and the weak followed his humble and devoted nature. On Sundays, he accompanied a religious priest from the college and trained through the surrounding villages and towns; he had a bell ring before him; he gave the children, give them catechism and teach them to love the Savior Jesus. Then, having similarly prepared the more or less neglected Christians, he brought them to the Father who heard their confession.

His taste for the apostolate finally displayed itself in a definitive way in the sanctification of the town of Andance, where his memory has remained very much alive. There, he worked wonders; drunkenness, wearing, impiety reigned supreme there; instead, Brother Regis established the practice of the sacraments, the frequent reception and worship of the Eucharist, he had the glory and happiness of instituting a brotherhood of the Blessed Sacrament there, as other Jesuits before him had done in the region; he was then only twenty-two years old.

However, the time for major works had not yet come, and his superiors thought it appropriate, in 1625, to send him to the town of Le Puy to teach literature.

Teaching.

In Le Puy, as previously in Cahors, Jean-Francois Regis thought not only of instructing his students, but also of directing them in good. He prepared his classes with the greatest care and found no surer way of teaching fruitfully than to go and pray before class time in front of the Blessed Sacrament; it was noted that, despite the great cold, in a spirit of mortification, he did not even hide his hands in his sleeves. He healed one of his sick students by making the sign of the cross over him and recommending that he hesforth be more fervent in the service of God. On feast days, he ran to exercise his apostolic zeal among the people of the countryside.

A professor in Auch in 1627, Father Regis was sent the following year to Toulouse to study theology. At night he would get up to go to the chapel; the superior was informed and, as if inspired, he replied:

– Do not disturb the conversations of this angel with his God; I am very much mistaken if his feast is not celebrated some day in the Church.

Ordination.

At the beginning of 1630, Jean-Francois received the order to prepare for the priesthood; a struggle then arose in his heart; and; zeal for the glory of God and the desire to win souls made him desire this honor, while his humility filled him with a holy fear. His hesitations fell away and he even asked, contrary to custom, that his ordination be brought forward by a year, which would forever remove from him the right to be, strictly speaking, a professed religious, without, however, ceasing to belong to the Society of Jesus; this sacrifice was accepted, and Father Jean-Francois Regis was ordered priest at the Trinity of 1631. He prepared for his first mass by fasting, prayers and mortifications.

Apostolate of the Poor.

A few months later, the young priest had to make a trip to Fontcouverte, his birthplace. He went there on family business, but the things of God occupied him much more than the interests of this world.

This is how he spent his time: in the morning he learned catechism to the children, then he preached, then he heard confessions, and towards night he gave a new instruction. In the middle of the day he visited the poor, begged for them at the homes of the rich, and then took his alms to the old and the sick.

He would continue this program in many places where his missionary career would take him.

One day, as he was crossing the streets, carrying a straw mattress on his shoulders, he was jeered by soldiers. Father Regis was filled with joy at seeing himself assimilated to his divine Master, and like him insulted. His brothers believed they should make observations to him on his conduct so far removed from the maxims of the world, and which could only be admitted by those who understand the folly of the cross:

– Exercise, they said to him, the works of mercy, but do it without covering us with shame and ridiculous.

– It is not by humbling themselves, replied Jean-Francois, that the ministers of the Gospel lose their character; and provided that God is not offended, what do the judgments of men matter!

Indeed, this boundless charity acknowledged hearts to him, and he had the consolation of bringing many souls back to God, leaving in the country, wrote his provincial, a great odor of holiness.

These consoling successes convinced his superiors to enter him exclusively with the mission of the apostolate. He began in May 1632, in the city of Montpellier, very tried by the civil wars of religion during the reign of Louis XIII, and he made many conversions there, not by brilliant sermons, but by his example and the explanation of the catechism.

He had a real preference for the poor; he often remained in his confessional until evening, without taking food, in order to hear the confessions of the unfortunate, saying: "People of quality will not lack confessors; the poor, this most abandoned portion of the flock of Jesus Christ, such must be my portion." He was not content to give them kind words, he helped them, as we have already seen him do elsewhere, with the alms he collected.

In this city, too, he worked to convert the Magdalenes, who, following the example of their holy patron, wanted to water the feet of the Savior with their tears and renounce their sins. He excelled in this task, not shrinking from any danger, not even that of covering himself with ridiculous or shame.

Missions in the South of France among the Protestants.

In 1633, Bishop de la Baume de La Suze, Bishop of Viviers, who had asked for a Jesuit missionary to accompany him through his diocese, was given Father Regis; the country had suffered greatly from religious struggles, and the memory of the two Jesuits martyred in 1593, the wounded Jacques Sales and Guillaume Saultemouche, was not about to disappear. It is true that religious from various Orders had already worked effectively for the religious recovery of the region. Alas! much remained to be done, and it was not too much of the apostolic activity and humility of Father Regis to prepare the passage of the bishop by multiplied preachings, countless confessions, which represented very many returns to God and to the Christian life. At Uzer, an excellent Catholic, Jean de Chalendar de La Motte,arranged an interview between the missionary and a noble lady, an obstinate Protestant, of pure morals and very influential; the abjuration of this person was a success for the Catholic cause.

In 1634, Father Regis asked his Superior General for the favor of leaving as a missionary for Canada; but obedience kept him at his post. The region of Routiers where he was soon sent with a companion, Father Broquin, was the corner of Vivarais that most needed the presence of an apostle; crimes of all kinds were frequent there; the life of a man was held for little. Now, the missions that the two religious give there, fighting against the wind, the snow, the ice, in some heroic conditions, accomplished wonders: after three centuries. Le Cheylard, in particular, has remained one of the most fervent points in France.

The Catechisms of Le Puy.

Several years of Father Regis' life would then pass in Le Puy, where rich and poor alike, suffering from religious ignorance, had forgotten the right path. What this population needed, as the bishop, Just de Cerres, had understood very well, was the teaching of the catechism. Now, who better than Father Regis could take on the task? Every Sunday, 4 to 5,000 people came to hear his instructions, simple, figurative, lively, presented with much of the southern eloquence; no resort to mythology or antiquity, but a popular eloquence that penetrated all minds and all hearts.

These successes of the preacher annoyed a renowned orator, who believed he should deny him to the provincial superior; the later, passing through Le Puy, insisted on seeing for himself; and; twice he went to hear Father Regis' religion class and could not help crying: the ordinary thus turned to the advantage of this marvellous catechist.

Moreover, let no one imagine this apostle passing through the streets with his eyes and ears closed; having heard a masked man blasphemy in the street, he went to slap him; he put mud in the mouth of a woman who had committed the same sin; the first immediately knelt down under the wounding of the Father; the second went away with her head bowed: for such was the prestige of his business.

But also, what mortifications he imposed on his body to keep his soul closer to God and to buy conversions! His discipline was an instrument of "carnage", and despite his harsh life and his southern origin, he never drank wine, offering to God this heroic sacrifice, given the circumstances, in order to obtain perfect chastity, without any trouble. This grace was granted to him, as it was to Saint Thomas Aquinas and to Saint Therese.

The struggles against libertinism earned him mockery, insults, death threats; he never packed down. More than one young girl owed him the preservation of her virtue; he made many a fallen woman a penitent, thanks to a house of refuge that he had founded.

Men thought in their impure passions planned to kill him: he went to meet them and encouraged them themselves to renounce their secret design and to change their life. Indeed, he sometimes read in the consciences, announced the future; it is thus that he predicted to the lace-makers of Puy, who were later to take him as Patron, that their industry, threatened by ordinances, would develop on the contrary with the royal protection: it was soon so.

A libertine draws his sword to strike the Saint.

Last illness and death.

The last part of his life was spent in winter missions; only readers who know the harshness of mountain winters can understand the difficulties and sufferings that the missionary endured. He was to die on the field of honor, during a mission he gave at La Louvesc, at Christmas time 1640. Before going there, having a presentiment of his approaching end, he went to Le Puy, put his affairs of conscience in order, settled some debts contracted for the poor and reached his work station. On the way, in terrible weather, he got lost during the night, and, despite pneumonia that had broken out, had the courage to go to La Louvesc, to preach five or six times and to hear confessions for three whole days. On the evening of the day after Christmas, he died, was taken to the rectory where he heard confessions again.But the doctors judged his condition to be hopeless.

The missionary received the Viaticum and the last sacraments with great fervor; he found relief from his sufferings only in the sight of the Crucifix. On December 31, he said to his companion: "Ah! my Brother, I see Our Lord and Our Lady opening paradise to me!" Then he shouted out: "  In manus tuas... Lord, I commend my soul into your hands." These were his last words.

He was proclaimed a saint with one voice; the earth of his tomb was removed several times as a precious relic. The people of La Louvesc, having learned that the body of the Father would be transported to Tournon or Le Puy, buried it in the earth and placed crossed iron bars above it. Thirty-six years after his death, official steps were taken for his beatification, which took place under the pontificate of Clement XI, on May 8, 1716; finally, he was canonized under that of Clement XII, on May 8, 1737.

Quite frequently we hear that at the time of his death, Saint John Francis Regis no longer belonged to the Society of Jesus, or that he was on the point of being expelled; this is a malicious statement launched, around 1716, by the Jansenist reviews and which history denies, with supporting evidence.

His wright.

During the Revolution, the relics of the Saint were put in a safe place, replaced in the church by a box of bones. They returned to their place in 1802. A magnificent basilica, built in La Louvesc by the architect Bossan, from 1865 to 1871, sees thousands of pilgrims flock there every year.

A pious association, intended to regulate illegitimate unions, was placed under the invocation of Saint John Francis Regis. This great Saint, who restored health to a pious magistrate, Mr. Gossin, vice-president of the court of the Seine, inspired him with this good thought and thus perpetuated, beyond the tomb, the good that he never ceased to do during his pilgrimage on earth.

Again under the auspices of the Zealous missionary, the double Institute of the Sisters of Saint Regis and the Ladies of the Cenacle, and that of the Sisters of the Presentation of Bourg-Saint-Andeol were born; Ven. Mother Duchesne, who propagated the Institute of the Ladies of the Sacred Heart in America, possessed her vocation to him, and it was to him that the future Saint John the Baptist Vianney had recourse, unable to advance in his studies, and who was to later, while adapting his life to the circumstances and necessities of his ministry, take him as a model.

A. D.

– Les Petits Bollandistes. – Joseph Vianet, Saint Francois Regis (Collection Les Saints). – R. P. Daubenton, S. J., Vie de saint Jean-Francis Regis (1855). – R. P. Frederic de Curley, S. J., Saint John Francis Regis (1893). – Abbot Blancard, parish priest of Fontcouverte, Saint Francis Regis, his life, his miracles (1916). – (V. S. B. P., nbones 227 And 644.)



Source: https://laportelatine.org/spiritualite/vies-de-saints/saint-jean-francois-regis


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Saints Life History - Saint Pauline de Nole

 

To ive century lived in Bordeaux an illustrious family, orirginary of Rome, that of Pontius Paulinus, former pre-fect of Gaul; it’ belonged to her the noble Paulin whose life we would like to esquisiate. ’'s life is all the more interesting because, if it predicts a few imposed chroannohlous differences to be solved, Paulin himself has filled in his writings the most circumstantial details. The great stages are moreover certain’s: thirty-six years of play and of mondaine life; forty-two of Christian life, priestly and episcopal, sanctified by the practice of the highest vers, who assure the converted’illus an empire over demons and attract him the praise of the greatest Saints; Ambrose, Jerome, Augustine, Gregory the Great.

Youth of saint Paulin. – His successes in the world.

It is therefore in Burdigala or Bordeaux that, around 353, Pontius Meropius Anicius Paulinus was born, better known in history as Paulin. His parents, who were Christians, dedicated him to St. Felix of Nole; unfortunately, following a use then too widespread, they refused to have him baptized.

As soon as’il was old enough to study, Paulin followed the courses of the’ University of Burdigala, where he had for teacher Ausone, the most famous rhetorician of his time. The master took a paternal affection for this young student, whose he noted the heinous dispositions, and he remained attached to him all his life, rejoicing in his success, even as these threatened to’ eclipse its own fame. So it was not without regrets that’il left him, when’ in 368 he had to go to Trier, called by Valentinian Ier to the functions of preceptor of Gratian, the young heir of the’empire. Paulin, then fifteen years old, expressed these regrets and contierned his evades with new masters; he then applied himself above all to philosophy, the naturelle sciences and law.

Moreover, he did not hesitate to undergo the’attraction of Rome. He probably already felt for this city the same feelings that’Ausone expressed one day in four words: « My heart, in Burdigala ; in Rome, my veneration. » His studies completed, he therefore takes the chemin of the capitale of the’empire, and, almost soearly, he sees the career of public charges open before him. Governor of the’Epire and prefect of Rome perhaps, he is certainly a superior consul in 378, then he enters the Senate and, in 380, the vow named gourever?neur of Campania.

Thus, barely twenty-seven years old, Paulin is at the height of human honors and a brilliant confession seems to him assuaged, he said, when suddenly a frightful tragedy comes to annihilate all these hopes. On June 25, 383, the’ emperor Gratian falls under the blows of an assaultsin armed by Maximus, which the legions of revolted Brittany have raised to the’empire. In this sad conjuncture, Paulin believes he must bow to circumstances. In order to protect his family from the reprisals of Maximus, he left the service of the’ emperor and returned to Aquitaine.

Voies providentielles. – The stages of’a conversion. – The baptism.

It was in Burdigala that Providence was waiting for Paulin. Already at the beginning of his visit to Campania, a first call S’ was heard. Paulin had fixed his resignation above all on Nole. Now, one day, while he was attending the feasts of Saint Felix, he had felt a prodh impression :

At the sight of the admirable works performed in your sanctuary, will he be written in his 13the chanting in honor of Saint Felix, I believed with all my heart in the veritable God and I’uvris my soul to the love of Christ.

It had been consacrcre of new birth to the martyr of Nole, had made repair the road which, from the city, led to his tom ⁇ beau and, next to it, the latter, he had built a hospice for the needy It was then only’a spark, but which, after having sunk for ten years in the heart of the young patrician, was, there will finally light the flame that will consume him without return.

God will moreover reiterate his calls. This’ is ain ⁇ si that’obligated by the duties of his charge to’ to go to Rome rather souvent, the gourosverneur of Campania, saw there Saint Jerome or at least in inten ⁇ dit to speak with enthourosiasm. There he learned the generosity of Melanie, his relative, who had left everything to lead monastic life in the East ; he renounced the noble Paula and was witness to the angelic life practiced by the matrons of the’Aventine; he noted without difficulty the defiant triumph of Christia's, without difficulty, supported by the edicts of Gratian.

All this’emut, toucha and’inclina more and more towards the religion that’ attracted it. Gratian's death was the coup de grace, but six more years had to pass before the final conversion.

The first years of Paulin's retirement in Aquitaine were troubled by many anxious ones. Suspect to the’usurper, the’ancien gourosverneur of Campania saw for a moment his confiscated property and had to make several trips to put order to his business. Sweet Providence used all these occurrences to move it little by little towards practical faith. During a trip to Spain, she saw that’he would meet a young Spaniard, named Therasia, who was Christian, and that’il would marry her. Another time, passing through Vienna, Paulin saw St. Martin of Tours, and the venerable bishop ford him miraculously and suddenly an evil of’. In Milan, the divine’action became even more visible. Paulinus knew Saint Alype, a friend of Saint Augustine, and was the future bishop of’Hippo himself. Especially,he frantically visited Saint Ambrose, coming like him from the ranks of the patriciate; he had with the’illus pontiffe repeated entretins and assisted him to the instruments that he gave to the people. Also he will write later : « J’ai always been loved by’Ambroise, and it’ is he who nourished me in faith. »

Strangely enough, these interviews with Ambrose did not’ any immediate results, and Paulin hesitated again leaning two years to make the last step. Too many links L’ still attached to the world. Staying early in Burdigala, early in one of the proscprieties of’alentour, he entered into frantic relations with Ausone, his former master, who, after the death of Gratian, had retired to Saintes, he, and he was like’a court of devoted’amis, through which he was holed up in the first rank, after Ausone, Sulpice-Severe, the future historian of the CHURCH. On the other hand, his riches allowed him to enjoy all legal pleasures, and his exquisite urbanity loved him by all. Finally, he had preserved a pro-unknown taste for pagan letters. Fortunately for him,he went back to the’ study of the phi ⁇ lo ⁇ sophie; he finally understood the rights of God over the’ man, he said, as well as the necessity of intergral christia and it came to this conclusion that’ it will later in these terms : « J’ai beaucoup studied, i’ai parcouru the cycle of all the sysctems and I’ nothing better than to believe in Christ. » The’work of grace contianua with the heartfelt and tactful exhortations of two Saints whom’il liked to count among his friends: Delphin, the’bishop of Burdigala, and Amand, venerable priest of the city and future pastor of the diocese; with the incursions repeated without being imported from Therasia, and Paulinus decided to receive baptism. At the last moment, Satan tried to make everything fail. Maximus, defeated by Theodosius, having died,the demon suggested to Paulin the inclination that, if’il condemned him, he could resume his rank at court. Thanks be to God, the converted cow, feeling himself arrived at the port, did not want to throw himself back into the open sea, and he generously triumphed over the temptation. Delphin and Amand therefore pre-prepared him for baptism, and the cereal-mohnia was made at Burdigala in 389.

Saint Paulin withdraws to Spain. – He is ordained priest.

From then on, Pauline's ascents in the ways of perdition will be constant; he made, he said himself, as « the voyager who, advancing always and never receding, never receding, one day insensibly reaches the border and fran ⁇ chit ». Leaving the pagan muse, who could no longer charm his disheveled spirit, he turned to Christian poetry. He put in verse many psalms, a life of St. John the Baptist and three admirable prayers, where he deplores his indifference. He left the bar, withdrew to the country, reduced his way of life and became more of his wealth than to do good around him. A way of life so little ordinary could not fail to’ attract to Paulin the most acerbic criticism. His manly friends haughtyly reproved them ;his comipartriots laughed at him, and their backs came to him. Ausone himself went so far as to reproach him for bowing under the yoke of Therasia.

No longer, therefore, piercing in Aquitaine the peace and rest to which he aspired, Paulin took the opportunity to seek them in Spain, where he was less known, and he retreated to Barcino, today’ Barcelona. He arrived in the neck of the year 390 and lived there three or four years. Two tests came during the’y to reach. In 392, Valentinian II was assasigned by Arbogastus and, according to Bishop Lagrange, Paulin's brother was one of the victims of this dismissal. Very affected by this death, Paulin was still affected by what this brother had experienced without leaning enough to the salvation of his soul. Also, in a letter that’il wrote to this occurrence to Delphin and Amand, he confided to them his fears, by admonishing them to pray so that God may cause wrath to the deceased. Some time later, though,a new mourning came to frighten him. He had always desired the joys of fatherhood, and the Lord had at last granted them to him; but this longed-for son lived only eight days.

From now on, detached from everything, the noble patrician N’ will aspire more than’ to the evangelical perversion. In agreement with Therasia, he no longer wished to live with her as with a sister, he put on his hair and put on the robes of the monks, then he thought of retiring to Nole, near the tom ⁇ beau of Saint Felix. He wrote to St. Jerome. The solidary of Bethlehem told him and told him to divest himself of his possessions and to devote himself to the study of the Holy Books. Paulin soon took up the work and handled the liquidation of his estates in Spain. When the people of Barcino got wind of these projects, they tried to frighten the’ execution. On Christmas Day 393, Paulin and Therasia attended the offices of the cathedral. All of a sudden,the faithful rise up and superplease the’bishop to confer on Pauline priestly’ordination, hoping otherwise to fix it in the middle of’ux. Paulin resisted first of all, judging himself unworthy of’ such an honor. He gave in and allowed himself to be ordered, but to the condition that’il would not be attached to Barcino's clergy. By giving Delphin and Amand his election to the priesthood, he was willing to offer the’ support for their prayers, because, he read, he read, « I will be your joy if to the fruits that I will wear one must reconnect me for a branch of your tree ».By giving Delphin and Amand his election to the priesthood, he was willing to offer the’ support for their prayers, because, he read, he read, « I will be your joy if to the fruits that I will wear one must reconnect me for a branch of your tree ».By giving Delphin and Amand his election to the priesthood, he was willing to offer the’ support for their prayers, because, he read, he read, « I will be your joy if to the fruits that I will wear one must reconnect me for a branch of your tree ».

Paulin was only able to leave’Spain after the Easter holidays of’an 394. Instead of going straight towards’Italy towards the Mediterranean, he will go back to Gaul, where he lives by walking past Narbonne Sulpice-Severe, who wanted to follow him, then he went to Florence, where Saint Ambrose was then holed up. The old bishop received him with open arms, and’a aggrandized him to his clergy, while allowing him freedom to resign wherever he pleased. From Florence, Paulin s’achemina to Rome. Welcomed with contempt by the pagan senateurs, his former colleagues, angryly by Pope Siricius, who irregularly disturbed his predicent ordination and its situation with regard to Therasia, the, he was received with enthousiasm by the friends of St. Jerome and St. Paul. It is easy to understand what’en such conjunctures,he did not intend to plan his stay in capitality. So he hastened to descend into Campania and to head towards Nole; he arrived at the environs of autumn’.

Saint Paulin in Nole, – Monastic life.

It was a joy for the inhabitants of the city, who still repressed the manners with which he had admired the province fifteen years ago; the’bishop of Nole, Paul, and, L’authorized to settle near the tom ⁇ beau of Saint Felix. At the height of this tom ⁇ beau, Paulin had built, we have said, a hospice for the needy. He’ raised him from’a floor, S’en reserved a wing for him and his companions, yielded the other wing to Therasia and to some pious women who’a had suicievie. He could then let escape from his heart this cry of’amour to the’ address of Saint Felix : « House, homeland, family, you keep me instead of everything. » He gave to his nouvelle remains the name of monasterio, and in fact they led about the same life as the monks of Saint Martin in Marmoutiers.We would get up before the day to sing Matins and Laides; in the evening, we would gather for Vespers. The fast was almost contianual and the refecution only occurred towards the evening; the’abstience was perpetual and the’use of the strong wine was restricted. We used the saddle of’clay or wood, we wore the shaved head, and Paulin contained the most soulful of’a tunic in goat or camel hair. Solidity was jealously guarded, and the’man of God would decide only if the harmony demanded it. It’s is indeed that’more times he welcomed in his retirement various messhers that sent him his friends from Gaul or elsewhere,’, and what’in two circumstances he gave the’hospitality to Saint Melanie and to the perrsons who accompanied him :a first time when the noble lady came back from Palestine after a long absence, then when’elle refuted in Sicily, at the time when Alaric threatened Rome. This love of solidity does NOT’ prevent Paulin from preaching sometimes the word of God to the faithful and we have of him a sermon, the only one besides which remains to us, on the’aumone. Finally, he had become accustomed to’ going to Rome every year to celebrate the feast of the Apostles Peter and Paul and to venerate their tombs.he had become accustomed to’ going to Rome every year to celebrate the feast of the Apostles Peter and Paul and to venerate their tombs.he had become accustomed to’ going to Rome every year to celebrate the feast of the Apostles Peter and Paul and to venerate their tombs.

Apart from these circumstances, Paulin was engaged in the’study and the work of the’ spirit. This period of his life that’il com ⁇ poussa for the feast of Saint Felix qua'torze hymns, full of interesting details, to rai'son of’une every year, is inclined, and that’, at the request of’a priest of Rome, he wrote the gyro-like panel of the’ Emperor Theodosius. His speech was very active; he entered into an epistolary relationship with Alype and Augustine, with Jerome, with Sulpice-Severe, who led an almost monastic life, with Delphin and Amand. In the meantime, he consoled Pammachus, son-in-law of Saint Paul, with the death of his wife Pauline, and Pneumatius, afflicted by the loss of’a son named Celsus ; he celebrates in verse the wedding of Julien with Ya and even attends it with Therasia.

To disentangle himself from his intellectual work, the venerable monk was not afraid to give his care to a small jar ⁇ din and S’ occupied with the construction of a basilic new’ in the’honor of Saint Felix. The one who until then had closed the Saint's tom ⁇ beau was dark and surrounded by old masures. Pauline stayed and added a magnificent church, accompanied by porticoes. The’edifice had three naves and three apses; at the vault were above chandeliers of’argent and Crisstal; the walls were decorated with artistic paintings.

Bishop of Nole. – Trait of heroic charity.

Paulin had been living in Nole for fifteen years and he had just lost Therasia, for which he had had until the end a fraternal affection, when Paul, the’bishop of Nole, died. A unanimous voice, the clergy and the people elected Paulin to succeed him. L’heure was critical; Alaric envahishisait the’Italy. Despite his taste for retirement, the solidary did not think he had to hide in front of the danger and he accepted the’episcopate. A few months later, in 410, Alaric seized Rome, went to’ to Nole, became master of this city and emmered a large number of priors, many of whom were sold to Africa. Among them was the only son of’a poor widow. His mother desolated came to conjure the’bishop to rake him. Paulin no longer had’argent; he sacrificed himself :he left for’Africa, preached himself to the master of the young captive whom he obtained to take the place. Marveled at the verstu of his slave nou ⁇ vel, the barbarian soon asked him who he was. Learning that Paulin is bishop, this fierce master is moved; he gives freedom to the noble priest and grants him to take with him all the captives of his diocese. When Paulin arrived at Nole, the inhabitants of the city made him a triumphal reception.the inhabitants of the city made him a triumphal reception.the inhabitants of the city made him a triumphal reception.

Saint Pauline, captive in Africa, cultivates the jarordin of his master.

The first concern of the venerable bishop was to apply himself to reparating the ruins accu ⁇ mutated by the baribars. His fame grew constantly. When Honorat founded the monastery of Lerins and’Eucher, the future bishop of Lyon, he retreated to an island near Lerins, both sent to Nole messarigers to study the kind of life that’on practised there. St. Augustine wrote to Pauline about Pelacian’heresis. The’bishop of Nole combats this capientious error which, denying the sin orirgian, led to deny the necessity of grace, and he had to excommute more than gentlemen of his priests who favored it. Finally, it’ is to Paulin that’on attribue the’ invention of bells. Not that the’use of the sonnettes has been unheard of before him, but it’ is he who, the first,would have had the’ to melt from these more voluicient instruments, the bells, which, above in the air above or next to the churches, were to call the faithful to divine services. In this purpose, he would have built the first bell tower or campairnary tower. A splendid presentation of this description takes place again in Nole on June 22 of each year, for the festival of « lis » .

On that day, in the streets of the city, a procession takes place, in which various living paintings are represented, representing the first and second episodes of the life of St. Pauline; or, in one of these paintings, thirty young people wear a huge pyrasmid of flowers, lilies specifically, and, hidden within this pyrasmid, children wave bells.

Death of saint Paulin. – Son culte.

However, despite a foolish sanity, Paulin had arrived at his seventy-seventh year. In the month of June 431, he was struck by an acute rain-fed’ and had to. He then set up an altar in his room, in order to celebrate the Holy Sacrifice again with the bishops Symmachus and Acyndine who were at his bedside. During the two days that followed, he kept on reciting Laudes and Vespers with those who surrounded him ; he re-established in his commutnion the few Pelacian priests whom’il had had to cut off and who repented; he paid a small forgotten debt with a money that was brought to him, it may be said, miraculously; saint Janvier and Saint Martin appealed to him to comfort him and, towards the evening of the third day, he atoned for it. At the moment when he renounced the last one to wish,a violent shaking shook the room where he was holed; C’, said the priest Uranius, who conveyed to us the story of this admirable death, « the angels who came to take to heaven the’soul of Paulin ».

The people of Nole and des environs rained down the holy bishop like a father, made him funereal magnificence and’ensevelit near Saint Felix, whom’il had loved so much. Later, it is not known at what occurrence, the relics of St. Pauline were transferred to Benevento, but in the year 1000 the’ Emperor Otto III, not present in this city, was, took them to Rome and placed them in the’church Saint-Barthelemy-en‑l’Ile, which he had just built. They stayed there, under the’ altar of the scallop to the left of the sanctuary, until’ at the beginning of this century.

By apostolic letters of September 18, 1908, St. Pius X renouncing the desire expressed to his predecessor by numerous superplices, accordida to the’Eglise de Nole to renounce in possession the remains of Saint Paulin. The Pope himself reserved the relics on May 14, 1909, during a ceremony which took place in the Vatican, in the Consistory Hall. They are venerated today’ under the’ altar of the left transept of the cathedral, rebuilt from top to bottom, excluding the steeple of the xiiie century, which may have been preserved. The papal docusition cited raised the’office of Saint Pauline to the double rite for the universal Church.

Th. Vettard.

– Oeuvres de saint Paulin, dans Migne, Patr. lat., t. LXI. – Lagrange, Histoire de saint Paulin de Nole (Paris, 1882). – Andre Baudrillart, Saint Paulin, bishop of Nole (Collection Les Saints, Paris, 1905). – (V. S. B. P., n° 280.)


Source: https://laportelatine.org/spiritualite/vies-de-saints/saint-paulin-de-nole?feed_id=3753

வெள்ளி, 21 ஜூன், 2024

அர்ச். கொன்சாகா ஞானப்பிரகாசியார்

ஜுன் 2️1ம் தேதி

ஸ்துதியரும், இளைஞர்களின் பாதுகாவலருமான
அர்ச். கொன்சாகா ஞானப்பிரகாசியார் திருநாள்

 

அலோஷியஸ் (ஞானப் பிரகாசியார்), காஸ்டிகிலியோனின் பிரபுவான ஃபெர்டினான்டு கொன்சாகாவிற்கு, 1568ம் வருடம்  மார்ச் 9ம் தேதி, மூத்த மகனாகப் பிறந்தார். இவர் குழந்தையாக இருந்தபோது, திவ்ய சேசுநாதருடையவும் மகா பரிசுத்த தேவமாதாவுடையவும் மகா பரிசுத்தத் திருநாமங்களையே, முதன் முதலில் உச்சரித்த வார்த்தைகளாகும். இவருக்கு 9 வயதானபோது, பரிசுத்த கன்னிமை விரத்தத்துவத்தின் நித்திய வார்த்தைப் பாட்டைக் கொடுத்தார். ஒரு விசேஷ தேவ கொடையால்,  பரிசுத்த கற்பிற்கு எதிரான சோதனைகளிலிருந்து,  பாதுகாக்கப்பட்டிருந்தார். இவர் அர்ச்சார்லஸ் பொரோமேயோவின் கரங்களிலிருந்து, புதுநன்மை வாங்கினார். இவர் மிகச் சிறிய வயதிலேயே உலகத்தைத் துறந்து சர்வேசுரனுக்காக துறவற சபையில் சேர்ந்து சந்நியாசியாக உறுதிபூண்டார். மகா பரிசுத்த தேவமாதா இவருக்குக் காட்சியளித்து, சேசு சபையில் சேரும்படி அறிவுறுத்தினார்கள். இதைக் கேட்டு அலோஷியஸின் தாயார் வெகுவாக சந்தோஷமடைந்தார்கள். ஆனால், இவருடைய தந்தை, மூன்று வருட காலம், இவர் சேசு சபையில் சேர்வதற்கு, அனுமதிக்காமலிருந்தார். இறுதியில், அலோஷியஸ் என்ற ஞானப் பிரகாசியார், தந்தையிடம் அனுமதி பெற்று, சேசுசபையில், 1585ம் வருடம் நவம்பர்.25ம் தேதி நவசந்நியாசியாக சேர்ந்தார்.

                இவர் மடத்தில் சேர்ந்து 2 வருடங்களுக்குப் பிறகு,  சேசு சபை துறவற வார்த்தைப் பாடு கொடுத்தார்.தத்துவ இயலும் வேத இயலும் கற்றார். “நம் சரீரம்,துன்புறுத்தலுக்கான  உபத்திரவப்பட்டு, சுத்திகரமாக்குவதற்காக தண்டிக்கப்பட்டு இருந்தாலொழிய, நம் மனித சுபாவம் , நாளடைவில் மெல்ல மெல்ல, அநேக வருட உழைப்பின் பலனாக துன்பப்படுகிற பழக்கத்தை இழந்து,  தன் பழைய  மோசமான நிலைமைக்குத் திரும்பி விடும் என்பதால், தபசு இல்லையென்றால், தேவ வரப்பிரசாதம் நம் சுபாவத்துடன்  போராட வேண்டியிருக்கும் என்று எனக்கு சந்தேகமாயிருக்கிறதுஎன்று இவர் கூறுவதை வழக்கமாக் கொண்டிருந்தார். “நான் ஒரு வளைந்து உருக்குலைந்த ஒரு இரும்பத் துண்டு; சரீர ஓறுத்தல், தபசு என்கிற சுத்தியலால் நேராக்கப்படும்படியாக, இந்த துறவற சபைக்கு வந்திருக்கிறேன்என்று இந்த சரீரமெடுத்த சம்மனசான அர்ச்.ஞானப்பிரகாசியார் கூறுவார். மகா பரிசுத்த தேவநற்கருணையின் மீதும், மகா பரிசுத்த தேவமாதாவின் மீதும் அலோஷியஸ் மிக ஆழ்ந்த பக்தி கொண்டிருந்தார்.

                இவர் வேத இயல் கடைசி ஆண்டு படிப்பு படிக்கும்போது, உரோமாபுரியில் விஷக்காய்ச்சல் நோய்,  கொள்ளை நோயாகப் பரவியது!இந்நோயில் விழுந்த மக்களைக் காப்பாற்றுவதற்கான பிறர்சிநேக அலுவலில் ஞானப்பிரகாசியார் ஈடுபட்டார். 1591ம் வருடம் குருமாணவர்கள் அநேகருக்கு இக்காய்ச்சல் வந்தது: இவருக்கும் காய்ச்சல் வந்தது. ஏறக்குறைய மரண விளிம்புவரை சென்றார்.சில நாட்களில் குணமடைந்தார்; ஆனால் இலேசான காய்ச்சல், மூன்று  மாத காலம் தொடர்ந்து நீடித்தது. ஆண்டவருடையவும் மகா பரிசுத்த தேவமாதாவினுடையவும், மகா பரிசுத்த திருநாமங்களை பக்திபற்றுதலுடன் உச்சரித்தபடி, 1591ம் வருடம்,  மகா பரிசுத்த தேவநற்கருணை திருநாளுடைய எட்டாம் நாளன்று,ஜுன் 20ம் தேதி நள்ளிரவில், 21ம் தேதி துவங்கிய சிறிது நேரத்தில், தனது 23வது வயதில், பாக்கியமாய் மரித்தார்.

1726ம் வருடம், டிசம்பர் 31ம் தேதி 13ம் பெனடிக்ட் பாப்பரசர் இவருக்கு அர்ச்சிஷ்டப்பட்டம் அளித்தார்.இவருடைய பரிசுத்த அருளிக்கங்கள்  உரோமாபுரியிலுள்ள அர்ச்.இஞ்ஞாசியார் தேவாலயத்தில் பூஜிதமாக ஸ்தாபிக்கப்பட்டிருக்கின்றன!

           அர்ச்.கொன்சாகா ஞானப்பிரகாசியார் ஒருபோதும் எந்த ஒரு சாவான பாவத்தினாலும் சர்வேசுரனை மனநோகச் செய்யவில்லை, என்று, இவருடைய ஆன்மகுருவான அர்ச்இராபர்ட் பெல்லார்மின், இவருக்கு அர்ச்சிஷ்டப்பட்டம் கொடுப்பதற்காக ஏற்படுத்தப்பட்டிருந்த விசாரணைக் குழுவினர் முன்பாக சாட்சியளித்தார். இருப்பினும் அரச்.ஞானப்பிரகாசியார் தனது சரீரத்தை மிகக்கடுமையாகத் தண்டித்து ஒறுத்து வந்தார். இரவு சமயங்களில் எழுந்து ஜெபிப்பார்; தன் பாவங்களுக்காக திரளாகக் கண்ணிர் சொறிந்து அழுவார்.

அர்ச். கொன்சாகா ஞானப்பிரகாசியாரின் மாசற்றதனத்தைப் பின்பற்ற இயலாவிடினும், இவர் மேற்கொண்ட சரீர ஒறுத்தல்களையும் தபசு முயற்சிகளையும் நாம் பின்பற்றி அனுசரிப்போமாக!

இவ்வளவு குறுகிய காலம் ஜீவித்தபோதிலும், அர்ச்.கொன்சாகா ஞானப்பிரகாசியார் கிறீஸ்துவிற்காக மிக பிரகாசத்துடன் தேவ சிநேகத்தினால், பற்றி எரிந்திருக்கிறார்; எனவே தான், 13ம் பெனடிக்ட் பாப்பரசர் இவருக்கு அர்ச்சிஷ்டப்பட்டம் அளித்தபோது, இவரை இளைஞர்களின் பாதுகாவலர் என்று அழைத்தார்.🌹

நம் உயர்குடிப் பிறப்பைப் பற்றி,பெருமை கொள்வதற்கான உரிமையை நமக்கு அளிப்பதற்கு , நம்மிடம் ஒன்றுமில்லை. மகா பெரிய உயர்குடி மக்களும், மிக தாழ்ந்த  வறிய மனிதர்களைப்போலவே இறந்தபிறகு, மண்ணும் தூசியுமாகவே போகின்றனர்;  இதில் எதாவது சிறப்பாகக் கூறவேண்டுமெனில்,  இளவரசர்களின் சாம்பல் அதிக துர்நாற்றம் வீசும் என்பதைத் தான் கூற வேண்டும்- அர்ச். கொன்சாகா ஞானப்பிரகாசியார்