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Saint Anthony
of Padua
Anthony was born in the year 1195 at Lisbon, the capital of Portugal, where
his
father was a captain in the royal army. Already at the age of fifteen
years the youth had entered the Congregation of Canons Regular of St.
Augustine, and was devoting himself with
great earnestness to study and to the
practice of piety in the monastery at Coimbra, when a significant event, which
occurred in the year 1220, changed his entire career.
The relics of St. Berard and companions, the first martyrs of the
Franciscan Order, were being brought from Africa to Coimbra. At
the sight of them, Anthony was seized with an intense desire to suffer
martyrdom as a Franciscan missionary in Africa. In response to his repeated
and humble petitions, the permission of his superiors to transfer to the
Franciscan Order was reluctantly given. At his departure, one of
the canons said to him ironically, "Go, then, perhaps you will become a saint
in the new order." Anthony replied, "Brother, when you hear that I have
become a saint, you will praise God for it."
In the quiet little Franciscan convent at Coimbra he received a friendly
reception, and in the very same year his earnest wish to be sent to the
missions in Africa was fulfilled. But God had decreed otherwise.
Anthony scarcely set foot on African soil when he was seized with a
grievous illness. Even after recovering from it, he was so weak that,
resigning himself to the will of God, he boarded a boat back to Portugal.
But a storm drove the ship to the coast of Sicily, and Anthony went to
Assisi, where the general chapter of the order was held in May, 1221.
As he still looked weak and sickly,
and gave no evidence of his scholarship, no one paid any attention to the
stranger until Father Gratian, provincial of Romagna, had compassion on him
and sent him to the quiet little convent near Forli. There Anthony remained
nine months occupied in the lowliest duties of the kitchen and convent, and to
his heart's content he practiced interior as well as exterior mortification.
But the hidden jewel was soon to
appear in all its brilliance. Anthony was sent to Forli with some other
brethren, to attend the ceremony of ordination. At the convent
there the superior wanted somebody to give an address for the occasion.
Everybody excused himself, saying that he was not prepared, until Anthony was
finally asked to give it. When he, too, excused himself most
humbly, his superior ordered him by virtue of the vow of obedience to give the
sermon. Anthony began to speak in a very reserved manner; but soon holy
animation seized him, and he spoke with such eloquence, learning, and unction
that everybody was fairly amazed.
When St. Francis was informed of
the event, he gave Anthony the mission to preach all over Italy. At the
request of the brethren, Anthony was later commissioned also to teach
theology, "but in such a manner, St. Francis distinctly wrote, "that the
spirit of prayer be not extinguished either in yourself or in the other
brethren."
St. Anthony himself placed greater
value on the salvation of souls than on learning. For that reason he never
ceased to exercise his office as preacher along with the work of teaching.
The concourse of hearers was sometimes so great that no church was
large enough to accommodate the audiences and he had to preach in the open
air. He wrought veritable miracles of conversion. Deadly
enemies were reconciled with each other. Thieves and usurers made restitution
of their ill gotten goods. Calumniators and detractors recanted and
apologized. He was so energetic in defending the truths of the Catholic Faith
that many heretics re-entered the pale of the Church, so that Pope Gregory IX
called him "the ark of the covenant."
Once he was preaching at Rimini on the seacoast. He noticed that a group of
heretics turned their backs to him and started to leave.
Promptly the preacher turned to the sea and called out to the fishes: "Since
the heretics do not wish to listen to me, do you come and listen to me!" And
marvelous to say, shoals of fish came swimming and thrust their heads out of
the water as if to hear the preacher. At this the heretics fell
at Anthony's feet and begged to be instructed in the truth.
The blessings of St. Anthony's
preaching were not confined to Italy. St. Francis sent him to France, where
for about three years (1225-1227) he labored with blessed results in the
convents of his order as well as in the pulpit. In all his
labors he never forgot the admonition of his spiritual Father, that the spirit
of prayer must not be extinguished. If he spent the day in teaching, and
heard the confessions of sinners till late in the evening, then many hours of
the night were spent in intimate union with God.
Once a man, at whose home Anthony
was spending the night, came upon the saint and found him holding in his arms
a child of unspeakable beauty surrounded with heavenly light. It was the
Child Jesus.
In 1227, Anthony was elected minister provincial of upper Italy; and then he
resumed the work of preaching. Due to his taxing labors and his austere
practice of penance, he soon felt his strength so spent that he prepared
himself for death. After receiving the last sacraments he kept
looking upward with a smile on his countenance. When he was asked what he saw
there, he answered, "I see my Lord." Then he breathed forth his
soul on June 13, 1231, being only 36 years old. Soon the children in the
streets of the city of Padua were crying, "The saint is dead.
Anthony is dead."
Pope Gregory IX enrolled him among the saints in the very next year. At Padua
a magnificent basilica was built in his honor, his holy relics
were entombed there in 1263. From the time of his death up to the present
day, countless miracles have occurred through St. Anthony's intercession, so
that he is known as the Wonder Worker. In 1946 he was also
declared a Doctor of the Church.
ON THE VENERATION OF ST. ANTHONY
1. Consider how highly St. Anthony
is honored by Holy Church. His feast is celebrated by the whole Catholic
Church, and the priests celebrate holy Mass in his honor. In
Franciscan churches, not only is his feast observed with great solemnity, but
every Tuesday devotions in his honor are conducted before the exposed Blessed
Sacrament, at which devotion all the faithful can gain a plenary indulgence.
In Padua, where a magnificent basilica has been erected in his honor, he is
called the Saint, as if there were no other that can compare with him, as when
we style God's Mother the Holy Virgin. Among Catholics there is
hardly anyone who does not know the dear saint with the Infant Jesus. --
Do you pay him due honor? Do you use the opportunity to gain the
indulgence on Tuesday?
2.
Consider that, judging by the measure with which God permits St. Anthony to be
honored here on earth, his power in heaven must be very great.
The experience of the whole Catholic world testifies to the fact. From the day
of his death to the present time, he has been invoked in the most diverse
needs, and these prayers are answered in an almost remarkable manner. --
Have you not had the experience yourself? Call upon him with
confidence in every necessity, and in case of serious trouble make the
devotion of the nine Tuesdays.
3. Consider that in a special way
St. Anthony is invoked as the restorer of lost objects. God
usually gives the saints a power of intercession in keeping with the way by
which they were distinguished in life. Now Anthony once missed a book of the
Psalms which he valued very highly because he had written so many comments on
the Psalms in it. He prayed earnestly to his dear Jesus to
restore the book to him, and behold, soon afterwards a young man who had taken
the book came to him, driven by some indescribable fear, and brought it back
to him. Pray to St. Anthony and to the Divine Child with similar fervor, and
you will experience his power. But let us not only pray for lost temporal
things, but particularly for the more precious gifts of the soul.
For example, let us pray for that devotion we used to have and have
lost, for our lost patience, our lost zeal, and for all that is good. May he
gladden us by restoring it so that we may one day rejoice with him in eternal
bliss.
PRAYER OF THE CHURCH
O God, may the votive commemoration of St. Anthony, your
confessor and doctor, be a joy to your Church, that she may always be
fortified with spiritual assistance and deserve to enjoy eternal happiness.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
from THE FRANCISCAN BOOK OF SAINTS
edited by Marion Habig, ofm
© 1959 Franciscan Herald Press
used with written permission from the publisher
(Forwarded to fraternity by NAFRA)
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