THE LIVES OF THE SAINTS
January 4.
SAINT TITUS
(ABOUT 105.)
SAINT TITUS was born of Gentile parents, being descended from the ancient royal family of Crete. He was a favourite companion of S. Paul, who calls him his son in Christ. His virtue gained him the particular esteem of this Apostle; for we find him employed as secretary and interpreter by S. Paul; and the Apostle styles him his brother. On one occasion, when much depressed, he was consoled by the presence of Titus: "God, that comforteth those that are cast down, comforted us by the coming of Titus;" and he testified, on another occasion, that he found no rest in his spirit, because at Troas he had not met Titus.
Titus accompanied S. Paul to the Council that was held at
Jerusalem, on the subject of the Mosaic rites. Though the Apostle had consented
to the circumcision of Timothy, in order to render his ministry more
acceptable among the Jews, he would not allow the same in the case of Titus,
apprehensive of giving thereby a sanction to the faction which held to the
necessity of combining the rites of the Law with the Sacraments of the Gospel.
Towards
the close of the year 56, S. Paul sent Titus from Ephesus to Corinth, with full
commission to remedy several subjects of scandal, and to allay the dissensions
in that Church. He was there received with great respect, and was satisfied
with the penance and submission of the offenders; but could not be prevailed
upon to accept from them any present, not even so much as his own maintenance.
His love for that Church was very great, and at the request of the Corinthians,
he interceded with S. Paul for the pardon of the incestuous man whom he had
excommunicated. He was sent the same year by the Apostle, a second time, to Corinth,
to bring the alms of that Church to Jerusalem, for the relief of the necessity
of the poor Christians there. All these particulars we learn from S. Paul's two
epistles to the Corinthians.
S.
Paul, after his first imprisonment, returning from Rome into the East, made
some stay in the island of Crete, of which Rustilius, the governor, was married
to the sister of S. Titus. He consecrated his beloved disciple, Titus, to be bishop
of that island, and left him there to finish the work he had begun. "We
may form a judgment," says S. Chrysostom, "from the importance of
the charge, how great was the esteem of S. Paul for his disciple." But
the Apostle, on his return into Europe the year after, finding the loss of such a
companion too material, ordered him to meet him at Nicopolis, in Epirus, where
he intended to pass the winter, as soon as Artemas or Tychicus, whom the
Apostle was about to send to him, to take the place of the bishop during his
absence, should arrive. And when he came, he bade him assist Zenas, the
lawyer, and Apollos on their journey. From this Zenas we have certain
incidents of the life of S. Titus, which have been preserved in a fragmentary condition
in the Greek Menea.
Zenas
relates the conversion of S. Titus thus:—Titus, living in the island of Crete,
was learned in Greek literature, having been studious in youth. But the dreams
of the poets and philosophers did not satisfy the inward craving of his soul after
truth. One day, when twenty years old, he heard a voice say to him,
"Titus, depart hence and save thy soul, for the learning of the Greeks
will not profit thee unto salvation." Wondering in himself what this
could mean, he was bidden by the same voice to take up a Hebrew volume that he
had long disregarded, and open it. And the book was the Prophet Isaiah, and the
place of the Scriptures that his eye rested on was this, " Keep silence
before me, 0 islands; and let the people renew their strength : let them come
near; then let them speak," and what follows.
He
seems to have read on much of that chapter, with its promise to the isles, and
to have applied to himself the words, " Thou whom I have taken from the
ends of the earth, and called thee from the chief men thereof, and said unto
thee, Thou art my servant; I have chosen thee, and not cast thee away. Fear
thou not; for I am with thee: be not dismayed; for I am thy God: I will
strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee; yea, I will uphold thee with the right
hand of my righteousness. . . . When the poor and needy seek water, and there is none, and their tongue faileth for thirst, I the Lord will hear
them, I the God of Israel will not forsake them." These were words very
different from those of the poets of Greece, and gave an idea of God quite
other from that formed by Homer, in whose writings he had found delight; so
Titus left his Greek studies and his native island, and sought Jerusalem, the
chief city of that people of whom the prophet spake such great things. And when
he was there he saw Jesus, and heard Him teach. Perhaps he was one of those
Greeks whom S. Andrew brought to Christ. He believed, and was of the number
of the first disciples. He remained at Jerusalem after the ascension and the
descent of the Holy Ghost. After he joined S. Paul, he accompanied him in most
of his journeys. In 65, S. Paul sent him to preach the Word of God in Dalmatia,
after he had visited him in Nicopolis; but he probably was there for no great
length of time, though the Dalmatians honour him as their Apostle.
Peter
de Natalibus relates that when death approached, he saw angels coming from
heaven in a glorious train to fetch his soul, and that his face lit up with joy
at their approach, and shone with supernatural splendour. He committed his
people to God in long and earnest prayer, and then yielded up his spirit in
peace to Christ his Saviour.
The
body of S. Titus was kept, with great veneration, in the Cathedral of Gortyna;
but that city having been ruined by the Saracens, in 823, the metropolitan see
was transferred to Candia, seventeen miles from the ancient Gortyna ; there the
head of S. Titus was preserved, till it was carried off by the Venetians, and
is now among the sacred treasures of S. Mark's, at Venice.
Patron
of Candia, or Crete.
S.
DAFROSA
(A.D. 361.)
THIS
Saint was the wife of S. Flavian, a martyr. She was one of the few who suffered
in the reign of Julian, the Apostate; having been sentenced by Apronianus,
prefect of the city, in Rome, along with her daughters, Demetria and Bibiana.
S. Flavian, her husband, was crowned on the 22nd December; and she followed
him shortly. She was sent to the house of a certain Faustus, who desired to
have her in marriage; but she refused to become his wife, and converted him to
the faith. He was baptized by S. John the priest, who is commemorated on June
23rd. Faustus was executed, and his body cast to the dogs; but Dafrosa saved
it, and buried it secretly at night. Then, in a dream, her husband Flavian
appeared to her, and called her to follow him. And at the expiration of five
days, whilst engaged in prayer, she migrated to her heavenly country.
S. GREGORY OF LANGRES, R
(about a.d. 541.)
[The life of S. Gregory of Langres was written by S. Gregory of Tours, who died 591.]
Saint Gregory, one of the principal senators of Autun, in France, was appointed count of the city, and for many years administered justice with the utmost prudence and uprightness. His wife, Armentaria, was also of senatorial rank; by her he had several children, of whom Tetricus was numbered among the Saints.
After the death of his wife, having been elected by the clergy and citizens of Langres to be their bishop, he was
consecrated by the metropolitan. As bishop, his life was edifying. He was a model of humility, and sought, above all things, to conceal his acts of self-denial, and long communings with God. He ate barley bread, but that this might not be observed, he had wheat cakes piled on the table above his brown barley cakes, so that he could draw from the dish those for his own eating, whilst the others ate white bread, and supposed him to be doing the same. In like manner, at table he used a dull glass goblet, so that it might not be noticed that he drank water, whereas, the others were supplied with wine. At night, he was wont to rise from his bed, when everybody else was asleep, and steal, on tip-toe, to the baptistery of the church, where he passed several hours in prayer and singing psalms. This was long unobserved; but one night a deacon was awake, and saw the bishop rise. Wondering at his proceeding, when S. Gregory had left the dormitory, he rose also, and stole softly after him, and saw him enter the baptistery, the gate opening to him of its own accord. For some time there was silence, and then the bishop's voice was heard chanting,and immediately many voices took up the psalm, and the singing continued for three hours. "
I, for my part," says S. Gregory, of Tours, "think that the Saints, of whom the relics were there preserved, revealed themselves to the blessed man, and sang praises to God in company with him. One day, as he was walking to Langres, he was struck with fever, and he died shortly after; " and his blessed countenance was so glorified after his departure, that it looked like a blushing rose, whilst the rest of his body was shining like a white lily, so that it seemed then to have a foretaste of its future resurrection beauty."
He was buried at Dijon, which was then in the diocese of Langres, and his son, Tetricus, succeeded him in the see of Langres.
There is much uncertainty about the date of his death. In some Martyrologies he is said to have died in 535, Galesinius says in 524. But he was present at the Council of Clermont, in 535, and signed the decrees of the third Council of Orleans by his deputy, Evantius, the priest, in 538; but did not appear at, or send a deputy to, the fourth Council of Orleans, in 541. It is, therefore, probable that the see was then vacant by his death.
In art, S. Gregory appears before a church door, which an angel opens to him; or with chains, because it is said
that as his body was being taken to burial, the bier was set down before a prison, and the chains fell off the prisoners, and they were freed at the same moment.
S. RIGOBERT OF
RHEIMS.
(ABOUT A.D. 749.)
[Roman, Benedictine, and
Gallican Martyrologies. Authority :—A life of the gth cent.]
SAINT RIGOBERT, a
Benedictine monk, was ordained archbishop of Rheims in the year 696. He
consecrated Dagobert II, Chilperic II, and Theoderic II, kings of the
Franks. In his diocese he laboured to restore discipline and sanctity of life.
When Charles Martel and Ragenfried were fighting for the mastery, the former came
with his troops before Rheims, and demanded to be admitted. The bishop refused
to open the gates, "Because," said he, "I know not whether you
or Ragenfried will be given the kingdom." Charles Martel went away in a
fury, and vowed, if he gained the day, he would make the cautious archbishop
suffer for it. When Charles Martel had subdued his rival, he returned to
Rheims, and drove S. Rigobert into exile, and gave the revenues of the see to
laymen, creatures of the court. Whilst at Rheims, S. Rigobert had lived over
the city gate, and kept the keys of the town. The window of his chamber looked
towards the Basilica of S. Remigius, and at it he was wont to pray, like
Daniel, with his face turned to Jerusalem. That he might easily, and at will,
descend into the church of S. Peter, which was situated near the gateway, S.
Rigobert had a hole knocked in a turret of the church, so that by a ladder he could
descend into the church to prayer, and return by it to a little oratory,
dedicated to S. Michael, which he had built on the city wall. But this oratory
did not stand very long, for King Louis gave the monastery of S. Peter to his
daughter Alpaida; and her husband, Begus, having knocked his head against the
lintel of the door when entering the little chapel—he being a very tall
man—ordered it to be pulled down, pretending that it cut off the light from the
windows of the church. "Humility," says the chronicler dryly,
"never knocks its head against any thing."
S. Rigobert, when in
exile, retired to Gascony, but was recalled by Pepin, and returned to Rheims;
but finding that, contrary to canon law, Milo, an abbot, had been appointed to
the see, he went away to Gernicour, a village at no great distance. At
Gernicour, he lived in poverty, in great humility and prayer; sometimes he
visited Rheims, that he might celebrate on the altar of S. Mary, which had been
conceded to him by Milo. One day he was at Cormicy, and visited the church of
S. Cyriac, to pray for his poor diocese, a prey to ravening wolves; and his
prayer being ended, he conversed with Wibert, comptroller of Rheims, who
invited him to dine with him, as the table was ready. But S. Rigobert answered,
"I may not eat, as I have to celebrate mass this morning in the church of
S. Peter, at Gernicour." Whilst he was speaking, a poor widow brought the
deputy-governor a goose. "Here," said Wibert, "as you will not
dine with me, take this goose home with you, and cook it for your own
dinner." Then S. Rigobert gave it to his little serving boy to carry
before him; and he went on his way saying his office; when the goose flew out
of the boy's hands, and was gone. The boy was much grieved. and was on the
point of crying. The bishop, seeing the sad face of the child, interrupted his
psalm to console him, and to tell him that the
loss of this world's goods should not draw forth tears, but that the heart
should trust in God, who gives all things bountifully. Then the bishop resumed
his psalms, now reciting them to himself, and then breaking forth into song.
Presently the goose came fluttering down before the feet of the old man, so the
boy put it under his arm again, and brought it safely to Gernicour. But it was
not cooked for dinner. Indeed, the bishop would not allow it to be killed, and
the goose became so tame, that it followed him about, and would even accompany
him on his walks to Rheims, and wait there for him when he said mass at the
altar of S. Mary.
Relics, in the church of
S. Denis, at Rheims, and in the chapel of S. Rigobert, in the Cathedral of
Notre Dame, at Paris.
In art, he is
represented with a goose.
