• =?UTF-8?Q?March_8th_=E2=80=93_Saint_Veremundus_of_Irache?=

    From rich@1:396/4 to All on Wed Mar 7 09:09:06 2018
    From: rich <richarra@gmail.com>

    March 8th =E2=80=93 Saint Veremundus of Irache
    Also known as Veremund, Veremondo, Veremundo, Vermund
    d. 1092

    OF the religious houses in the kingdom of Navarre in the 11th century
    the chief in importance was the Benedictine abbey of Hyrache, which
    under the direction of St. became second to none in all Spain. He had
    entered the monastery as a mere boy under his uncle, Abbot Munius,
    from whom he afterwards received the habit. He grew up an exemplary
    monk, distinguished especially for his boundless love of the poor. In illustration of this, a story appears amongst the chronicles of the
    abbey. When serving as doorkeeper Veremundus was sometimes carried
    away by his zeal to distribute to the poor more than the prescribed
    allowance of food, and the abbot, meeting him one day as he was going
    to the door with a great number of pieces of bread gathered up in his
    tunic, asked him what he was carrying. =E2=80=9CChips=E2=80=9D, replied the=
    young
    man--=E2=80=9Cpieces of bread being, as it were, like chips for warming the poor within=E2=80=9D, explains the chronicler. When, at the abbot's=
    command,
    Veremundus opened out his tunic the bread had been changed into chips--=E2=80=9CGod thus showing through this miracle=E2=80=9D, to quote th=
    e words of
    the narrative, =E2=80=9Cthat the liberality of Veremundus to the poor was pleasing in His eyes and that his ambiguity was not a lie but a mystery.=E2=80=9D

    Upon the death of Munius, St. Veremundus succeeded him as abbot and
    led his brethren on by precept and example to ever higher degrees of perfection. He appears to have possessed the gift of healing the sick,
    and is said to have arrested in a marvellous way a fire which was
    about to destroy the crops of the abbey. His care for the reverent and
    accurate recitation of the Divine Office won for him high approval and
    praise from Rome, and he was an upholder of the particular Spanish
    usages, called Mozarabic. The kings of Navarre made grants to his
    abbey, and the rise of the town of Estella was due to one of these
    donations. One night shepherds watching their flocks were amazed to
    see a shower of stars fall on a hill which was afterwards known in the
    local dialect as Yricarra, =E2=80=9CStarry=E2=80=9D. A search at the spot w= here the
    meteorites had fallen was rewarded by the find of a remarkable statue
    of our Lady with the Holy Child, and King Sancho Ramirez was so much
    impressed that he started to build a city to be called Estella upon
    the same spot. He presented the site to Veremundus, with the request
    that he would dedicate the new town to the Mother of God. Thus it came
    to pass that practically every building in Estella paid rent or
    tribute to the abbey.

    At one time there arose a great famine in Navarre, and the poor
    flocked to their good friend the abbot, and the numbers were increased
    by pilgrims on their way to or from Compostela. The monks' granarie=
    s
    and store-houses were bare, but 3000 persons had collected and their
    wailing rent the air. Veremundus had gone up to the altar to celebrate
    Mass, and when he reached that part where the priest prays for the
    people, he made intercession with tears for the starving crowd.
    Suddenly there appeared a white dove, which flew down low over the
    heads of the people, seeming to touch them in its passage, and then
    disappeared as sud=C2=ADdenly as it had come. Meanwhile the people
    experienced a wonderful feeling of contentment: not only was their
    hunger appeased, but their mouths were filled with a delicious taste,
    as though they had been regaled with some heavenly and invigorating
    food. In their joy and relief they cried aloud and gave thanks and
    glory to God for His goodness.

    See the Acta Sanctorum, March, vol. i, and Mabillon.


    Saint Quote:
    Labor without stopping; do all the good works you can while you still
    have the time.
    --Saint John of God

    Bible Quote:
    Open to me the gates of righteousness; I will go through them, And I
    will praise the Lord. This is the gate of the Lord, Through which the
    righteous shall enter. [Psalm 118:19-20]


    <><><><>
    PRAYER FOR THE GIFT TO SEEK GOD AND LIVE IN HIM.

    Father, in your goodness
    grant me the intellect to comprehend you,
    the perception to discern you,
    and the reason to appreciate you.
    In your kindness endow me
    with the diligence to look for you,
    the wisdom to discover you,
    and the spirit to apprehend you.
    In your graciousness
    bestow on me a heart to contemplate you,
    ears to hear you,
    eyes to see you,
    and a tongue to speak of you.
    In your mercy confer on me a conversation pleasing to you,
    the patience to wait for you,
    and the perseverance to long for you.
    Grant me a perfect end,
    your holy presence.
    --- NewsGate v1.0 gamma 2
    * Origin: News Gate @ Net396 -Huntsville, AL - USA (1:396/4)