• May 17th - St. Possidius, Bishop and Confessor

    From rich@1:396/4 to All on Thu May 16 09:22:17 2019
    From: rich <richarra@gmail.com>

    May 17th - St. Possidius, Bishop and Confessor

    HE was a native of the proconsular Africa, and had his education under
    the great St. Augustine. In 397 he was chosen bishop of Calama in
    Numidia, which diocese he found distracted by the factions both of
    heathens and Donatists. In 404 a party of the latter dragged him out
    of his house, beat him, and threatened his life. All the revenge he
    took of them was to obtain their pardon from the emperor. Four years
    after this, the idolaters in a riotous festival on the 1st of June,
    had the insolence to dance round the church, throw stones into it, and
    set it on fire, wounding several of the clergy, and killing one upon
    the spot. Nectarius, a principal person among the heathens, who had no
    share in this tumult, wrote to St. Augustine to beg him to intercede
    with the emperor for the pardon of the rioters, observing to him that
    it is the duty of the Christian pastors to employ themselves in works
    of mercy and peace. By the interposition of Possidius their punishment
    was only an order which the emperor sent for the breaking down their
    idols, with a prohibition of their abominable festivals and
    sacrifices. When the relics of St. Stephen were brought into Africa
    about the year 410, our holy bishop was careful to enrich Calama with
    a portion of them, by which several miracles were there wrought, as
    St. Augustine informs us. [1] St. Possidius was doubtless one of those
    bishops who established among the clergy of their cathedrals a
    monastic regularity in imitation of St. Augustine, and according to
    the rule by him instituted, as our saint mentions in the life of that
    great doctor; and St. Augustine speaks of the poor religious men of
    Calama.

    =C2 The Vandals passed over from Spain into Africa with an army of
    fourscore thousand veteran soldiers, long accustomed to blood and
    plunder; and made themselves in a short time masters of Mauritania,
    Numidia, and the proconsular province, except the strong fortresses of Carthage, Cirta, and Hippo. They pillaged the whole country and the
    towns which lay in their way; and among others Calama, which seems to
    have never since lifted up its head. St. Possidius took refuge in
    Hippo with his dear master, St. Augustine, who soon after died in his
    arms in 430, during the siege of that city, which some time after fell
    into the hands of the barbarians. These were severe trials to our
    saint, who from that time lived in perpetual banishment from his
    flock. He wrote the life of St. Augustine, with a catalogue of his
    works. The Italians say, that from Africa he came into Italy, and died
    at Mirandola. That city and Rhegio in Apulia honoured him as patron.
    The regular canons keep his festival on the 17th of May, and regard
    him as one of the most illustrious fathers of their Order.

    See the life and works of St. Augustine and Papebroke, who show that
    it is a mistake to confound St. Possidius with Possidonius, another
    African bishop sometimes mentioned with him in the same councils, t.
    4, Maij. p. 27. See also Ceillier, t. 12, p. 261.

    Note 1. L. 22, de Civil, c. 8.


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

    Bible Quote:
    =C2 What shall it profit, my brethren, if a man say he hath faith, but
    hath not works? Shall faith be able to save him? And if a brother or
    sister be naked and want daily food:=C2 And one of you say to them: Go
    in peace, be ye warmed and filled; yet give them not those things that
    are necessary for the body, what shall it profit? So faith also, if it
    have not works, is dead in itself.=C2 [James 2:14-17] DRB


    <><><><>
    The easy roads are crowded

    The easy roads are crowded,
    And the level roads are jammed;
    The pleasant little rivers
    With the drifting folks are crammed,
    But off yonder where it's rocky,
    Where you get a better view,
    You will find the ranks are thinning
    And the travelers are few.
    Where the going's smooth and pleasant
    You will always find the throng,
    For the many, more's the pity,
    Seem to like to drift along.
    But the steps that call for courage
    And the task that's hard to do,
    In the end results in glory
    For the never-wavering few.

    --- NewsGate v1.0 gamma 2
    * Origin: News Gate @ Net396 -Huntsville, AL - USA (1:396/4)