• July 18th - St. Bruno, Bishop of Segni

    From rich@1:396/4 to All on Wed Jul 17 08:56:41 2019
    From: rich <richarra@gmail.com>

    July 18th - St. Bruno, Bishop of Segni

    Died 1123

    St. Bruno was of the family of the lords of Asti in Piedmont, and born
    near that city.=C2 He made his studies in the university of Bologna, and
    was made a canon of Siena.=C2 He was called to Rome and there, in the
    council of 1079, he defended the doctrine of the Church concerning the
    Blessed Sacrament against Berengarius of Tours; Pope Gregory VII
    nominated him bishop of Segni in the following year, Bruno's
    humbleness prompting him to refuse a cardinalate.

    Bruno served his flock with unwearied zeal; he was a personal friend
    of St Gregory and entered with fearless enthusiasm into all his
    projects for the reform of the Church, suffering imprisonment for
    three months at the hands of Count Ainulf, a partisan of the Emperor
    Henry IV.=C2 He went with Bl. Urban II into France in 1095, and assisted
    at the Council of Clermont-Ferrand, and returning into Italy he
    continued to labour for the sanctification of his flock till, not
    being able any longer to resist his inclination for solitude and
    retirement, and still persecuted by Ainulf, he withdrew to Monte
    Cassino and received the monastic habit.

    The people of Segni demanded him back; but the abbot of Monte Cassino
    prevailed upon the pope to allow his retreat, but not the resignation
    of his see. In 1107 he was elected abbot of the monastery.

    Bruno by his writings laboured to support ecclesiastical discipline
    and to extirpate simony. This abuse, together with that of lay
    investiture (Lay investiture was the appointment of bishops, abbots,
    and other church officials by feudal lords and vassals) to
    ecclesiastical offices, he looked upon as a main source of the
    disorders which saddened zealous pastors in the church, by filling the sanctuary with hirelings and by corrupting with avarice and ambition
    those in whom, above all others, a perfect freedom from earthly things
    ought to Lay a foundation of the gospel temper and spirit.

    He indeed took it upon himself to rebuke Pope Paschal II, who had been persuaded by the emperor elect, Henry V, to make concessions in the
    matter of ecclesiastical privileges and investiture in Germany. The
    pope retorted by ordering Bruno to resign his abbacy and return to his bishopric, and was at once obeyed.

    He continued faithfully in the discharge of his duties and in writing, especially commentaries on the Holy Scriptures, until his death in
    1123.=C2 He was the greatest scriptural commentator of his age, but in theology he maintained the extreme and erroneous view that the
    sacraments administered by bishops or priests who had been guilty of
    simony were invalid.=C2 Bruno was canonized in 1183.

    There are two lives of Bruno printed in the Acta Sanctorum, July, vol.
    iv, the shorter and earlier being the work of that historically
    unscrupulous writer Peter the Deacon=C2 but the main facts given above
    may be trusted.=C2 See B. Gigalski, Bruno Bischof von Segni (1898).
    Bruno is noticed in both DTC and DHG .


    Saint Quote:
    The remembrance of the most holy Passion of Jesus Christ is the door
    through which the soul enters into intimate union with God, interior recollection and most sublime contemplation...
    --St. Paul of the Cross

    Bible Quote:
    11 Let him decline from evil, and do good: let him seek after peace
    and pursue it: 12 Because the eyes of the Lord are upon the just, and
    his ears unto their prayers: but the countenance of the Lord upon them
    that do evil things. (1 Peter 3:11-12) DRB


    <><><><>
    A prayer to angels before undertaking a journey:

    In the way of peace direct us, O Lord. We praise and
    venerate All the heavenly princes, But especially Raphael,
    Faithful physician And companion true, Who with Heaven's
    power Bindeth fast the demon.

    V. God hath given His Angels charge over thee.
    R. To keep thee in all thy ways.

    Let us pray:

    --- NewsGate v1.0 gamma 2
    * Origin: News Gate @ Net396 -Huntsville, AL - USA (1:396/4)
  • From rich@1:396/4 to All on Sat Jul 17 10:25:18 2021
    From: rich <richarra@gmail.com>

    July 18th - St. Bruno, Bishop of Segni

    St. Bruno was of the family of the lords of Asti in Piedmont, and born
    near that city.=C2 He made his studies in the university of Bologna, and
    was made a canon of Siena.=C2 He was called to Rome and there, in the
    council of 1079, he defended the doctrine of the Church concerning the
    Blessed Sacrament against Berengarius of Tours; Pope Gregory VII
    nominated him bishop of Segni in the following year, Bruno's
    humbleness prompting him to refuse a cardinalate.

    Bruno served his flock with unwearied zeal; he was a personal friend
    of St Gregory and entered with fearless enthusiasm into all his
    projects for the reform of the Church, suffering imprisonment for
    three months at the hands of Count Ainulf, a partisan of the Emperor
    Henry IV.=C2 He went with Bl. Urban II into France in 1095, and assisted
    at the Council of Clermont-Ferrand, and returning into Italy he
    continued to labour for the sanctification of his flock till, not
    being able any longer to resist his inclination for solitude and
    retirement, and still persecuted by Ainulf, he withdrew to Monte
    Cassino and received the monastic habit.

    The people of Segni demanded him back; but the abbot of Monte Cassino
    prevailed upon the pope to allow his retreat, but not the resignation
    of his see.=C2 In 1107 he was elected abbot of the monastery.

    Bruno by his writings laboured to support ecclesiastical discipline
    and to extirpate simony. This abuse, together with that of lay
    investiture (Lay investiture was the appointment of bishops, abbots,
    and other church officials by feudal lords and vassals) to
    ecclesiastical offices, he looked upon as a main source of the
    disorders which saddened zealous pastors in the church, by filling the sanctuary with hirelings and by corrupting with avarice and ambition
    those in whom, above all others, a perfect freedom from earthly things
    ought to Lay a foundation of the gospel temper and spirit.

    He indeed took it upon himself to rebuke Pope Paschal II, who had been persuaded by the emperor elect, Henry V, to make concessions in the
    matter of ecclesiastical privileges and investiture in Germany. The
    pope retorted by ordering Bruno to resign his abbacy and return to his bishopric, and was at once obeyed.

    He continued faithfully in the discharge of his duties and in writing, especially commentaries on the Holy Scriptures, until his death in
    1123. He was the greatest scriptural commentator of his age, but in
    theology he maintained the extreme and erroneous view that the
    sacraments administered by bishops or priests who had been guilty of
    simony were invalid. Bruno was canonized in 1183.

    There are two lives of Bruno printed in the Acta Sanctorum, July, vol.
    iv, the shorter and earlier being the work of that historically
    unscrupulous writer Peter the Deacon=C2 but the main facts given above
    may be trusted.=C2 See B. Gigalski, Bruno Bischof von Segni (1898).


    Saint Quote:
    If all flowers wanted to be roses, nature would lose her springtime
    beauty, and the fields would no longer be decked, out with little
    wildflowers.
    --St. Teresa of Lisieux

    Bible Quote
    Now the parable is this: The seed is the word of God. And they by the
    way side are they that hear; then the devil cometh, and taketh the
    word out of their heart, lest believing they should be saved. Now they
    upon the rock, are they who when they hear, receive the word with joy:
    and these have no roots; for they believe for a while, and in time of temptation, they fall away. And that which fell among thorns, are they
    who have heard, and going their way, are choked with the cares and
    riches and pleasures of this life, and yield no fruit. But that on the
    good ground, are they who in a good and perfect heart, hearing the
    word, keep it, and bring forth fruit in patience.=C2 (Luke 8:11-15) DRB


    <><><><>
    Teach me to Wait

    I know I am impatient, Lord,
    I want to run ahead;
    Speak to my heart and make me
    Willing to be led.
    You clock is always right, Lord
    It never does run late;
    Your schedule can't be hurried
    So teach me, Lord, to wait.

    Your time is never my time--
    Oh, make this plain to me
    And give me patience so to wait
    And Thy fulfillment see.
    I see through a glass darkly
    And in this earthly state
    I only see impatience,
    So teach me, Lord, to wait.
    --- NewsGate v1.0 gamma 2
    * Origin: News Gate @ Net396 -Huntsville, AL - USA (1:396/4)