† Saint of the Day †
(October 23)
✠ St. John of Capistrano ✠
Franciscan Friar and Catholic
Priest:
Born: June 24, 1386
Capestrano, Abruzzi, Kingdom of
Naples
Died: October 23, 1456 (Aged 70)
Ilok, Syrmia, Kingdom of Croatia in
personal union with Hungary
Venerated in: Roman Catholic Church
Canonized: 1690 or 1724
Pope Benedict XIII
Feast: October 23
Patronage: Jurists, Belgrade and
Hungary
Saint John of Capestrano was a
Franciscan friar and Catholic priest from the Italian town of Capestrano,
Abruzzo. Famous as a preacher, theologian, and inquisitor, he earned himself
the nickname 'the Soldier Saint' when in 1456 at age 70 he led a crusade
against the invading Ottoman Empire at the siege of Belgrade with the Hungarian
military commander John Hunyadi.
Elevated to sainthood, he is the
patron saint of jurists and military chaplains, as well as the namesake of the
Franciscan missions San Juan Capistrano in Southern California and San Juan
Capistrano in San Antonio, Texas.
Biographical selection:
Born in 1386 in the city of
Capistrano in the Kingdom of Naples, Italy, John entered law school at Perugia
where he became a famous jurist and was appointed the governor of that city in
1412 at age 26. He entered the Franciscan Monastery of Monte after becoming
disillusioned with the world. His superior, Blessed Mark of Bergamo, made
strong tests of his late vocation before he was accepted in the Order. For
example, once John was ordered to ride through the streets of Perugia on a
donkey with his head turned toward the tail of the animal and wearing a cardboard
miter on his head with his worst sins written on it.
With the support of St. James of the
Marches and St. Bernardine of Siena, he overcame all the difficulties and met
with great success in his apostolate. He had the friendship and support of four
Popes, reformed his Order, led a Crusade, and with his extraordinary gift for
preaching evangelized in Italy, France, Germany, Austria, Hungary, and Poland.
He converted countless pagans, fanatic heretics, and obstinate Jews, and
brought hundreds of young men to the religious life. He had a special grace to
reconcile quarrels. He was named Inquisitor against the Hussites and
tenaciously fought this heresy.
He was described by the future Pius
II, then a Bishop, as “small, old, dry, thin, wasted, nothing but skin and
bones. Always cheerful and tireless, he preached often to audiences of twenty
or thirty thousand people. He used to resolve the most difficult questions to
the satisfaction of both the simple and the erudite.”
After the fall of Constantinople at
Islamic hands, he preached the Crusade against the Muslim Turks, exhorting
Catholics to raise an army to resist the invaders, who were threatening
Christendom by their victorious march into the northwest of Europe. At age 70
he was commissioned by Pope Callistus II as delegate and adviser for the war
against the Turks.
He traveled to Belgrade to encourage
the 40,000 Catholic soldiers who were surrounded by Mohammed II. By a clever
feint, he got past the Turkish guard, entered the city and began to preach
constancy in the fight and confidence in the victory. All of Christendom was
praying for a successful outcome for the city. The soldiers, under the
influence of the Saint, fought and prayed. John Capistrano accompanied the
troops in their more difficult maneuvers: the surprise attacks and recoups.
Although he took the greatest risks, he was never wounded by a single bullet.
It was due to him, above all, that Belgrade was saved. This victory stalled the
Turkish invasion, which in turn saved all of Europe.
Then, worn out from the battle, he
was taken in the field by the bubonic plague. A few months later, he died in
1456 in the Franciscan Monastery of Villach, Austria.
Comments:
One could try to make a
classification of the saints. Some were founders of nations, others were
organizers of nations, still, others were founders of religious orders. Then,
there is a category of saints who were the defensive walls of the House of God.
They constitute a kind of saint whose principal goal is to fight, to destroy the
enemies of God. They have the capacity to put fire in souls to stimulate them
to the defense of God, to lead them to combat. And in the combat they know how
to sustain the courage of the good as well as how to attack the enemies. Doing
this, they defend the walls of the House of God. Such is the mission of this
category of saints. St. John of Capistrano was one of these saints.
Consider his vocation: First, he was
an Inquisitor and a great fighter against heretics on the doctrinal level, a
fighter who also converted many of them. I do not think that to fight against
heretics and destroy them is a negative mission, because the heretics are
already negative, and to place a negative with the negative is to make a
positive. No one would say that a physician who destroys the viruses that
attack the human body would be doing something negative. The same principle
applies to the Inquisitors. They were the physicians who destroyed the viruses
that attacked the spiritual health of the Church and Christendom.
Second, he was a great orator who
preached to audiences of 20-30,000 people. There is a curious thing that the
text does not report, which is the way the people of that time used to listen
to an orator. There was no hall large enough to receive these multitudes, so
the speaker would deliver his speech outdoors. But a problem would arise when
the wind would change because then the voice could no longer be heard in some
places among the crowd. To resolve this problem the custom was established to
have a flag hanging at a high site that everyone could see. When the wind would
change, the waving flag would indicate the change, and the people would know
where they needed to stand to hear the voice of the speaker and they would move
there to accommodate the wind change. Thus, it was a moving audience. But let
us return to our St. John of Capistrano.
Third, he preached a Crusade and
made the necessary diplomatic arrangements for the Catholics to fight against
the Turks. But he was not satisfied with this. He went a step further. He
thought it necessary to be present on the battlefront. Although he did not
personally take up weapons, since a priest is not supposed to shed human blood,
he was there as the soul of the combat. He was everywhere giving support and
encouragement. It was his action that saved Belgrade, which at that moment was
the strategic weak point of Christendom. He broke the march of the Turks into
the West and foiled their plan to enter Hungary, Austria, and Italy until they
reached Rome to subjugate the Holy See.
Rich in merit and years, he died.
His figure remains in History as a great fighter. Perhaps it is, for this
reason, we do not hear much praise today of St. John of Capistrano.
A final point that requests comment
in this text is that of the convivium of saints. This association of
fellow-saints is one of the most beautiful things in the History of the Church.
One saint is already a rare and admirable thing. But this fellowship of many
saints, the convivium that sometimes existed among them, and the way that the
distinctive holiness of one influences another and in this sense multiplies the
sanctity – all this is truly wonderful.
St. John of Capistrano lived in an
ambiance of sanctity. His superior was Blessed Mark of Bergamo. He was a
disciple of St. Bernardine of Siena and a fellow student with St. James of the
Marches. There were four saints in a small region of Italy. Four saints of the
same religious order living at the same time. Can you imagine the supernatural
atmosphere that reigned there under such conditions?
The only thing that remains for us
to do is to recommend ourselves to the prayers of the great St. John of
Capistrano.
~ Late Prof. Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira
No comments:
Post a Comment