Saint Dominic
Founder
(1170-1221)
Saint
Dominic de Guzman was born in Spain in 1170. As a student, he sold his
books to feed the poor during a famine, and offered himself to ransom a
slave. At the age of twenty-five, after taking the religious habit he
became acting Superior of the Canons Regular of Saint Augustine in Osma,
and was soon offered an episcopal chair at Compostella. He answered as
afterward he also answered many times: God has not sent me to be a
bishop, but to preach. He accompanied his prelate to southern France on a
commission for the king of Castille. There his heart was well-nigh
broken by the ravages of the Albigensian heresy, a variant of ancient
Manicheanism, and the source of devastating wars in southern France. His
life from that time on was devoted to the conversion of heretics and
the defense of the Faith.
In
the year 1199, while he was still a Canon Regular of Saint Augustine
and was preaching near the Spanish coasts, he was taken captive, with
all his audience and a Brother in religion, by a band of pirates. They
placed the prisoners in their galleys at the oars. When a furious storm
broke, the young Saint exhorted the disciples of Mohammed to think
seriously of their souls, to open their eyes to the truth of
Christianity, and above all, to invoke the Mother of God. They did not
listen until his third exhortation, at a moment when it was clear the
ship and passengers could not be saved. They swore to him then that if
the God of Christians preserved them by the intercession of His Holy
Mother, they would dedicate themselves to their service. Immediately the
storm ceased, and the pirates kept their word.
When in his 46th year,
and with six companions, he began the great Order of Preaching Friars,
this Order with that of the Friars Minor, founded by his contemporary
friend Saint Francis of Assisi, was the chief means God employed to
renew Christian fervor during the Middle Ages. In addition, Saint
Dominic founded his Second Order for nuns for the education of Catholic
girls, and his Third Order, or Tertiaries, for persons of both sexes
living in the world. God abundantly blessed the new Order, and France,
Italy, Spain, and England welcomed the Preaching Friars. Our Lady took
them under Her special protection. During a debate with the heretics, a
book by the Saint, defending Her Immaculate Conception, was thrown into
the flames along with one by the heretics, to see whether one might be
spared. Saint Dominic's was not injured, and many heretics were
converted.
It
was in 1208, while Saint Dominic knelt in the little chapel of Notre
Dame de La Prouille, and implored the great Mother of God to save the
Church, that Our Lady appeared to him and gave him the Rosary, bidding
him to go forth and preach it. During the famous battles in southern
France against the Albigensians, with his rosary in hand he revived the
courage of the Catholic armies, led them to victory against overwhelming
numbers, and finally subdued the heresy. His nights were spent in
prayer; and, though all beheld him as an Angel of purity, before morning
broke he would scourge himself to blood. His words rescued countless
souls, and three times raised the dead to life. At length, on August 6,
1221, at the age of fifty-one, he gave up his soul to God.
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