Saint Raymund Nonnatus
Religious of Our Lady of Mercy and Cardinal
(1204-1240)
Saint
Raymund Nonnatus was born in Catalonia, Spain, in the year 1204.
Motherless from infancy, in his childhood he seemed to find pleasure
only in his devotions and serious duties. He chose the Blessed Virgin
for his mother, almost as soon as the light of reason made this choice
available to him. His father, perceiving in him an inclination to the
religious state and unwilling to give up his son, took him from school
and sent him to take care of a farm which he owned in the country.
Raymund readily obeyed, and, in order to enjoy holy solitude, kept the
sheep himself and spent his time in the mountains and forests in holy
meditation and prayer. He found there an ancient hermitage containing a
portrait of his Blessed Mother, and made this his asylum. There the
devil found him and, assuming the disguise of a shepherd, attempted to
turn him away from his devotions; but Raymund turned his back on his
visitor and called Mary to his assistance. The sole name of the Mother
of God caused the demon to disappear, and the hermit prostrated himself
and blessed Her for Her assistance.
Some
time afterward, he joined the new Order of Our Lady of Mercy for the
redemption of captives, and was admitted to profession at Barcelona by
the holy founder, Saint Peter Nolasco. Within two or three years after
his profession, he was sent into Barbary with a considerable sum of
money; in Algiers he purchased the liberty of a great number of slaves.
When all his treasure was exhausted, he gave himself up as a hostage for
the ransom of others, according to the Rule of his Order. This
magnanimous sacrifice served only to exasperate the Moslems, who treated
him with uncommon barbarity, until they began to fear that if he died
in their hands, they would lose the ransom which had been asked for his
deliverance. A crier announced in the streets that anyone who mistreated
him would answer for it, if he died.
Therefore
he was permitted to go abroad in the streets, which liberty he utilized
to comfort and encourage the Christians in chains, and to convert and
baptize certain Moslems. Learning of this, their pasha, furious,
condemned him to be impaled, but his barbarous sentence was commuted at
the insistence of those who had an interest in the ransom payments for
the slaves he was replacing. He underwent instead a cruel bastinade, but
that torment did not daunt his courage. So long as he saw souls in
danger of perishing eternally, he thought he had yet done nothing.
Saint
Raymund had no more money to employ in releasing poor captives; and to
converse with those of the local beliefs on the subject of religion
meant death. He enjoyed sufficient liberty nonetheless to continue the
same endeavors, and he did so, hoping either for success or martyrdom.
The governor, enraged, ordered our Saint to have his lips pierced and
padlocked, then to be imprisoned until his ransom would be brought by
members of his Order. He remained in jail for eight months before his
brethren arrived with the required sum, sent by Saint Peter Nolasco.
Upon
his return to Spain, he was nominated Cardinal by Pope Gregory IX, and
the Pope called him to Rome. The Saint was on his way, but had gone no
farther than Cardona when he was seized with a violent fever. He died on
August 31, 1240, in his thirty-seventh year. His face in death became
beautiful and radiant like that of Moses when he descended from the
mountaintop, where he had spoken with God. A heavenly fragrance
surrounded his body, and cures were effected on behalf of those who came
and touched him.
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