Saint Eleutherius
Abbot
(† 585)
A
wonderful simplicity and spirit of compunction were the distinguishing
virtues of this holy sixth century abbot. He was elected to preside
Saint Mark's monastery near Spoleto, and favored by God with the gift of
miracles.
A
child who was confided to the monastery, to be educated there after
having been delivered by the Abbot from a diabolical possession,
appeared to everyone to be entirely exempt from further molestations.
And Saint Eleutherius chanced to say one day: Since the child is among
the servants of God, the devil dares not approach him. These words
seemed to savor of vanity, and thereupon the devil again entered into
and tormented the child. The Abbot humbly confessed his fault and
undertook a fast, in which the entire community joined, until the child
was again freed from the tyranny of the fiend.
Saint Gregory the Great, finding himself unable to fast on Holy Saturday
on account of extreme weakness, called for this Saint, who was in Rome
at the time, to offer up prayers to God for him that he might join the
faithful in the solemn practice of that day's penances. Saint
Eleutherius prayed with many tears, and the Pope, when they came out of
the church, felt suddenly strengthened and able to accomplish the fast
as he desired. The same Pope, remarking that the Abbot was said to have
raised a dead man to life, added: He was so simple a man, one of such
great penance, that we must not doubt that Almighty God granted much to
his tears and his humility! After resigning his abbacy, Saint
Eleutherius died in Rome in Saint Andrew's monastery, about the year
585.
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