TODAY, Nov. 4 is the feast
day of St. Charles Borromeo, cardinal-archbishop of Milan, who stayed put in
place even as the secular authorities abandoned the principality upon the outbreak
of the plague of 1576.
Charles organized the care of those stricken and ministered to the dying. It is said that he fed from 60,000 to 70,000 people daily using up his own funds, so much so that he went into debt.
We reflect on the response
of the saint to the plague, in his own words:
To the faithful: A long time ago I resolved never to leave
undone anything which might be for my people’s good. I beg you, above all, not
to lose heart. Do not be affected by the example of those born and bred in the city
who hurriedly abandoned it by flight at the very moment when it needed help…
The dreadful state of these wretched
creatures, everything lacking both for soul and body. These unhappy children
seem to look on me as the cause of all their ills. Their silence reproaches me
for my idleness. I put off holding out a helping hand when by my example I
should have moved others to pity. I will delay no longer. By the grace of God,
I will do my duty to the utmost…
We have only one life and we should spend it for Jesus
Christ and souls, not as we wish, but at the time and in the way God wishes. It
would show presumption and neglect of our duty and God’s service to fail to do
this.
To his priests: Do not be so forgetful of your
priesthood as to prefer a late death to a holy one…
Take the plague of the soul in
consideration more than the contagion of the body which, for many reasons, is
less pernicious.
Do not neglect human means, such as
preventatives, remedies, doctors, everything that you can use to keep off
infection, for such means are in no way opposed to our doing our duty.
In God’s mercy: God can replace us…
From the beginning I resolved to place
myself entirely in God’s hands, without however despising ordinary remedies…
Not by our prudence, which was caught asleep.
Not by science of the doctors who could not discover the sources of the
contagion, much less a cure. Not by the care of those in authority who
abandoned the city. No, my dear children, but only by the mercy of God.
A testimonial
A Capuchin brother named
James, who worked in the leper house where St. Charles went to almost daily to
give the Sacraments to the suffering and the last rites to the dying,
witnessed: “He often goes to the lazer [leper] house to console the sick… into
huts and private houses to speak to the sick and comfort them, as well as
providing for all their needs. He fears nothing. It is useless to try to
frighten him. It is true that he exposes himself much to danger but so far he
has been preserved by the special grace of God, he says he cannot do otherwise.
Indeed, the city has no other help and consolation.”
(Culled from articles
in the web)
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