Born at Marianella,
near Naples, 27 September, 1696; died at Nocera de' Pagani, 1 August, 1787. The eighteenth
century was not an age remarkable for depth of spiritual life, yet it produced three of
the greatest missionaries of the Church, St. Leonard of Port Maurice, St. Paul of the
Cross, and St. Alphonsus Liguori. Alphonsus Mary Antony John Cosmas Damian Michael Gaspard
de' Liguori was born in his father's country house at Marianella near Naples, on Tuesday,
27 September, 1696. He was baptized two days later in the church of Our Lady of the
Virgins, in Naples. The family was an old and noble one, though the branch to which the
Saint belonged had become somewhat impoverished. Alphonsus's father, Don Joseph de'
Liguori was a naval officer and Captain of the Royal Galleys. The Saint's mother was of
Spanish descent, and if, as there can be little doubt, race is an element in individual
character, we may see in Alphonsus's Spanish blood some explanation of the enormous
tenacity of purpose which distinguished him from his earliest years. "I know his
obstinacy", his father said of him as a young man; "when he once makes up his
mind he is inflexible". Not many details have come down to us of Alphonsus's
childhood. He was the eldest of seven children and the hope of his house. The boy was
bright and quick beyond his years, and made great progress in all kinds of learning. In
addition his father made him practice the harpsichord for three hours a day, and at the
age of thirteen he played with the perfection of a master.
Riding and fencing were his
recreations, and an evening game of cards; he tells us that he was debarred from being a
good shot by his bad sight. In early manhood he became very fond of the opera, but only
that he might listen to the music, for when the curtain went up he took his glasses off,
so as not to see the players distinctly. The Neapolitan stage at this time was in a good
state, but the Saint had from his earliest years an ascetic repugnance to theatres, a
repugnance which he never lost. The childish fault for which he most reproached himself in
after-life was resisting his father too strongly when he was told to take part in a
drawing-room play. Alphonsus was not sent to school but was educated by tutors under his
father's eye. At the age of sixteen, on 21 January, 1713, he took his degree as Doctor of
Laws, although twenty was the age fixed by the statutes. He said himself that he was so
small at the time as to be almost buried in his doctor's gown and that all the spectators
laughed. Soon after this the boy began his studies for the Bar, and about the age of
nineteen practised his profession in the courts. In the eight years of his career as
advocate, years crowded with work, he is said never to have lost a case. Even if there be
some exaggeration in this, for it is not in an advocate's power always to be on the
winning side, the tradition shows that he was extraordinarily able and successful. In
fact, despite his youth, he seems at the age of twenty-seven to have been one of the
leaders of the Neapolitan Bar.
Alphonsus, like so many saints,
had an excellent father and a saintly mother. Don Joseph de' Liguori had his faults. He
was somewhat worldly and ambitious, at any rate for his son, and was rough tempered when
opposed. But he was a man of genuine faith and piety and stainless life, and he meant his
son to be the same. Even when taking him into society in order to arrange a good marriage
for him, he wished Alphonsus to put God first, and every year father and son would make a
retreat together in some religious house. Alphonsus, assisted by divine grace, did not
disappoint his father's care. A pure and modest boyhood passed into a manhood without
reproach. A companion, Balthasar Cito, who afterwards became a distinguished judge, was
asked in later years if Alphonsus had ever shown signs of levity in his youth. He answered
emphatically: "Never! It would be a sacrilege to say otherwise." The Saint's
confessor declared that he preserved his baptismal innocence till death. Still there was a
time of danger.
There can be little doubt but
that the young Alphonsus with his high spirits and strong character was ardently attached
to his profession, and on the way to be spoilt by the success and popularity which it
brought. About the year 1722, when he was twenty-six years old, he began to go constantly
into society, to neglect prayer and the practices of piety which had been an integral part
of his life, and to take pleasure in the attention with which he was everywhere received.
"Banquets, entertainments,
theatres," he wrote later on--"these are the pleasures of the world, but
pleasures which are filled with the bitterness of gall and sharp thorns. Believe me who
have experienced it, and now weep over it." In all this there was no serious sin, but
there was no high sanctity either, and God, Who wished His servant to be a saint and a
great saint, was now to make him take the road to Damascus. In 1723 there was a lawsuit in
the courts between a Neapolitan nobleman, whose name has not come down to us, and the
Grand Duke of Tuscany, in which property valued at 500,000 ducats, that to say, $500,000
or 100,000 pounds, was at stake. Alphonsus was one of the leading counsel; we do not know
on which side. When the day came the future Saint made a brilliant opening speech and sat
down confident of victory. But before he called a witness the opposing counsel said to him
in chilling tones: "Your arguments are wasted breath. You have overlooked a document
which destroys your whole case." "What document is that?" said Alphonsus
somewhat piqued. "Let us have it." A piece of evidence was handed to him which
he had read and re-read many times, but always in a sense the exact contrary of that which
he now saw it to have. The poor advocate turned pale. He remained thunderstruck for a
moment; then said in a broken voice: "You are right. I have been mistaken. This
document gives you the case." In vain those around him and even the judge on the
bench tried to console him. He was crushed to the earth. He thought his mistake would be
ascribed not to oversight but to deliberate deceit. He felt as if his career was ruined,
and left the court almost beside himself, saying: "World, I know you now. Courts, you
shall never see me more." For three days he refused all food. Then the storm
subsided, and he began to see that his humiliation had been sent him by God to break down
his pride and wean him from the world. Confident that some special sacrifice was required
of him, though he did not yet know what, he did not return to his profession, but spent
his days in prayer, seeking to know God's will. After a short interval--we do not know
exactly how long--the answer came.
On 28 August, 1723, the young advocate had gone to
perform a favourite act of charity by visiting the sick in the Hospital for Incurables.
Suddenly he found himself surrounded by a mysterious light; the house seemed to rock, and
an interior voice said: "Leave the world and give thyself to Me." This occurred
twice. Alphonsus left the Hospital and went to the church of the Redemption of Captives.
Here he laid his sword before the statue of Our Lady, and made a solemn resolution to
enter the ecclesiastical state, and furthermore to offer himself as a novice to the
Fathers of the Oratory. He knew that trials were before him. His father, already
displeased at the failure of two plans for his son's marriage, and exasperated at
Alphonsus's present neglect of his profession, was likely to offer a strenuous opposition
to his leaving the world. So indeed it proved. He had to endure a real persecution for two
months. In the end a compromise was arrived at. Don Joseph agreed to allow his son to
become a priest, provided he would give up his proposal joining the Oratory, and would
continue to live at home. To this Alphonsus by the advice of his director, Father Thomas
Pagano, himself an Oratorian, agreed. Thus was he left free for his real work, the
founding of a new religious congregation. On 23 October of the same year, 1723, the Saint
put on the clerical dress.
In September of the next year he received the tonsure and soon
after joined the association of missionary secular priests called the "Neapolitan
Propaganda", membership of which did not entail residence in common. In December,
1724, he received minor orders, and the subdiaconate in September, 1725. On 6 April, 1726,
he was ordained deacon, and soon after preached his first sermon. On 21 December of the
same year, at the age of thirty, he was ordained priest. For six years he laboured in and
around Naples, giving missions for the Propaganda and preaching to the lazzaroni of
the capital. With the aid of two laymen, Peter Barbarese, a schoolmaster, and Nardone, an
old soldier, both of whom he converted from an evil life, he enrolled thousands of lazzaroni in a sort of confraternity called the "Association of the Chapels", which exists
to this day. Then God called him to his life work.
In April 1729, the Apostle of
China, Matthew Ripa, founded a missionary college in Naples, which became known
colloquially as the "Chinese College". A few months later Alphonsus left his
father's house and went to live with Ripa, without, however, becoming a member of his
society. In his new abode he met a friend of his host's, Father Thomas Falcoia, of the
Congregation of the "Pii Operarii" (Pious Workers), and formed with him the
great friendship of his life. There was a considerable difference in age between the two
men, for Falcoia, born in 1663, was now sixty-six, and Alphonsus only thirty-three, but
the old priest and the young had kindred souls. Many years before, in Rome, Falcoia had
been shown a vision of a new religious family of men and women whose particular aim should
be the perfect imitation of the virtues of Our Lord. He had even tried to form a branch of
the Institute by uniting twelve priests in a common life at Tarentum, but the community
soon broke up. In 1719, together with a Father Filangieri, also one of the "Pii
Operarii", he had refounded a Conservatorium of religious women at Scala on
the mountains behind Amalfi. But as he drew up a rule for them, formed from that of the
Visitation nuns, he does not seem to have had any clear idea of establishing the new
institute of his vision. God, however, intended the new institute to begin with these nuns
of Scala. In 1724, soon after Alphonsus left the world, a postulant, Julia Crostarosa,
born in Naples on 31 October, 1696, and hence almost the same age as the Saint, entered
the convent of Scala.
She became known in religion as Sister Maria Celeste. In 1725, while
still a novice, she had a series of visions in which she saw a new order (apparently of
nuns only) similar to that revealed to Falcoia many years before. Even its Rule was made
known to her. She was told to write it down and show it to the director of the convent,
that is to Falcoia himself. While affecting to treat the novice with severity and to take
no notice of her visions, the director was surprised to find that the Rule which she had
written down was a realization of what had been so long in his mind. He submitted the new
Rule to a number of theologians, who approved of it, and said it might be adopted in the
convent of Scala, provided the community would accept it. But when the question was put to
the community, opposition began. Most were in favour of accepting, but the superior
objected and appealed to Filangieri, Falcoia's colleague in establishing the convent, and
now, as General of the "Pii Operarii", his superior. Filangieri forbade any
change of rule and removed Falcoia from all communication with the convent. Matters
remained thus for some years. About 1729, however, Filangieri died, and on 8 October,
1730, Falcoia was consecrated Bishop of Castellamare. He was now free, subject to the
approval of the Bishop of Scala, to act with regard to the convent as he thought best. It
happened that Alphonsus, ill and overworked, had gone with some companions to Scala in the
early summer of 1730. Unable to be idle, he had preached to the goatherds of the mountains
with such success that Nicolas Guerriero, Bishop of Scala, begged him to return and give a
retreat in his cathedral.
Falcoia, hearing of this, begged
his friend to give a retreat to the nuns of his Conservatorium at the same time.
Alphonsus agreed to both requests and set out with his two friends, John Mazzini and
Vincent Mannarini, in September, 1730. The result of the retreat to the nuns was that the
young priest, who before had been prejudiced by reports in Naples against the proposed new
Rule, became its firm supporter, and even obtained permission from the Bishop of Scala for
the change. In 1731, the convent unanimously adopted the new Rule, together with a habit
of red and blue, the traditional colours of Our Lord's own dress. One branch of the new
Institute seen by Falcoia in vision was thus established. The other was not to be long
delayed. No doubt Thomas Falcoia had for some time hoped that the ardent young priest, who
was so devoted to him, might, under his direction, be the founder of the new Order he had
at heart. a fresh vision of Sister Maria Celeste seemed to show that such was the will of
God. On 3 October, 1731, the eve of the feast of St. Francis, she saw Our Lord with St.
Francis on His right hand and a priest on His left. A voice said "This is he whom I
have chosen to be head of My Institute, the Prefect General of a new Congregation of men
who shall work for My glory." The priest was Alphonsus. Soon after, Falcoia made
known to the latter his vocation to leave Naples and establish an order of missionaries at
Scala, who should work above all for the neglected goatherds of the mountains. A year of
trouble and anxiety followed.
The Superior of the Propaganda
and even Falcoia's friend, Matthew Ripa, opposed the project with all their might. But
Alphonsus's director, Father Pagano; Father Fiorillo, a great Dominican preacher; Father
Manulio, Provincial of the Jesuits; and Vincent Cutica, Superior of the Vincentians,
supported the young priest, and, 9 November, 1732, the "Congregation of the Most Holy
Redeemer", or as it was called for seventeen years, "of the Most Holy
Saviour", was begun in a little hospice belonging to the nuns of Scala. Though St.
Alphonsus was founder and de facto head of the Institute, its general direction in
the beginning, as well as the direction of Alphonsus's conscience, was undertaken by the
Bishop of Castellamare and it was not till the latter's death, 20 April, 1743, that a
general chapter was held and the Saint was formally elected Superior-General. In fact, in
the beginning, the young priest in his humility would not be Superior even of the house,
judging one of his companions, John Baptist Donato, better fitted for the post because he
had already had some experience of community life in another institute.
The early years, following the
founding of the new order, were not promising. Dissensions arose, the Saint's former
friend and chief companion, Vincent Mannarini, opposing him and Falcoia in everything. On
1 April, 1733, all the companions of Alphonsus except one lay brother, Vitus Curtius,
abandoned him, and founded the Congregation of the Blessed Sacrament, which, confined to
the Kingdom of Naples, was extinguished in 1860 by the Italian Revolution. The dissensions
even spread to the nuns, and Sister Maria Celeste herself left Scala and founded a convent
at Foggia, where she died in the odour of sanctity, 14 September, 1755. She was declared
Venerable 11 August, 1901. Alphonsus, however, stood firm; soon other companions arrived,
and though Scala itself was given up by the Fathers in 1738, by 1746 the new Congregation
had four houses at Nocera de' Pagani, Ciorani, Iliceto (now Deliceto), and Caposele, all
in the Kingdom of Naples. In 1749, the Rule and Institute of men were approved by Pope
Benedict XIV, and in 1750, the Rule and Institute of the nuns. Alphonsus was lawyer,
founder, religious superior, bishop, theologian, and mystic, but he was above all a
missionary, and no true biography of the Saint will neglect to give this due prominence.
From 1726 to 1752, first as a member of the Neapolitan "Propaganda", and then as
a leader of his own Fathers, he traversed the provinces of Naples for the greater part of
each year giving missions even in the smallest villages and saving many souls. a special
feature of his method was the return of the missionaries, after an interval of some
months, to the scene of their labours to consol
After 1752 Alphonsus gave fewer
missions. His infirmities were increasing, and he was occupied a good deal with his
writings. His promotion to the episcopate in 1762 led to a renewal of his missionary
activity, but in a slightly different form. The Saint had four houses, but during his
lifetime it not only became impossible in the Kingdom of Naples to get any more, but even
the barest toleration for those he had could scarcely be obtained. The cause of this was
"regalism", the omnipotence of kings even in matters spiritual, which was the
system of government in Naples as in all the Bourbon States. The immediate author of what
was practically a lifelong persecution of the Saint was the Marquis Tanucci, who entered
Naples in 1734. Naples had been part of the dominions of Spain since 1503, but in 1708
when Alphonsus was twelve years old, it was conquered by Austria during the war of the
Spanish Succession. In 1734, however, it was reconquered by Don Carlos, the young Duke of
Parma, great-grandson of Louis XIV, and the independent Bourbon Kingdom of the Two
Sicilies was established. With Don Carlos, or as he is generally called, Charles III, from
his later title as King of Spain, came the lawyer, Bernard Tanucci, who governed Naples as
Prime Minister and regent for the next forty-two years. This was to be a momentous
revolution for Alphonsus.
Had it happened a few years later, the new Government might have
found the Redemptorist Congregation already authorized, and as Tanucci's anti-clerical
policy rather showed itself in forbidding new Orders than, with the exception of the
Society of Jesus, in
suppressing old ones, the Saint might have been free to develop his work in comparative
peace. As it was, he was refused the royal exequatur to the Brief of Benedict XIV,
and State recognition of his Institute as a religious congregation till the day of his
death. There were whole years, indeed, in which the Institute seemed on the verge of
summary suppression. The suffering which this brought on Alphonsus, with his sensitive and
high-strung disposition, was very great, besides what was worse, the relaxation of
discipline and loss of vocations which it caused in the Order itself. Alphonsus, however,
was unflagging in his efforts with the Court. It may be he was even too anxious, and on
one occasion when he was over-whelmed by a fresh refusal, his friend the Marquis Brancone,
Minister for Ecclesiastical Affairs and a man of deep piety, said to him gently: "It
would seem as if you placed all your trust here below"; on which the Saint recovered
his peace of mind. A final attempt to gain the royal approval, which seemed as if at last
it had been successful, led to the crowning sorrow of Alphonsus's life: the division and
apparent ruin of his Congregation and the displeasure of the Holy See. This was in 1780,
when Alphonsus was eighty-three years old. But, before relating the episode of the
"Regolamento", as it is called, we must speak of the period of the Saint's
episcopate which intervened.
In the year 1747, King Charles of
Naples wished to make Alphonsus Archbishop of Palermo, and it was only by the most earnest
entreaties that he was able to escape. In 1762, there was no escape and he was constrained
by formal obedience to the Pope to accept the Bishopric of St. Agatha of the Goths, a very
small Neapolitan diocese lying a few miles off the road from Naples to Capua. Here with
30,000 uninstructed people, 400 mostly indifferent and sometimes scandalous secular
clergy, and seventeen more or less relaxed religious houses to look after, in a field so
overgrown with weeds that they seemed the only crop, he wept and prayed and spent days and
nights in unremitting labour for thirteen years. More than once he faced assassination
unmoved. In a riot which took place during the terrible famine that fell upon Southern
Italy in 1764, he saved the life of the syndic of St. Agatha by offering his own to the
mob. He fed the poor, instructed the ignorant, reorganized his seminary, reformed his
convents, created a new spirit in his clergy, banished scandalous noblemen and women of
evil life with equal impartiality, brought the study of theology and especially of moral
theology into honour, and all the time was begging pope after pope to let him resign his
office because he was doing nothing for his diocese. To all his administrative work we
must add his continual literary labours, his many hours of daily prayer, his terrible
austerities, and a stress of illness which made his life a martyrdom.
Eight times during his long life,
without counting his last sickness, the Saint received the sacraments of the dying, but
the worst of all his illnesses was a terrible attack of rheumatic fever during his
episcopate, an attack which lasted from May, 1768, to June, 1769, and left him paralyzed
to the end of his days. It was this which gave St. Alphonsus the bent head which we notice
in the portraits of him. So bent was it in the beginning, that the pressure of his chin
produced a dangerous wound in the chest. Although the doctors succeeded in straightening
the neck a little, the Saint for the rest of his life had to drink at meals through a
tube. He could never have said Mass again had not an Augustinian prior shown him how to
support himself on a chair so that with the assistance of an acolyte he could raise the
chalice to his lips. But in spite of his infirmities both Clement XIII (1758-69) and
Clement XIV (1769-74) obliged Alphonsus to remain at his post. In February, 1775, however,
Pius VI was elected Pope, and the following May he permitted the Saint to resign his see.
Alphonsus returned to his little
cell at Nocera in July, 1775, to prepare, as he thought, for a speedy and happy death.
Twelve years, however, still separated him from his reward, years for the most part not of
peace but of greater afflictions than any which had yet befallen him. By 1777, the Saint,
in addition to four houses in Naples and one in Sicily, had four others at Scifelli,
Frosinone, St. Angelo a Cupclo, and Beneventum, in the States of the Church. In case
things became hopeless in Naples, he looked to these houses to maintain the Rule and
Institute. In 1780, a crisis arose in which they did this, yet in such a way as to bring
division in the Congregation and extreme suffering and disgrace upon its founder. The
crisis arose in this way. From the year 1759 two former benefactors of the Congregation,
Baron Sarnelli and Francis Maffei, by one of those changes not uncommon in Naples, had
become its bitter enemies, and waged a vendetta against it in the law courts which lasted
for twenty-four years. Sarnelli was almost openly supported by the all-powerful Tanucci,
and the suppression of the Congregation at last seemed a matter of days, when on 26
October, 1776, Tanucci, who had offended Queen Maria Carolina, suddenly fell from power.
Under the government of the Marquis della Sambuca, who, though a great regalist, was a
personal friend of the Saint's, there was promise of better times, and in August, 1779,
Alphonsus's hopes were raised by the publication of a royal decree allowing him to appoint
superiors in his Congregation and to have a novitiate and house of studies. The Government
throughout had recognized the good effect of his missions, but it wished the missionaries
to be secular priests and not a religious order.
The Decree of 1779, however, seemed a
great step in advance. Alphonsus, having got so much, hoped to get a little more, and
through his friend, Mgr. Testa, the Grand Almoner, even to have his Rule approved. He did
not, as in the past, ask for an exequatur to the Brief of Benedict XIV, for
relations at the time were more strained than ever between the Courts of Rome and Naples;
but he hoped the king might give an independent sanction to his Rule, provided he waived
all legal right to hold property in common, which he was quite prepared to do. It was
all-important to the Fathers to be able to rebut the charge of being an illegal religious
congregation, which was one of the chief allegations in the ever-adjourned and
ever-impending action by Baron Sarnelli. Perhaps in any case the submission of their Rule
to a suspicious and even hostile civil power was a mistake. At all events, it proved
disastrous in the result. Alphonsus being so old and so inform--he was eighty-five,
crippled, deaf, and nearly blind--his one chance of success was to be faithfully served by
friends and subordinates, and he was betrayed at every turn. His friend the Grand Almoner
betrayed him; his two envoys for negotiating with the Grand Almoner, Fathers Majone and
Cimino, betrayed him, consultors general though they were. His very confessor and vicar
general in the government of his Order, Father Andrew Villani, joined in the conspiracy.
In the end the Rule was so altered as to be hardly recognizable, the very vows of religion
being abolished. To this altered Rule or "Regolamento", as it came to be called,
the unsuspecting Saint was induced to put his signature. It was approved by the king and
forced upon the stupefied Congregation by the whole power of the State. a fearful
commotion arose.
Alphonsus himself was not spared. Vague rumours of impending treachery
had got about and had been made known to him, but he had refused to believe them.
"You have founded the Congregation and you have destroyed it", said one Father
to him. The Saint only wept in silence and tried in vain to devise some means by which his
Order might be saved. His best plan would have been to consult the Holy See, but in this
he had been forestalled. The Fathers in the Papal States, with too precipitate zeal, in
the very beginning denounced the change of Rule to Rome. Pius VI, already deeply
displeased with the Neapolitan Government, took the fathers in his own dominions under his
special protection, forbade all change of rule in their houses, and even withdrew them
from obedience to the Neapolitan superiors, that is to St. Alphonsus, till an inquiry
could be held. A long process followed in the Court of Rome, and on 22 September, 1780, a
provisional Decree, which on 24 August, 1781, was made absolute, recognized the houses in
the Papal States as alone constituting the Redemptorist Congregation. Father Francis de
Paula, one of the chief appellants, was appointed their Superior General, "in place
of those", so the brief ran, "who being higher superiors of the said
Congregation have with their followers adopted a new system essentially different from the
old, and have deserted the Institute in which they were professed, and have thereby ceased
to be members of the Congregation." So the Saint was cut off from his own Order by
the Pope who was to declare him "Venerable". In this state of exclusion he lived
for seven years more and in it he died. It was only after his death, as he had prophesied,
that the Neapolitan Government at last recognized the original Rule, and that the
Redemptorist Congregation was reunited under one head (1793).
Alphonsus had still one final
storm to meet, and then the end. About three years before his death he went through a
veritable "Night of the Soul". Fearful temptations against every virtue crowded
upon him, together with diabolical apparitions and illusions, and terrible scruples and
impulses to despair which made life a hell. at last came peace, and on 1 August, 1787, as
the midday Angelus was ringing, the Saint passed peacefully to his reward. He had nearly
completed his ninety-first year. He was declared "Venerable", 4 May, 1796; was
beatified in 1816, and canonized in 1839. In 1871, he was declared a Doctor of the Church.
"Alphonsus was of middle height", says his first biographer, Tannoia; "his
head was rather large, his hair black, and beard well-grown." He had a ;pleasant
smile, and his conversation was very agreeable, yet he had great dignity of manner. He was
a born leader of men. His devotion to the Blessed Sacrament and to Our Lady was
extraordinary. He had a tender charity towards all who were in trouble; he would go to any
length to try to save a vocation; he would expose himself to death to prevent sin. He had
a love for the lower animals, and wild creatures who fled from all else would come to him
as to a friend. Psychologically, Alphonsus may be classed among twice-born souls; that is
to say, there was a definitely marked break or conversion, in his life, in which he
turned, not from serious sin, for that he never comitted, but from comparative
worldliness, to thorough self-sacrifice for God. Alphonsus's temperament was very ardent.
He was a man of strong passions, using the term in the philosophic sense, and tremendous
energy, but from childhood his passions were under control. Yet, to take anger alone,
though comparatively early in life he seemed dead to insult or injury which affected
himself, in cases of cruelty, or of injustice to others, or of dishonour to God, he showed
a prophet's indignation even in old age.
Ultimately, however, anything merely human in
this had disappeared. At the worst, it was only the scaffolding by which the temple of
perfection was raised. Indeed, apart from those who become saints by the altogether
special grace of martyrdom, it may be doubted if many men and women of phlegmatic
temperament have been canonized. The differentia of saints is not faultlessness but
driving-power, a driving-power exerted in generous self-sacrifice and ardent love of God.
The impulse to this passionate service of God comes from Divine grace, but the soul must
correspond (which is also a grace of God), and the soul of strong will and strong passions
corresponds best. The difficulty about strong wills and strong passions is that they are
hard to tame, but when they are tamed they are the raw material of sanctity.
Not less remarkable than the
intensity with which Alphonsus worked is the amount of work he did. His perseverance was
indomitable. He both made and kept a vow not to lose a single moment of time. He was
helped in this by his turn of mind which was extremely practical. Though a good dogmatic
theologian--a fact which has not been sufficiently recognized--he was not a metaphysician
like the great scholastics. He was a lawyer, not only during his years at the Bar, but
throughout his whole life--a lawyer, who to skilled advocacy and an enormous knowledge of
practical detail added a wide and luminous hold of underlying principles. It was this
which made him the prince of moral theologians, and gained him, when canonization made it
possible, the title of "Doctor of the Church". This combination of practical
common sense with extraordinary energy in administrative work ought to make Alphonsus, if
he were better known, particularly attractive to the English-speaking nations, especially
as he is so modern a saint. But we must not push resemblances too far. If in some things
Alphonsus was an Anglo-Saxon, in others he was a Neapolitan of the Neapolitans, though
always a saint. He often writes as a Neapolitan to Neapolitans. Were the vehement things
in his letters and writings, especially in the matter of rebuke or complaint, to appraised
as if uttered by an Anglo-Saxon in cold blood, we might be surprised and even shocked.
Neapolitan students, in an animated but amicable discussion, seem to foreign eyes to be
taking part in a violent quarrel. St. Alphonsus appeared a miracle of calm to Tannoia.
Could he have been what an Anglo-Saxon would consider a miracle of calm, he would have
seemed to his companions absolutely inhuman. The saints are not inhuman but real men of
flesh and blood, however much some hagiographers may ignore the fact.
While the continual intensity of
reiterated acts of virtue which we have called driving-power is what really creates
sanctity, there is another indispensable quality. The extreme difficulty of the lifelong
work of fashioning a saint consists precisely in this, that every act of virtue the saint
performs goes to strengthen his character, that is, his will. On the other hand, ever
since the Fall of Man, the will of man has been his greatest danger. It has a tendency at
every moment to deflect, and if it does deflect from the right path, the greater the
momentum the more terrible the final crash. Now the saint has a very great momentum
indeed, and a spoiled saint is often a great villain.
To prevent the ship going to
pieces on the rocks, it has need of a very responsive rudder, answering to the slightest
pressure of Divine guidance. The rudder is humility, which, in the intellect, is a
realization of our own unworthiness, and in the will, docility to right guidance. But how
was Alphonsus to grow in this so necessary virtue when he was in authority nearly all his
life? The answer is that God kept him humble by interior trials. From his earliest years
he had an anxious fear about committing sin which passed at times into scruple.
He who ruled and directed others
so wisely, had, where his own soul was concerned, to depend on obedience like a little
child. To supplement this, God allowed him in the last years of his life to fall into
disgrace with the pope, and to find himself deprived of all external authority, trembling
at times even for his eternal salvation. St. Alphonsus does not offer as much directly to
the student of mystical theology as do some contemplative saints who have led more retired
lives. Unfortunately, he was not obliged by his confessor, in virtue of holy obedience, as
St. Teresa was, to write down his states of prayer; so we do not know precisely what they
were. The prayer he recommended to his Congregation, of which we have beautiful examples
in his ascetical works, is affective; the use of short aspirations, petitions, and acts of
love, rather than discursive meditation with long reflection. His own prayer was perhaps
for the most part what some call "active", others "ordinary",
contemplation. Of extraordinary passive states, such as rapture, there are not many
instances recorded in his life, though there are some. At three different times in his
missions, while preaching, a ray of light from a picture of Our Lady darted towards him,
and he fell into an ecstasy before the people. In old age he was more than once raised in
the air when speaking of God.
His intercession healed the sick;
he read the secrets of hearts, and foretold the future. He fell into a clairvoyant trance
at Arienzo on 21 September, 1774, and was present in spirit at the death-bed in Rome of
Pope Clement XIV.
It was comparatively late in life
that Alphonsus became a writer. If we except a few poems published in 1733 (the Saint was
born in 1696), his first work, a tiny volume called "Visits to the Blessed
Sacrament", only appeared in 1744 or 1745, when he was nearly fifty years old. Three
years later he published the first sketch of his "Moral Theology" in a single
quarto volume called "Annotations to Busembaum", a celebrated Jesuit moral
theologian. He spent the next few years in recasting this work, and in 1753 appeared the
first volume of the "Theologia Moralis", the second volume, dedicated to
Benedict XIV, following in 1755. Nine editions of the "Moral Theology" appeared
in the Saint's life-time, those of 1748, 1753-1755, 1757, 1760, 1763, 1767, 1773, 1779,
and 1785, the "Annotations to Busembaum" counting as the first. In the second
edition the work received the definite form it has since retained, though in later issues
the Saint retracted a number of opinions, corrected minor ones, and worked at the
statement of his theory of Equiprobabilism till at last he considered it complete. In
addition, he published many editions of compendiums of his larger work, such as the
"Homo Apostolicus", made in 1759. The "Moral Theology", after a
historical introduction by the Saint's friend, P. Zaccaria, S.J., which was omitted,
however, from the eighth and ninth editions, begins with a treatise "De
Conscientia", followed by one "De Legibus". These form the first book of
the work, while the second contains the treatises on Faith, Hope, and Charity. The third
book deals with the Ten Commandments, the fourth with the monastic and clerical states,
and the duties of judges, advocates, doctors, merchants, and others. The fifth book has
two treatises "De Actibus Humanis" and "De Peccatis"; the sixth is on
the sacraments, the seventh and last on the censures of the Church.
St. Alphonsus as a moral
theologian occupies the golden mean between the schools tending either to laxity or to
rigour which divided the theological world of his time. When he was preparing for the
priesthood in Naples, his masters were of the rigid school, for though the center of
Jansenistic disturbance was in northern Europe, no shore was so remote as not to feel the
ripple of its waves. When the Saint began to hear confessions, however, he soon saw the
harm done by rigorism, and for the rest of his life he inclined more to the mild school of
the Jesuit theologians, whom he calls "the masters of morals". St. Alphonsus,
however, did not in all things follow their teaching, especially on one point much debated
in the schools; namely, whether we may in practice follow an opinion which denies a moral
obligation, when the opinion which affirms a moral obligation seems to us to be altogether
more probable. This is the great question of "Probabilism". St. Alphonsus, after
publishing anonymously (in 1749 and 1755) two treatises advocating the right to follow the
less probable opinion, in the end decided against that lawfulness, and in case of doubt
only allowed freedom from obligation where the opinions for and against the law were equal
or nearly equal. He called his system Equiprobabilism. It is true that theologians even of
the broadest school are agreed that, when an opinion in favour of the law is so much more
probable as to amount practically to moral certainty, the less probable opinion cannot be
followed, and some have supposed that St. Alphonsus meant no more than this by his
terminology. According to this view he chose a different formula from the Jesuit writers,
partly because he thought his own terms more exact, and, partly to save his teaching and
his congregation as far as possible from the State persecution which after 1764 had
already fallen so heavily on the Society of Jesus, and in 1773 was formally to suppress
it.
It is a matter for friendly controversy, but it seems there was a real difference,
though not as great in practice as is supposed, between the Saint's later teaching and
that current in the Society. Alphonsus was a lawyer, and as a lawyer he attached much
importance to the weight of evidence. In a civil action a serious preponderance of
evidence gives one side the case. If civil courts could not decide against a defendant on
greater probability, but had to wait, as a criminal court must wait, for moral certainty,
many actions would never be decided at all. St. Alphonsus likened the conflict between law
and liberty to a civil action in which the law has the onus probandi, although
greater probabilities give it a verdict. Pure probabilism likens it to a criminal trial,
in which the jury must find in favour of liberty (the prisoner at the bar) if any single
reasonable doubt whatever remain in its favour. Furthermore, St. Alphonsus was a great
theologian, and so attached much weight to intrinsic probability. He was not afraid of
making up his mind. "I follow my conscience", he wrote in 1764, "and when
reason persuades me I make little account of moralists." To follow an opinion in
favour of liberty without weighing it, merely because it is held by someone else, would
have seemed to Alphonsus an abdication of the judicial office with which as a confessor he
was invested. Still it must in fairness be admitted that all priests are not great
theologians able to estimate intrinsic probability at its true worth, and the Church
herself might be held to have conceded something to pure probabilism by the unprecedented
honours she paid to the Saint in her Decree of 22 July, 1831, which allows confessors to
follow any of St. Alphonsus's own opinions without weighing the reasons on which they were
based.
Besides his Moral Theology, the
Saint wrote a large number of dogmatic and ascetical works nearly all in the vernacular.
The "Glories of Mary", "The Selva", "The True Spouse of
Christ", "The Great Means of Prayer", "The Way of Salvation",
"Opera Dogmatica, or History of the Council of Trent", and "Sermons for all
the Sundays in the Year", are the best known. He was also a poet and musician. His
hymns are justly celebrated in Italy. Quite recently, a duet composed by him, between the
Soul and God, was found in the British Museum bearing the date 1760 and containing a
correction in his own handwriting.
Finally, St. Alphonsus was a
wonderful letter-writer, and the mere salvage of his correspondence amounts to 1,451
letters, filling three large volumes. It is not necessary to notice certain non-Catholic
attacks on Alphonsus as a patron of lying. St. Alphonsus was so scrupulous about truth
that when, in 1776, the regalist, Mgr. Filingeri, was made Archbishop of Naples, the Saint
would not write to congratulate the new primate, even at the risk of making another
powerful enemy for his persecuted Congregation, because he thought he could not honestly
say he "was glad to hear of the appointment." It will be remembered that even as
a young man his chief distress at his breakdown in court was the fear that his mistake
might be ascribed to deceit. The question as to what does or does not constitute a lie is
not an easy one, but it is a subject in itself. Alphonsus said nothing in his "Moral
Theology" which is not the common teaching of Catholic theologians.
Very few remarks upon his own
times occur in the Saint's letters. The eighteenth century was one series of great wars;
that of the Spanish, Polish, and Austrian Succession; the Seven Years' War, and the War of
American Independence, ending with the still more gigantic struggles in Europe, which
arose out of the events of 1789. Except in '45, in all of these, down to the first shot
fired at Lexington, the English-speaking world was on one side and the Bourbon States,
including Naples, on the other. But to all this secular history about the only reference
in the Saint's correspondence which has come down to us is a sentence in a letter of
April, 1744, which speaks of the passage of the Spanish troops who had come to defend
Naples against the Austrians. He was more concerned with the spiritual conflict which was
going on at the same time. The days were indeed evil. Infidelity and impiety were gaining
ground; Voltaire and Rousseau were the idols of society; and the ancien régime, by
undermining religion, its one support, was tottering to its fall. Alphonsus was a devoted
friend of the Society of Jesus and its long persecution by the Bourbon Courts, ending in
its suppression in 1773, filled him with grief. He died on the very eve of the great
Revolution which was to sweep the persecutors away, having seen in vision the woes which
the French invasion of 1798 was to bring on Naples.
An interesting series of
portraits might be painted of those who play a part in the Saint's history: Charles III
and his minister Tanucci; Charle's son Ferdinand, and Ferdinand's strange and unhappy
Queen, Maria Carolina, daughter of Maria Teresa and sister of Marie Antoinette; Cardinals
Spinelli, Sersale, and Orsini; Popes Benedict XIV, Clement XIII, Clement XIV, and Pius VI,
to each of whom Alphonsus dedicated a volume of his works. Even the baleful shadow of
Voltaire falls across the Saint's life, for Alphonsus wrote to congratulate him on a
conversion, which alas, never took place! Again, we have a friendship of thirty years with
the great Venetian publishing house of Remondini, whose letters from the Saint, carefully
preserved as became business men, fill a quarto volume. Other personal friends of
Alphonsus were the Jesuit Fathers de Matteis, Zaccaria, and Nonnotte.
A respected opponent was the
redoubtable Dominican controversialist, P. Vincenzo Patuzzi, while to make up for hard
blows we have another Dominican, P. Caputo, President of Alphonsus's seminary and a
devoted helper in his work of reform. To come to saints, the great Jesuit missionary St.
Francis di Geronimo took the little Alphonsus in his arms, blessed him, and prophesied
that he would do great work for God; while a Franciscan, St. John Joseph of the Cross, was
well known to Alphonsus in later life. Both of them were canonized on the same day as the
Holy Doctor, 26 May, 1839. St. Paul of the Cross (1694-1775) and St. Alphonsus, who were
altogether contemporaries, seem never to have met on earth, though the founder of the
Passionists was a great friend of Alphonsus's uncle, Mgr. Cavalieri, himself a great
servant of God. Other saints and servants of God were those of Alphonsus's own household,
the lay brother, St. Gerard Majella, who died in 1755, and Januarius Sarnelli, Cfsar
Sportelli, Dominic Blasucci, and Maria Celeste, all of whom have been declared
"Venerable" by the Church.
Blessed Clement Hofbauer joined
the Redemptorist congregation in the aged Saint's lifetime, though Alphonsus never saw in
the flesh the man whom he knew would be the second founder of his Order. Except for the
chances of European war, England and Naples were then in different worlds, but Alphonsus
may have seen at the side of Don Carlos when he conquered Naples in 1734, an English boy
of fourteen who had already shown great gallantry under fire and was to play a romantic
part in history, Prince Charles Edward Stuart. But one may easily overcrowd a narrow
canvas and it is better in so slight a sketch to leave the central figure in solitary
relief. If any reader of this article will go to original sources and study the Saint's
life at greater length, he will not find his labour thrown away.
From Catholic Encyclopedia (1907)