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ST GREGORY OF TOURS - 17 NOVEMBER

 

ALL SAINTS CELEBRATED IN NOVEMBER

Saints celebrated on the 17th of November 

WELCOME!

SAINT GREGORY OF TOURS, BISHOP AND CONFESSOR

The second ornament of the church of Tours after the great St Martin, was George Florentius Gregory. 

He was born at Auvergne, of one of the most illustrious families of that country, both for riches and nobility; and, what was far more valuable, piety seemed hereditary in it. 

Leocadia, his grandmother, descended from Vettius Epagatus, the illustrious martyr of Lyons. His father was brother to St Gallus, bishop of Clermont, under whom, and his successor St Avitus, Gregory had his education. 

He received the clerical tonsure from the former, and was ordained deacon by the latter. 

HE RECEIVED THE CLERICAL TONSURE AND WAS ORDAINED DEACON

Having contracted a dangerous distemper, for the recovery of his health he made a visit of devotion to the tomb of St Martin at Tours, and had scarcely left that city when, upon the death of St Euphronius, the clergy and people, who had been charmed with his piety, learning, and humility, chose him bishop. 

Their deputies overtook him at the court of Sigebert, king of Austrasia, and the saint being compelled to acquiesce, though much against his will, he was consecrated by Giles, bishop of Rheims, on August 22, 573, being thirty-four years old. 

BISHOP OF RHEIMS

Faith and piety, in the diocese of Tours, received a new increase under his conduct. He rebuilt his cathedral (which was founded by St Martin) and several other churches; he assisted at the council of Paris in 577, and there defended St Praetextatus, bishop of Rouen, with so much zeal and prudence as to gain the applause of king Chilperic himself, the persecutor of that injured prelate. 

HE REBUILT THE CATHEDRAL

The Arians and Sabellians in France were often confounded by him, and the greatest part of them were brought over to the unity of faith by his mildness and erudition. 

St Odo extols his meekness, profound humility, ardent zeal for religion, and charity towards all, especially his enemies. 

The admirable purity of his life and manners could not shelter him from slanders and persecutions, and he was accused of a design of surrendering the city of Tours to King Childebert; but cleared in a council held at Braine a royal palace, three leagues from Soissons, in 580. 

THE PURITY OF HIS LIFE AND MANNERS COULD NOT SHELTER HIM FROM SLANDERS AND PERSECUTIONS

Chilperic condemned at Braine a nobleman named Dacco, accused by treachery, to be put to death. Dacco besought a priest, without the king’s privity, to admit him to penance; which being done, he was executed. 

This is an instance of secret penance and confession at the point of death, and of the impious maxim which anciently prevailed, sometimes in the civil courts in France, of refusing the sacraments to dying criminals that were guilty of grievous crimes. 

The stupidity and vanity of King Chilperic appear in his rash disputations with St Gregory about the fundamental articles of our faith, in which the Saint vigorously opposed his extravagances. 

TO GOD ALONE ALL PRAISE IS DUE

In 594 our saint went to Rome out of devotion, and was received with distinction by St Gregory the Great, who made him a present of a gold chain. That Pope admired the great graces and virtues of his soul, and the lowness of his stature. To whom the bishop of Tours replied: "We are such as God has framed us: but he is the same in the little and in the great;" meaning, that God is the author of all the good that is in us, and to him alone all praise is due. 

GOD IS THE AUTHOR OF ALL THE GOOD THAT IS IN US

Several miracles are ascribed to St Gregory of Tours, which he attributed to St Martin and other saints, whose relics he always carried about him. 

When certain thieves who had robbed the church of St Martin were taken, St Gregory was afraid lest King Chilperic should put them to death, and wrote to him to save their lives; and as no one appeared to carry on the prosecution against them, they were pardoned. 

ALL SHOULD WALK OVER HIS GRAVE

This saint was bishop twenty-three years, and died on November 17, 596. Before his death he ordered his body to be buried in a place where all who came to the church should walk over his grave, and where no memorial could be erected. 

From Fr Butler's Lives of the Saints



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