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ST FELIX OF CANTALICE, CAPUCHIN FRIAR - 18 MAY

 

ALL SAINTS CELEBRATED IN MAY

Saints celebrated on the 18th of May

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SAINT FELIX OF CANTALICE, CAPUCHIN FRIAR 

[Saint Felix of Cantalice] was a Capuchin friar, born at Cantalice, on the north-western border of the Abruzzi; he died at Rome, May 18, 1587. His feast is celebrated among the Franciscans and in certain Italian dioceses on May 18. He is usually represented in art as holding in his arms the Infant Jesus, because of a vision he once had, when the Blessed Virgin appeared to him and placed the Divine Child in his arms.

FARM LABOUR

His parents were peasant folk, and very early he was set to tend sheep. When nine years of age he was hired out to a farmer at Cotta Ducale with whom he remained for over twenty years, first as a shepherd-boy and afterwards as a farm labourer. 

SIGNS OF GREAT HOLINESS

But from his earliest years Felix evinced signs of great holiness, spending all his leisure time in prayer, either in the harsh or in some solitary place. A friend of his having read to him the lives of the Fathers of the Desert, Felix conceived a great desire for the eremitical life, but at the same time feared to live otherwise than under the obedience of a superior. 

HE ASKED ADMITTANCE AMONGST THE CAPUCHINS

After seeking light in prayer, he determined to ask admittance amongst the Capuchins. At first the friars hesitated to accept him, but he eventually received the habit, in 1543, at Anticoli in the Roman Province. 

It was not without the severest temptations that he persevered and made his profession. These temptations were so severe as injure his bodily health. In 1547 he was sent to Rome and appointed questor for the community. Here he remained for the rest of his life, and in fulfilling his lowly office became a veritable apostle of Rome.

A VERITABLE APOSTLE OF ROME

The influence which he speedily gained with the Roman people is an evidence of the inherent power of personal holiness over the consciences of men. He had no learning he could not even read; yet learned theologians came to consult him upon the science of the spiritual life and the Scriptures. 

Whenever he appeared in the streets of Rome vicious persons grew abased and withdrew from his sight. Sometimes Felix would stop them and earnestly exhort them to live a better life; especially did he endeavour to restrain young men. 

THEY ORGANISED A PROCESSION

But judges and dignitaries also at times incurred his rebuke, he was no respecter of persons when it was a matter of preventing sin. On one occasion, during a Carnival, he and Saint Philip Neri organised a procession with their crucifix; then came the Capuchin friars; last came Felix leading Fra Lupo, a well-known Capuchin preacher, by a rope round his neck, to represent Our Lord led to judgment by his executioners. Arrived in the middle of the revels, the procession halted and Fra Lupo preached to the people. The Carnival, with its open vice, was broken up for that year.

HE SET THEM TO SING CANTICLES

But Felix’s special apostolate was amongst the children of the city, with whom his childlike simplicity made him a special favourite. His method with these was to gather them together in bands and, forming circle, set them to sing canticles of his own composing, by which he taught them the beauty of a good life and the ugliness of sin. 

THE FAMINE OF 1580

These canticles became popular and frequently, when on his rounds in quest of alms, Felix would be invited into the houses of his benefactors and asked to sing. He would seize the opportunity to bring home some spiritual truth in extemporized verse. During the famine of 1580 the directors of the city’s charities asked his superiors to place Felix at their disposal to collect alms for the starving, and he was untiring in his quest.

HUMILITY AND SIMPLICITY

Saint Philip Neri had a deep affection for the Capuchin lay brother, whom he once proclaimed the greatest saint then living in the Church. When Saint Charles Borromeo sought Saint Philip’s aid in drawing up the constitutions of his Oblates, Saint Philip took him to Saint Felix as the most competent adviser in such matters. But through all, Felix kept his wonderful humility and simplicity. He was accustomed to style himself “Ass of the Capuchins”. 

Acclaimed a Saint by the people of Rome, immediately after his death, he was beatified by Urban VIII in 1625, and canonised by Clement XI in 1712. His body rests under an altar dedicated to him in the church of the Immaculate Conception to Rome.

(From Catholic Encyclopedia, 1913)



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