Saint of the day - September 17
St. Robert Bellarmine
(1542-1621)
When
Robert Bellarmine was ordained in 1570, the study of Church history and
the fathers of the Church was in a sad state of neglect. A promising
scholar from his youth in Tuscany, he devoted his energy to these two
subjects, as well as to Scripture, in order to systematize Church
doctrine against the attacks of the Protestant Reformers. He was the
first Jesuit to become a professor at Louvain.
His most famous work is his three-volume Disputations on the Controversies of the Christian Faith.
Particularly noteworthy are the sections on the temporal power of the
pope and the role of the laity. He incurred the anger of monarchists in
England and France by showing the divine-right-of-kings theory
untenable. He developed the theory of the indirect power of the pope in
temporal affairs; although he was defending the pope against the
Scottish philosopher Barclay, he also incurred the ire of Pope Sixtus V.
Bellarmine was made a cardinal by Pope Clement VIII on the
grounds that "he had not his equal for learning." While he occupied
apartments in the Vatican, Bellarmine relaxed none of his former
austerities. He limited his household expenses to what was barely
essential, eating only the food available to the poor. He was known to
have ransomed a soldier who had deserted from the army and he used the
hangings of his rooms to clothe poor people, remarking, "The walls won't
catch cold."
Among many activities, he became theologian to Pope
Clement VIII, preparing two catechisms which have had great influence
in the Church.
The last major controversy of Bellarmine's life
came in 1616 when he had to admonish his friend Galileo, whom he
admired. Bellarmine delivered the admonition on behalf of the Holy
Office, which had decided that the heliocentric theory of Copernicus
(the sun as stationary) was contrary to Scripture. The admonition
amounted to a caution against putting forward—other than as a
hypothesis—theories not yet fully proved. This shows that saints are not
infallible.
Bellarmine died on September 17, 1621. The process
for his canonization was begun in 1627 but was delayed until 1930 for
political reasons, stemming from his writings. In 1930, Pope Pius XI
canonized him and the next year declared him a doctor of the Church.
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