From Fr. Butler's Lives of the Saints.
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ST.
BENEDICT, blessed by grace and in name, was born of a noble Italian family
about 480. When a boy he was sent to Rome, and there placed in the public
schools. Scared by the licentiousness of the Roman youth, he fled to the desert
mountains of Subiaco, and was directed by the Holy Spirit into a cave, deep,
craggy, and almost inaccessible. He lived there for three years, unknown to any
one save the holy monk Romanus, who clothed him with the monastic habit and
brought him food. But the fame of his sanctity soon gathered disciples round
him. The rigor of his rule, however, drew on him the hatred of some of the monks,
and one of them mixed poison with the abbot's drink; but when the Saint made
the sign of the cross on the poisoned bowl, it broke and fell in pieces to the
ground. After he had built twelve monasteries at Subiaco, he removed to Monte
Casino, where he founded an abbey in which he wrote his rule and lived until
death. By prayer he did all things: wrought miracles, saw visions, and
prophesied. A peasant, whose boy had just died, ran in anguish to St. Benedict,
crying out, "Give me back my son!" The monks joined the poor man in
his entreaties; but the Saint replied, "Such miracles are not for us to
work, but for the blessed apostles. Why will you lay upon me a burden which my
weakness cannot bear?" Moved at length by compassion he knelt down and,
prostrating himself upon the body of the child, prayed earnestly. Then rising,
he cried out, "Behold not, O Lord, my sins, but the faith of this man, who
desireth the life of his son, and restore to the body that soul which Thou hast
taken away." Hardly had he spoken when the child's body began to tremble,
and taking it by the hand he restored it alive to its father. Six days before
his death he ordered his grave to be opened, and fell ill of a fever. On the
sixth day he requested to be borne into the chapel, and, having received the
body and blood of Christ, with hands uplifted, and leaning on one of his
disciples, he calmly expired in prayer on the 21st of March, 543.
Reflection.—The Saints never feared to
undertake any work, however arduous, for God, because, distrusting self, they
relied for assistance and support wholly upon prayer.
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