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Saint Thomas Aquinas

 

Feast: January 28 - Obligatory Memorial
Born: 1225   Died: 1274   Canonized: 1323  Doctor of the Church 1567

St. Thomas was born in 1225 AD into the family of the Count of Aquino. While studying in Paris at Cologne, he had St. Albert the Great for an instructor. St. Thomas has been given the title of the Angelic Doctor. His most known works include: Adoro te devote , O salutaris , Tantum Ergo , Pange Linqua , and Summa Theologiæ which was never finished because he died on his way to the Council of Lyons in 1274 A.D. His body was transferred to Touluse in 1369 AD on January 28. St. Thomas is the Patron Saint of Book Sellers, Catholic Schools, Colleges, Universities, Philosophers, Schools, Students, and Theology.

 

At 5 years old, the young St. Thomas was introduced to the Benedictine monks of Monte Cassino for training. While receiving instruction there, St. Thomas was noted for his diligence and prayer, and even his advanced questions, such as “What is God?”

The Abbot of Monte Cassino in 1236, knowing that this small boy deserved better instruction than his community could provide, sent him to the University of Naples where in just a few months St. Thomas reportedly began to surpass his professors in knowledge and understanding.

After he had received the habit of the Order of St. Dominic around 1243, his mother, Countess of Teano, having barely seen her child after he was sent to Monte Cassino, conspired to kidnap St. Thomas and tempt him to leave the religious life and return to his family. While St. Thomas was under the Countess’s control at the fortress of San Giovanni, she sent an impure woman to tempt him to abandon his religious celibacy, but St. Thomas drove the temptress out of his cell with a brand from the fire.

While he was in captivity for over a year, St. Thomas’s sister provided the young scholar with copies of the Holy Scriptures, Aristotle’s Metaphysics, and the Sentences of Peter Lombard. When he was released, the Dominicans rejoiced at the intellectual progress St. Thomas had made while imprisoned.

Despite his family’s protests, St. Thomas continued to pursue membership in the Dominican Order, finally becoming a member of the Order of Friars Preachers. The Order sent him to study with St. Albert the Great in Cologne and at the University of Paris.

[Despite his imposing large build, St. Thomas remained devotedly humble. His peers at the University of Paris referred to him as the “dumb ox,” because of his size and meek humbleness to present his knowledge in front of others. However, after a brilliant defence of a difficult thesis in class, his teacher exclaimed, “We call this young man a dumb ox, but his bellowing in doctrine will one day resound throughout the world.

By 1250, St. Thomas had been ordained to the priesthood and was now preaching to packed crowds in churches in Germany, France, and Italy. People came from miles around to hear his brilliant interpretations of scripture. In 1257, St. Thomas, coincidentally in the same year as the other great theologian St. Bonaventure, received his doctorate in Theology from the University of Paris.

As his fame grew, his life became increasingly hectic. He was simultaneously praying, preaching, teaching, writing, and journeying … while also writing his famous book the Summa Theologica. He was in tremendous demand: people flocked to hear his sermons, the Pope demanded his presence in Rome, and Paris claimed the “dumb ox” as its own.

However, his busy life soon caught up with him. By 1273, St. Thomas was experiencing regular religious ecstasies and visions. After the Eucharist in a Naples Church, he was reported to have been contacted by Jesus himself. Three of the brethren reported hearing a booming heavenly voice resound, “Thou has written well of me, Thomas; what reward wilt thou have?” St. Thomas replied, “None other than thyself, Lord.

Soon after, St. Thomas ceased his work on the Summa Theologica, citing the impossibilities of ever truly interpreting the word of God. In 1274, Pope Gregory X called for a general council of the Church at Lyons and St. Thomas, while en route, fell ill near Terracina and was taken in by local Cistercian monks. He died on March 7 of that year at the age of 49.

After his death, his body was given to the Dominican Church at Toulouse, where a shrine was erected. However, it was later destroyed during the French Revolution. As a precaution, his body was later moved to the Church of St. Sernin in Toulouse with his left arm sent to the Cathedral of Naples and his right arm to the Dominican Church of S. Maria Sopra Minerva in Rome.

St. Thomas was canonized by Pope John XXII on July 18, 1323, and was proclaimed Doctor of the Church by Pope Pius V in 1567, becoming the patron saint of all Catholic universities and students worldwide. St. Thomas’ feast day is celebrated internationally on January 28.

303.344.9300 St. Isidore Church
attn: Fr. Trevor Burfitt
32100 E. Colfax Svc Rd
Watkins , CO   80137

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