St. John Gualbert, Abbot | Saint of the Day | July 12

Prayer to St. John Gualbert, Abbot

Lord, amid the things of this world, let us be wholeheartedly committed to heavenly things in imitation of the example of evangelical perfection You have given us in St. John the Abbot. Amen.




St. John Gualbert, Abbot

The city of Florence gave to the world St. John Gualbert. Although he enjoyed the benefits of an early Christians education, his youthful heart was soon attracted to the vanities of the world. A painful incident was the means God made use of to open his eyes. Hugo, his only brother, had been murdered and St. John had resolved to avenge his death. On a certain Good Friday he met his enemy in a place where there was no escape for the latter.

St. John drew his sword and would have killed his adversary on the spot, but the latter threw himself on his knees begging him by the Passion of Jesus Christ to spare his life. St. John was touched at the words, embraced his enemy, entered a church and prayed with many tears for the pardon of his sins.

The Saint now entered the Order of St. Benedict, in which he made such great progress in virtue that after the death of the Abbot the monks wished to impose this dignity upon him, but St. John absolutely refused to accept it. Sometimes later he left the monastery with one companion in quest of great solitude.

Having visited the hermitage of Camaldoli, the Saint finally settled at Valle Ombrosa in Tuscany. Together with two companions built a small monastery, oserving the primitive rule of St. Benedict. Thus was laid the foundation of the Order of Vallombrosa. Such was St. John’s humility that he would never allow himself to be promoted, even to Minor Orders. His charity for the poor caused him to make a rule that no indigent person should be sent away without an alms. He founded several monasteries, reformed others, and succeeded in eradicating the vice of simony from the part of the country where he lived. He died on July 12, 1073, at about eighty years of age, and was canonized in 1193 by Pope Celestine III.

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