dominican saints
Bl. Gonsalvo de Amarante, C.O.P.
Feast Day January 16th
Born: 1187 at Vizella, diocese of Braga, Portugal
Died: January 10, 1259 of natural causes at 71 years old
Beatified: By Pius IV on September 16, 1561
Patronage: In Portugal- Amarante and Braga In Brazil – Acaiaca, Belo Vale, Contagem
Attributes: Dominican Habit; light shining on him while holding a ball or a monastery; giving food to beggars.
Gonsalvo de Amarante was a true son of the Middle Ages, a man right out of the pages of the ‘Golden Legend.’ His whole life reads like a mural from the wall of a church–full of marvelous things and done up in brilliant colors.
In his boyhood Gonsalvo Pereira was gave wonderful indications of his holiness. While still small, he was consecrated to study for the Church, and received his training in the household of the archbishop of Braga. After his ordination he was given charge of a wealthy parish, an assignment that should have made him very happy. Gonsalvo was not as interested in choice parishes as some of his companions; he went to his favorite Madonna shrine and begged Our Lady to help him administer this office fairly.
There was no complaint with Gonsalvo’s governance of the parish of Saint Pelagius. He was penitential himself, but indulgent with everyone else. Revenues that he might have used for himself were used for the poor and the sick. The parish, in fact, was doing very well when he turned it over to his nephew, whom he had carefully trained as a priest, before making a pilgrimage to the Holy Land.
Gonsalvo would have remained his entire life in the Holy Land, but after 14 years his archbishop commanded him to return to Portugal. Upon his arrival, he was horrified to see that his nephew had not been the good shepherd that he had promised to be, the money left for the poor had gone to purchase a fine stable of thoroughbred horses and a pack of fine hounds. The nephew had told everyone that his old uncle was dead, and he had been appointed pastor in his place by an unsuspecting archbishop. When the uncle appeared on the scene, ragged and old, but very much alive, the nephew was not happy to see him. Gonsalvo seems to have been surprised as well as pained.
The ungrateful nephew settled the matter by turning the dogs on his inconvenient uncle. They would have torn him to pieces, but the servants called them off and allowed the ragged pilgrim to escape. Gonsalvo decided then that he had withstood enough parish life, and went out into the hills to a place called Amarante. Here he found a cave and other necessities for an eremitical life and lived in peace for several years, spending his time building a little chapel to the Blessed Virgin. He preached to those who came to him, and soon there was a steady stream of pilgrims seeking out his retreat.
Happy as he was, Golsalvo felt that this was not his sole mission in life, and he prayed to Our Lady to help him to discern his real vocation. She appeared to him one night as he prayed and told him to enter the order that had the custom of beginning the office with “Ave Maria gratia plena.” She told him that this order was very dear to her and under her special protection. Gonsalvo set out to learn what order she meant, and eventually came to the convent of the Dominicans. Here was the end of the quest, and he asked for the habit.
Blessed Peter Gonzales was the prior, and he gave the habit to the new aspirant. After Gonsalvo had gone through his novitiate, he was sent back to Amarante, with a companion, to begin a regular house of the order. The people of the neighborhood quickly spread the news that the hermit was back. They flocked to hear him preach, and begged him to heal their sick.
One of the miracles of Blessed Gonsalvo concerns the building of a bridge across a swift river that barred many people from reaching the hermitage in wintertime. It was not a good place to build a bridge, but Gonsalvo set about it and followed the heavenly directions he had received. Once, during the building of the bridge, he went out collecting, and a man who wanted to brush him off painlessly sent him away with a note for his wife.
Gonsalvo took the note to the man’s wife, and she laughed when she read it. “Give him as much gold as will balance with the note I send you,” said the message. Gonsalvo told her he thought she ought to obey her husband, so she got out the scales and put the paper in one balance. Then she put a tiny coin in the other balance, and another, and another–the paper still outweighed her gold–and she kept adding. There was a sizeable pile of coins before the balance with the paper in it swung upwards.
Gonsalvo died about 1259, after prophesying the day of his death and promising his friends that he would still be able to help them after death. Pilgrimages began soon, and a series of miracles indicated that something should be done about his beatification. Forty years after his death he appeared to several people who were apprehensively watching a flood on the river. The water had arisen to a dangerous level, just below the bridge, when they saw a tree floating towards the bridge, and Gonsalvo was balancing capably on its rolling balk. The friar carefully guided the tree under the bridge, preserving the bridge from damage, and then disappeared (Benedictines, Dorcy).
Bl. Gonsalvo of Amarantha, Confessor
Gonsalvo or Gundisalvus was a native of Portugal, and was born of noble parents about A.D. 1187.
When he was carried to the font, the bystanders observed that the infant fixed his eyes on the crucifix with a look of extraordinary love. Whenever, in after life, the child was fretful or ill, if his mother showed him some holy image, it immediately soothed him, and he would hold out his arms to embrace it. When he grew up, he entered the ecclesiastical state, and was given a rich benefice by the Archbishop of Braga.
After discharging the duties attached to this post with the utmost fidelity for some years, Gonsalvo felt a great desire to visit the Holy Land as a pilgrim and obtained leave to commit the care of his parish during his absence to one of his nephews.
He spent fourteen years in pilgrimage, at the end of which time he returned to Portugal and hastened to his home. To his sorrow he found that his nephew had fallen into evil ways and was leading a life of riot and dissipation. The young man had long believed that his uncle was dead, and, not recognizing him in the ragged and wayworn pilgrim who came to his gate begging for alms, he drove him away with curses and blows. Gonsalvo did not make himself known, but, retiring to a solitary place, built a little hermitage, where he led an austere life, employing him self in preaching missions in the surrounding villages.
The fame of his sanctity soon spread. Gonsalvo, however, felt that his true vocation had not yet been made manifest to him. One night, as he slept at the foot of the altar in his little hermitage, the Blessed Virgin appeared to him and commanded him to enter that religious Order wherein her Office began and ended with the Ave Maria. On awakening, Gonsalvo could remember no Order where this custom prevailed; but he resolved at once to set out in search of the institute to which the voice of Our Lady had called him. He passed through a great part of Spain and Portugal, visiting convent after convent, before he could find the one which he sought. Arriving at length at the newly founded Dominican Convent of Guimares, of which Blessed Peter Gonzalez was then prior, he asked for a night’s hospitality; and, as he was retiring to rest, he heard the Brethren, according to their custom, reciting the Office of Our Lady in the Dormitory. It began with the Ave Maria, and Gonsalvo listened anxiously for the conclusion, in the hope that he should receive an assurance that his search had ended and that his faith and obedience were about to be rewarded. His ear soon caught the welcome sound of the Angelic Salutation, repeated at the close also of the Office, and he at once begged for the habit and was admitted into the Order.
After his profession, he was allowed to return with a companion to his old hermitage at Amarantha, whence he went forth, as before, to preach in the surrounding towns and villages. He built a bridge, partly with his own hands, over the river Tamaga, which flowed near his hermitage. Many persons had lost their lives in attempting to forde this river; Gonsalvo therefore undertook the difficult task of constructing the bridge purely as a work of charity. God marked His approval of His servant’s labors by many miracles. On one occasion, provisions failing him and the peasants who worked with him, Gonsalvo went to the riverside and made the sign of the Cross; after which he called the fishes to him and a great number obeyed his voice. Coming to the shore and leaping about, as if to show their goodwill, they suffered him to take them alive with his hands; and, when he had secured as many as he required, he dismissed the others with his blessing.
On another occasion, when he was preaching to the people, desiring to make them understand the effect of the Church’s censures upon the soul, he excommunicated a basket of bread and the loaves at once became black and corrupt. Then, to show that the Church can restore to her communion those who humbly acknowledge their fault, he removed the excommunication, and the loaves recovered their whiteness and their wholesome savor.
Gonsalvo died A.D. 1259. Many miracles were worked through his intercession. In the year 1400, during a terrible inundation of the Tamaga, he was seen turning aside some oak trees which, borne along by the raging stream, threatened the destruction of his bridge. In the year 1540, his chapel and hermitage came into the possession of the Order. Pope Pius IV gave permission for the Mass and Office of Blessed Gonsalvo to be celebrated in all the territories dependent on the crown of Portugal, a privilege which was afterwards extended by Clement X. to the entire Dominican Order.
Taken from “Short Lives of the Dominican Saints” (London, Kegan Paul, Trench, and Trübner & Co., Ltd., 1901)
Prayers/Commemorations
First Vespers:
Ant. Strengthen by holy intercession, O Gonsalvo, confessor of the Lord, those here present, have we who are burdened with the weight of our offenses may be relieved by the glory of thy blessedness, and may by thy guidance attain eternal rewards.
V. Pray for us, Blessed Gonsalvo.
R. That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.
Lauds:
Ant. Well done, good and faithful servant, because Thou has been faithful in a few things, I will set thee over many, sayeth the Lord.
V. The just man shall blossom like the lily.
R. And shall flourish forever before the Lord.
Second Vespers:
Ant. I will liken him unto a wise man, who built his house upon a rock..
V. Pray for us. Blessed Gonsalvo.
R. That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.
Prayer:
Let us Pray: O God, who didst wonderfully enflame the mind of Blessed Gonsalvo, Thy confessor with the love of Thy holy name, grant, we beseech Thee, that, treading in his footsteps, we may ever think of Thee, and with fervent zeal do those things that are agreeable to Thee. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.