Increase font size Default font size Decrease font size Pontificio Orientale English POI





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
OOPS. Your Flash player is missing or outdated.Click here to update your player so you can see this content.
You are here : Home
SAINT COLOMBANO AND THE “CHRISTIAN ROOTS” OF EUROPE PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Thursday, 12 June 2008
san-colombano.jpg "A man of great culture and rich in the gifts of grace, both as an indefatigable builder of monasteries and an uncompromising penitential preacher, he spent all his energies in feeding the Christian roots of the Europe that was being born". This is the portrait of Saint Colombano, the Irish abbot born in 543 and died in 615, the focus of today's audience. The Pope defined him a "European" saint, because "as a monk, a missionary and a writer, he worked in many countries of Western Europe". "Along with the Irish of his time", Saint Colombano "was aware of the cultural unity of Europe": in one of his letters, written around 600 to Pope Gregory the Great, "we can find for the very first time - highlighted Benedict XVI - the phrase ‘totius Europae - of all Europe', speaking of the presence of the Church in the Continent". Saint Colombano's "message", according to the Pope, "focuses on a firm reference to conversion and the detachment from earthly goods, with a view to eternal inheritance". In particular, "with his ascetic life and uncompromising behaviour before the corruption of the powerful, he recalls the severe figure of John the Baptist". An "austerity", that of Saint Colombano's, which however "is never an end in itself". Comece has recently proposed to appoint Saint Colombano the patron saint of Western Europe. A monk at 20, around the age of 50 Colombano leaves Ireland "to venture, with twelve mates, on a missionary work on the European continent, where the migration of peoples from the north and east had made Christianised regions fall back into paganism". On the coast of Brittany, Colombano and his followers carried out a work "of re-evangelisation, through the testimony of life". In the Rule written by Saint Colombano in Luxeuil - "the only Irish ancient monastic rule we have nowadays, commented the Holy Father, he "draws the ideal image of the monk" and also develops "a sort of criminal code for the monks' breaches" and brings "private and reiterated confession and penance" into the continent. "As uncompromising as he was in every moral issue", as well as with the bishops Colombano "came into conflict with the royal house too". That's why he was sentenced to exile and was engaged in the "new work of re-evangelisation", first on the Rhine and near Lake Constance (where the abbey of Saint Gall grew from the hermitage founded by one of his monks, Gallus), then in Italy, where, despite the "benevolent reception" of the Lombard court, he had to face the Arian heresy and the schism that were threatening the Church. In Bobbio, where he died, he founded a new monastery, "which would then become a cultural centre, comparable to the famous one of Montecassino".
Saint Colombano, “with his spiritual energy, with his faith, has truly become one of the fathers of Europe, who still shows us where the roots are, on which this Europe of ours can be reborn”. With these words, spoken off the cuff, the Pope ended the catechesis for today’s general audience in Saint Peter’s Square in front of about 15 thousand devotees. With reference to the “re-evangelisation” work accomplished by Saint Colombano on the coast of Brittany, Benedict XVI pointed out that “the fame of those foreign religious people who, living of prayer and austerity, built houses and tilled the land, quickly spread and attracted pilgrims and repentant sinners”. “An exemplary life that rebuilt the land and the souls”, this is how Benedict XVI defined it, speaking off the cuff and highlighting that “many young people asked to live like them”. Saint Colombano’s message, commented the Holy Father, off the cuff, was a message “against rampant corruption”, to convert “the land and human society as well”.

News by SIR
 
< Prev   Next >






Pontifical Oriental Institute
POI

Top Video

Get the Flash Player to see this player.

Events

There are no upcoming events currently scheduled.
View Full Calendar
March 2010 April 2010
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
Week 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Week 10 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Week 11 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
Week 12 22 23 24 25 26 27 28
Week 13 29 30 31

Polls


Members: 930
News: 780
Web Links: 13
Visitors: 3255937

Visitors by Country

Totals Top 10
 56 % United States (82014)
 7 % Italy (10893)
 4 % United Kingdom (6076)
 3 % China (4436)
 2 % Unknown (3299)
 2 % Sweden (2951)
 2 % Russian Federation (2609)
 2 % Germany (2509)
 2 % Canada (2242)
 < 1.0 % Australia (1563)
335.74Visitors per day: Ø
3,226,893Page views:
1,190Page views today:
3,539Page views yesterday:
3,887.55Page views per day: Ø
11.58Page views per visitor: Ø
752Page views this page:
10Your own page views:
max.
298Max. online:
2008-06-17, 01:00:00at (date):
853Max. visitors per day:
2009-08-21at (date):
10,476Max. page views per day:
2008-05-23at (date):
Made by the Paul Freeman Team with Joomla! -- partner of Zammerù Maskil - www.zammerumaskil.com as a witness to Catholic, Ecumenical, and Interreligious dialogue

The Pontifical Oriental Institute (POI - or PIO in Italian version - Pontificio Istituto Oientale) is an educational facility under the jurisdiction of the Holy See dedicated to advanced studies on Eastern Christianity. This Pontifical Institute of  the Oriental Church has  a special Catholic mission. Its Catholic mission aims at diffusing knowledge and appreciation for the religious and cultural traditions of the Eastern Christian churches. Its Eastern orientation is recognized by the two faculties of specialization offered: the Faculty of Eastern Church Studies and the Faculty of Eastern Canon Law. The Oriental Institute is also dedicated to the progression in ecumenical dialogue between the churches and holds a student body composed from among all creeds.


This XHTML Template and its CSS is validated in W3C