Aloysius Gonzaga

Saint Aloysius Gonzaga, S.J.
Confessor
Born (1568-03-09)March 9, 1568
Castiglione delle Stiviere,
Duchy of Mantua,
Holy Roman Empire
Died June 21, 1591(1591-06-21) (aged 23)
Rome, Papal States
Venerated in Catholic Church
Beatified October 19, 1605, Rome, Papal States by Pope Paul V
Canonized December 31, 1726, Rome, Papal States by Pope Benedict XIII
Major shrine Church of Sant'Ignazio,
Rome, Italy
Feast 21 June
Attributes Lily, Crown (headgear), cross, skull, rosary
Patronage Young students, Christian youth, Jesuit scholastics, the blind, AIDS patients, AIDS care-givers

Saint Aloysius Gonzaga, S.J. (Italian: Luigi Gonzaga;[1] March 9, 1568  June 21, 1591) was an Italian aristocrat who became a member of the Society of Jesus. While still a student at the Roman College, he died as a result of caring for the victims of an epidemic. He was beatified in 1605, and canonized in 1726.

Early life

Gonzaga was born the eldest of seven children,[2] at his family's castle in Castiglione delle Stiviere, between Brescia and Mantua in northern Italy in what was then part of the Duchy of Mantua, into the illustrious House of Gonzaga. "Aloysius" is the Latin form of Gonzaga's given name in Italian, Luigi.[3] He was the oldest son of Ferrante Gonzaga (1544–1586), Marquis of Castiglione, and Marta Tana di Santena, daughter of a baron of the Piedmontese Della Rovere family. His mother was a lady-in-waiting to Isabel, the wife of Philip II of Spain.[4]

As the first-born son, he was in line to inherit his father's title of Marquis.[3] His father assumed that Aloysius would become a soldier, as the family was constantly involved in the frequent minor wars in the region. His military training started at an early age, but he also received an education in languages and the arts. As early as age four, Luigi was given a set of miniature guns and accompanied his father on training expeditions so that the boy might learn “the art of arms.”[4] At the age of five, Aloysius was sent to a military camp to get started on his career. His father was pleased to see his son marching around camp at the head of a platoon of soldiers. His mother and his tutor were less pleased with the vocabulary he picked up there.[5]

Aloysius Gonzaga as a boy

He grew up amid the violence and brutality of Renaissance Italy and witnessed the murder of two of his brothers.[3] In 1576, at the age of 8, he was sent to Florence, along with his younger brother, Rodolfo, to serve at the court of the Grand Duke Francesco I de' Medici and to receive further education.[6] While there, he fell ill with a disease of the kidneys, which was to trouble him throughout his life. While he was ill, he took the opportunity to read about the saints and to spend much of his time in prayer. He is said to have taken a private vow of chastity at the age of 9. In November 1579, the brothers were sent to the Duke of Mantua. Aloysius was shocked by the violent and frivolous lifestyle he encountered there.

Aloysius returned to Castiglione where he met Cardinal Charles Borromeo, and from him received First Communion on July 22, 1580.[6] After reading a book about Jesuit missionaries in India, Aloysius felt strongly that he wanted to become a missionary himself.[7] He started practicing by teaching catechism classes to young boys in Castiglione in the summers. He also repeatedly visited the houses of the Capuchin friars and the Barnabites located in Casale Monferrato, the capital of the Gonzaga-ruled Duchy of Montferrat where the family spent the winter. He also adopted an ascetic lifestyle.

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The family was called to Spain in 1581 to assist the Holy Roman Empress Maria of Austria. They arrived in Madrid in March 1582, where Aloysius and Rodolfo became pages for the young Infante Diego (1575–82).[6] At that point, Aloysius started thinking in earnest about joining a religious order. He had considered joining the Capuchins, but he had a Jesuit confessor in Madrid and decided instead to join that order. His mother agreed to his request, but his father was furious and prevented him from doing so.

In July 1584, a year and a half after the Infante's death, the family returned to Italy. Aloysius still wanted to become a priest but several members of his family worked hard to persuade him to change his mind. When they realized there was no way to make him give up his plan, they tried to persuade him to become a secular priest, and offered to arrange for a bishopric for him. If he were to become a Jesuit he would renounce any right to his inheritance or status in society.[8] His family was afraid of this, but their attempts to persuade him not to join the Jesuits failed; Aloysius was not interested in higher office and still wanted to become a missionary.

Religious life

St. Eloisius, roof figure at the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

In November 1585, Aloysius gave up all rights of inheritance, which was confirmed by the emperor. He went to Rome and, because of his noble birth, gained an audience with Pope Sixtus V. Following a brief stay at the Palazzo Aragona Gonzaga, the Roman home of his cousin, Cardinal Scipione Gonzaga, on 25 November 1585 he was accepted into the novitiate of the Society of Jesus in Rome. During this period, he was asked to moderate his asceticism somewhat, and to be more social with the other novices.[7]

Aloysius' health continued to cause problems. In addition to the kidney disease, he also suffered from a skin disease, chronic headaches and insomnia. He was sent to Milan for studies, but after some time he was sent back to Rome because of his health. On November 25, 1587, he took the three religious vows of chastity, poverty and obedience. In February and March 1588, he received minor orders and started studying theology to prepare for ordination. In 1589, he was called to Mantua to mediate between his brother, Rodolfo, and the Duke of Mantua. He returned to Rome in May 1590. It is said that later that year, he had a vision in which the Archangel Gabriel told him that he would die within a year.

In 1591, a plague broke out in Rome. The Jesuits opened a hospital for the stricken, and Aloysius volunteered to work there.[7] After begging alms for the victims, Aloysius began working with the sick, carrying the dying from the streets into a hospital founded by the Jesuits. There he washed and fed the plague victims, preparing them as best he could to receive the sacraments. But though he threw himself into his tasks, he privately confessed to his spiritual director, Fr. Robert Bellarmine, that his constitution was revolted by the sights and smells of the work; he had to work hard to overcome his physical repulsion.

At the time, many of the younger Jesuits had become infected with the disease, and so Aloysius’s superiors forbade him from returning to the hospital. But Aloysius—long accustomed to refusals from his father—persisted and requested permission to return, which was granted. Eventually he was allowed to care for the sick, but only at another hospital, called Our Lady of Consolation, where those with contagious diseases were not admitted. While there, Aloysius lifted a man out of his sickbed, tended to him, and brought him back to his bed. But the man was infected with the plague: Aloysius grew ill and was bedridden by March 3, 1591, a few days before his 23rd birthday.

Aloysius rallied for a time, but as fever and a cough set in, he declined for many weeks. He had an intimation in prayer that he might die on the Feast of Corpus Christi, and when that day arrived he appeared to his friends better than on the previous day. Two priests came in the evening to bring him communion. As Fr. Tylenda tells the story, “When the two Jesuits came to his side, they noticed a change in his face and realized that their young Aloysius was dying. His eyes were fixed on the crucifix he held in his hands, and as he tried to pronounce the name of Jesus he died.” Like Joan of Arc and the Ugandan martyrs, Aloysius Gonzaga died with the name of Jesus on his lips.He was allowed to work in a ward where there were no plague victims, as they were afraid to lose him. As it turned out, a man on his ward was already infected, and on March 3, 1591 (six days before his 23rd birthday), Aloysius showed the first symptoms of being infected. It seemed certain that he would die in a short time, and he was given Extreme Unction. To everyone's surprise, however, he recovered, but his health was left worse than ever.[9]

Painting of Aloysius Gonzaga in Marmoutier Abbey, Alsace, France

While he was ill, he spoke several times with his confessor, the cardinal and later saint, Robert Bellarmine. Aloysius had another vision, and told several people that he would die on the Octave of the feast of Corpus Christi.[10] On that very day, which fell on June 21 that year, he seemed very well in the morning, but insisted that he would die before the day was over. As he began to grow weak, Bellarmine gave him the last rites, and recited the prayers for the dying. He died just before midnight.

Purity was his notable virtue.[11] The Carmelite mystic St Maria Magdalena de Pazzi claimed to have had a vision of him on April 4, 1600. She described him as radiant in glory because of his "interior works", "a hidden martyr" for his great love of God.[12]

Veneration

Saint Aloysius Gonzaga in Glory by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, incomplete provenance

Aloysius was buried in the Church of the Most Holy Annunciation, which later became the church of Saint Ignatius of Loyola (Sant'Ignazio) in Rome.[2] His name was changed to "Robert" before his death, in honor of his confessor. Many people considered him to be a saint soon after his death, and his remains were moved into the Sant'Ignazio church, where they now rest in an urn of lapis lazuli in the Lancelotti Chapel. His head was later translated to the basilica bearing his name in Castiglione delle Stiviere. He was beatified only fourteen years after his death by Pope Paul V, on October 19, 1605. On December 31, 1726, he was canonized together with another Jesuit novice, Stanislaus Kostka, by Pope Benedict XIII.

Saint Aloysius' feast day is celebrated on June 21, the date of his death.

Patronage

In 1729 Pope Benedict XIII declared Aloysius to be the patron saint of young students. In 1926 he was named patron of all Christian youth by Pope Pius XI. Owing to the manner of his death, he has always been considered a patron saint of plague victims. For his compassion and courage in the face of an incurable disease, Aloysius Gonzaga has become the patron both of AIDS sufferers and their caregivers.[9] Aloysius is also the patron of Valmontone, a town in Lazio.

Iconography

In art, St Aloysius is shown as a young man wearing a black cassock and surplice, or as a page. His attributes are a lily, referring to innocence; a cross, referring to piety and sacrifice; a skull, referring to his early death; and a rosary, referring to his devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary.[4]

St. Joseph in Gelsenkirchen, the location of German soccer club Schalke 04, has a glass window of the saint with a soccer ball and refers to the Club colors and its strong fanbase.[13]

Legacy

Oblates of Saint Aloysius

Statue of Saint Aloysius Gonzaga, St. Joseph's Church, Macao

Not long after Aloysius' death, on his feast day in 1608, the three daughters of his brother, Rodolfo, established, under his patronage, a community of women dedicated to education, under the formal name of the Noble Virgins of Jesus. This community still exists, although as of 2012 it is currently reduced to two members.[14]

See also

References

  1. http://catholicsaints.info/tag/name-aluigi/
  2. 1 2 "Aloysius Gonzaga". Gonzaga College, Dublin. Retrieved 24 December 2012.
  3. 1 2 3 "Who is Aloysius Gonzaga?". Gonzaga University. Retrieved 24 December 2012.
  4. 1 2 3 Martin, James, S.J. (20 June 2011). "The Life of Times of St. Aloysius Gonzaga". America. Retrieved 27 May 2015.
  5. Sisters of Notre Dame of Chardon, Ohio (2004). Saints and Feast Days. Loyola Press. ISBN 978-0-8294-1505-6.
  6. 1 2 3 O'Conor, John Francis Xavier (1907). St. Aloysius Gonzaga. The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  7. 1 2 3 Foley, O.F.M., Leonard. Saint of the Day.
  8. Coulson, John. "The Saints: A Concise Biographical Dictionary".
  9. 1 2 Craughwell, Thomas J. "Patron Saints for Modern Challenges". St. Anthony Messenger. American Catholic. Retrieved 24 December 2012.
  10. Cepari, Virgil, S.J. (1891). Life of Saint Aloysius Gonzaga. New York: Benziger Brothers. p. 232.
  11. James, William (1982). The Varieties of Religious Experience. Penguin Books. p. 258.
  12. Fabrini, Placido (1852). The Life of St Mary Magdalen De-Pazzi.
  13. Nieden, Felix zur. "Der Fußball-Heilige wacht über die St.-Joseph-Kirche in Schalke". WAZ. Retrieved 2016-02-06.
  14. Religious Institutes of the Diocese of Mantua, Italy

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