11
November 371 A.D. Day of
Remembrance: Martin of Tours Made Bishop
How do you honor a man who converts a nation to
Christ? In France, St. Martin of Tours is venerated on this
day, November 11, with a feast. Even if one scrapes off the crust of
legend, it is clear he was an extraordinary man.
Martin was born around 316, the
son of a military tribune. Even as a youngster, he cared more for spiritual
concerns than for military life. Although compelled to take up arms he
"kept completely free from those vices in which that class of men become
too frequently involved," wrote his associate Sulpitius Severus. "He
showed exceeding kindness towards his fellow-soldiers, and held them in
wonderful affection; while his patience and humility surpassed what seemed
possible to human nature." He aided "those who were in trouble, by
furnishing assistance to the wretched, by supporting the needy, by clothing the
naked, while he reserved nothing for himself from his military pay except what
was necessary for his daily sustenance."
The most famous instance of
Martin's charity was reported by Sulpitius. "[I]n the middle of winter, a winter which had
shown itself more severe than ordinary so that the extreme cold was proving
fatal to many, he happened to meet at the gate of the city of Amiens a poor man
destitute of clothing. He was entreating those that passed by to have
compassion upon him, but all passed the wretched man without notice, when
Martin, that man full of God, recognized that a being to whom others showed no
pity, was, in that respect, left to him. Yet, what should he do? He had nothing
except the cloak in which he was clad, for he had already parted with the rest
of his garments for similar purposes. Taking, therefore, his sword with which
he was girt, he divided his cloak into two equal parts, and gave one part to
the poor man, while he again clothed himself with the remainder."
The following night, Martin had
a vision in which Christ appeared arrayed in that part of his cloak Martin had
given to the beggar. Jesus said, "Martin, who is still but a catechumen,
clothed me with this robe." (Martin's half of the robe was preserved as a
relic.)
Martin enraged Emperor Julian by
saying, "Hitherto I have served you as a soldier: allow me now to become a
soldier to God..." The Emperor accused him of cowardice, to which Martin
replied he would stand unarmed in front of the coming battle. That night,
however, the enemy sued for peace.
Having gained release from the
army, Martin studied and was baptized under Bishop Hilary and lived the life of
a hermit, emerging from solitude only to preach. He suffered persecution from
Arian heretics while seeking to convert his own family to Christ. Around 371,
the people of Tours, impressed by his holy life and miracles, made him Bishop
by force.
Taking his duties seriously,
Martin preached, destroyed pagan temples, assisted all who were in need, and
worked miracles. To gain the solitude he craved, he built the first abbey in
France, at Marmontiers between the river Loire and a rock face.
Bibliography:
1. Baring-Gould, S. Lives of the Saints. Edinburgh: John
Grant, 1914.
2. Butler, Alban. Lives of the Saints. Westminster,
Maryland: Christian Classics, 1981, 1956.
3. Clugnet, Lüon. "St. Martin of Tours." The Catholic
Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton, 1914.
4. Daniel-Rops, Henri. The Heroes of God. Garden City, New
York: Doubleday, 1965, 1958.
5. Jameson. Sacred and Legendary Art vol 2. London: Longmans, 1870.
6. "Martin, St." The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church.
Edited by F. L. Cross and E. A. Livingstone. Oxford, 1997.
Last updated April,
2007.
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