ST. JOHN OF GOD
FOUNDER OF THE ORDER OF CHARITY
[From his life, written by Francis de Castro, twenty - five years after his death, abridged by Baillet, p. 92, and F. Helyot, Hist. Des Ordres Rel. t. iv. p. 131.]
A.
D. 1550.
ST.
JOHN, surnamed of God, was born in Portugal, in 1495. His parents were
of the lowest rank in the country, but devout and charitable. John spent
a considerable part of his youth in service, under the mayoral or chief
shepherd of the Count of Oropeusa in Castile, and in great innocence and
virtue. In 1522, he listed himself in a company of foot raised by the count,
and served in the wars between the French and Spaniards; as he did afterwards
in Hungary against the Turks, whilst the Emperor Charles V. was king of
Spain. By the licentiousness of his companions he, by degrees, lost his
fear of offending God, and laid aside the greatest part of his practices
of devotion. The troop which he belonged to being disbanded, he went into
Andalusia in 1536, where he entered the service of a rich lady near Seville,
in quality of shepherd. Being now about forty years of age, stung with
remorse for his past misconduct, he began to entertain very serious thoughts
of a change of life, and doing penance for his sins. He accordingly employed
the greatest part of his time, both by day and night, in the exercises
of prayer and mortification; bewailing almost continually his ingratitude
towards God, and deliberating how he could dedicate himself in the most
perfect manner to his service. His compassion for the distressed moved
him to take a resolution of leaving his place, and passing into Africa,
that he might comfort and succour the poor slaves there, not without hopes
of meeting with the crown of martyrdom. At Gibraltar he met with a Portuguese
gentleman condemned to banishment, and whose estate had also been confiscated
by King John III. He was then in the hands of the king's officers, together
with his wife and children, and on his way to Ceuta in Barbary, the place
of his exile. John, out of charity and compassion, served him without any
wages. At Ceuta, the gentleman falling sick with grief and the change of
air, was soon reduced to such straits as to be obliged to dispose of the
small remains of his shattered fortune for the family's support. John,
not content to sell what little stock he was master of to relieve them,
went to day-labour at the public works, to earn all he could for their
subsistence. The apostacy of one of his companions alarmed him; and his
confessor telling him that his going in quest of martyrdom was an illusion,
he determined to return to Spain. Coming back to Gibraltar, his piety suggested
to him to turn pedler, and sell little pictures and books of devotion,
which might furnish him with opportunities of exhorting his customers to
virtue. His stock increasing considerably, he settled in Granada, where
he opened a shop in 1538, being then forty-three years of age.
The
great preacher and servant of God John D'Avila, surnamed the Apostle of
Andalusia, preached that year at Granada, on St. Sebastian's day, which
is there kept as a great festival. John, having heard his sermon, was so
affected with it, that, melting into tears, he filled the whole church
with his cries and lamentations; detesting his past life, beating his breast,
and calling aloud for mercy. Not content with this, he ran about the streets
like a distracted person, tearing his hair, and behaving in such a manner
that he was followed every where by the rabble with sticks and stones,
and came home all besmeared with dirt and blood. He then gave away all
he had in the world, and having thus reduced himself to absolute poverty,
that he might die to himself, and crucify all the sentiments of the old
man he began again to counterfeit the mad man, running about the streets
as before, till some had the charity to take him to the venerable John
D'Avila, covered with dirt and blood. The holy man, full of the Spirit
of God, soon discovered in John the motions of extraordinary graces, spoke
to him in private, heard his general confession, and gave him proper advice,
and promised his assistance ever after. John, out of a desire of the greatest
humiliations, returned soon after to his apparent madness and extravagances.
He was, thereupon, taken up and put into a mad­house, on supposition
of his being disordered in his senses, where the severest methods were
used to bring him to himself, all which he underwent in the spirit of penance,
and by way of atonement for the sins of his past life. D'Avila, being informed
of his conduct, came to visit him, and found him reduced almost to the
grave by weakness, and his body covered with wounds and sores; but his
soul was still vigorous, and thirsting with the greatest ardour after new
sufferings and humiliations. D'Avila, however, told him, that having now
been sufficiently exercised in that so singular a method of penance and
humiliation, he advised him to employ himself for the time to come in something
more conducive to his own and the public good. His exhortation had its
desired effect; and he grew instantly calm and sedate, to the great astonish­ment
of his keepers. He continued, how­ever, some time longer in the
hospital, serving the sick, but left it entirely on St. Ursula's day, in
1539. This his extraordinary conduct is an object of our admiration, not
of our imitation: in this saint it was the effect of the fervour of his
conversion, his desire of humiliation, and a holy hatred of himself and
his past criminal life. By it he learned in a short time perfectly to die
to himself and the world; which prepared his soul for the graces which
God afterwards bestowed on him. He then thought of executing his design
of doing something for the relief of the poor; and, after a pilgrimage
to our Lady's in Guadaloupa, to recommend himself and his undertaking to
her intercession, in a place celebrated for devotion to her, he began by
selling wood in the marketplace, to feed some poor by the means of his
labour. Soon after he hired a house to harbour poor sick persons in, whom
he served and provided for with an ardour, prudence, economy, and vigilance
that surprised the whole city. This was the foundation of the order of
charity, in 1540, which, by the benediction of heaven, has since been spread
all over Christendom. John was occupied all day in serving his patients:
in the night he went out to carry in new objects of charity, rather than
to seek out provisions for them; for people, of their own accord, brought
him in all necessaries for his little hospital. The Archbishop of Granada,
taking notice of so excellent an establishment, and ad­miring the
incomparable order observed in it, both for the spiritual and temporal
care of the poor, furnished considerable sums to increase it, and favoured
it with his protection. This excited all persons to vie with each other
in contributing to it. Indeed the charity, patience, and modesty of St.
John, and his wonderful care and foresight, engaged every one to admire
and favour the institute. The Bishop of Tuy, president of the royal court
of judicature in Granada, having invited the holy man to dinner, put several
questions to him, to all which he answered in such a manner as gave the
bishop the highest esteem of his person. It was this prelate that gave
him the name of John of God, and prescribed him a kind of habit, though
St. John never thought of founding a religious order; for the rules which
bear his name were only drawn up in 1556, six years after his death; and
religious vows were not introduced among his brethren before the year 1570.
To
make trial of the saint's disinterestedness, the Marquis of Tarisa came
to him in disguise to beg an alms, on pretence of a necessary lawsuit,
and he received from his hands twenty-five ducats, which was all he had.
The marquis was so much edified by his charity, that besides returning
the sum, he bestowed on him one hundred and fifty crowns of gold, and sent
to his hospital every day, during his stay at Granada, one hundred and
fifty loaves, four sheep, and six pullets. But the holy man gave a still
more illustrious proof of his charity when the hospital was on fire; for
he carried out most of the sick on his own back; and though he passed and
repassed through the flames, and stayed in the midst of them a considerable
time, he received no hurt. But his charity was not confined to his own
hospital: he looked upon it as his own misfortune if the necessities of
any distressed person in the whole country had remained unrelieved. He
therefore made strict inquiry into the wants of the poor over the whole
province, relieved many in their own houses, employed in a proper manner
those that were able to work, and with wonderful sagacity laid himself
out every way to comfort and assist all the afflicted members of Christ.
He was particularly active and vigilant in settling and providing for young
maidens in distress, to prevent the danger to which they are often exposed,
of taking bad courses. He also reclaimed many who were already engaged
in vice; for which purpose he sought out public sinners, and holding a
crucifix in his hand, with many tears exhorted them to repentance. Though
his life seemed to be taken up in continual action, he accompanied it with
perpetual prayer and incredible corporal austerities. And his tears of
devotion, his frequent raptures, and his eminent spirit of contemplation,
gave a lustre to his other virtues. But his sincere humility appeared most
admirable in all his actions, even amidst the honours which he received
at the court of Valladolid, whither business called him. The king and princes
seemed to vie with each other who should show him the greatest courtesy,
or put the largest alms in his hands; whose charitable contributions he
employed with great prudence in Valladolid itself, and the adjacent country.
Only perfect virtue could stand the test of honours, amidst which he appeared
the most humble. Humiliations seemed to be his delight: these he courted
and sought, and always underwent them with great alacrity. One day, when
a woman called him hypocrite, and loaded him with invectives, he gave her
privately a piece of money, and desired her to repeat all she had said
in the marketplace.
Worn
out at last by ten years' hard service in his hospital, he fell sick. The
immediate occasion of his distemper seemed to be excess of fatigue in saving
wood and other such things for the poor in a great flood, in which, seeing
a person in danger of being drowned, he swam in his long clothes to endeavour
to rescue him, not without imminent hazard of his own life; but he could
not see his Christian brother perish without endeavouring at all hazards
to succor him. He at first concealed his sickness, that he might not be
obliged to diminish his labours and extraordinary austerities; but in the
mean time he carefully revised the inventories of all things belonging
to his hospital, and inspected all the accounts. He also reviewed all the
excellent regulations which he had made for its administration, the distribution
of time, and the exercises of piety to be observed in it. Upon a complaint
that he harboured idle strollers and bad women, the archbishop sent for
him, and laid open the charge against him. The man of God threw himself
prostrate at his feet, and said, "The Son of God came for sinners,
and we are obliged to promote their conversion, to exhort them, and to
sigh and pray for them. I am unfaithful to my vocation because I neglect
this; and I confess that I know no other bad person in my hospital but
myself; who, as I am obliged to own with extreme confusion, am a most base
sinner, altogether unworthy to eat the bread of the poor." This he
spoke with so much feeling and humility that all present were much moved,
and the archbishop dismissed him with respect, leaving all things to his
discretion. His illness increasing, the news of it was spread abroad. The
Lady Anne Ossorio was no sooner informed of his condition, but she came
in her coach to the hospital to see him. The servant of God lay in his
habit in his little cell, covered with a piece of an old coat instead of
a blanket, and having under his head, not indeed a stone, as was his custom,
but a basket, in which he used to beg alms in the city for his hospital.
The poor and sick stood weeping round him. The lady, moved with compassion,
despatched secretly a message to the archbishop, who sent immediately an
order to St. John to obey her as he would do himself, during his illness.
By virtue of this authority she obliged him to leave his hospital. He named
Antony Martin superior in his place, and gave moving instructions to his
brethren, recommending to them in particular, obedience and charity. In
going out he visited the blessed sacrament, and poured forth his heart
before it with extraordinary fervour; remaining there absorbed in his devotions
so long, that the Lady Anne Ossorio caused him to be taken up and carried
into her coach, in which she conveyed him to her own house. She herself
prepared with the help of her maids, and gave him with her own hands, his
broths and other things, and often read to him the history of the passion
of our divine Redeemer. He complained that whilst our Saviour, in his agony,
drank gall, they gave him, a miserable sinner, broths. The whole city was
in tears; all the nobility visited him; the magistrates came to beg he
would give his benediction to their city. He answered, that his sins rendered
him the scandal and reproach of their country; but, recommended to them
his brethren, the poor, and his religious that served them. At last, by
order of the archbishop, he gave the city his dying benediction. His exhortations
to all were most pathetic. His prayer consisted of most humble senti­ments
of compunction and inflamed aspirations of divine love. The archbishop
said mass in his chamber, heard his confession, gave him the viaticum and
extreme unction, and promised to pay all his debts, and to provide for
all his poor. The saint expired on his knees, before the altar, on the
8th of March, in 1550, being exactly fifty-five years old. He was buried
by the archbishop at the head of all the clergy, both secular and regular,
accompanied by all the court, noblesse, and city, with the utmost pomp.
He was honoured by many miracles, beatified by Urban VIII. in 1630, and
canonized by Alexander VIII. in 1690. His relics were translated into the
church of his brethren in 1664. His order of charity to serve the sick
was approved of by Pope Pius V. The Spaniards have their own general: but
the religious in France and Italy obey a general who resides at Rome. They
follow the rule of St. Austin.
One sermon perfectly converted one who had been long enslaved to the world and his passions, and made him a saint. How comes it that so many sermons and pious books produce so little fruit in our souls? It is altogether owing to our sloth and wilful hardness of heart, that we receive God's omnipotent word in vain, and to our most grievous condemnation. The heavenly seed can take no root in hearts which receive it with indifference and insensibility, or it is trodden upon and destroyed by the dissipation and tumult of our disorderly affections, or it is choked by the briers and thorns of earthly concerns. To profit by it, we must listen to it with awe and respect, in the silence of all creatures, in interior solitude and peace, and must carefully nourish it in our hearts. The holy law of God is comprised in the precept of divine love: a precept so sweet, a virtue so glorious and so happy, as to carry along with it its present incom­parable reward. St. John, from the moment of his conversion, by the penitential austerities which he performed, was his own greatest persecutor; but it was chiefly by heroic works of charity that he endeavoured to offer to God the most acceptable sacrifice of compunction, gratitude, and love. What encouragement has Christ given us in every practice of this virtue, by declaring, that whatever we do to others he esteems as done to himself! To animate ourselves to fervour, we may often call to mind what St. John frequently repeated to his disciples, “Labour without intermission to do all the good works in your power, whilst time is allowed you." His spirit of penance, love, and fervour he inflamed by meditating assiduously on the sufferings of Christ, of which he often used to say: “Lord, thy thorns are my roses, and thy sufferings my paradise."