St. Robert Bellarmine Page

Biography of St. Robert Bellarmine
Born at Montepulciano, Italy, October 4, 1542, St. Robert
Bellarmine was the third of ten children. His mother, Cinzia
Cervini, a niece of Pope Marcellus II, was dedicated to
almsgiving, prayer, meditation, fasting, and mortification of
the body.
Robert entered the newly formed Society of Jesus in 1560 and
after his ordination went on to teach at Louvain (1570-1576)
where he became famous for his Latin sermons. In 1576, he was
appointed to the chair of controversial theology at the Roman
College, becoming Rector in 1592; he went on to become
Provincial of Naples in 1594 and Cardinal in 1598.
This outstanding scholar and devoted servant of God defended
the Apostolic See against the anti-clericals in Venice and
against the political tenets of James I of England. He composed
an exhaustive apologetic work against the prevailing heretics of
his day. In the field of church-state relations, he took a
position based on principles now regarded as fundamentally
democratic - authority originates with God, but is vested in the
people, who entrust it to fit rulers.
This saint was the spiritual father of St. Aloysius Gonzaga,
helped St. Francis de Sales obtain formal approval of the
Visitation Order, and in his prudence opposed severe action in
the case of Galileo. He has left us a host of important
writings, including works of devotion and instruction, as well
as controversy. He died in 1621.
Copyright 1996-2000 by Terry Matz. All Rights Reserved.
Text from
http://www.catholic.org |