| |
St. Agatha, Virgin, Martyr
251 A.D.
February 5
The cities of Palermo and Catana in Sicily dispute the honor of her being
born there,
but they do much better who, by copying her virtues and claiming her patronage, strive to become her
fellow-citizens in heaven. It is agreed that she received the crown of martyrdom at Catana in the
persecution of Decius, in the third consulship of that prince, in the year of our Lord 251. She was of a
rich and illustrious family and, having been consecrated to God from her tender years, triumphed over many
assaults upon her chastity. Quintianus, a man of consular dignity, bent on gratifying both his lust and
avarice, imagined he should easily compass his wicked designs on Agatha's person and estate by means of
the emperor's edict against the Christians. He therefore caused her to be apprehended and brought before
him at Catana. Seeing herself in the hands of the persecutors, she made this prayer: "Jesus Christ, Lord
of all things, you see my heart; you know my desire; possess alone all that I am. I am your sheep. Make me
worthy to overcome the devil." She wept and prayed for courage and strength all the way she went. When she
appeared, Quintianus gave orders for her being put into the hands of Aphrodisia, a most wicked woman
who with six daughters, all prostitutes, kept a brothel. The saint suffered in this infamous place
assaults and stratagems against her virtue, infinitely more terrible to her than any tortures or death
itself. But placing her confidence in God, she never ceased with sighs and most earnest tears to implore
His protection and by it was an overmatch for all their hellish attempts the whole month she was there.
Quintianus, being informed of her constancy after thirty days, ordered her to be brought before him. The
virgin, in her first interrogatory, told him that to be a servant of Jesus Christ was the most illustrious
nobility and true liberty. The judge, offended at her resolute answers, commanded her to be buffeted and
led to prison. She entered it with great joy, recommending her future conflict to God. The next day she
was arraigned a second time at the tribunal and answered with equal constancy that Jesus Christ was her
life and her salvation. Quintianus then ordered her to be stretched on the rack, which torment was
usually accompanied with stripes, the tearing of the sides with iron hooks, and burning them with torches
or matches. The governor, enraged to see her suffer all this with cheerfulness, commanded her breast to be
tortured and afterwards to be cut off, at which she made him this reproach: "Cruel tyrant, do you not
blush to torture this part of my body, you that sucked the breasts of a woman yourself?" He remanded her
to prison with a severe order that neither salves nor food should be allowed her. But God would be Himself
her physician, and the apostle St. Peter in a vision comforted her, healed all her wounds, and filled her
dungeon with a heavenly light. Quintianus, four days after, not in the least moved at the miraculous cure of
her wounds, caused her to be rolled naked over live coals mixed with broken potsherds. Being carried back
to prison, she made this prayer: "Lord, my Creator, you have ever protected me from the cradle. You have
taken from me the love of the world and given me patience to suffer. Receive now my soul." After these
words, she sweetly gave up the ghost. Her name is inserted in the canon of the mass, in the calendar of
Carthage, as ancient as the year 530, and in all martyrologies of the Latins and Greeks. Pope Symmachus
built a church in Rome on the Aurelian way under her name about the year 500, which has fallen to ruins.
St. Gregory the Great enriched a church, which he purged from the Arian impiety, with her relics, which it
still possesses. This church had been rebuilt in her honor by Ricimer, general of the western empire, in
460. Gregory II built another famous church at Rome under her invocation in 726, which Clement VIII gave
to the congregation of the Christian doctrine. St. Gregory the Great ordered some of her relics to be
placed in the church of the monastery of St. Stephen in the Isle of Capreae, now Capri. The chief part,
which remained at Catana, was carried to Constantinople by the Greek general who drove the Saracens out
of Sicily about the year 1040. These were brought back to Catana in 1127, a relation of which translation,
written by Mauritius who was then bishop, is recorded by Rocci Pyrrho and Bollandus. The same authors
relate in what manner the torrent of burning sulphur and stones which issue from mount AEtna in great
eruptions was several times averted from the walls of Catana by the veil of St. Agatha (taken out of her
tomb) which was carried in procession and also that through her intercession Malta (where she is honored
as patroness of the island) was preserved from the Turks who invaded it in 1551. Small portions of relics
of St. Agatha are said to be distributed in many places.
The perfect purity of intention by which St. Agatha was entirely dead to the
world and herself and sought only to please God is the circumstance which sanctified her sufferings and
rendered her sacrifice complete. The least cross which we bear, the least action which we perform in this
disposition, will be a great holocaust and a most acceptable offering. We have frequently something to
suffer, sometimes an aching pain in the body, at other times some trouble of mind, often some
disappointment, some humbling rebuke or reproach or the like. If we only bear those trials with patience
when others are witnesses, or if we often speak of them or are fretful under them, or if we bear patiently
public affronts or great trials yet sink under those which are trifling and are sensible to small or
secret injuries, it is evident that we have not attained to true purity of intention in our patience,
that we are not dead to ourselves and love not to disappear to the eyes of creatures but court them and
take a secret complacency in things which appear great. We profess ourselves ready to die for Christ
yet cannot bear the least cross or humiliation. How agreeable to our divine spouse is the sacrifice of a
soul which suffers in silence, desiring to have no other witness of her patience than God alone Who sends
her trials, the soul which shuns superiority and honors but takes all care possible that no one knows the humility
or modesty of such a refusal, which suffers humiliations and seeks no comfort or reward but from God. This
simplicity and purity of heart, this love of being hidden in God through Jesus Christ, is the perfection of
all our sacrifices and the complete victory over self-love, which it attacks and forces out of its
strongest entrenchments. This says to Christ with St. Agatha, "Possess alone all that I am."
from Lives of the Saints by Rev. Alban Butler, 1895
|
|
Chapel Tour Relics
St. Agatha
Mater Purissima Reliquary
Site Map
|