Saturday, September 03, 2011

Naomh An Lae - Saint Of The Day

gregorythegreat St Gregory the Great (540-604) monk and pope

Gregory was probably the most influential pope of the first millenium. Both a contemplative and a man of action, he established the papal states and sent missionaries to England. Along with Ambrose, Augustine and Jerome, he is one of the four Fathers of the Western Church.

Early life 

Gregory was born in Rome in 540, the son of a Roman senator. He received a good education and served as an administrator in the city as his father had also done. When his father died in 573 he made over his estates to the Church and had seven monasteries founded mostly in Sicily. He turned the family house on the Coelian Hill in Rome into a monastery and spent four years there in intense asceticism and prayer before becoming a deacon and priest.

Papal legate in Constantinople

Pope Pelagius II (579-590) sent Gregory as papal legate to the court of the emperor at Constantinople. On his return after six years he became abbot of the monastery on the Coelian Hill. Three years later a flood caused the Tiber to burst its banks destroying the city's grain stores and an outbreak of the plague. Gregory organised practical help and following this, was elected pope in 590.

Papal states and peace initiatives

Through estates owned by the papacy he secured the Roman food supply, thus unwittingly starting the idea of the papal states. He made peace with the Lombards, who were Arians, and with the Visigoths in Spain.

Missionaries to England

Gregory sent Augustine and missionaries to England. The story is that he was so impressed by the blond beauty of Anglo-Saxon slaves he saw for sale in the Roman forum that he had them liberated so they could be trained as missionary monks. Hence the famous saying: non Angli, sed angeli.

Liturgy and writings 

Keenly interested in the liturgy, Gregory composed presidential prayers (the Gregorian Sacramentary) and oversaw musical development (Gregorian chant - see image). He also wrote extensively: his Dialogues record the life of St Benedict and in his Moralia in Job he gives a literal, allegorical and moral exposition of the text to promote Christian ethical teaching.

Influence and papal power 

Gregory was probably the most influential pope of the first millennium. Only two other popes, both saints, are called "the Great" - Leo I (440-461) and Nicholas I (858-867). He saw himself as the leader of a Christian society, "God's consul", as the epitaph on his tombstone says. But he was also the one who first applied to himself as pope the title borrowed from St Augustine, "the servant of the servants of God".