March 22 is the liturgical memorial of Saint Lea of Rome, a
fourth-century widow who left her wealth behind, entered consecrated
life, and attained great holiness through asceticism and prayer.
Though not well-known as a figure of devotion in modern times, she was
acknowledged as a saint on the testimony of her contemporary Saint
Jerome, who wrote a brief description of Lea's life after she had died.
Jerome, a scholarly monk best known for his Latin translation of the
Bible (the Vulgate), is the Church's only source of information on St.
Lea, whose biographical details are unknown. St. Jerome eulogized her in
a letter written during the year 384 to his student and spiritual
directee Marcella, another Roman consecrated woman who had left her
aristocratic life behind after being widowed.
It is clear from his letter that Lea was a mutual friend to both Jerome
and Marcella. Jerome states that his account is written to “hail with
joy the release of a soul which has trampled Satan under foot, and won
for itself, at last, a crown of tranquility.” Jerome also contrasts the
life of “our most saintly friend” with that of the late pagan public
official Praetextatus, held up by Jerome as a cautionary example.
“Who,” Jerome begins, “can sufficiently eulogize our dear Lea's mode of
living? So complete was her conversion to the Lord that, becoming the
head of a monastery, she showed herself a true mother to the virgins in
it, wore coarse sackcloth instead of soft raiment, passed sleepless
nights in prayer, and instructed her companions even more by example
than by precept.”
Jerome describes how Lea, in her great humility, “was accounted the
servant of all … She was careless of her dress, neglected her hair, and
ate only the coarsest food. Still, in all that she did, she avoided
ostentation that she might not have her reward in this world.”
Jerome's letter goes on to compare her fate to that of Praetextus – who
died in the same year as Lea, after spending his life promoting a
return to Rome's ancient polytheistic pagan religion. The monk retells
Jesus' parable of Lazarus and Dives, with Lea in the place of the poor
and suffering man.
Lea, Jerome says, is “welcomed into the choirs of the angels; she is
comforted in Abraham's bosom. And, as once the beggar Lazarus saw the
rich man, for all his purple, lying in torment, so does Lea see the
consul, not now in his triumphal robe but clothed in mourning, and
asking for a drop of water from her little finger.”
Thus Lea, “who seemed poor and of little worth, and whose life was
accounted madness,” triumphs in salvation. But the punishment of
infidelity falls on the consul-elect – who had led a triumphant
procession just before his death, and been widely mourned afterward.
Jerome ends his letter by urging Marcella to remember the lesson of St.
Lea's life: “We must not allow … money to weigh us down, or lean upon
the staff of worldly power. We must not seek to possess both Christ and
the world. No; things eternal must take the place of things transitory;
and since, physically speaking, we daily anticipate death, if we wish
for immortality we must realize that we are but mortal.”