Saint Romuald, who founded the Camaldolese monastic order during the
early eleventh century, has his liturgical memorial on June 19.
Working within the Western Church’s Benedictine tradition, he revived
the primitive monastic practice of hermit life, allowing for greater
solitude in a communal setting.
Born into an aristocratic family during the middle of the tenth century,
Romuald grew up in a luxurious and worldly environment, where he
learned little in the way of self-restraint or religious devotion. Yet
he also felt an unusual attraction toward the simplicity of monastic
life, prompted by the beauty of nature and the experience of solitude .
It was not beauty or tranquility, but a shocking tragedy that spurred
him to act on this desire. When Romuald was 20 years old, he saw his
father Sergius kill one of his relatives in a dispute over some
property. Disgusted by the crime he had witnessed, the young man went to
the Monastery of St. Apollinaris to do 40 days of penance for his
father.
These 40 days confirmed Romuald’s monastic calling, as they became the
foundation for an entire life of penance. But this would not be lived
out at St. Apollinaris, where Romuald’s strict asceticism brought him
into conflict with some of the other monks. He left the area near
Ravenna and went to Venice, where he became the disciple of the hermit
Marinus.
Both men went on to encourage the monastic vocation of Peter Urseolus, a
Venetian political leader who would later be canonized as a saint. When
Peter joined a French Benedictine monastery, Romuald followed him and
lived for five years in a nearby hermitage.
In the meantime, Romuald’s father Sergius had followed his son’s course,
repenting of his sins and becoming a monk himself. Romuald returned to
Italy to help his father, after learning that Sergius was struggling in
his vocation. Through his son’s guidance, Sergius found the strength to
persist in religious life.
After guiding his penitent father in the way of salvation, Romuald
traveled throughout Italy serving the Church. By 1012 he had helped to
establish or reform almost 100 hermitages and monasteries, though these
were not connected to one another in the manner of a distinct religious
order.
The foundations of the Camaldolese order were not laid until 1012 – when
a piece of land called the ”Camaldoli,” located in the Diocese of
Arezzo, was granted to Romuald. It became the site of five hermits’
quarters, and a full monastery soon after. This combination of hermits’
cells and community life, together with other distinctive features, gave
this monastery and its later affiliates a distinct identity and
charism.
Romuald’s approach to the contemplative life, reminiscent of the early
Desert Fathers, can be seen in the short piece of writing known as his
“Brief Rule.” It reads as follows:
“Sit in your cell as in paradise. Put the whole world behind you and
forget it. Watch your thoughts like a good fisherman watching for fish.
The path you must follow is in the Psalms – never leave it.”
“If you have just come to the monastery, and in spite of your good will
you cannot accomplish what you want, take every opportunity you can to
sing the Psalms in your heart and to understand them with your mind. And
if your mind wanders as you read, do not give up; hurry back and apply
your mind to the words once more.”
“Realize above all that you are in God’s presence, and stand there with
the attitude of one who stands before the emperor. Empty yourself
completely and sit waiting, content with the grace of God, like the
chick who tastes nothing and eats nothing but what his mother brings
him.”
St. Romuald of Ravenna died in his monastic cell on June 19, 1027. Pope Gregory XIII canonized him in 1582.