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St. John Francis Regis
Born 31 January, 1597, in the village of Fontcouverte (department of Aude); died at la Louvesc, 30 Dec., 1640. His father Jean, a rich merchant, had been recently ennobled in recognition of the prominent part he had taken in the Wars of the League; his mother, Marguerite de Cugunhan, belonged by birth to the landed nobility of that part of Languedoc. They watched with Christian solicitude over the early education of their son, whose sole fear was lest he should displease his parents or his tutors. The slightest harsh word rendered him inconsolable, and quite paralyzed his youthful faculties. When he reached the age of fourteen, he was sent to continue his studies in the Jesuit college at Béziers. His conduct was exemplary and he was much given to practices of devotion, while his good humour, frankness, and eagerness to oblige everybody soon won for him the good-will of his comrades. But Francis did not love the world, and even during the vacations lived in retirement, occupied in study and prayer. On one occasion only he allowed himself the diversions of the chase. At the end of his five years' study of the humanities, grace and his ascetic inclinations led him to embrace the religious life under the standard of St. Ignatius Loyola. He entered the Jesuit novitiate of Toulouse on 8 December, 1616, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception of Mary. Here he was distinguished for an extreme fervour, which never afterwards flagged, neither at Cahors, where he studied rhetoric for a year (Oct., 1618-Oct., 1619), nor during the six years in which he taught grammar at the colleges of Billom (1619-22), of Puy-en-Velay (1625-27), and of Auch (1627-28), nor during the three years in which he studied philosophy in the scholasticate at Tournon (Oct., 1622-Oct., 1625). During this time, although he was filling the laborious office of regent, he made his first attempts as a preacher. On feast-days he loved to visit the towns and villages of the neighbourhood, and there give an informal instruction, which never failed - as attested by those who heard him - to produce a profound impression on those present.
As he burned with the desire to devote himself entirely to the salvation of
his neighbour, he aspired with all his heart to the priesthood. In this spirit
he began in October, 1628, his theological studies. The four years he was
supposed to devote to them seemed to him so very long that he finally begged his
superiors to shorten the term. This request was granted, and in consequence
Francis said his first Mass on Trinity Sunday, 15 June, 1631; but on the other
hand, in conformity with the statutes of his order, which require the full
course of study, he was not admitted to the solemn profession of the four vows.
The plague was at that time raging in Toulouse. The new priest hastened to
lavish on the unfortunate victims the first-fruits of his apostolate. In the
beginning of 1632, after having reconciled family differences at Fontcouverte,
his birthplace, and having resumed for some weeks a class in grammar at Pamiers,
he was definitively set to work by his superiors at the hard labour of the
missions. This became the work of the last ten years of his life. It is
impossible to enumerate the cities and localities which were the scene of his
zeal. On this subject the reader must consult his modern biographer, Father de
Curley, who has succeeded best in reconstructing the itinerary of the holy man.
We need only mention that from May, 1632, to Sept., 1634, his head-quarters were
at the Jesuit college of Montpellier, and here he laboured for the conversion of
the Huguenots, visiting the hospitals, assisting the needy, withdrawing from
vice wayward girls and women, and preaching Catholic doctrine with tireless zeal
to children and the poor. Later (1633-40) he evangelized more than fifty
districts in le Vivarais, le Forez, and le Velay. He displayed everywhere the
same spirit, the same intrepidity, which were rewarded by the most striking
conversions. Everybody
, wrote the rector of Montpellier to the general of the
Jesuits, agrees that Father Regis has a marvellous talent for the Missions
(Daubenton, La vie du B. Jean-François Régis
, ed. 1716, p. 73). But not
everyone appreciated the transports of his zeal. He was reproached in certain
quarters with being impetuous and meddlesome, with troubling the peace of
families by an indiscreet charity, with preaching not evangelical sermons, but
satires and invectives which converted no one. Some priests, who felt their own
manner of life rebuked, determined to ruin him, and therefore denounced him to
the Bishop of Viviers. They had laid their plot with such perfidy and cunning
that the bishop permitted himself to be prejudiced for a time. But it was only a
passing cloud. The influence of the best people on the one hand, and on the
other the patience and humility of the saint, soon succeeded in confounding the
calumny and caused the discreet and enlightened ardour of Regis to shine forth
with renewed splendour (Daubenton, loc. dit., 67- 73). Less moderate indeed was
his love of mortification, which he practiced with extreme rigour on all
occasions, without ruffling in the least his evenness of temper. As he returned
to the house one evening after a hard day's toil, one of his confrères
laughingly asked: Well, Father Regis, speaking candidly, are you not very
tired?
No
, he replied, I am as fresh as a rose.
He then took only a bowl of
milk and a little fruit, which usually constituted both his dinner and supper,
and finally, after long hours of prayer, lay down on the floor of his room, the
only bed he knew. He desired ardently to go to Canada, which at that time was
one of the missions of the Society of Jesus where one ran the greatest risks.
Having been refused, he finally sought and obtained from the general permission
to spend six months of the year, and those the terrible months of winter, on the
missions of the society. The remainder of the time he devoted to the most
thankless labour in the cities, especially to the rescue of public women, whom
he helped to persevere after their conversion by opening refuges for them, where
they found honest means of livelihood. This most delicate of tasks absorbed a
great part of his time and caused him many annoyances, but his strength of soul
was above the dangers which he ran. Dissolute men often presented a pistol at
him or held a dagger to his throat. He did not even change colour, and the
brightness of his countenance, his fearlessness, and the power of his words
caused them to drop the weapons from their hands. He was more sensitive to that
opposition which occasionally proceeded from those who should have seconded his
courage. His work among penitents urged his zeal to enormous undertakings. His
superiors, as his first biographers candidly state, did not always share his
optimism, or rather his unshaken faith in Providence, and it sometimes happened
that they were alarmed at his charitable projects and manifested to him their
disapproval. This was the cross which caused the saint the greatest suffering,
but it was sufficient for him that obedience spoke: he silenced all the murmurs
of human nature, and abandoned his most cherished designs. Seventy-two years
after his death a French ecclesiastic, who believed he had a grievance against
the Jesuits, circulated the legend that towards the end of his life St. John
Francis Regis had been expelled from the Society of Jesus. Many different
accounts were given, but finally the enemies of the Jesuits settled on the
version that the letter of the general announcing to John his dismissal was sent
from Rome, but that it was late in reaching its destination, only arriving some
days after the death of the saint. This calumny will not stand the slightest
examination. (For its refutation see de Curley, St. Jean-François Régis
,
336-51; more briefly and completely in Analecta Bollandiana
, XIII, 78-9.) It
was in the depth of winter, at la Louvesc, a poor hamlet of the mountains of
Ardèche, after having spent with heroic courage the little strength that he had
left, and while he was contemplating the conversion of the Cévennes, that the
saint's death occurred, on 30 December, 1640. There was no delay in ordering
canonical investigations. On 18 May, 1716, the decree of beatification was
issued by Clement XI. On 5 April, 1737, Clement XII promulgated the decree of
canonization. Benedict XIV established the feast-day for 16 June. But
immediately after his death Regis was venerated as a saint. Pilgrims came in
crowds to his tomb, and since then the concourse has only grown. Mention must be
made of the fact that a visit made in 1804 to the blessed remains of the Apostle
of Vivarais was the beginning of the vocation of the Blessed Curé of Ars,
Jean-Baptiste Vianney, whom the Church has raised in his turn to her altars.
Everything good that I have done
, he said when dying, I owe to him
(de
Curley, op. cit., 371). The place where Regis died has been transformed into a
mortuary chapel. Near by is a spring of fresh water to which those who are
devoted to St. John Francis Regis attribute miraculous cures through his
intercession. The old church of la Louvesc has received (1888) the title and
privileges of a basilica. On this sacred site was founded in the beginning of
the nineteenth century the Institute of the Sisters of St. Regis, or Sisters of
Retreat, better known under the name of the Religious of the Cenacle; and it was
the memory of his merciful zeal in behalf of so many unfortunate fallen women
that gave rise to the now flourishing work of St. Francis Regis, which is to
provide for the poor and working people who wish to marry, and which is chiefly
concerned with bringing illegitimate unions into conformity with Divine and
human laws.
Besides the biographies mentioned in CARAYON, Bibliographic historique de la Compagnie de Jésus, nn. 2442-84, must be mentioned the more recent lives: DE CURLEY, St. Jean-François Régis (Lyons, 1893), which, together with DAUBENTON'S work - often reprinted - is the most complete history of Regis; CROS, Saint Jean-François Régis (Toulouse, 1894), in which the new portion consists of unedited papers regarding the saint's family. Among the early biographers LABRONE, a pupil of the saint, occupies an unparalleled place for the charm, the sincerity, and the documentary value of the relation. His book appeared in 1690, ten years after the death of the saint.
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