Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
St. Philip Romolo Neri
THE APOSTLE OF ROME.
Born at Florence, Italy, 22 July, 1515; died 27 May, 1595. Philip's family
originally came from Castelfranco but had lived for many generations in Florence,
where not a few of its members had practised the learned professions, and
therefore took rank with the Tuscan nobility. Among these was Philip's own
father, Francesco Neri, who eked out an insufficient private fortune with what
he earned as a notary. A circumstance which had no small influence on the life
of the saint was Francesco's friendship with the Dominicans; for it was from the
friars of S. Marco, amid the memories of Savonarola, that Philip received many
of his early religious impressions. Besides a younger brother, who died in early
childhood, Philip had two younger sisters, Caterina and Elisabetta. It was with
them that the good Pippo
, as he soon began to be called, committed his only
known fault. He gave a slight push to Caterina, because she kept interrupting
him and Elisabetta, while they were reciting psalms together, a practice of
which, as a boy, he was remakably fond. One incident of his childhood is dear to
his early biographers as the first visible intervention of Providence on his
behalf, and perhaps dearer still to his modern disciples, because it reveals the
human characteristics of a boy amid the supernatural graces of a saint. When
about eight years old he was left alone in a courtyard to amuse himself; seeing
a donkey laden with fruit, he jumped on its back; the beast bolted, and both
tumbled into a deep cellar. His parents hastened to the spot and extricated the
child, not dead, as they feared, but entirely uninjured.
From the first it was evident that Philip's career would run on no conventional lines; when shown his family pedigree he tore it up, and the burning of his father's house left him unconcerned. Having studied the humanities under the best scholars of a scholarly generation, at the age of sixteen he was sent to help his father's cousin in business at S. Germano, near Monte Cassino. He applied himself with diligence, and his kinsman soon determined to make him his heir. But he would often withdraw for prayer to a little mountain chapel belonging to the Benedictines of Monte Cassino, built above the harbour of Gaeta in a cleft of rock which tradition says was among those rent at the hour of Our Lord's death. It was here that his vocation became definite: he was called to be the Apostle of Rome. In 1533 he arrived in Rome without any money. He had not informed his father of the step he was taking, and he had deliberately cut himself off from his kinsman's patronage. He was, however, at once befriended by Galeotto Caccia, a Florentine resident, who gave him a room in his house and an allowance of flour, in return for which he undertook the education of his two sons. For seventeen years Philip lived as a layman in Rome, probably without thinking of becoming a priest. It was perhaps while tutor to the boys, that he wrote most of the poetry which he composed both in Latin and in Italian. Before his death he burned all his writings, and only a few of his sonnets have come down to us. He spent some three years, beginning about 1535, in the study of philosophy at the Sapienza, and of theology in the school of the Augustinians. When he considered that he had learnt enough, he sold his books, and gave the price to the poor. Though he never again made study his regular occupation, whenever he was called upon to cast aside his habitual reticence, he would surprise the most learned with the depth and clearness of his theological knowledge.
He now devoted himself entirely to the sanctification of his own soul and the
good of his neighbour. His active apostolate began with solitary and unobtrusive
visits to the hospitals. Next he induced others to accompany him. Then he began
to frequent the shops, warehouses, banks, and public places of Rome, melting the
hearts of those whom he chanced to meet, and exhorting them to serve God. In
1544, or later, he became the friend of St. Ignatius. Many of his disciples
tried and found their vocations in the infant Society of Jesus; but the majority
remained in the world, and formed the nucleus of what afterwards became the
Brotherhood of the Little Oratory. Though he appeared not fasting to men
, his
private life was that of a hermit. His single daily meal was of bread and water,
to which a few herbs were sometimes added, the furniture of his room consisted
of a bed, to which he usually preferred the floor, a table, a few chairs, and a
rope to hang his clothes on; and he disciplined himself frequently with small
chains. Tried by fierce temptations, diabolical as well as human, he passed
through them all unscathed, and the purity of his soul manifested itself in
certain striking physical traits. He prayed at first mostly in the church of S.
Eustachio, hard by Caccia's house. Next he took to visiting the Seven Churches.
But it was in the catacomb of S. Sebastiano - confounded by early biographers
with that of S. Callisto - that he kept the longest vigils and received the most
abundant consolations. In this catacomb, a few days before Pentecost in 1544,
the well-known miracle of his heart took place. Bacci describes it thus: While
he was with the greatest earnestness asking of the Holy Ghost His gifts, there
appeared to him a globe of fire, which entered into his mouth and lodged in his
breast; and thereupon he was suddenly surprised with such a fire of love, that,
unable to bear it, he threw himself on the ground, and, like one trying to cool
himself, bared his breast to temper in some measure the flame which he felt.
When he had remained so for some time, and was a little recovered, he rose up
full of unwonted joy, and immediately all his body began to shake with a violent
tremour; and putting his hand to his bosom, he felt by the side of his heart, a
swelling about as big as a man's fist, but neither then nor afterwards was it
attended with the slightest pain or wound.
The cause of this swelling was
discovered by the doctors who examined his body after death. The saint's heart
had been dilated under the sudden impulse of love, and in order that it might
have sufficient room to move, two ribs had been broken, and curved in the form
of an arch. From the time of the miracle till his death, his heart would
palpitate violently whenever he performed any spiritual action.
During his last years as a layman, Philip's apostolate spread rapidly. In 1548, together with his confessor, Persiano Rosa, he founded the Confraternity of the Most Holy Trinity for looking after pilgrims and convalescents. Its members met for Communion, prayer, and other spiritual exercises in the church of S. Salvatore, and the saint himself introduced exposition of the Blessed Sacrament once a month (see FORTY HOURS' DEVOTION). At these devotions Philip preached, though still a layman, and we learn that on one occasion alone he converted no less than thirty dissolute youths. In 1550 a doubt occurred to him as to whether he should not discontinue his active work and retire into absolute solitude. His perplexity was set at rest by a vision of St. John the Baptist, and by another vision of two souls in glory, one of whom was eating a roll of bread, signifying God's will that he should live in Rome for the good of souls as though he were in a desert, abstaining as far as possible from the use of meat.
In 1551, however, he received a true vocation from God. At the bidding of his
confessor - nothing short of this would overcome his humility - he entered the
priesthood, and went to live at S. Girolamo, where a staff of chaplains was
supported by the Confraternity of Charity. Each priest had two rooms assigned to
him, in which he lived, slept, and ate, under no rule save that of living in
charity with his brethren. Among Philip's new companions, besides Persiano Rosa,
was Buonsignore Cacciaguerra (see A Precursor of St. Philip
by Lady Amabel
Kerr, London), a remarkable penitent, who was at that time carrying on a
vigorous propaganda in favour of frequent Communion. Philip, who as a layman had
been quietly encouraging the frequent reception of the sacraments, expended the
whole of his priestly energy in promoting the same cause; but unlike his
precursor, he recommended the young especially to confess more often than they
communicated. The church of S. Girolamo was much frequented even before the
coming of Philip, and his confessional there soon became the centre of a mighty
apostolate. He stayed in church, hearing confessions or ready to hear them, from
daybreak till nearly midday, and not content with this, he usually confessed
some forty persons in his room before dawn. Thus he laboured untiringly
throughout his long priesthood. As a physician of souls he received marvellous
gifts from God. He would sometimes tell a penitent his most secret sins without
his confessing them; and once he converted a young nobleman by showing him a
vision of hell. Shortly before noon he would leave his confessional to say Mass.
His devotion to the Blessed Sacrament, like the miracle of his heart, is one of
those manifestations of sanctity which are peculiarly his own. So great was the
fervour of his charity, that, instead of recollecting himself before Mass, he
had to use deliberate means of distraction in order to attend to the external
rite. During the last five years of his life he had permission to celebrate
privately in a little chapel close to his room. At the Agnus Dei
the server
went out, locked the doors, and hung up a notice: Silence, the Father is saying
Mass
. When he returned in two hours or more, the saint was so absorbed in God
that he seemed to be at the point of death.
Philip devoted his afternoons to men and boys, inviting them to informal
meetings in his room, taking them to visit churches, interesting himself in
their amusements, hallowing with his sweet influence every department of their
lives. At one time he had a longing desire to follow the example of St. Francis
Xavier, and go to India. With this end in view, he hastened the ordination of
some of his companions. But in 1557 he sought the counsel of a Cistercian at Tre
Fontane; and as on a former occasion he had been told to make Rome his desert,
so now the monk communicated to him a revelation he had had from St. John the
Evangelist, that Rome was to be his India. Philip at once abandoned the idea of
going abroad, and in the following year the informal meetings in his room
developed into regular spiritual exercises in an oratory, which he built over
the church. At these exercises laymen preached and the excellence of the
discourses, the high quality of the music, and the charm of Philip's personality
attracted not only the humble and lowly, but men of the highest rank and
distinction in Church and State. Of these, in 1590, Cardinal Nicolo Sfondrato,
became Pope Gregory XIV, and the extreme reluctance of the saint alone prevented
the pontiff from forcing him to accept the cardinalate. In 1559, Philip began to
organize regular visits to the Seven Churches, in company with crowds of men,
priests and religious, and laymen of every rank and condition. These visits were
the occasion of a short but sharp persecution on the part of a certain malicious
faction, who denounced him as a setter-up of new sects
. The cardinal vicar
himself summoned him, and without listening to his defence, rebuked him in the
harshest terms. For a fortnight the saint was suspended from hearing confessions;
but at the end of that time he made his defence, and cleared himself before the
ecclesiastical authorities. In 1562, the Florentines in Rome begged him to
accept the office of rector of their church, S. Giovanni dei Fiorentini, but he
was reluctant to leave S. Girolamo. At length the matter was brought before Pius
IV, and a compromise was arrived at (1564). While remaining himself at S.
Girolamo, Philip became rector of S. Giovanni, and sent five priests, one of
whom was Baronius, to represent him there. They lived in community under Philip
as their superior, taking their meals together, and regularly attending the
exercises at S. Girolamo. In 1574, however, the exercises began to be held in an
oratory at S. Giovanni. Meanwhile the community was increasing in size, and in
1575 it was formally recognised by Gregory XIII as the Congregation of the
Oratory, and given the church of S. Maria in Vallicella. The fathers came to
live there in 1577, in which year they opened the Chiesa Nuova, built on the
site of the old S. Maria, and transferred the exercises to a new oratory. Philip
himself remained at S. Girolamo till 1583, and it was only in obedience to
Gregory XIII that he then left his old home and came to live at the Vallicella.
The last years of his life were marked by alternate sickness and recovery. In
1593, he showed the true greatness of one who knows the limits of his own
endurance, and resigned the office of superior which had been conferred on him
for life. In 1594, when he was in an agony of pain, the Blessed Virgin appeared
to him, and cured him. At the end of March, 1595, he had a severe attack of
fever, which lasted throughout April; but in answer to his special prayer God
gave him strength to say Mass on 1 May in honour of SS. Philip and James. On the
following 12 May he was seized with a violent haemorrhage, and Cardinal Baronius,
who had succeeded him as superior, gave him Extreme Unction. After that he
seemed to revive a little and his friend Cardinal Frederick Borromeo brought him
the Viaticum, which he received with loud protestations of his own unworthiness.
On the next day he was perfectly well, and till the actual day of his death went
about his usual duties, even reciting the Divine Office, from which he was
dispensed. But on 15 May he predicted that he had only ten more days to live. On
25 May, the feast of Corpus Christi, he went to say Mass in his little chapel,
two hours earlier than usual. At the beginning of his Mass
, writes Bacci, he
remained for some time looking fixedly at the hill of S. Onofrio, which was
visible from the chapel, just as if he saw some great vision. On coming to the
Gloria in Excelsis he began to sing, which was an unusual thing for him, and
sang the whole of it with the greatest joy and devotion, and all the rest of the
Mass he said with extraordinary exultation, and as if singing.
He was in
perfect health for the rest of that day, and made his usual night prayer; but
when in bed, he predicted the hour of the night at which he would die. About an
hour after midnight Father Antonio Gallonio, who slept under him, heard him
walking up and down, and went to his room. He found him lying on the bed,
suffering from another haemorrhage. Antonio, I am going
, he said; Gallonio
thereupon fetched the medical men and the fathers of the congregation. Cardinal
Baronius made the commendation of his soul, and asked him to give the fathers
his final blessing. The saint raised his hand slightly, and looked up to heaven.
Then inclining his head towards the fathers, he breathed his last. Philip was
beatified by Paul V in 1615, and canonized by Gregory XV in 1622.
It is perhaps by the method of contrast that the distinctive characteristics
of St. Philip and his work are brought home to us most forcibly (see Newman,
Sermons on Various Occasions
, n. xii; Historical Sketches
, III, end of ch.
vii). We hail him as the patient reformer, who leaves outward things alone and
works from within, depending rather on the hidden might of sacrament and prayer
than on drastic policies of external improvement; the director of souls who
attaches more value to mortification of the reason than to bodily austerities,
protests that men may become saints in the world no less than in the cloister,
dwells on the importance of serving God in a cheerful spirit, and gives a
quaintly humorous turn to the maxims of ascetical theology; the silent watcher
of the times, who takes no active part in ecclesiastical controversies and is
yet a motive force in their development, now encouraging the use of
ecclesiastical history as a bulwark against Protestantism, now insisting on the
absolution of a monarch, whom other counsellors would fain exclude from the
sacraments (see BARONIUS), now praying that God may avert a threatened
condemnation (see SAVONAROLA) and receiving a miraculous assurance that his
prayer is heard (see Letter of Ercolani referred to by Capecelatro); the founder
of a Congregation, which relies more on personal influence than on disciplinary
organization, and prefers the spontaneous practice of counsels of perfection to
their enforcement by means of vows; above all, the saint of God, who is so
irresistibly attractive, so eminently lovable in himself, as to win the title of
the Amabile santo
.
GALLONIO, companion of the saint was the first to produce a
Life of St. Philip, published in Latin (1600) and in Italian (1601), written
with great precision, and following a strictly chronological order. Several
medical treatises were written on the saint's palpitation and fractured ribs, e.
g. ANGELO DA BAGNAREA's Medica disputatio de palpitatione cordis, fractura
costarum, aliisque affectionibus B. Philippi Neri … qua ostenditur praedictas
affectiones fuisse supra naturam, dedicated to Card. Frederick Borromeo (Rome,
1613). BACCI wrote an Italian Life and dedicated it to Gregory XV (1622). His
work is the outcome of a minute examination of the processes of canonization,
and contains important matter not found in GALLONIO. BROCCHI's Life of St.
Philip, contained in his Vite de' santi e beati Fiorentini (Florence, 1742),
includes the saint's pedigree, and gives the Florentine tradition of his early
years; for certain chronological discrepancies between GALLONIO, BACCI, and
BROCCHI, see notes on the chronology in ANTROBUS' ed. of BACCI. Other Lives are
by RICCI (Rome, 1670), whose work was an enlargement of BACCI, and includes his
own Lives of the Companions of St. Philip; MARCIANO (1693); SONZONIO (1727);
BERNABEI (d. 1662), whose work is published for the first time by the
BOLLANDISTS (Acta SS., May, VII); RAMIREZ, who adapts the language of Scripture
to St. Philip in a Latin work called the Via lactea, dedicated to Innocent XI
(Valencia, 1682); and BAYLE (1859). GEOTHE at the end of his Italien. Reise
(Italian Journey) gives a sketch of the saint, entitled Filippo Neri, der
humoristische Heilige. The most important modern Life is that of CAPECELATRO
(1879), treating fully of the saint's relations with the persons and events of
his time. There is an English Life by HOPE (London, New York, Cincinnati,
Chicago). An abridged English translation of BACCI appeared in penal times
(Paris, 1656), a fact which shows our Catholic forefathers' continued
remembrance of the saint, who used to greet the English College students with
the words, Salvete, flores martyrum.
FABER's Modern Saints (1847) includes
translations of an enlarged ed. of BACCI, and of RICCI's Lives of the Companions.
Of the former there is a new and revised edition by ANTROBUS (London, 1902).
CAPECELATRO's work has been translated by POPE (London, 1882). English
renderings of two of St. Philip's sonnets by RYDER are published at the end of
the recent editions of BACCI and CAPECELATRO, together with translations of St.
Philip's letters. These were originally published in BISCONI's Raccolta di
lettere di santi e beati Fiorentini (Florence, 1737); but since that time twelve
other letters have come to light.
Heiligenlexikon als USB-Stick oder als DVD
Unterstützung für das Ökumenische Heiligenlexikon
Artikel kommentieren / Fehler melden
Suchen bei amazon: Bücher über Catholic Encyclopedia - St. Philip Romolo Neri
Wikipedia: Artikel über Catholic Encyclopedia - St. Philip Romolo Neri
Fragen? - unsere FAQs antworten!
Impressum - Datenschutzerklärung
korrekt zitieren: Artikel
Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet das Ökumenische Heiligenlexikon in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über https://d-nb.info/1175439177 und https://d-nb.info/969828497 abrufbar.