
Aloysius Gonzaga: A Patron Saint for Teenagers
By Thomas J. Craughwell Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 6/10/04)
St. Aloysius Gonzaga (1568-1591)
Feast day: June 21
The people who mass-produce statues and holy cards have done St. Aloysius
Gonzaga no favors. The standard image of the saint as a frail, doe-eyed
novice has given us the wrong impression. It may even be responsible for the
decline in devotion to St. Aloysius. Yet Aloysius deserves a revival,
especially as the patron saint of teenagers.
The time and place where he grew up — 16th-century Italy — is not very
different from 21st century America. It was a lax, morally careless,
self-indulgent age. Aloysius saw the decadence around him and vowed not to
be part of it. He did not, however, become a kill-joy. Like any teenage boy,
he wanted to have a good time, and as a member of an aristocratic family he
had plenty of opportunities for amusement. He enjoyed horse races, banquets
and the elaborate parties held in palace gardens. But if Aloysius found
himself at a social function that took a turn to the lascivious, he left.
Aloysius did not just want to be good, he wanted to be holy; and on this
point he could be tough and uncompromising. He came by these qualities
naturally: among the great families of Renaissance Italy, the Medici were
famous as patrons of the arts, and the Borgias as schemers, but the Gonzagas
were a warrior clan. While most Gonzaga men aspired to conquer others,
Aloysius was determined to conquer himself.
Aloysius wanted to be a priest. When he was 12 or 13, he invented for
himself a program he thought would prepare him for the religious life. He
climbed out of bed in the middle of the night to put in extra hours kneeling
on the cold stone floor of his room. Occasionally, he even beat himself with
a leather dog leash. Aloysius was trying to become a saint by sheer
willpower. It was not until he entered the Jesuit novitiate in Rome that he
had a spiritual director — St. Robert Bellarmine — to guide him.
Bellarmine put a stop to Aloysius’ boot camp approach to sanctity,
commanding him to follow the Jesuit rule of regular hours of prayer and
simple acts of self-control and self-denial. Aloysius thought the Jesuits
were too lenient, but he obeyed. Such over-the-top zeal may have exasperated
Bellarmine, but he believed that Aloysius’ fervor was genuine and that with
proper guidance the boy might be a saint.
To his credit, Aloysius recognized that his bullheadedness was a problem.
From the novitiate he wrote to his brother, "I am a piece of twisted iron. I
entered the religious life to get twisted straight."
Then, in January 1591, the plague struck Rome. With the city’s hospitals
overflowing with the sick and the dying, the Jesuits sent every priest and
novice to work in the wards. This was a difficult assignment for the
squeamish Aloysius. Once he started working with the sick, however, fear and
disgust gave way to compassion. He went into the streets of Rome and carried
the ill and the dying to the hospital on his back. There he washed them,
found them a bed, or at least a pallet, and fed them. Such close contact
with the sick was risky. Within a few weeks, Aloysius contracted the plague
himself and died. He was 23 years old.
In the sick, the helpless, the dying, St. Aloysius saw the crucified
Christ. The man of the iron will who thought he could take Heaven by sheer
determination surrendered at last to divine grace.
Craughwell is the author of Saints for Every Occasion (Stampley
Enterprises, 2001).
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