If you wish to read the texts click here: Wis 7:7-14; Mt 5:17-19
Robert
Bellarmine was born on October 4, 1542 and entered the Society of Jesus on September
20, 1560 when he was 18 years old. His intellectual ability led him to earn a
reputation as professor and preacher. His spiritual depth was so much that many
lay people, Priests, Bishops and Cardinals flocked to him for solace and advice.
He was available to all.
In
1592 he was made Rector of the Roman College, and in 1595 Provincial of Naples.
In 1597 Clement VIII recalled him to Rome and made him his own theologian and
likewise Examiner of Bishops and Consultor of the Holy Office. Further, in 1599
he made him Cardinal-Priest of the title of Santa Maria in viâ, alleging as his
reason for this promotion that "the Church of God had not his equal in
learning".
His
spirit of prayer, his singular delicacy of conscience and freedom from sin, his
spirit of humility and poverty, together with the disinterestedness which he
displayed as much under the cardinal's robes as under the Jesuit's gown, his
lavish charity to the poor, and his devotedness to work, had combined to
impress those who knew him intimately with the feeling that he was of the
number of the saints.
Among
many activities, he became theologian to Pope Clement VIII, preparing two
catechisms which have had great influence in the Church.
Bellarmine
died on September 17, 1621. The process for his canonization was begun in 1627
but was delayed until 1930 for political reasons, stemming from his writings.
In 1930, Pope Pius XI canonized him and the next year declared him a doctor of
the Church.
The
readings for the feast of this great Saint contain what are commonly known as
the “theme” of the Sermon on the Mount. In these verses, the Matthean Jesus
makes explicit that he is a law abiding Jew. His attitude towards the Jewish
law is fundamentally positive. However, Jesus also makes explicit here, that he
has come not merely to confirm or establish the law, but to fulfil or complete
it. This means that he will go beyond a purely legal interpretation to a
broader perspective. He will remove the focus from the mere external and
concentrate on the internal. The focus will be more on the attitude than merely
on the action. This was exactly the attitude that Robert Bellarmine possessed.
While
laws, rules and regulations are necessary and help towards order, it is also
possible that they can become ends in themselves and not as they are meant to
be, means to an end. We might follow in some cases the letter of the law, but
miss out on its spirit. We might even follow the rule or law only because we
are afraid of getting caught and punished and not because we are convinced of
it.
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