Dominic
was born at Canas de Navarre, on the Spanish side of the Pyrenees. From
a family of peasants, at first he looked after his father’s flocks in
the foothills of the beautiful mountains of that region.
Developing
a taste for silence and solitude, he entered the monastery of San
Millán de la Cogolla. As he made great progress in the religious state,
he was entrusted with works of reform and became prior of his monastery.
Refusing
to hand over to King Garcia III of Navarre some of the monastery’s
lands which the monarch coveted, he and two of his companions were
forced into exile by the king. They were warmly received by Ferdinand I
of Castille and León who entrusted to Dominic the monastery of San
Sebastián de Silos, in a remote part of the diocese of Burgos. The
ancient Benedictine monastery, however, was decaying – structurally and spiritually.
As
Abbot of San Sebastian, Dominic restored order to both the physical
structure of the edifice and the spiritual edifice of the souls within,
and made Silos famous throughout Spain.
Dominic was a great
miracle worker, and it was said that there was no disease that he had
not, at one time or another, cured. His charitable solicitude embraced
not only the poor and the infirm but Christians enslaved by the Moors.
These he endeavored by all means within his powers to free from their
cruel captivity.
About one hundred year after his death, a young
woman, Blessed Juana de Aza de Guzmán, made a pilgrimage to his tomb,
asking to conceive a child. The child she effectually conceived and
bore, she named Dominic after the holy abbot of Silos. This Dominic
became the great St. Dominic de Guzmán, founder of the Dominican Order.
Dominic of Silos died on December 20, 1073.
Sunday, December 20, 2020
St. Dominic de Silos
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