Born
in 1082 into a wealthy and pious family in northern Portugal,
Theotonius was a nephew to the Bishop of Coimbra and studied with him
from a young age to prepare for the priesthood.
When Theotonius
was ordained a priest, he lived most austerely, avoiding luxury. After
the death of his uncle around the year 1112, the young priest, now
thirty years old, accepted – though not without reluctance – the office
of the Superior of the Cathedral Chapter of Viseu.
The Countess
Teresa of Portugal (referred to by Pope Paschal II in 1116 as "Queen," a
title that remained from that time onwards) and her husband, Henry of
Burgundy, with the consent of the clergy and at the urging of the
people, often sought to appoint Theotonius as Bishop of Coimbra, but he
always refused.
In an effort to dissuade the Queen from her
intentions, Theotonius resigned his office as Prior of the Cathedral
Chapter and made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. After he returned to
Portugal, he resumed his work as a priest and Chapter member in Viseu,
but refused to take up again the office of Prior.
Theotonius was
fearless in rebuking sinful behavior, in public or in private. In one
instance, the now widowed queen was attending Holy Mass celebrated by
Theotonius. She was accompanied by the Galician nobleman Fernando Pérez
de Traba and the nature of their scandalous relationship had become
well-known. Theotonius' sermon, though not naming them, was clearly
directed at their conduct. On another occasion, Theotonius was about to
begin Holy Mass when the queen had a message sent asking him to say the
Mass quickly. He replied simply that there was another Queen in heaven,
far more noble, for whom he ought to say the Mass with the greatest
reverence and devotion. If the queen did not wish to stay, she was free
to leave, but he would not rush – Theotonius was ever insistent on the
exact and reverent recitation of holy prayers.
Theotonius’s
priestly life was distinguished by a great love for the poor and for the
Holy Souls in Purgatory, for whom he offered Mass every Friday. The
Mass was followed by a procession to the cemetery, and large sums were
donated to the priest, but Theotonius distributed the money to the poor.
Theotonius
died in 1162 at the age of eighty. When he heard the news, Don Afonso
Henriques, Queen Teresa's son and the first king of Portugal, who was a
good friend of Theotonius’s, remarked of him, “his soul will have gone
up to Heaven before his body is lowered into the tomb.”
Thursday, February 18, 2021
St. Theotonius
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