Camillus
was born on May 25, 1550 in the region of Abruzzo in the Kingdom of
Naples. His father was a mercenary soldier and seldom at home. His
mother, Camilla, though good was also timid and had trouble controlling
her morose, hot-tempered son.
At seventeen, being tall for his
age, Camillus joined his father in soldiering. Leading the rambling,
ambulant life of a mercenary, he acquired the wayward habits of the
profession, especially the vice of gambling.
Still, Camillus’
mother had instilled in him a respect for religion. After his father
died repentant, and his regiment disbanded in 1574, he found himself, at
twenty-four, destitute because of his gambling. He was offered a shot
at reform when a wealthy, pious man, noticing the tall, lanky young man
in town, offered him employment at a monastery that he was building for
the Capuchins of Manfredonia.
Despite his aggressive nature and
gambling habits, the guardian of the monastery saw another side to
Camillus, and continually tried to bring out in him his better nature.
Finally moved by the good friar’s exhortations, Camillus underwent a
deep spiritual conversion.
Refused admission by the Capuchins
because of an unhealed leg wound, he traveled to Rome where he began to
serve the sick at the Hospital of St. Giacomo while attempting to lead a
penitential and ascetic life.
Hearing
of St. Philip Neri and his great gift with souls in need, Camillus
sought his spiritual direction and was taken in by the saint.
He
soon discovered that helping the sick was the cure for his wayward
habits, and the only thing that gave him true joy. He began to gather a
group of men around him who had a desire to help the sick for love
alone and not for pay. Feeling the need to be ordained, he studied under
the Jesuit Fathers and was ordained in 1584 at the age of thirty-four.
Thus
Camillus de Lellis, former wandering soldier and professional gambler,
established the Clerks Regular, Ministers of the Sick. His group was
approved by Pope Sixtus V in 1586, and officially raised to the status
of a mendicant order by Gregory XV in 1591. On their black habit they
wore a large red cross which became the first inspiration for today’s
Red Cross.
By the time of Camillus’ death in 1614, his order had spread throughout Italy and into Hungary. He was canonized in 1746.
Sunday, July 18, 2021
St. Camillus de Lellis
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