If a poor man needed some clothing, Fidelis would often give the
man the clothes right off his back. Complete generosity to others
characterized this saint's life.
Born in 1577, Mark Rey (Fidelis was his religious name) became a
lawyer who constantly upheld the causes of the poor and oppressed
people. Nicknamed "the poor man's lawyer," Fidelis soon grew disgusted
with the corruption and injustice he saw among his colleagues. He left
his law career to become a priest, joining his brother George as a
member of the Capuchin Order. His wealth was divided between needy
seminarians and the poor.
As a follower of Francis, Fidelis
continued his devotion to the weak and needy. During a severe epidemic
in a city where he was guardian of a friary, Fidelis cared for and cured
many sick soldiers.
He was appointed head of a group of
Capuchins sent to preach against the Calvinists and Zwinglians in
Switzerland. Almost certain violence threatened. Those who observed the
mission felt that success was more attributable to the prayer of Fidelis
during the night than to his sermons and instructions.
He was
accused of opposing the peasants' national aspirations for independence
from Austria. While he was preaching at Seewis, to which he had gone
against the advice of his friends, a gun was fired at him, but he
escaped unharmed. A Protestant offered to shelter Fidelis, but he
declined, saying his life was in God's hands. On the road back, he was
set upon by a group of armed men and killed.
He was canonized in
1746. Fifteen years later, the Congregation for the Propagation of the
Faith, which was established in 1622, recognized him as its first
martyr.
Comment: Fidelis's constant prayer was that he be kept
completely faithful to God and not give in to any lukewarmness or
apathy. He was often heard to exclaim, "Woe to me if I should prove
myself but a halfhearted soldier in the service of my thorn-crowned
Captain." His prayer against apathy, and his concern for the poor and
weak make him a saint whose example is valuable today. The modern Church
is calling us to follow the example of "the poor man's lawyer" by
sharing ourselves and our talents with those less fortunate and by
working for justice in the world.
Quote: "Action on behalf of justice and participation
in the transformation of the world fully appear to us as a constitutive
dimension of the preaching of the Gospel, or, in other words, of the
Church's mission for the redemption of the human race and its liberation
from every oppressive situation" ("Justice in the World," Synod of
Bishops, 1971). |
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