It’s been said that youth is wasted on the young. In some ways, that was true for today’s saint.
Born in France in the early fifth century, Hilary came from an
aristocratic family. In the course of his education he encountered his
relative, Honoratus, who encouraged the young man to join him in the
monastic life. Hilary did so. He continued to follow in the footsteps of
Honoratus as bishop. Hilary was only 29 when he was chosen bishop of
Arles.
The new, youthful bishop undertook the role with
confidence. He did manual labor to earn money for the poor. He sold
sacred vessels to ransom captives. He became a magnificent orator. He
traveled everywhere on foot, always wearing simple clothing.
That
was the bright side. Hilary encountered difficulty in his relationships
with other bishops over whom he had some jurisdiction. He unilaterally
deposed one bishop. He selected another bishop to replace one who was
very ill–but, to complicate matters, did not die! Pope St. Leo the Great
kept Hilary a bishop but stripped him of some of his powers.
Hilary died at 49. He was a man of talent and piety who, in due time, had learned how to be a bishop. |
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