Today, in the 1962 Dominican Rite Calendar, we celebrate the commemoration of Blessed Innocent V, one of the four Dominican Popes. The ferial office is prayed, and a commemoration is made of Bl. Innocent at Lauds only.
We anticipated his feast yesterday at Pretiosa, during the reading of the Martyrology:
Coat of Arms of Bl. Innocent V |
From “Short Lives of the Dominican Saints” (London, Kegan Paul, Trench, and Trübner & Co., Ltd., 1901):At Rome, Blessed Innocent V, pope. Previously he had been known as Friar Peter of Tarantaise, of the Order of Preachers. He excelled in both learning and sanctity. He was made Archbishop of Lyons and later Cardinal Bishop of Ostia; finally, he was elected pope. He labored with suave prudence to protect the liberty of the Church and to promote concord among Christians. His fame was spread by many miracles both in life and after death.
Blessed Innocent
V., known before his elevation to the Papacy by the name of Peter of
Tarantaise, was born of noble parents at that town, situated at the foot of the
Alps, on the confines of Savoy, a territory then dependent on the Dukes of
Burgundy, about A.D. 1225. Whilst
still quite a child, he was sent to study at the University of Paris, where he
received the Dominican habit from the hands of Blessed Jordan, the second
Master-General of the Order of Preachers, when only nine years old. He is believed to have been one of
those young postulants admitted on occasion of the General Chapter of
1234. To the remonstrances
of the capitular Fathers, who complained that these children were so ignorant
of Latin as scarcely to be able to read a lesson of Matins even after much
previous preparation, the holy Master-General gently replied: “Suffer these
little onese to come, and forbid them not. Know that you will see many, yea, most
of them, acquit themselves gloriously of the office of preaching; and God will
make use of them for the work of saving souls, in preference to many others of
cultured mind.” In none was
this prophecy more brilliantly fulfilled than in little Peter of
Tarantaise. To the
extraordinary beauty of person he joined the highest gifts of mind and heart;
and in the shadow of the cloister, like the child Jesus in the holy house at
Nazareth, he daily “grew in wisdom, and age, and grace with God and men.” When only twenty-eight, he was judged
capable of teaching theology in the University at the same time as his intimate
friend, Saint Thomas Aquinas; and we are particularly told that his merit was
not in the least eclipsed by that of the Angel of the Schools. He also composed Commentaries on the
Four Books of the Sentences of Peter the Lombard and on Holy Scripture, and
other learned works, which in their day were scarcely less prized than those of
Saint Thomas himself. Hence,
in the year 1259, he was chosen with [Saint] Albert the Breat, Saint Thomas,
and two other distinguished religious, to draw up a general plan of studies to
be followed in all Dominican schools.
At the age of forty, his rare
prudence, his knowledge of men, his admirable meekness, and his invincible
firmness, caused him to be elected Provincial of his Order in the Province of
France, which then numbered dome fifty Convents. His journeys in the visitation of his
Province were always made on foot, with the simplicity of a poor Friar; he
everywhere diffused the good odor of his virtues and kept alive primitive
fervor and zeal for souls in the hearts of his Brethren. Meanwhile, the masters and students at the
University of Paris, who deeply regretted his absence, earnestly begged to have
him back among them. The General Chapter
of the Order granted their petition, and Father Peter returned to Paris where
he took his doctor’s degree and succeeded Saint Thomas at the head of the
School. In the year 1269, however, he
was re-elected Provincial. Three years
later, Blessed Gregory X., who then filled the Chair of Saint Peter and who had
formerly been one of his pupils at Paris, appointed him Archbishop of Lyons and
Primate of France. A few months later,
he raised him to the dignity of Cardinal at the same time as the great
Franciscan, St. Bonaventure, and made him Bishop of Ostia and Velletri and Dean
of the sacred College, commanding him to continue the administration of the
Archdiocese of Lyons until the nomination of his successor in that see.
The saintly Pontiff employed the
new Cardinal to assist him in making preparations for the General Council which
he had convoked at Lyons, for the purpose of effecting a re-union between the
Greek and Latin Churches, and organizing a fresh Crusade for the recovery of
the Holy Land. The Council opened on May
7, 1274. Cardinal Peter of Tarantaise
took a distinguished part in its proceedings and displayed an extraordinary
talent for business. He was especially
charged with all that concerned the re-union of the Greeks with the Latins, and
succeeded in inducing the ambassadors of the Greek Emperor to submit to the
faith and authority of the Roman Church.
It fell to his lot to preach the funeral sermon of his friend and
colleague, Saint Bonaventure, who died at Lyons during the Council; and he did so with a touching eloquence which
caused the whole of his audience to mingle their tears with his own.
In January, A.D. 1276, Blessed
Gregory X died, and Cardinal Peter of Tarantaise was unanimously elected as his
successor, assuming the name of Innocent V.
The holy man immediately set himself to labour zealously for the peace
of Christendom, the repression of the Moors, who were threatening a fresh
invasion of Spain, the acceptance by the Greeks of the adhesion of their
ambassadors to reunion with the Roman Church, and the undertaking of a fresh Crusade
against the infidels. Such splendid
beginnings excited the greatest hopes for the new Pontificate, but it was
doomed to be of brief duration. On June
22nd, and attack of malignant fever closed the holy Pontiff’s career; he had
sat in the Chair of Peter only five months and two days. He was laid to rest in the Lateran Basilica,
and rendered himself illustrious by a host of miracles. Pope Leo XIII, raised him to the Altars of
the Church, A.D. 1898.
Prayer
O God, you enriched your bishop
and confessor, the blessed Innocent, with the gifts of knowledge and prudence,
and made him a promotor of peace and unity; grant, through his prayers, that we
may relish what is heavenly, and in perfect concord follow what is right. Through our Lord...