St Gregory the Great

Pope, Doctor of the Church (entered heaven in 604)

Dear Greg,

What God asks of us is not always to our liking, but it is always better than what we may like.  You may prefer to spend your days playing tennis and your nights studying philosophy, but the Lord would like you to be squeezing in as well some activities to serve your neighbor.  You would do well to follow in the footsteps of today’s saint, who led a comfortable and easy life for a few years, but God knew that he could give so much more, and so he spent the rest of his life exhausting himself for the good of the Church.

He was of patrician birth (that’s the high society of ancient Rome), and his family was devoutly Christian.  Unfortunately, Rome (and the rest of the former Roman Empire in western Europe) was in ruins by the time he became a young man.  Barbarian invasions and plagues and widespread anarchy had reduced the “mistress of the world” to a broken down backwash.  Having received the best education available, Gregory took up a career in civil service, doing all he could to restore order and prosperity to the Eternal City and its surrounding townships.  He rose quickly to the position of city prefect (i.e. mayor), and made solid progress.  But soon the call to serve God alone became too strong to resist, so he gave his fortune to the city and retired to his family villa, which he turned into a monastery.  He was happy there for three years, praying, studying, and disciplining his spirit and body in imitation of Christ.  But he was soon brought back into public affairs, when the Pope sent him as ambassador to the Emperor’s court in Constantinople.  Again his efforts met with success, but his heart remained in the cloister.  Upon returning to Rome, however, he was made a deacon, and given care of the Roman Churches.  His zeal, intelligence, and charity made him the obvious choice for Pope, which he became in 590.

As Christ’s Vicar, his spiritual and practical leadership led the suffering city through plagues, invasions, and famines, while at the same time he turned the papacy into a rock of stability and order that would give Christendom a dependable foundation throughout the Middle Ages.  He combined the prudence and shrewdness of an administrator with remarkable eloquence in both speech and writing.  Above all, he strived to please and honor God by pouring himself out in service of his Kingdom.  Indeed, it was Gregory the Great who coined the papal title still in use today, “servus servorum Dei” or “servant of the servants of God.”  He never rested, he suffered from chronic health problems, and by the time his 13-year pontificate came to a close he looked more like a skeleton than a man.  To the end, however, he remained the faithful pastor.  One of his last actions was to send a heavy cloak to a poor bishop who had difficulty making it through the cold winters.  His epitaph says it all: “After having conformed all his actions to his doctrines, the great consul of God went to enjoy eternal triumphs.”

And just think, my talented young nephew: for all those years, what he really would have liked to be doing was praying and gardening in his monastery.  I hope you see my point.

Sincerely,

your Uncle Eddy

What did you think?

Share your review! Just log in or create your free account.

Leave a Reply

Meet Uncle Eddy

Receive Uncle Eddy's daily advice in your inbox!

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Skip to content