Feb 20 – Fri. of Ash Wed. / S Eucherius

It’s the Friday After Ash Wednesday, 3rd Class, with the color of Violet. In this episode: the meditation: “The Choice of Resolutions”, today’s news from the Church: “Letter from Father Pagliarani to Cardinal Fernández”, a preview of this week’s episode of “QWF #57: Is Space Exploration Moral?”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.

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Saint Eucherius of Lyon was a bishop whose holiness was shaped not first by office, but by withdrawal. Born into a noble Roman family in the late fourth century, Eucherius grew up amid wealth, education, and influence in Gaul. Yet as Christianity moved from persecuted minority to imperial religion, he sensed a subtle danger. Comfort could dull conviction. Power could soften discipline. Longing for something purer, Eucherius and his wife, Galla, chose a different path. With their children grown, they embraced a life of separation from the world, withdrawing to the island monastery of Lérins off the southern coast of France.

Lérins was not a place of idleness. It was a furnace of prayer and study. There, Eucherius immersed himself in Scripture, ascetic discipline, and contemplation. He wrote spiritual treatises encouraging detachment from worldly ambition and urging Christians to pursue interior freedom. His most famous work, addressed to a relative, described the desert as a place where the soul becomes clear before God. For Eucherius, renunciation was not rejection of creation, but reordering of desire. Wealth, honor, and position were not evil, but dangerous if allowed to eclipse eternity.

Despite his desire for hiddenness, the Church called him back into public life. Around 434, he was chosen Bishop of Lyon, one of the most important sees in Gaul. He accepted reluctantly, convinced that pastoral care required sacrifice greater than solitude. As bishop, he remained marked by monastic simplicity. He preached with clarity, governed with gentleness, and defended orthodoxy in a time when theological tensions still lingered after the great councils of the fourth century. His authority rested not on political skill, but on integrity formed in silence.

Eucherius also endured personal sorrow. His sons entered religious life, one becoming a monk and another a bishop. Their vocation was a source of joy, yet also a reminder that even holy families are shaped by surrender. Eucherius taught that Christian life requires holding all things lightly, even the good gifts God Himself provides.

He died around 449, remembered as both monk and bishop, contemplative and shepherd. His life bridged two worlds that are often separated. He proved that withdrawal can purify action, and that leadership rooted in contemplation carries a different weight.

Devotion to Saint Eucherius of Lyon remained especially strong in France. His feast on November 16 invited reflection on interior detachment amid responsibility. He became a quiet patron of those called to leadership who must guard their hearts against distraction.

Saint Eucherius teaches that sanctity begins in the heart’s renunciation, and that even bishops must first learn to be monks before God.

Saint Eucherius of Lyon, contemplative shepherd, pray for us.

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