It’s the Feast of S Camillus de Lellis, 3rd Class, with the color of White. In this episode: the meditation: “Enlightened Obedience”, today’s news from the Church: “The Fraternity of Saint Peter Against the Consecrations”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre.
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Sources Used Today:
- “Enlightened Obedience” — From Trinity Sunday to the Assumption
- “The Fraternity of Saint Peter Against the Consecrations” (FSSPX.news)
- The Spiritual Life — Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre (Angelus Press)
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Saint Camillus de Lellis is proof that God can completely rewrite a life. If you had met him as a young man, “future saint” is probably the last thing you would have guessed.
He was born in 1550 in the Kingdom of Naples and grew into an enormous man, standing well over six feet tall at a time when that was highly unusual. He followed his father into military life and became a soldier, but he also developed a serious gambling addiction. More than once he gambled away everything he owned. At one point, he was so destitute that he had to take work as a laborer on a Capuchin construction project simply to survive.
That was where God got hold of him.
One day, while reflecting on his wasted life, Camillus experienced a profound conversion. He later said it felt as though a veil had been lifted from his eyes. He abandoned his old way of life and resolved to dedicate himself entirely to Christ.
There was one problem.
For years, Camillus had suffered from a painful wound on his leg that never fully healed. It forced him into hospitals repeatedly, and in those days hospitals were often miserable places. Patients were crowded together, cleanliness was poor, and many of the sick were treated more like burdens than human beings.
Camillus looked around and thought, There has to be a better way.
He believed that every sick person should be cared for as though Christ Himself were lying in the bed.
That simple conviction changed everything.
After becoming a priest, Camillus founded the Ministers of the Sick, better known today as the Camillians. His priests and brothers took the traditional vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, but they added a remarkable fourth vow: to care for the sick, even if it meant risking their own lives during times of plague.
And they meant it.
When epidemics swept through Italy, many people fled. Camillus and his companions ran toward the danger. They carried the sick to safety, cleaned hospital wards, fed patients who had no family, and remained beside the dying so that no one would have to face death alone.
Camillus also helped introduce practices that seem obvious today but were revolutionary at the time, emphasizing cleanliness, fresh linens, proper nutrition, and treating patients with dignity. Long before modern nursing developed, he was insisting that compassionate care was part of Christian charity.
Visitors to Rome can still pray at the Church of Saint Mary Magdalene, where his body rests. His spiritual family continues his work in hospitals and missions throughout the world, caring for the sick just as he envisioned nearly five hundred years ago.
Saint Camillus reminds us that sometimes the people who have wandered the farthest become the ones who understand mercy the best.
Saint Camillus de Lellis, compassionate servant of the sick and apostle of Christian charity, pray for us.
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