Category:Pope Saint Celestine V

Pope Saint Celestine V Papacy began: July 5, 1294 Papacy ended: December 13, 1294 (5 months, 3 weeks and 1 day) Predecessor: Nicholas IV Successor: Boniface VIII Orders Consecration: August 29, 1294 Personal details Birth name: Pietro Angelerio Born: 1215, Near Isernia, Kingdom of Sicily Died: May 19, 1296 (aged 80–81) in Ferentino, Papal States Sainthood Feast day: May 19 Canonized: May 5, 1313

Excerpt from Lives of the Saints, 1894
April 6 — ST. CELESTINE, Pope. (His feast day is now May 19.)

ST. CELESTINE was a native of Rome, and upon the demise of Pope Boniface he was chosen to succeed him, in September 422, by the wonderful consent of the whole city. His first official act was to confirm the condemnation of an African bishop who had been convicted of grave crimes. He wrote also to the bishops of the provinces of Vienne and Narbonne in Gaul, to correct several abuses, and ordered, among other things, that absolution or reconciliation should never be refused to any dying sinner who sincerely asked it; for repentance depends not so much on time as on the heart. He assembled a synod at Rome in 430, in which the writings of Nestorius were examined, and his blasphemies in maintaining in Christ a divine and a human person were condemned. The Pope pronounced sentence of excommunication against Nestorius, and deposed him. Being informed that Agricola, the son of a British bishop called Saverianus, who had been married before he was raised to the priesthood, had spread the seeds of the Pelagian heresy in Britain, St. Celestine sent thither St. Germanus of Auxerre, whose zeal and conduct happily prevented the threatening danger. He also sent St. Palladius, a Roman, to preach the Faith to the Scots, both in North Britain and in Ireland, and many authors of the life of St. Patrick say that apostle likewise received his commission to preach to the Irish from St. Celestine, in 431. This holy Pope died on the 1st of August, in 432, having reigned almost ten years.

Reflection.—Vigilance is truly needful to those to whom the care of souls has been confided. "Blessed are the servants whom the Lord at His coming shall find watching." Excerpt from Lives of the Saints, 1894 by Alban Butler, Benziger Brothers edition, 1894