Saint Martin and the Search for Holiness | Régine Pernoud |
Prologue to Martin
of Tours
November 11 is now a red-letter day on the French civil calendar: in 1918
that date marked the end of the slaughter that was the First World War.
But even before France was called France, that date, the eleventh of November,
had been a date on the calendar used throughout Christendom because it
commemorated the burial at Tours of the amazing individual whom we call
Saint Martin.
He
was an amazing and even a paradoxical man: he never accomplished what
he had hoped to do, and yet his accomplishments surpassed all possible
expectations. To begin with, this man, who had always tried to go unnoticed,
enjoyed extraordinary popularity. He wanted to be a hermit, to flee the
world and devote himself to ascetical practices; instead he was constantly
surrounded by people, during his lifetime and after his death: the pilgrimage
shrine of Saint Martin in Tours was once the most important after the
three great pilgrimage sites of Christianity, Jerusalem, Rome, and, later
on, Saint James of Compostela. He is remembered as a soldier, and indeed
he was one, albeit entirely against his will. He had refused to be ordained
a priest, considering himself unworthy, and yet he became a bishop. He
had fled the world and sought a life of seclusion, but instead his biography
was written while he was still living!
Thanks to those who discerned the extraordinary qualities in this rather
reticent, unassuming man who resolutely practiced poverty, we know the
story of his life. It spans the fourth century, in which the Church became
free at last to live above ground, only to be torn by dissension so widespread
that it almost brought her to ruin.
There are not many individuals whose biographies were written during the
fourth century, especially during their lifetime. This was the case, however,
with Martin of Tours, thanks to his friend Sulpicius Severus, who survived
him long enough to record for us also the story of his death. And so we
have the unusual good fortune of possessing a contemporary document to
tell us about a man who, throughout his life, sought only to live among
his peers, in obscurity.
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