Tuesday, August 8, 2023

Memorial of Saint Dominic Guzman, priest

(Numbers 12:1-13; Matthew 14: 22-36)

In May American Catholics were amazed to hear of a nun’s dead body discovered uncorrupted four years after its burial.  Immediately they asked if the nun, Sr. Wilhelmina Lancaster, was not a saint.  She founded her religious community and was known for her devotion to Mary, the Mother of our Lord.

Hearing of Sr. Wilhelmina, many Dominicans friars and sisters thought of their founder St. Dominic Guzman. When his body was exhumed after being buried twelve years, a sweet fragrance ascended from the casket.  The aroma sealed the case of Dominic’s sanctity.  Dominicans in the first third of the thirteenth century worried that their founder was not being given due recognition.  His contemporary, St. Francis of Assisi, was canonized within two years of his death.  Not as charismatic as “il poverello,” Dominic was nevertheless a very holy man who displayed a critical quality for the renewal of the human heart.

St. Dominic was a man of community.  He did not call attention to himself but worked steadfastly for the good of the whole.  He founded the Order of Preachers to assist the Church in its re-evangelization of southern France where heresy had taken hold.  He also had the foresight to organize a community of nuns to pray for the preaching friars.  Beyond his example of prayer and fraternity, he left the Order with a functional Constitution.  Its flexibility and prudence have allowed the Order to remain undivided for over eight hundred years.