MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Groups Home  |  My Groups  |  Language  |  Help  
 
PrayTheRosaryPrayTheRosary@groups.msn.com 
  
What's New
  Join Now
  Month of JULY  
  SITE POLICY Please read  
  What We're All About  
  Site Dedication  
  Prayer for Protection & Our Web Rings  
  MESSAGE BOARDS  
  WE SELL ROSARIES TOO!  
  PRAY THE ROSARY Together  
  Secret of The Rosary  
  Childlike Devotion to Mary, our Mother  
  What is The Rosary?  
  History of the Rosary  
  The Mysteries of the Rosary  
  Scriptural Foundation  
  Saint Dominic and The Rosary  
  Fifteen Promises  
  Consecrate & Sign-up for Rosary  
  Pentecost  
  Gifts of the Holy Spirit  
  OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST  
  Precious Blood of Jesus  
  OUR BLESSED MOTHER MARY  
  Feast of the VISITATION  
  Lady of MOUNT CARMEL  
  FREE ROSARY & SCAPULAR  
  What are SACRAMENTALS?  
  Garment of Grace/Brown Scapular  
  Five First Saturdays  
  The Green Scapular  
  The Miraculous Medal  
  Medal of Saint Benedict  
  WILL YOU MARCH for LIFE?  
  Abortion: None of Your Business?  
  Pray a Pro-Life Rosary  
  Examine Your Pro-Life Conscience  
  My Commitment for Life Pledge  
  ATTENTION CATHOLICS  
  Christian MODESTY  
  Calendar of Saints for JULY  
  FAVORITE SAINTS List  
  
  St. Joseph  
  
  St. Monica  
  
  St. Robert Bellarmine  
  
  St. Agatha  
  
  St. Agnes  
  
  St. Alphonsus Liguori  
  
  St. Anne  
  
  St. Anthony Mary Claret  
  
  St. Anthony of Padua  
  
  St. Barbara  
  
  St. Bernard Clairvaux  
  
  St. Blaise  
  
  St. Bridget of Sweden  
  
  St. Catherine of Siena  
  
  St. Cecilia  
  
  St. Clare  
  
  St. Dominic  
  
  St. Dymphna  
  
  St. Elizabeth of Hungary  
  
  St. Elizabeth Seton  
  
  St. Francis of Asissi  
  
  St. Francis deSales  
  
  St. Francis Xavier  
  
  St. Gemma Galgani  
  
  St. Gerard Majella  
  
  Holy Guardian Angels  
  
  The Holy Innocents  
  
  St. Isaac Jogues  
  
  St. Januarius  
  
  St. Joan of Arc  
  
  St. John the Baptist  
  
  St. John Bosco  
  
  St. John Chrysostom  
  
  St. John Neumann  
  
  St. John Vianney  
  
  St. Joseph of Cupertino  
  
  St. Jude  
  
  Bl. Kateri Tekakwitha  
  
  St. Lucy  
  
  St. Luke  
  
  St. Maria Goretti  
  
  St. Martin dePorres  
  
  St. Mary Magdalene  
  
  St. Michael the Archangel  
  
  Mother Cabrini  
  
  St. Nicholas  
  
  St. Padre Pio of Pietrelcina  
  
  St. Patrick  
  
  St. Philomena  
  
  St. Rose of Lima  
  
  St. Teresa of Avila  
  
  St. Theresa of Lisieux  
  
  St. Valentine  
  
  St. Vincent dePaul  
  
  St. Vincent Ferrer  
  Make a Family Altar  
  Light a Candle on our Shrine  
  Why PURGATORY?  
  Make Use of Suffering  
  HEAVEN Our Home  
  Reality of HELL  
  New to The Church?  
  The Holy Sacrifice of THE MASS  
  On the use of the Tridentine Mass  
  The SACRAMENTS  
  Jesus High Priest  
  Our Lady of The Blessed Sacrament  
  Eucharistic Belief  
  Our AWARDS  
  Apply for our AWARDS  
  LINKS & Banner Exchange  
  Documents  
  Member Photo Albums  
  God Bless America COMMEMORATIVE ROSARY BEADS  
  
  
  Tools  
 

Saint Robert Bellarmine

Feast Day May 13 

Born at Montepulciano, Tuscany, Italy, on October 4, he joined the Jesuits, and despite his father's opposition, he joined the Jesuits in 1560.

He studied at Florence and Mondovi and then at Padua and Louvain and was ordained at Ghent in 1570. He was appointed the first Jesuit professor at Louvain, lectured on Thomas Aquinas' Summa, counteracted Baius' teaching, and gained a reputation for his learning and brilliant preaching. He studied Scripture and the Church Fathers and learned Hebrew for his studies.

In 1576, he was recalled to Rome, where he occupied the chair of controversial theology at the newly founded Roman College for eleven years. It was during this period that he prepared his monumental Disputatianes de cantraversiis Christianae Fidei adversus hujus temparis Haereticas, a study of the Catholic faith to refute the Protestant Centuries of Magdeburg.

He was sent on an unsuccessful mission to Paris in 1589, enduring the eight-month siege of Paris by Henry of Navarre. In 1592, he was the leader in preparing the Clementine revised version of the Vulgate for which he wrote an Introduction, was named rector of the Roman College in 1592, and in 1594 became provincial of the Naples province of the Jesuits. He became Pope Clement VIII's theologian in 1597, prepared two catechisms that were still in use in modern times, and in 1599 was created a cardinal by Clement. He was appointed archbishop of Capua in 1602 but was recalled to Rome three years later by the newly elected Pope Paul V.

Robert Bellarmine soon became the most effective spokesman and apologist of the Church in the later years of the Counter Reformation, noted, in his opposition to the Protestants, for his reasoning and rational argumentation rather than for rhetoric and dogmatic assertions.

He was the great champion of the papacy, brilliantly defending the interdict placed on Venice against Fra Paoli Sarpi. Bellarmine overwhelmed King James I of England, who had written two books defending his theory of supremacy in the controversy that developed when Archpriest Blackwell took an Oath of Allegiance to the King that denied papal jurisdiction in temporal matters.

Bellarmine incurred further royal opposition with his De potestate papae, denying the divine right of kings, which was publicly burned by the Paris parlement..

However, he alienated Pope Sixtus V when he declared Popes had only indirect jurisdiction over secular rulers; Sixtus threatened to put the first volume of Disputationes de controversiis on the Index but died before doing so.

Bellarmine's position became basic Catholic teaching on the subject. He became embroiled in the controversy over his friend Galileo, who accepted his admonition in 1610 that it would be wise to advance his findings as hypotheses rather than as fully proved theories.

In the last decade of his life, his writings were on spiritual matters, among them Art of Dying Well and a commentary on the Psalms.

He retired to St. Andrew's novitiate in Rome the last days of his life and died there on September 17. He was canonized in 1930 and declared a             Doctor of the Church in 1931.

Saint Robert Mellarmine, pray for us!

 

 

 

Notice: Microsoft has no responsibility for the content featured in this group. Click here for more info.
  Try MSN Internet Software for FREE!
    MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail  |  Search
Feedback  |  Help  
  ©2005 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.  Legal  Advertise  MSN Privacy