ST CHARLES BORROMEO.
FEAST DAY: NOVEMBER 4TH

About fifty years after the Protestant heresy had broken out, our Lord raised up
a mere youth to renew the face of His Church. In 1560 Charles Borromeo, then
twenty-two years of age, was created cardinal, and by the side of his uncle,
Pius IV., administered the affairs of the Holy See. His first care was the
direction of the Council of Trent. He urged forward its sessions, guided its
deliberations by continual correspondence from Rome, and by his firmness
carried it to its conclusion. Then he entered upon a still more arduous work—the
execution of its decrees. As Archbishop of Milan, he enforced their observance,
and thoroughly restored the discipline of his see. He founded schools for the
poor, seminaries for the clerics, and by his community of Oblates trained his
priests to perfection. Inflexible in maintaining discipline, to his flock he was
a most tender father. He would sit by the roadside to teach a poor man the Pater and Ave, and would enter hovels the stench of which drove his attendants
from the door. During the great plague, he refused to leave Milan, and was ever
by the sick and dying, and sold even his bed for their support. So he lived, and
so he died, a faithful image of the Good Shepherd, up to his last hour giving
his life for his sheep.
REFLECTION.—Daily resolutions to fulfil, at all cost, every duty demanded by God, is the lesson taught by St. Charles; and a lesson we must learn if we would overcome our corrupt nature and reform our lives.