ST CAJETAN
From Butler’s Lives of the Saints
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St Cajetan was son of Caspar, Count of Thiene, of the nobility of Vicenza,
where he was born in 1480. Two years later his father was killed, fighting for the
Venetians against King Ferdinand of Naples. Cajetan went for four years to
Padua University, where he distinguished himself in theology, and took the
degree of doctor in civil and canon law in 1504. He then returned to his native
town, of which he was made senator. In pursuance of his resolve to serve God as
a priest he received the tonsure. In 1506 he went to Rome. Soon after his arrival
Pope Julius II conferred on him the office of protonotary… On the death of
Julius Cajetan refused his successor’s request to continue in that office, and
devoted three years to preparing himself for the priesthood. He was ordained in
1516, being thirty-three years old, and returned to Vicenza in 1518.
Cajetan had re-founded a confraternity in Rome called “The Oratory of
the Divine Love”, which was an association of zealous and devout clerics who
devoted themselves to labor with all their power to promote God’s honor and
the welfare of souls… but consisted only of men in the lowest station of life. This
circumstance gave great offense to his friends, who thought it a reflection on the
honor of his family. He persisted, however, and sought out the sick and the poor
throughout the whole town, served them and cared for those who suffered from
the most loathsome diseases in the hospital of the incurables. He founded a
similar oratory at Verona and then went in 1520 to Venice where he took up his
lodgings in the new hospital of that city… He introduced exposition of the
Blessed Sacrament in that city, as well as continuing the promotion of frequent
communion.
The state of Christendom at this time shocked and distressed Cajetan, and
in 1523 he went back to Rome to confer with his friends of the Oratory of Divine
Love. They agreed that little could be done other than by reviving in the clergy
the spirit and zeal of those holy pastors who first planted the faith, and a plan
was formed for instituting an order of regular clergy upon the model of the lives
of the Apostles. The first associates of Cajetan were John Peter Caraffa, who
later became pope under the name of Paul IV. The institute was approved by
Clement VII, and Caraffa was chosen as the first provost general. From the
name of his episcopal see of Theatensis these clerks regular came to be
distinguished from others as Theatines…
In 1527, when it still numbered only a dozen members, the army of
Emperor Charles V sacked Rome. The Theatines house was demolished and the
members had to escape to Venice. Cajetan was sent to Verona, where both the
clergy and the laity were opposing the reformation of discipline, which their
bishop was endeavoring to introduce among them. A general improvement was
the fruit of his example, preaching and labors.
Worn out with trying to appease civil strife in Naples, and disappointed at
the suspension of the Council of Trent, from which he hoped so much for the
Church’s good, Cajetan had to take to his bed in the summer of 1547. The end
came on Sunday, August 7. Many miracles wrought by his intercession were
approved at Rome after rigorous scrutiny, and he was canonized in 1671.