A READING ON ST PIUS X
By Leonard von Matt1
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Pius X, the canonized Pope, holds a special place in the hearts of the
faithful. But this devotion of the faithful did not begin only at his canonization,
when the Church publicly proclaimed the holiness of his life: it began from the
moment when he ascended the papal throne. At once there grew up an
understanding between the Shepherd and his flock. The first to understand him
were the simple, humble people, who recognized him for what he was.
The obvious quality which led to his canonization was his outstanding
holiness. With Pius X, sanctity seemed to be the most natural thing in the
world. It quietly enlivened all that he said or did. Yet it would seem that
Giuseppe Sarto’s natural temperament inclined to a certain violence, easily
inflamed, and no one will ever know how much struggle it cost him to achieve
that gentleness and unruffled goodness for which he was so renowned. We can
follow him on the narrow path which he set himself as church-student, curate,
parish-priest, bishop, cardinal and Pope; but the moment of his vocation to the
priesthood and the beginning of his heroic sanctity are secrets known to God
alone.
A certain holiness seems to have been his from the beginning: his striving
after a virtuous life seems never to have been interrupted, his charity never
diminished. But it was when he began what he called the Ascent of Mount
Calvary, when he became Pope, that his great sanctity became evident. It was
his conscientiousness that turned the enormous responsibility of the office into
a crucifixion: he gave himself unstintingly to the service of the Church, and
spent himself without reserve for the love of God and everyone. His sanctity lay
in this total dedication: it was thus an inner and in a great measure a hidden9
sanctity: there were no spectacular penances, no remarkable practices beyond
those of a normal, good Christian. It might almost be said that Pius X became
a saint in spite of himself by sanctifying himself and his nature and by not
resisting God’s grace that drew him on.