<http://www.tanbooks.com/index.php/page/shop:flypage/product_id/538/>St. 
Gerard Majella
1726-1755
Wonder-worker and Patron of Expectant Mothers
Lay Brother of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer

“Thou art the God of my heart, and the God that 
is my portion forever.” ­Psalm 72:26
“And the works that I do, he also shall do; and 
greater than these shall he do.” ­John 14:12
“So that even there were brought from his body to 
the sick, handkerchiefs and aprons, and the 
diseases departed from them, and the wicked 
spirits went out of them.” ­Acts 19:12

"To the honor of the Most Holy and Undivided 
Trinity, for the exaltation of the Catholic Faith 
and for the spread of the Christian Religion, by 
the authority of Our Lord Jesus Christ, of the 
Blessed Apostles Peter and Paul and by Our 
own...We define and declare the Blessed 
Confessors Gerard Majella and Alexander Sauli to 
be Saints, and We enroll them in the catalogue of Saints..."
Pope St. Pius X, December 11, 1904

PUBLISHER’S PREFACE
The incredible life of St. Gerard Majella has 
been a great inspiration to the entire Catholic 
Church for over 200 years, and yet his story may 
cause some readers to become discouraged about 
their own salvation. But this should not be. As 
with so many great and notable Saints in the 
history of the Catholic Church, St. Gerard 
Majella is believed never to have committed a 
mortal sin; in fact, his spiritual advisers could 
not detect that he had ever committed even a 
venial sin. Undoubtedly, this level of sanctity 
was the basis for the many miracles that he 
worked during life, and even after death. And yet 
we read in Father Saint-Omer’s life of the Saint 
that he often had periods of great spiritual 
darkness, and even came close to despairing of 
his salvation. This fact could easily lead the 
reader to discouragement, for if St. Gerard, who 
was so very good, had periods of darkness, even 
to the point of despair, what about the vast 
majority of us, who are nowhere near so good, who 
oftentimes fall into sin, who perhaps even commit 
mortal sin, or who have in the past lived in 
mortal sin? Should not we be the ones inclined to 
despair? “If one who was so obviously holy and 
blessed by Almighty God was worried about his 
salvation, what chance do we have?” might well be our question.

An attitude of concern, of course, is typical of 
all who are truly on the road to salvation. St. 
Peter, no less, gives us the clue to this seeming 
paradox of “sanctity combined with concern” when 
he says, “If the just man shall scarcely be 
saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner 
appear?” (1 Peter 4:18). In other words, if those 
true Christians who are avoiding mortal sin and 
who are striving for Heaven shall barely be 
saved, what about a) the open sinners, who 
knowingly and blithely (it would seem) commit 
mortal sin, and b) the ungodly, who have no real 
concern for their salvation and who mainly pursue 
worldly goals? “Where shall they appear?” The 
point is that people living without the light of 
the Gospel of Jesus Christ are in darkness about their eternal salvation.

Even regarding Catholics, the Curé of Ars could 
say, “Some people are so profoundly ignorant that 
they do not recognize a quarter of their ordinary 
sins.” This failure to recognize our sins arises 
from the spiritual darkness caused, on the one 
hand, by Original Sin, and on the other, by our 
own personal sins. When a person begins really to 
live by the teachings of Our Lord and to strive 
for perfection, there occur as a consequence 
moments wherein his mind penetrates the veil of 
this darkness, and in that spiritual insight, he 
perceives­if only for a brief time­the precarious 
state of man’s salvation, that “we have all 
sinned and do need the glory of God.” (Rom. 
3:23). Such periodic moments of clear insight can 
cause us almost to despair, as St. Gerard nearly did on a number of occasions.

Far from causing us to despair, however, these 
moments of spiritual lucidity­wherein we perceive 
our great danger­should cause us joy. For as Holy 
Scripture repeats in several places, “The fear of 
the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” (Psalm 
110:10; cf. also Prov. 15:33; Eccles. 1:20, 22, 
25, 34; 19:18). St. Paul tells us, “With fear and 
trembling work out your salvation.” (Phil. 2:12). 
When once we who are earnestly striving for 
salvation become concerned and “fearful,” this 
means that the scales of blindness covering our 
spiritual insight are falling away and we are 
starting to see our situation as it really is 
vis-a-vis pleasing God and attaining our 
salvation! And the prospect is frightening, 
because we find ourselves, especially in our 
inclinations and motives, to be far from really 
good. All the greatest Saints had this 
perception, and they were humble as a result, for 
they could see their own weaknesses and 
shortcomings. That is the reason, when one starts 
to receive this insight, that confidence in God 
becomes such a necessary virtue.

The life of St. Gerard Majella throws these 
realities about the spiritual life into sharp 
focus. On the one hand, he was so good and worked 
so many miracles, and on the other, he was so 
profoundly concerned about his own salvation. 
Reading about this concern of his, one could say 
to himself, “What’s the use? If St. Gerard had 
such trouble, I will never make it!” But that is 
exactly the wrong reaction. Why? First of all, we 
must distinguish between ordinary and 
extraordinary Saints. You and I, probably, and 
most of us, are called to be ordinary Saints, 
people who work out our salvation pretty much in 
obscurity and, when we pass from this life, are 
forgotten by all save a few close loved ones. 
Extraordinary Saints are generally called by God 
to do some extraordinary work or to have their 
holiness manifested to the world as a great 
inspiration to others. St. Gerard, obviously, was 
an extraordinary Saint. The number of 
extraordinary Saints is relatively small, 
compared to the number who live in obscurity. But 
this does not mean that you and I cannot achieve 
great sanctity and find a high place in Heaven.

Sanctity depends on our interior state, upon the 
degree of our love of God, upon uniformity with 
His holy Will and upon the purity of our motives. 
Indeed, if we are so blessed as to gain Heaven, 
we shall likely find there in the highest places 
many who were obscure mothers and fathers and 
other lay people in this life. St. Therese the 
Little Flower stands in both camps­ordinary and 
extraordinary. In life, her sanctity was unknown 
to the world, unknown even to many of the nuns in 
her Carmelite convent. But it was not unknown to 
her own sisters, who, after her death, helped 
make her known to the world. She was so 
tremendous that Pope St. Pius X could exclaim 
that she is the greatest Saint of modern 
times­she, a totally unknown nun who died at 24 
and of whom a fellow sister commented to the 
effect: “What shall we ever find to say about Sr. 
Therese of the Child Jesus in our announcement of 
her death to the other Carmelite convents?” Now 
the whole world knows her. (Just ask her for a favor!)

Notable in St. Gerard’s life is the high level of 
sanctity he achieved in a relatively short time. 
He died at age 29. From this we can all take 
heart. For if we have till now delayed working 
seriously on our salvation, we can nonetheless 
make up for lost time­and in a hurry­if we are 
truly contrite, ardent, sincere and constant in 
our efforts at reparation, virtue and love of 
God. Plus, we have in St. Gerard Majella a great 
patron Saint. Not only is he “Patron of Expectant 
Mothers,” for which he is famous the world over, 
but he is obviously one of those universal patron 
Saints, like St. Joseph, whom one can call upon 
in every need. Witness the great devotion to him 
that developed in Belgium. (Cf. page 237). 
Indeed, we could all make him our own personal 
“Patron Saint of Rapid Growth in Holiness”­ of 
“holiness in a hurry,” if you will. Yes, God is 
honored by the greatness of His Saints, and He 
wants us to approach Him with all our needs 
through these heavenly friends of His, who in 
their lives loved Him so truly and so well that 
they have been “raised to the altars.” The 
quintessential model of all Saints, of course, is 
Our Lady, whom Our Dear Lord wishes to honor and 
recognize at every turn and in all things, such 
that He allows all graces (theology teaches us) 
to come to us only through her. Yes, God wants to 
share His greatness, His goodness, His 
beneficence and His glory with His friends, the 
Saints and Holy Angels. As would a great, 
magnanimous earthly king, He wants to share His 
glory with His friends and servants who surround 
Him. Therefore, we can call upon St. Gerard 
Majella with utmost confidence. Surely all 
expectant mothers should do so, of whom he is the 
special patron, but also all other faithful 
people, in whatever need they might have.

St. Alphonsus Liguori­St. Gerard’s spiritual 
father as founder of the Congregation of the Most 
Holy Redeemer­outlived St. Gerard by 32 years; 
yet in miracles and lustrous sanctity, St. Gerard 
would seem to have o’ertopped even that eminent 
Doctor of the Church and his own superior, a man 
whom the whole Church knows and who is the most 
widely published author in history! Yes, Dear 
Reader, the least can indeed become the greatest 
in the wonderful, paradoxical reality of the 
Catholic Faith! And from the life of St. Gerard 
Majella, not only can we derive great inspiration 
at the goodness and mercy of God as shown through 
the life and ministry of so great and 
extraordinary a Saint, but we can also be assured 
in all confidence that we too can ourselves rise 
to high sanctity by employing the same humble 
means used by St. Gerard Majella and all other 
Saints, viz., prayer, penance, sacrifice, good 
works­and confidence in Almighty God, who desires our salvation above all else.

Thomas A. Nelson
Publisher
December 17, 1998

A NOTE TO THE READER
 From the Edition published c. 1907

This biography was taken by Father Saint-Omer 
from the beautiful Italian edition which appeared 
at the Beatification of the great Servant of God 
entitled Vita del Beato Gerardo Majella...Roma, 
Tipografia Vaticana, 1893. We have here 
reproduced it in full [translating it from Fr. 
Saint-Omer’s French], with the addition only of 
the chapter on the glorification of the Saint. 
“We do not pretend,” wrote Father Saint-Omer in 
1893, “to put forth a learned work. Our intention 
is to offer to the public an inexpensive book, so 
desirous are we to see the life of Brother Gerard 
introduced into the humble homes of the poor for 
their encouragement and edification. Our hero was 
a child of the people, an apprentice, a servant, 
a workman, a humble lay brother, whom grace 
transformed into a Saint. If we put aside the 
purely gratuitous supernatural gifts which God 
gives to whom He pleases, what Gerard became, 
every child of the people may become as well as 
he, by the practice of virtue, by suffering and 
by conformity to the will of God.”

Preface to The Second Edition
SOME REMARKS ON THE MARVELOUS IN THE LIFE OF ST. GERARD

Sound reason, reason unbiased by prejudice, 
cannot but admit the possibility of miracles in 
general; and when a miraculous fact is proved, to 
reject it because it is miraculous and 
inexplicable to our feeble intelligence is not 
the part of a wise man, since the purely natural 
order is full of facts admitted by everyone, 
although no one, not even men of genius, can 
explain them; for instance, the germination of 
seed. Now, a miraculous fact is proved just as an 
ordinary one. We have said that right reason 
cannot help admitting the possibility of a 
miracle: “No man making use of his reason,” 
writes Cardinal Dechamps, “will reject the 
marvelous found in the Lives of the Saints under 
the plea of impossibility. Only the unthinking 
dare to say that miracles are impossible and­by 
reasoning as absurd as it is impious­to put a 
limit to the almighty power of God. Miracles are 
phenomena which interrupt the laws of nature and 
surpass the force of all natural causes. Reason 
alone is needed to make a man understand that 
God, whose power is infinite, can, when it so 
pleases Him, interrupt nature’s course directly 
by Himself or indirectly by the ministry of His 
creatures.” (Dissertation upon the Marvelous in the Lives of the Saints.)

St. Augustine, that sublime genius, had said long 
before: “All nature is full of miracles. We are 
not astonished at them because we are used to 
seeing them; their repetition makes them familiar 
to our eyes. Behold why God has reserved to 
Himself others out of the course of nature, that 
they may strike us by their novelty.” (De Civit. 
Dei, L.X). But for the Christian, the possibility 
of a miracle is not a question; it is a point of 
Faith which he professes every day when he says: 
“I believe in God, the Father Almighty,” and 
which springs from these words of the Gospel: “No 
word shall be impossible with God” (Luke 1:37); 
and from these others: “He that believeth in me, 
the works that I do, he also shall do, and 
greater than these shall he do.” (John 14:12).

But is it indeed certain that God has at times 
performed miracles? Here as above, the 
affirmative is of Faith for every Christian. 
What, in truth, is the whole history of the 
people of God­a history written under the 
dictation of the Holy Ghost­but a series of 
miracles­the plagues of Egypt, the passage 
through the Red Sea, the pillar of cloud, the 
manna which fell from Heaven every morning for 
forty years in sufficient quantity to feed 
several million, etc.? Can God communicate to 
Saints the power to work miracles? Yes, since He 
is all-powerful. In fact, when a miracle is 
performed, it is always God who performs it at 
the request of a Saint. Has He at times done so? 
Yes, answers Holy Scripture. How many miracles 
were performed by the Apostles and their 
disciples under the eyes of all! To enumerate 
some: a paralytic cured at the gate of the 
Temple, Tabitha raised from the dead, the shadow 
alone of St. Peter curing the sick, etc. Long ago 
it was said: “To suppose that the pagan world 
would have become Christian without being 
influenced thereto by the sight of great and 
numerous miracles is to suppose a miracle greater 
than those that fill the lives of the Saints.”

Did God give St. Gerard this power of performing 
miracles? Yes, the history of his life proclaims 
it, a history as credible as any other 
history­that of Napoleon, for instance. The facts 
related had witnesses who were able to prove for 
themselves their genuineness, for the Life of 
Brother Gerard [by Tannoia, a contemporary of St. 
Gerard] appeared a short time after his death. 
Besides, the Acts of Beatification may be taken 
as a guarantee of their evidence. It is an 
enormous folio volume containing the depositions 
of a crowd of sworn witnesses. In fine, the Holy 
See itself has already juridically confirmed some 
of those miraculous facts. It first submitted 
them to the most severe examination, by minutely 
interrogating the witnesses and requiring the 
opinion of the most able physicians. It proceeded 
with its proverbial slowness in order to take 
time to examine the cause, and only after these proceedings did it pronounce.

Never do our tribunals of justice act with so 
much consideration nor take so many precautions, 
even in questions of life or death. But some say 
that the marvelous in the life of St. Gerard is 
so extraordinary that it scandalizes even good 
Catholics! Scandalizes them? No. Surprises them? 
Yes. They are astonished, but not scandalized, 
because they know that God is all-powerful, that 
He is the Master of His gifts and that His love 
for souls most faithful to Him sometimes far 
exceeds the greatest maternal tenderness.

After all that has been said, I ask whether there 
is a man of sense who will exclaim: “The 
marvelous plays too great a part in the life of 
this Saint. I will have none of it!” No, rather 
he will kneel down humbly before his Creator and 
say: “O Thou to Whom everything is possible, Thou 
art worthy to be our God! I adore Thee! Have pity 
on me, dust and ashes that I am!”

­ Part One ­
ST. GERARD MAJELLA’S LIFE IN THE WORLD

1. THE SAINTLY CHILD
The Life that we are now writing is a long chain 
of marvels. When turning its pages, the reader 
will recall the act of faith which he makes every 
day: “I believe in God, the Father Almighty,” 
also the words of the Gospel, “No word shall be 
impossible with God” (Luke 1:37), and this 
promise of Jesus Christ, “He that believeth in 
me, the works that I do, he also shall do, and 
greater than these shall he do” (John 14:12), for 
the Holy Spirit declares, “God is wonderful in 
His saints.” (Ps. 67:36). The blessed child whose 
virtues we are going to portray was born in 
April, 1726 at Muro, a little village about sixty 
miles south of Naples. His father, a tailor by 
trade, was Dominico Majella, and his mother was 
Benedetta Galella­both admirable for their 
thoroughly Christian life. The newborn babe 
received in Baptism the name of Gerard. From the 
very cradle, he gave evidence of the high 
sanctity to which God destined him, for never did 
he weep, never did he demand nourishment by his 
cries, as do other children. On certain days, he 
even refused the maternal breast, a presage of 
the severe abstinence which he kept his whole 
life long. Benedetta wondered. She would say to 
him tenderly: “God bless you, dear child!” 
Prepared by grace from his earliest years, he 
found his only amusement in the little practices 
of devotion suited to his age. His two sisters, 
Brigida and Anna Elizabetta, tell us that 
Gerard’s only attraction when a child was to make 
little altars and imitate the ceremonies of divine worship.

He used to place on a table the pictures of the 
Saints, that of St. Michael in particular, and 
pass and repass before them, inclining and 
bowing. Then, kneeling down, he would recite some 
prayers, striking his breast or singing the pious 
canticles that he had heard in church. His 
growing piety astonished and delighted all who 
saw it. Gerard’s life convinces us of this truth, 
that God finds His delights among the children of 
men and in converse with them. A short distance 
from Muro stands the chapel of Capotignano, where 
a statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary holding the 
Infant Jesus in her arms is venerated. When 
Gerard was not yet six years old, led no doubt by 
a heavenly hand, he made his way to this 
sanctuary. Scarcely had he knelt down when the 
little Jesus, leaving His Mother’s arms, came to 
play with him and gave him a little loaf of 
extreme whiteness. The child joyfully carried the 
present home to his mother. In great surprise, 
she asked: “Who gave it to you?” “It was a 
beautiful lady’s Child with whom I have been 
playing.” Attracted by the divine charms of his 
heavenly Friend, Gerard ran every morning to the 
chapel, and each time the Infant God came down to 
play with him and to present to him a little 
white loaf. Brigida’s curiosity urged her one day 
to follow her little brother, and unknown to him, 
she became a witness of the prodigy. The prudent 
mother, Benedetta, did likewise and saw the same thing.

Following the example of her Son, the Blessed 
Virgin also desired to give Gerard the miraculous 
bread. The child himself revealed to us this 
secret. Going one day into the chapel with his 
mother, pointing to the statue of the Blessed 
Virgin, he said: “Mama, there is the Lady who 
gave me bread more than once, and there is the 
Child with whom I have played.” Years after, when 
he had become a Redemptorist, his sister Brigida 
having come to see him, he said to her with his 
usual simplicity: “I now know that it was the 
Infant Jesus who gave me the little white 
loaves.” “Well,” replied his sister smiling, 
“come again to see the child.” “At present,” said 
Gerard, “I find Him wherever I wish.”
This was not the only miraculous fact in the 
childhood of St. Gerard. One day he was playing 
at forming a procession with some children of his 
own age. He attached to a tree a little cross 
that he had made and called upon his young 
friends to venerate it. But lo, a prodigy! The 
tree became sparkling with light, to the great 
amazement of the good people of Muro, and the 
little Child Jesus, coming down from it, again 
bestowed upon Gerard the tiny white loaf that He 
was accustomed to give him. Toward the age of 
eight, this child so favored by Jesus was already 
hungering for the Eucharistic Bread. One day when 
at Mass, he went up to the Holy Table to receive 
Communion with the other Faithful. The celebrant, 
seeing him so young, passed him by, and the child 
retired in tears. But on the night following, St. 
Michael the Archangel comforted him by bringing 
him the Bread of Angels. It was for this reason 
that Gerard preserved during his whole life a 
tender devotion toward this holy Archangel.

This was not the only time that Benedetta’s 
favored son was communicated miraculously. A 
priest, finding him one day kneeling near the 
altar, asked him what he was doing there. “A 
little Child,” answered Gerard, “came out of the 
Tabernacle and gave me Holy Communion.” This 
favor, so rare in the lives of even the most 
privileged Saints, Gerard merited, doubtless by 
his heroic temperance. Who would believe it? This 
little child took scarcely enough nourishment to 
support life. His mother, sometimes alarmed at 
the fact, used to say to her friends: “My son 
eats almost nothing. For whole days he does not touch food.”

2. THE SAINTLY SCHOLAR
While still very young, Gerard was sent to school 
in his native place, Muro. In a short time he 
learned to read and write, to count and even to 
express himself with facility. His special love 
was for the Catechism and all that concerned 
religion. Far from indulging in the levity of 
other children during class hours, he was quiet, 
silent and attentive to his lessons. His docility 
and application were so great that his teacher 
regarded him with tender affection and called him 
his “delight.” As soon as school was over, little 
Gerard promptly returned home, carefully shunning 
the company of such of his fellow scholars as 
were giddy and unreserved in their speech. It was 
above all in the Holy Place that the pious child 
of Muro appeared most admirable. His recollected 
exterior made him look like an Angel. All the 
sacred services of the Church attracted him 
wonderfully. His devotion during the Holy 
Sacrifice of the Mass was extraordinary in a 
child of his age, and he seemed to be entirely 
absorbed in the great Mystery celebrated at the 
altar. At the moment of Consecration, he bowed 
profoundly to the ground. His angelic piety, so 
charming to all who witnessed it, won the Heart of God and was recompensed by
the apparition of the Infant Jesus. Frequently 
during the Holy Sacrifice, Gerard beheld on the 
altar the Infant God under a visible form. His 
heart was inundated with joy, but when he saw Him 
disappear at the priest’s Communion, he shed tears of sorrow.

Even at this early age, he experienced a 
supernatural attraction for the House of God. It 
was his Paradise of delights. Just as the child 
is happy at the mother’s side, so this holy boy 
found his greatest satisfaction at the foot of 
the Tabernacle. When the evening bell called the 
people to visit the Blessed Sacrament, he 
hastened to the church, taking with him his young 
companions: “Let us go,” he would say to them, 
“let us go to visit Jesus Christ, who has made 
Himself a prisoner for us!” This tender love for 
Our Lord was joined to a filial devotion to the 
Queen of Heaven. He recited her Rosary daily and 
performed different penances in her honor, 
especially at the approach of her feasts. For her 
part, Mary treated him as her privileged child. 
One day among others, Gerard took part in a 
pilgrimage from Muro to Caposele. But scarcely 
was the little pilgrim on his knees before the 
miraculous picture of the Mother of God than he 
was ravished in ecstasy, as if Mary had appeared to him.

Despite his youth, he was already favored with 
the gift of miracles. The care of a lamb had been 
confided to him. It happened that some robbers 
stole it and killed it. The child­seeing that its 
loss was a great annoyance to his parents, since 
the animal did not belong to them­said: “Be 
assured the lamb will come back.” Then he began 
to pray, and soon, by a prodigy of the Divine 
Goodness, the little creature was restored to its lawful owner.

Toward his tenth year, the holy child made his 
First Communion. His seraphic fervor filled with 
deep emotion all who saw him. From that time, the 
Eucharist became the food of his soul and the 
charm of his heart. His confessor hesitated not 
to grant him the favor of communicating every 
other day. This angel of earth soon understood 
that he could not share in the glory of Jesus 
without first participating in His dolorous 
Passion. Smitten with the holy folly of the 
Cross, he imposed upon himself a cruel scourging 
as the price of every one of the Communions that 
he received. God Himself was leading him on the way of Calvary.

3. THE SAINTLY APPRENTICE
About this time Gerard lost his father. This 
obliged his mother to place him as an apprentice 
to a tailor named Pannuto. The young apprentice 
devoted himself entirely to his work, meanwhile 
giving still more care to a faithful 
correspondence to grace and to following his 
attraction for prayer. Under the action of the 
Holy Spirit on his soul, he was sometimes seen 
ravished out of himself, and again, more freely 
to pour out his heart before God, he would hide 
under the worktable. His master loved him and was 
careful not to reprove him. Not so, however, the 
foreman. He looked upon such piety with a 
suspicious eye. One day, he dragged Gerard from 
the place in which he was praying and began to 
beat him severely. “Strike, strike!” said the 
holy apprentice, “you are right in doing so.”

On another occasion, the cruel man dealt him 
blows so violent that Gerard fell unconscious to 
the ground. Pannuto, appearing unexpectedly on 
the scene, indignantly demanded an explanation. 
The foreman, pointing to his victim, replied, 
“Let him say. He knows very well.” “I fell from 
the table,” said the youth gently. Another time, 
the brutal man gave him a rude blow on the ear, 
to which Gerard only responded by a quiet smile. 
“What! You are laughing!” exclaimed the barbarian 
in wrath, and seizing an iron instrument, he 
pitilessly struck the boy. The tender martyr, 
throwing himself at his feet, said in a tone full 
of sweetness: “I freely forgive you for the love of Jesus Christ.”

One morning, Gerard happened to arrive a little 
late, which fact furnished a pretext to this 
madman to beat him with fury. A sweet smile was 
all that he drew from the child. “What! You are 
laughing!” cried his infuriated assailant. “Tell 
me, why are you laughing?” “It is because the 
hand of God has struck me,” answered the angel of 
patience. Gerard never complained to his master 
of the bad treatment he received in his house. 
Pannuto regarded him with admiration. One day, he 
secretly followed the youth to church and there 
saw him after a long prayer lick with his tongue 
the pavement from where he was kneeling to the 
foot of the altar and then fall into ecstasy. 
 From that moment he venerated him as a Saint and 
dismissed the foreman who had so persecuted him.

The following incident is a new proof of the 
patience of the young tailor. One day as he was 
passing through a lonely place, the sound of his 
footsteps frightened away a bird just as a 
sportsman was going to fire. The latter fell upon 
him furiously and dealt him a blow on the face. 
Faithful to the word of the Divine Master, Gerard 
presented to him the other cheek. The man in his 
anger beheld in that act only an insult to 
himself and redoubled his bad treatment. 
Fortunately, Pannuto’s son happened to come along 
and interceded for the innocent youth. The 
sportsman was appeased, and passing suddenly from 
anger to admiration, he went about making known 
everywhere the virtue of the young apprentice. 
About the time when the grapes were ripening, 
Pannuto asked Gerard to go one night with his son 
to guard the vine against robbers. The servant of 
God, desirous of meditating on the Passion, made 
a little cross, placed around it some tiny 
candles and began to chant the Miserere. 
Suddenly, the thatched shed that sheltered them 
caught fire. “What have you done?” exclaimed 
Pannuto’s son. “It is nothing,” responded Gerard 
quietly, and as he made the Sign of the Cross, 
the fire was instantly extinguished. Tradition 
relates another miracle wrought by the Saint when 
he was with Pannuto. The latter finished a coat 
for someone. But it proved a misfit; it was too 
short. Seeing the embarrassment of both the 
tradesman and the customer, Gerard said: “Let me 
do it. It is nothing.” And taking the coat in one 
hand, he drew it down with the other and at once 
gave it back widened and lengthened, a perfect fit in every way.

The young lover of the Crucified felt that he was 
not made for the world. He was drawn by a divine 
and imperative attraction toward the religious 
life. He went, therefore, to present himself at 
the convent of the Capuchins of San Menna, where 
he had an uncle, a very learned man, named Father 
Bonaventura de Muro. But Gerard was rejected on 
account of his poor health. On bidding him 
goodbye, his uncle, touched at seeing him so 
poorly clad, gave him a new coat. But hardly had 
Gerard left the convent when he met a poor man in 
rags and bestowed upon him the coat just 
received. His uncle reproached him, but the 
saintly young man replied: “I have given it to one more needy than I.”

4. THE SAINTLY DOMESTIC
While awaiting God’s hour for his entrance into 
religion, Gerard, then about sixteen, took 
service in the episcopal residence of Msgr. 
Albini, the Bishop of Lacedonia. He was a man of 
great merit, but of a hasty temper. God made use 
of him to exercise His youthful servant in the 
practice of the most sublime Christian virtues. 
Complaints, scoldings, humiliations, excessive 
labor­the humble son of Benedetta was of a nature 
to support it all. The respectful silence that he 
kept during and after the most unjust 
corrections, his manner of receiving them­eyes 
cast down and countenance serene­his cheerfulness 
always sweet and amiable; his obedience to the 
least sign, and his love of labor­everything in 
him already denoted the heroic virtue of a Saint.

Despite his labors, Gerard continued in his new 
home the astonishing mortifications to which he 
was accustomed. One day the physician, noticing 
the pallor of his countenance, asked him whether 
he was sick. “I am well,” answered Gerard, 
smiling. The physician, incredulous, touched him 
on the breast and found that he was wearing a 
rough hairshirt. Affable toward all, good to the 
poor, tender toward the sick, the holy youth knew 
only one enemy, and that was himself. For his own 
nourishment, he allowed himself only a little 
bread and rarely any vegetables. Whatever else 
was given him in the kitchen, he reserved for the 
poor and sick. All who met him passing through 
the streets of the city were struck by his modest 
appearance. “Little Gerard,” they used to say, 
“is not a man; he is an Angel, he is a Saint.” 
But what edified the beholder above all else was 
his recollection, his piety when in the presence 
of the Blessed Sacrament. When his occupations 
permitted, he was sure to be found in the 
Cathedral, paying court to the King of kings. At 
the sight of so edifying an example, many 
resolved to pay a daily visit to the Saviour in His Sacrament of Love.

God, who loves simple and pure souls, was pleased 
to fulfill the least desires of this earthly 
angel. One day, Gerard was so unfortunate as to 
let the key of the Bishop’s room fall down the 
well. Foreseeing the chagrin that this accident 
would cause the prelate, the poor boy was himself 
greatly troubled. What should he do to recover 
the key? In his perplexity, he began to pray. 
Suddenly, filled with confidence, he ran to get a 
statue of the Infant Jesus, which he let down 
into the well, saying, “It is for Thee, Lord, to 
bring me the key, that the Bishop may not be put 
to trouble.” O prodigy! In the sight of a crowd 
of bystanders, Gerard drew up the Infant Jesus 
holding in His hand the lost key. This well was 
thenceforth called, “Little Gerard’s Well.”

Three years after Gerard’s entrance into the 
service of the Bishop, the latter died. This was 
in 1744. The boy wept over the death of his 
master. “Alas! I have lost my best friend,” he 
exclaimed, so eager was he for mortifications.

5. THE SAINTLY WORKMAN
After the death of his master, Gerard returned to 
Muro, thinking to earn his living by his trade. 
But as he had not worked at it for three years, 
he entered upon an apprenticeship once more, with 
a very good man named Vitus Mennona, whose home 
he perfumed with the fragrance of his virtues. 
Vitus held him in an esteem that never 
diminished. He loved to recount the following 
prodigy: One day, a woman belonging to his family 
went to wash the linen at a fountain about a mile 
from the city. Gerard accompanied her. Suddenly, 
a deluge of rain forced them to seek shelter in a 
neighboring hut. As it grew late and the rain 
still continued, the poor woman began to lament 
and say, “How shall we get home?” At these words, 
Gerard stepped outside the door and, full of 
confidence in God, raised his eyes to Heaven, 
exclaiming, “Lord, what shall we do?” The words 
were scarcely out of his mouth before the rain 
ceased, the weather cleared up and they returned home.

His second apprenticeship over, Gerard took up 
his abode in his mother’s home. Work was never 
wanting to him, his perfect honesty attracting 
many customers. With his mother’s consent, he 
divided his earnings into three parts: one for 
the family, one for the poor and the third for 
the souls in Purgatory. Benedetta sometimes 
complained of the liberality of her son, but he 
would say, “Fear nothing, Mother, God will 
provide for all our needs.” He loved, above all, 
to work for the poor. One day, God manifested to 
him how pleased He was with his charity. A poor 
man had sent him some material for a garment, but 
far less than it would take to make it. In the 
hands of the servant of God, it so increased that 
when the garment was finished, some of the 
material remained over. The miraculous surplus 
was conscientiously returned to the man. He 
frequently had Masses celebrated for the 
Suffering Souls. “They, too, are poor,” he used 
to say. “They earnestly call for our help.” When 
work was not as brisk as usual, he was broken-hearted.

He then ate only dry bread, that he might be able 
to assist the poor of the good God and his dear 
souls in Purgatory. But what he gave, he took 
from himself, for he always had at heart the 
practice of mortification, and especially that of 
the taste. He ate so little that his existence 
seemed a miracle. When pressed to eat, he would 
reply: “I am not hungry.” He was ingenious, also, 
in discovering means to stifle the cravings of 
hunger. His mother asked him one day what he did 
with the roots that he always carried in his 
pocket. “They serve,” he answered, “to chase away 
appetite.” Benedetta shed bitter tears over the 
austerities of her son, but her friends consoled 
her by telling her that he was a child of Heaven.

At the age of twenty, Gerard went for about a 
month to San Fele, a little town not far from 
Muro. He had been invited to do so by one of his 
townsmen, who had opened there a school for the 
higher branches. This man had need of a tailor to 
attend to the clothes of his boarding pupils. His 
name was Malpiedi. It would be difficult to 
imagine all that the Saint had to endure in his 
house. The pupils, with precocious malice, were 
ingenious in tormenting him, not only by insults, 
but by blows brutally multiplied. In the midst of 
the most inhuman treatment, which was often very 
prolonged, the holy young man uttered only the 
words, “Stop now!” or “O God!” or “What have I 
done to you?” And who would believe that Malpiedi 
himself, wishing doubtless to see how far the 
patience of the humble workman would go, 
subjected him several times to the punishment of 
the whip. But the pain never drew a complaint 
from this soul thirsting for martyrdom.

6. THE SERAPH OF MURO
Love assimilates lovers. Deeply moved at 
beholding Jesus Christ treated during His Passion 
as a fool, Gerard under the influence of a 
supernatural inspiration, determined to imitate 
folly. This holy folly of divine love cost him 
dearly. The children ran after him in the streets 
of Muro, made sport of him, said a thousand 
insulting things to him, threw mud in his face 
and loaded him with blows. Some of them went so 
far as even to bind him with cords, drag him 
along the stony road and hold him up as a 
spectacle of derision to the multitude. Gerard 
bore all their cruel treatment, not as a fool, 
but as a Saint. With smiling and radiant 
countenance, he said: “All this is little for the 
love of Jesus Christ, who became like unto a fool 
of love for my sake.” It was at that moment the 
Lord placed upon his lips prophetic words: “You 
despise me now, but a time will come when you 
will hold me in honor and kiss my hand.” In the 
excess of his love for Jesus suffering, Gerard 
wished to undergo like Him the punishment of 
scourging. “Often,” relates Felix Farenga, the 
Saint’s friend and confidant, “very often, I had 
to tie him to a post and strike him over his bare 
shoulders with wet cords. He bore it with joy, 
and when I expressed my repugnance at striking 
him so long, he earnestly begged me to continue, 
until his body was one wound and his blood flowed 
on all sides.” The young lover of the Cross made 
use of another means to crucify himself. He had 
himself suspended from a beam, head downward, 
over some smoldering rags, that the smoke might 
torture his eyes and throat. “We ought to 
suffer,” he used to say, “to please Him who suffered so much for us.”

This torment of smoke seems to have had for him a 
special attraction. One day, at the Stella house, 
he bent down under the mantlepiece just as a 
volume of thick smoke was mounting up from the 
fire. “Gerard, what are you doing there?” asked 
someone. “Smoke is good for beautiful eyes,” he 
answered gaily. In all these circumstances, 
Gerard followed an interior attraction which was 
the manifest expression of God’s designs over 
him. They who inflicted on him such torture knew 
him well, and it was their good faith that 
excused them for having made him suffer so cruelly.

It is customary in Italy to re-enact the scenes 
of the Passion. One of these pious spectacles was 
organized in the Cathedral of Muro, but someone 
was lacking to represent Jesus Crucified. Gerard 
obtained this favor. At the appointed hour, the 
Cathedral doors were opened, and Gerard was seen 
hanging on the cross, his arms extended and as if 
in agony. At this sight, the people burst into 
tears, and Benedetta, unprepared to behold her 
son in such a situation, uttered a cry of anguish 
and fell fainting. If Gerard was smitten with the 
sublime folly of the Cross, he was not less so 
with that of the Eucharist. As during the day, he 
could not fully satisfy his heart, obliged as he 
was to labor for his living, he indemnified 
himself at night. The sacristan of the Cathedral, 
a relative of his, readily gave him the keys of 
the Holy Place. There Gerard, seraph of love, 
found his delight in spending whole nights in 
adoration at the foot of the holy Tabernacle. The 
Heart of the good Master, ravished by the 
touching simplicity and holy folly of the pious 
young man, gave him to understand, in order to 
try him, that He looked upon his conduct as 
worthy of a fool. “But Thou, O my good Jesus,” 
responded Gerard with holy familiarity, in which 
the most ardent love and the most filial respect 
were mingled, “hast not Thou given me the first 
example of folly by thus imprisoning Thyself for me?”

On another occasion, the Divine Master reproached 
him lovingly for the apparent extravagance of his 
piety. “O my God,” replied Gerard, “how canst 
Thou address such a reproach to me? Is it not 
Thyself Who hast taught me these follies?” He 
would have desired to inflame the universe with 
the burning ardor that consumed his own heart for 
the Blessed Sacrament. How often were these words 
heard to escape his lips: “Come, let us go to see Jesus, our Prisoner of Love!”

Hell was enraged at such piety. One morning, as 
Gerard was about to enter the Cathedral, the 
demon rushed upon him in the form of a horrible 
mastiff, barking furiously and seemingly about to 
devour him. The Saint made the Sign of the Cross, 
and the monster vanished. One night, Satan threw 
upon him a statue, which after wounding his arm, 
began to run after him in the church, as if it 
were alive. Unshaken in his confidence in Jesus, 
Gerard went on with his prayer and thus chased away the enemy.

His devotion to the Queen of Heaven was 
incomparable. If he knelt to pray before her 
statue or picture, he could not tear himself 
away. He loved to repeat: “The Madonna has stolen 
my heart, and I have made her a present of it.” 
The mere thought of her or the sound of her name 
made his heart thrill with love. A novena was 
celebrated at Muro in honor of the Immaculate 
Conception. Gerard, whose joy it was to assist at 
all the sacred services, had been on his knees 
for a long time. Suddenly, yielding to an 
irresistible inspiration of grace, he arose in 
the presence of the crowd, his countenance 
inflamed, and going up to the statue of Mary, 
placed a ring on its finger, exclaiming in a loud 
voice: “Behold me betrothed to the Madonna!” By 
this he desired to signify the consecration of 
his virginity to the Virgin of virgins, or to 
speak more properly, the betrothal of his 
virginity with that of Mary. He was so faithful 
to his engagement that he ever preserved 
unsullied the lily of chastity and the robe of 
baptismal innocence. His directors were unanimous 
in calling him an angel of purity.

It was about this time that Gerard consoled a 
poor mother by curing with the Sign of the Cross 
her child who had fallen into boiling water and 
whose heartrending cries touched all hearts with 
pity. Another time, when passing before a 
building, he saw that the laborers were 
disconcerted because the beams were not long 
enough to reach from one wall to the other. The 
servant of God told the men to pull them with 
ropes. The workmen obeyed, and the beams 
immediately lengthened to the dimensions desired.

Gerard was not for the world, and the world was 
irksome to him. Not being able to obtain 
admission among the Capuchins, he formed the 
project of retiring into the solitude of some 
mountain, far from the sight of men. There he 
would divide his time between prayer, labor and 
penance, living on herbs and roots, as did the 
ancient Fathers of the Desert. A young man, 
fervent like himself, offered to accompany him. 
Their plan of life was hardly put into execution 
when obedience constrained them to abandon it. 
Gerard was now twenty-two years old. God, who did 
not will him to be an anchorite, but a lay 
brother of the Congregation of the Most Holy 
Redeemer, was not slow in opening the way for 
him. In August, 1748, Father Garzilli passed 
through Muro with Brother Onofrio. Scarcely did 
Gerard see them when he felt inspired to join 
them. They told him that their Institute was not 
suitable for him on account of the rigor of its 
Rule and that his frail health would not permit 
him to observe it. “But that is precisely what I 
am seeking,” replied the austere young man.

The next year, the Redemptorists gave the 
exercises of the mission at Muro with marvelous 
success. Gerard, enraptured by the zeal and 
holiness of the missionaries, became so attached 
to them that he could not quit their house. He 
spoke of his vocation to Father Cafaro, the 
Superior, and begged for admittance to the 
Institute. The Father, seeing him so slight, 
judged him unsuited to the life of a lay brother 
and advised him to renounce his design. This 
refusal did not discourage Gerard. He renewed his 
petition, but in vain. Benedetta, on her side, 
did all in her power to persuade her son not to 
leave her. “My son,” she would say to him weeping 
and making allusion to the scene in the Cathedral 
related above, “my son, I entreat you by the pain 
that you caused me when I saw you on the cross; 
give me not this new sorrow.” His sisters united 
with his mother to dissuade him from his design. 
They went so far as to lock him up. But faithful 
to his vocation, the prisoner, by the aid of the 
sheets from his bed, escaped by the window. He 
left a note to this effect: “I am going to become 
a Saint. Think no more of me.”

On leaving his mother’s house, Gerard ran after 
the Fathers, who had gone to give a mission at 
Rionero, and in the most humble and touching 
manner reiterated his petition. “Try me first,” 
he repeated in a suppliant tone and shedding a 
torrent of tears, “try me first, and then you can 
send me away. If you do not receive me,” he 
added, “you will see me every day begging alms at 
the convent gate.” His admirable firmness 
softened Father Cafaro, who decided to give him a 
trial. He sent him to the convent of Iliceto, 
bearing with him a letter to the Father who was 
holding his place. It began with these words: “I 
am sending you a useless brother.”

Taken from 
<http://www.tanbooks.com/index.php/page/shop:flypage/product_id/538/>St. 
Gerard Majella by <http://www.tanbooks.com>TAN Books & Publishers, Inc.

Return to <http://www.tanbooks.com/doct/index.htm>Catholic Doctrine Homepage

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Prayer for Unborn Life:
O GOD OF LIFE AND LOVE, You have given us the 
gift to participate with You to bring new life 
into the world.  But, all too often, the mother's 
womb, which should be a nursery of life, becomes 
instead a place of it's destruction.

Help us to remove this evil and ensure respect 
for all life made in Your image and likeness, 
called to fulfill its promise on this earth,
and destined to find a home with you for all eternity.

We ask this through Jesus Christ, Our Lord, Our God, Our Savior, and Our ALL.
Amen.



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<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/please%20donate.html>Donations 
are needed and very much appreciated <*}}}><
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<*}}}><<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Half the 
<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Kingdom!<*}}}><

Lord, may everything we do begin with Your 
inspiration and continue with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.



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