Blessed Marcolinus of Forli
Memorial day: January 24th
Profile
Marcolino Amanni entered the Dominicans at age 10. He
occupies a place unique in Dominican annals because he was almost purely
contemplative . There is outwardly little to record of Blessed Marcolino, except
that for 70 years he kept the Dominican Rule in all its rigor. That is a claim
to sanctity that can be made by very few, and is of itself enough to entitle him
to canonization. He did accomplish the reform of several convents that had
fallen from their primitive fervor, but this he did by his prayers and his
example rather than by teaching or preaching.
It is related that Marcolino was most at home with the lay
brothers, or with the neighborhood children who enjoyed talking to him. He
seldom went out of his cell, and could not have engaged in any active works;
neither did he leave any writings. His work was the unseen labor presided over
by the Holy Spirit, the work of contemplation. "To give to others the fruits of
contemplation," is the Dominican motto and one might be curious to know how
Blessed Marcolino accomplished this. In order to understand the need for just
such a type of holiness, it is well to remember the state of the Church in the
14th century. Devastated by plague and schism, divided and held up to scorn,
preyed upon by all manner of evils, the Church militant was in need, not only of
brave and intelligent action, but also of prayer. Consistently through the
centuries, God has raised up such saints as could best avert the disasters that
threatened the world in their day, and Marcolino was one answer to the need for
mystics who would plead ceaselessly for the Church.
The interior life of Marcolino was not recorded by himself or
by others. He lived the mystical life with such intensity that he was nearly
always in ecstasy and unconscious of the things around him. Some one of his
brothers recorded that he seemed "a stranger on earth, concerned only with the
things of heaven." Most of his brethren thought him merely sleepy and
inattentive, but actually he was, for long periods, lost in converse with God.
Some had heard him talking earnestly to the statue of Our Lady in his cell; some
fortunate few had heard Our Lady replying to his questions, with the same
simplicity.
At the death of Marcolino, a beautiful child appeared in the
streets, crying out the news to the little town that the saintly friar was dead.
As the child disappeared when the message was delivered, he was thought to have
been an angel. Many miracles were worked at the tomb of Marcolino. One was the
miraculous cure of a woman who had been bedridden for 30 years. Hearing of the
death of the blessed, she begged him to cure her so that she could visit his
tomb (Attwater2, Benedictines, Dorcy).
Born: 1317 at Forli, Italy
Died: January 2, 1397
Canonized: Benedict XIV confirmed his cult in 1750
First Vespers:
Ant. Strengthen by holy intercession, O Marcolino of Forli, confessor of the Lord, those here present, have we who are burdened with the weight of our offenses may be relieved by the glory of thy blessedness, and may by thy guidance attain eternal rewards.
V. Pray for us, Blessed Marcolino.
R. That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.
Lauds:
Ant. Well done, good and faithful servant, because Thou has been faithful in a few things, I will set thee over many, sayeth the Lord.
V. The just man shall blossom like the lily.
R. And shall flourish forever before the Lord.
Second Vespers:
Ant. I will liken him unto a wise man, who built his house upon a rock..
V. Pray for us. Blessed MarcolinoGonsalvo.
R. That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.
Prayers:
Let us Pray: O God, to whom the prayer of the humble and meek hath always been pleasing, grant that we may so profit by the prayers an example of Blessed Marcolino that, becoming truly meek and humble of heart, we may the more readily receive Thy gifts. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.