January 8 Saint Severinus of Noricum (Severino of Noricum) Monk, hermit, prophet, and founder of monasteries.
January 8 Saint Severinus of Noricum (Severino of Noricum) Monk, hermit, prophet, and founder of monasteries.
410 - 482
Patronage:
against famine
linen weavers
prisoners
vineyards
Austria
Bavaria, Germany
Linz, Austria, diocese of
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Saint Severinus labored diligently for the Lord, focusing his attention on the region of Noricum (modern day Austria). Through his efforts, the faith was spread to those regions, where he practiced charity and provided refuge to all trying to escape war and poverty. Saint Severinus lived the Gospel, demonstrating through his actions and words the love and redemption made possible through Christ.
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Severinus left home at an early age, and took great pains to hide his family origins. Given what we know of him, including his well-developed Latin abilities, he was likely a Roman of noble birth. However, he gave up this life of wealth and privilege, and spent his early years in the deserts of the East. There, he lived the life of a hermit, growing closer to God, listening attentively to His will, and following where He might lead. While there, he served as spiritual director and father to Saint Anthony of Egypt.
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Eventually, Saint Severinus felt called to a life of evangelization, and left the desert. He traveled to Noricum, where he spent the next 30 years of his life evangelizing and ministering to the peoples living along the banks of the Danube River, near modern-day Vienna. He labored to establish several monasteries, but found that the local citizens were none too keen to embrace Christianity. Given the gift of prophecy, Severinus predicted the arrival of the Huns and the destruction that would occur, and prepared by creating shelters and refuges (in advance!) for those who would need them. Having laid in food and provisions, he assisted many in surviving the deadly attacks.
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Following this, Severinus’ reputation for holiness spread quickly throughout the region, and many were converted. The monasteries were soon full, and more were constructed. He was sought out for assistance in times of famine, natural disaster, and other calamities. Always quiet and steady, Saint Severinus would preach penance and conversion to the people, and each time, crises were averted. He lived to spread the Word of God, and focused solely on this noble mission throughout the end years of his life.
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Saint Severinus also practiced what he preached. He ate only once each day, fasting almost completely during Lent. He always traveled barefoot, and dressed in thin robes regardless of the weather. He slept on sackcloth on the ground, and urged the monks in his monasteries to do the same. All this, considered penance, he offered for those in need.
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Generally surrounded by people, Severinus occasionally took refuge in a hermitage, where he harkened back to his days in the desert, communing internally with the Lord. It was there that he died, on January 8, 482, in his cell, singing Psalm 150. Of course, always a prophet, Severinus had predicted the date and time of his own death accurately. He was laid to rest, but during subsequent invasion, his relics were moved and interred in Naples, Italy at the Benedictine monastery of San Severino.
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Eternal Father, I wish to honor St. Severinus, and I give Thee thanks for all the graces Thou hast bestowed upon him. I ask Thee to please increase grace in my soul through the merits of this saint, and I commit the end of my life to him by this special prayer, so that by virtue of Thy goodness and promise, St. Severinus might be my advocate and provide whatever is needed at that hour. Amen.