SAINT
MONICA of TEGASTE (331-387)
Feast
Day - August 27
St.
Monica was born in the African city of Tegaste, of Christian parents.
She was married at an early age to a pagan, Patricius, and had three
children, the oldest of whom was the great Doctor of the Church, Saint Augustine
of Hippo. The household was
thoroughly Roman by language, culture and persuasion.
Despite Monica’s own Christianity, her children were not baptized in
the faith, although their childhood was suffused by it due to Monica’s
devotion and influence.
Monica’s
life was a difficult one. She
patiently suffered through the dissolute life of her husband and abuse from her
mother-in-law. Yet, her piety and
patient charity won the conversion of her husband Patricius one year before his
death, and the conversion of his mother as well.
Her son
Augustine was of great concern to Monica. At
the age of 19 he rejected his mother’s faith and embraced the heresy of
Manichaeism (a philosophy which is based on the dualism of good and evil, spirit
and matter, which leads to a denial of the good of the created order, of humans
as created in the image of God, and of marriage in particular). He left
Carthage, a city in which he had been working from 371-383, and took a position
in Rome, and eventually another in Milan, teaching grammar, rhetoric and the
liberal arts in both cities. Disturbed
by Augustine’s rejection of Christianity, Monica intensified her piety and
penance, and followed Augustine to both cities.
While in Milan, Monica sought the counsel and guidance of
the wise and gentle Bishop (St.) Ambrose.
Under his influence Augustine was able to resolve his doubts about
Christianity and was baptized during the Easter celebrations of his thirty-third
year of life. Monica’s long years
of prayer had thus been answered and she died in-route to her home, in the port
city of Ostia, in October 387, the year of Augustine’s baptism into
Catholicism.
Augustine took
up monastic life and decided to return to Africa, to the city of Hippo.
There he accepted ordination to the priesthood at the age of 36, and five
years later was named the bishop of that city.
His conversion, for which his mother had so fervently prayed and worked,
was complete. He preached
vigorously, especially against his former allies the Manicheans, cared for the
poor and orphans, took a personal interest in the formation of the clergy,
established monasteries for men and women, visited the sick and wrote numerous
theological treatises. As a pastor
and bishop he characterized himself as “servant of Christ and servant of the
servants of Christ,” a title today applied to the Pope.
Because of his pivotal influence on the Church in the crucial Patristic
era, Augustine is honored as one of the four fathers of the Western Church.
Augustine died on 28 August 430, the day which is now celebrated as his
universal feast day.
St. Monica is
honored as a model for virtuous Christian mothers.
She is the patron saint of ecclesiastical societies of mothers, of women,
and of all mothers. Since 1430 her
relics have been venerated in the Arrouaise Augustine monastery in the city of
Rome, in the Church of San Agostino. Her
feast day is celebrated universally on 27 August.