Painting of the Dominicans with Other Saints and Religious Figures
17TH-CENTURY
ARTIST UNKNOWN
The condition of the image is poor, the tint very ochre: this was the best we could manage.
Sharpening seemed to make it worse.
Ven. Louis is on the lower far left: the artist rendered a perfect
likeness. The only other image we have of the author is a black and
white sketch in very poor condition, not suitable for the web. St.
Thomas Aquinas is in the center, top, with St. Jerome, seated on the
far right, top, wearing the red hat. St. Gregory the Great is seated to
the left of St. Thomas. St. Dominic is seated with an Apostle on the
top right.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Venerable Louis of Granada His Life and Work
The life of Venerable Louis of Granada [1504-1588] paralleled to a remarkable degree the greatest era of the Spanish Empire
-----that
empire known as "the evangelizer of half the world, the hammer of
heretics, and the light of the Council of Trent." Louis himself is
known as "the writer of the Spanish empire." He was born only shortly
after the famous year 1492, when Spain had, under King Ferdinand and
Queen Isabella, defeated the Moors after eight centuries of Moorish
occupation and oppression in Spain and financed Christopher Columbus'
momentous voyage to America. These were the times of Spain's intense
exploration and missionary activity in the New World, of the Council of
Trent [1548-1563], and of the great Christian victory over the Turks at
Lepanto [1571].
The end of this glorious era is marked by the great defeat in 1588 of
the "invincible" Spanish Armada off the coast of England, an event
which signaled the beginning of the end of Spain's brief but glorious
reign as a world power. This was also the very year of Louis' death.
But during the early and mid-16th century, Catholic Spain gave to the
world many priceless gifts; not least of these were the books of her
renowned son, Ven. Louis of Granada.
In the aftermath of the surrender of the Moors in 1492, Ferdinand and
Isabella were faced with the task of making Granada a Spanish city once
again. In order to hasten the influx of Spanish influence into the city
and the blending of the Moorish and the Spanish people, Ferdinand and
Isabella granted free entrance to the city of Granada to any Spaniard
from the provinces who wished to settle there. One young couple who
took advantage of this opportunity was Francis Sarria and his wife
[whose name has been lost to history], a couple who in 1504 became the
parents of a son named Louis, later to become famous as "Louis of
Granada." Unfortunately, Francis died in 1509, and Louis and his mother
were reduced to poverty, being supported by alms from the Dominican
Monastery. After a few years of destitution, there occurred an event
whereby Louis de Sarria's fortunes changed suddenly and dramatically.
While engaged in a street fight with a boy who had insulted his mother,
Louis was discovered by the Count de Tendilla, Mayor of the Alhambra,
who was impressed with his courage. The Count took Louis under his
patronage. Thereafter Louis spent many hours on the balconies of the
Alhambra; thus, in addition to his other education, his soul was fed by
the magnificent beauty of the surrounding countryside, fueling that
deep love for the beauty of nature which was to be a hallmark of his
thought and writing for the rest of his life. When Louis de Sarria
reached young manhood, he turned his path toward the religious life. At
the same Dominican Monastery where he had begged alms as an orphaned
child, the Convent of the Holy Cross, he received the habit of a Friar
Preacher on June 15, 1524, to the joyful tears of his beloved mother. A
year later he made his religious profession. At the Convent of the Holy
Cross, Friar Louis, or Fray Louis, as he was called, undertook the
rigorous Dominican
ratio studiorum:
a review of Latin and then three years of Philosophy and three years of
Theology. Among the the texts used were the works of St. Thomas
Aquinas. Louis de Sarria was brilliant in scholastic disputations; he
had no equal in mental capacity, application to study, and exact
observance of the monastic life.
After some time, he was awarded a scholarship to the celebrated College
of St. Gregory in Valladolid. Arriving there in 1529, he spent the
designated eight days in preparation for taking the oath to uphold the
statutes of the College; thus Louis de Sarria became formally invested
in the College of St. Gregory, taking on both the honors and the
obligations thereof. In the mind of the young friar, his first duty was
worthily to represent Holy Cross Convent of Granada. Grateful for the
confidence placed in him by his fellow religious of Holy Cross, he
changed his name from Fray Louis de Sarria to Fray Louis of Granada.
With such great seriousness did the Spanish ecclesiastical student of
the 16th century hold his exalted position as a knight of Thomistic
truth.
But there was more than learning in Louis' heart and soul. By prayer
and penance, as well as study, he was preparing for a future apostolate
of preaching.
In the year 1534, at the age of 30, because of his ardent longings for
the apostolate, Louis stepped forward and generously offered himself as
a missionary to Mexico. Although he had not yet completed his
eight-year course of studies, he was willing to abandon the lecture
halls. He was all prepared to leave for the Americas; but when his
departure was imminent, Fray Louis' superior commanded him to cancel
his trip and let another go in his place.
This was a tremendous disappointment for Fray Louis. In fact, although
he obediently accepted the sacrifice, the longing for the mission field
remained a thorn in his soul all his life. This event ushered in a
deepening in the soul of Louis of Granada. More and more he realized
that prayer, rather than study, is the way to true spiritual knowledge
of Christ. He saw more clearly that his goal should be to live the life
of Christ within his own soul, and then to preach Christ to others. He
even began to have a distaste for study. In this regard, the writings
of the famous Master John of Avila also had a great influence in j the
changing of Fray Louis' attitude. At this time there also awakened in
him his vocation as a spiritual writer. He desired that the riches of
the spiritual treasure should be imparted to and shared by all, and the
means by which he intended to diffuse them were preaching and writing.
In 1539, at the age of 35, he wrote a small tract on the method of
prayer for a student at St. Gregory in Valladolid who had written to
him for advice: this little tract is spirituality pure and simple. It
is the first lecture of Fray Louis from the chair of Spanish
spirituality. This same tract was later to be transformed into a work
that would make Fray Louis' name immortal:
The Book of Prayer and Meditation.
In 1544 the Dominican Order gave Louis the title of Preacher General.
In 1546, he was granted the privilege of going anywhere in Spain to
preach, in the company of a companion of his choosing, and no superior
could prevent his preaching. During this period, Fray Louis spent much
of his time traveling and preaching. He was in demand everywhere as a
preacher and spiritual director
-----even among the royalty. He became widely known as a holy friar, a preacher, and a man of great administrative ability.
About the year 1552, Queen Catherine of Portugal, the sister of Charles
V, selected him as her confessor and advisor. Practically the rest of
his life was spent in Portugal, with occasional visits to Spain.
Because of his great knowledge and his practical talents, Fray Louis
was frequently called upon to help settle problems arising among the
royalty
-----important problems upon which might hang the
welfare of entire nations. But all such dealings with worldly affairs
were painful to him, and appear to have constituted the greatest cross
of his later life.
In addition, in 1556 he was elected Provincial of the Dominican
Province of Portugal. A year later he turned down Queen Catherine's
offer of the archbishopric of Braga, which would have made him Primate
of Portugal. In the midst of such preoccupations, Fray Louis never
forgot his apostolate of spiritual writing.
In 1554
The Book of Prayer and Meditation
was published. Its success was a complete surprise, especially to Fray
Louis, but it confirmed him in his vocation of spiritual writer. From
that time forward he dedicated himself with a divine impatience to
writing on spiritual themes for all. He led the left of an ascetic; his
cell was poor and possessions meager: a wooden bed, crude table, a few
books, some paper and and instruments of penance. He received quite a
lot of money for his writings, all of which went to the poor. His chief
virtues of excellence were meekness, humility, and good counsel.
This affable and simple religious, entirely given to the things of God,
was very active and even dynamic. He rose at four in the morning and
spent two hours in prayer. At six o'clock he celebrated Mass with
remarkable solemnity and devotion. In those days priests were not
accustomed to celebrate Mass every day, but Fray Louis never omitted
it, and stated that the best preparation for the celebration of Mass
was to celebrate daily. After Mass he devoted himself to a lengthy
thanksgiving and then returned to his cell to begin the labors of the
day.
The 16th century was a most turbulent time in the history of the
Church, a time whose terrible legacy of heresy and apostasy is still
with us today. [It was also a century of many, many great Saints.]
There was a crying need for true Catholic reform, but many heretics had
arisen to feed the faithful with stones and scorpions instead of bread.
An un-Christian humanism was spreading its contagion of rebellion
against God; and in 1517, when Fray Louis was 12 years old, Martin
Luther took the step that was to launch the tragic heresy of external
justification, a doctrine which smothered the true supernatural life of
the soul and thus led to the most man-centered form of humanism.
Another error which was spreading at the time was a false form of
spirituality which claimed that religion should be something completely
interior. A fourth error was Quietism, which discounted the effort
required for the Christian soul to grow in grace and virtue. A goodly
number of spiritual writers of the time fell into one or another of
these traps.
Louis of Granada, on the other hand, was a voice of true orthodox
Catholic reform. Although, in the confusion, he was for a time accused
of heresy, this false charge was disposed of at Trent and Rome. Louis
presented life in Christ as the life proper to all Christians, and he
showed the essential role which the virtues play in the growth of this
life. He showed how grace is essential to life in Christ, and how the
Christian must receive the Sacraments and pray in order to obtain the
necessary grace of God. Thus, by reading Fray Louis' true picture of
the Christian life, the 16th century Catholic
-----as well as the Catholic of today
-----is
protected against many errors and given true and powerful spiritual
food. His soul is protected against man-centered humanism, against the
error of external justification without an inner transformation into
holiness in the soul, the error of religion as being something entirely
interior and independent of laws and ceremonies, and the error that the
christian need not expand an effort to grow in grace. The
teaching in his works is firmly orthodox, completely Catholic.
In his 35 years of writing, Fray Louis produced 49 works. These can be
classified into five categories: spiritual theology, apologetics,
hagiography, sacred oratory, and translations. Some of his books are
masterpieces of spiritual theology. These are
The Book of Prayer and Meditation, a book that laments the miseries of life and manifests spiritual contempt for the world
-----this is the one of his books that Louis loved best, and one that has served as a manual of prayer for countless souls;
The Sinner's Guide
[first published in 1556], a masterwork of Aristotelian symmetry and
the most scholastic work of Fray Louis, a book which covers from myriad
angles the virtues of the Christian life, proving that this life is the
only way to true happiness [even on earth];
Introduction to the Creed,
a gigantic work written in Louis' old age, but which breathes the
spirit of youth. This work shows Louis' preoccupation with the
conversion of the Jews and Mohammedans; he knew the Oriental mind very
well, and in this book he shows, among many other things, that only
Catholicism can give God due worship. This is undoubtedly his most
admirable book, and modern critics never cease to be amazed at the
genius that produced it.
Louis' books have been translated into 25 different languages,
including Syrian, Arabic, and Japanese, in addition to the European
languages. There have been some 6 thousand editions of Fray Louis'
works. In fact, it is known from tales brought back by missionaries
that the Japanese version of
The Sinner's Guide
was one of the bulwarks that sustained the faith of the Japanese
Catholics during two centuries of terrible persecution, when both in
Europe and Japan, Japanese Christianity was believed dead. In 1865,
when missionaries were again allowed into Japan, missionary Father
Bernard Petitjean was astonished to find in the hills around Nagasaki
thousands of Japanese Catholics who had kept the Faith, hidden but
vital, without priests, for over 200 years! Immense was the joy of
these faithful ones at once again having a Catholic priest among them.
The Sinner's Guide had played a providential role in sustaining the Faith in their souls during that trying time.
The works of Fray Louis were included in the precious cargo brought to
the New World by the Spanish missionaries; these missionaries even
translated some of Granada's works into the native Indian languages.
St. Rose of Lima, too, loved the books of Fray Louis; she had them
always at hand. Her favorite was
The Book of Prayer and Meditation.
In one of her struggles with the devil, she protected herself by
reading this book; the devil became furious, snatched the book from
her, and threw it onto a rubbish heap. Rose remain unmoved, certain
that the Lord would return it to her
-----as indeed He did.
Other famous Catholics who have read and loved the works of Venerable
Louis include St. Vincent de Paul, St. Louise de Marillac, St. Francis
de Sales, Cardinal Berulle and Bossuet (all French); St. Charles
Borromeo (Italian), Louis of Leon (Spanish), and the Jesuit and
Barnabite Orders. St. Teresa read Louis' books and commanded her nuns
to do the same. She credited
The Sinner's Guide
with having converted over a million souls. In some religious rules and
constitutions the works of Louis were mentioned as almost obligatory
spiritual reading for the novices. There was no bishop in Spain in the
17th and 18th centuries who did not eulogize, recommend, and even grant
indulgences for the reading of the works of Fray Louis.
St. Francis de Sales urged a Bishop-elect of his acquaintance to read
the works or Louis of Granada, and to treat them as a second breviary.
He advised this man to read them slowly, beginning with
The Sinner's Guide.
In Advent of 1588, when he was nearly 84 years old, Louis' health was
unusually poor. Nevertheless he prayed more, fasted more, and took his
discipline. In December he began to have attacks of nausea and vomiting
which left him extremely weakened. By December 30 all hope for his
recovery was abandoned. On December 31, 1588, in the bare and humble
cell at Santo Domingo where monarchs of the world had visited him, it
was obvious that Fray Louis' lamp of life was almost extinguished. With
tears of joy he received the Last Sacraments. The novices knelt at the
door to his cell for a last farewell. Fray Louis sensed the approach of
death, and asked that they place him in his coffin. Then, at nine in
the evening, he breathed his last and exchanged the counting of years
for eternity.