Saint Cesar de Bus

(1544-1607) Cesar was born in a Papal State that is now part of France. He became a soldier at 18 and fought the Huguenots (French Calvinists). After the war, he took some time for painting and poetry, then tried to join the navy but illness prevented him. Having been a fairly virtuous person up to this time, he lived three years in Paris indulging in pleasures. When his brother, a canon (priest), died, Cesar took up his position for the income. He experienced a conversion, was ordained a priest at 38, and became distinguished for teaching catechism. He founded the Fathers of Christian Doctrine, and Saint Francis de Sales called him “a star of the first magnitude in the firmament of Catechesis.”

Pope Saint Paul VI said of this patron of catechists at the beatification address on April 27, 1975, “Perhaps that is the secret of his constancy, or in any case, what always enabled him to over come his difficulties and start off again with increased energy; we are referring to his ‘spirit of repentance.’” Does a spirit of repentance give you renewed energy in recovery?

“Everything in us must catechize and our conduct in life must make us living catechisms” (Saint Cesar de Bus).

Reflection by Brad Farmer