No known record of how the church was named has been found but perhaps the
first pastor had some influence. Father C. P. LeQuilene, first rector
of our church, was named after St. Alphonsus Mary de Liguori,
a famous bishop, confessor and doctor of the church. He is known as a great moral
theologian and founder of the congregation of priests known as the Redemptorist Order. His writings and prayers are numerous, therefore
comes his being also known as "Patron of Prayer." St. Alphonsus
insisted in simple preaching and unhurried celebration of the Eucharist, and
he sought to bring back sinners by patience and moderation. He died in
1787 and was canonized in 1839. August 2nd is his feast day.
Although the first few years' records used the spelling "Alphonse", after
1900 all the church records are spelled "Alphonsus."
Prayers and Passages of St. Alphonsus De Liguori
He who prays is certain to be saved; while he who prays not is certain to be
damned. All the saints were saved, and came to be saints by praying;
all the accursed souls in hell were lost through neglect of prayer; if they
had prayed, it is certain that they would not have been lost. And this
will be one of the greatest occasions of their anguish in hell, the thought
that they might have saved themselves so easily; that they had only to beg
God to help them, but that now the time is past when this could avail them
(from The Necessity of Prayer).
Bishop, Doctor of the Church, and the founder of the Redemptorist
Congregation. He was born Alphonsus Marie Antony John Cosmos Damien Michael
Gaspard de Liguori on September 27, 1696, at Marianella, near Naples, Italy.
Raised in a pious home, Alphonsus went on retreats with his father, Don
Joseph, who was a naval officer and a captain of the Royal Galleys.
Alphonsus was the oldest of seven children, raised by a devout mother of
Spanish descent. Educated at the University of Naples, Alphonsus received
his doctorate at the age of sixteen. By age nineteen he was practicing
law, but he saw the transitory nature of the secular world, and after a
brief time, retreated from the law courts and his fame. Visiting the local
Hospital for Incurables on August 28, 1723, he had a vision and was told to
consecrate his life solely to God. In response, Alphonsus dedicated
himself to the religious life, even while suffering persecution from his
family. He finally agreed to become a priest but to live at home as a
member of a group of secular missionaries. He was ordained on December
21, 1726, and he spent six years giving missions throughout Naples. In
April 1729, Alphonsus went to live at the "Chiflese College," founded in
Naples by Father Matthew Ripa, the Apostle of China. There he met
Bishop Thomas Falcoia, founder of the Congregation of Pious Workers. This
lifelong friendship aided Alphonsus, as did his association with a mystic,
Sister Mary Celeste. With their aid, Alphonsus founded the
Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer on November 9, 1732. The
foundation faced immediate problems, and after just one year, Alphonsus
found himself with only one lay brother, his other companions having left to
form their own religious group. He started again, recruited new
members, and in 1743 became the prior of two new congregations, one for men
and one for women. Pope Benedict XIV gave his approval for the men's
congregation in 1749 and for the women's in 1750. Alphonsus was
preaching missions in the rural areas and writing. He refused to become the
bishop of Palermo but in 1762 had to accept the papal command to accept the
see of St. Agatha of the Goths near Naples. Here he discovered more than
thirty thousand uninstructed men and women and four hundred indifferent
priests. For thirteen years Alphonsus fed the poor, instructed
families, reorganized the seminary and religious houses, taught theology,
and wrote. His austerities were rigorous, and he suffered daily
the pain from rheumatism that was beginning to deform his body.
He spent several years having to drink from tubes because his head was so
bent forward. An attack of rheumatic fever, from May 1768 to June 1769, left
him paralyzed. He was not allowed to resign his see, however,
until 1775. In 1780, Alphonsus was tricked into signing a submission
for royal approval of his congregation. This submission altered the
original rule, and as a result Alphonsus was denied any authority among the
Redemptorists. Deposed and excluded from his own congregation,
Alphonsus suffered great anguish. But he overcame his
depression, and he experienced visions, performed miracles, and gave
prophecies. He died peacefully on August 1, 1787, at Nocera di Pagani, near
Naples as the Angelus was ringing. He was beatified in 1816 and
canonized in 1839. In 1871, Alphonsus was declared a Doctor of the
Church by Pope Pius IX. His writings on moral, theological, and
ascetic matters had great impact and have survived through the years,
especially his Moral Theology and his Glories of Mary. He was buried
at the monastery of the Pagani near Naples. Shrines were built there and at
St. Agatha of the Goths. He is the patron of confessors, moral
theologians, and the lay apostolate. In liturgical art he is depicted
as bent over with rheumatism or as a young priest.
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