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Our historic and wonderful old Mission
was named for an Italian Saint, John Capistran, but since this was
a Spanish Mission they used the Spanish version, San Juan Capistrano.
He was born about 1385 in Capestrano in the Kingdom of Naples which
is now part of Italy. As our community grew around the Mission it
became known by the Mission's name as well. St. John led a rather
interesting life in nobility, as a governor, fervent priest and
military leader.
He was born in nobility but his father
died early and his devoted mother taught him primarily Latin then
sent him off to attend the University of Perugia. Here he studied
civil and canon law with great success. He married the daughter
of a prominent citizen in 1412 and King Ladislaus of Naples appointed
him Governor of Perugia. John zealously eradicated corruption and
bribery but there was a family, the Malatesta, who controlled several
cities and had many dissenters. John was selected to bring about
peace. For his efforts the Malatestas cast him into prison. His
treatment was bad, the King had abandoned him, and he meditated
about the unfairness of all earthly things. After he was released
he made a decision to join the religious orders. Either his wife
had died or he received special dispensation to join the Franciscan
Order. He studied theology and was ordained in 1425. Before he was
accepted in the Franciscan monastery, the Superior ordered him to
solemnly renounce the vanities of the world. John rode through Perugia
mounted backwards on a donkey, wearing a paper miter on which his
greatest sins were listed.
Fr. John traveled all over Italy and
incessantly toiled for the salvation of souls. He became so popular
that great crowds would gather to hear him speak. They would even
erect pulpits in their city plazas and stop all traffic to accommodate
him. At one time two Friars were accused of heresy. They were brought
to Rome for trial and Fr. John was appointed their spokesman. So
successful was his defense, that they were acquitted.
Fr. John was one of those ascetic priests
that not only accepted the Franciscan rules of poverty but also
mortification of the flesh. He ate only once a day and rarely any
meat. He slept on boards and rested only 3 to 4 hours at night.
He also celebrated mass everyday with intense fervor. His sermons
quite often preached against frivolous fashions and amusements of
time and against ladies' great quantity of hair, perfumes, and superfluous
fineries. Also cards, dice, and similar things abounding in idle
society he railed against. He had made a great bonfire of all these
useless and unworthy items and did this in many cities of Europe
to demonstrate the uselessness of it all.
The Popes called upon Fr. John frequently
for various commissions as a papal legate to Kingdoms throughout
Europe. After Mahomet II captured Constantinople in 1453, he was
so flushed with victory that he wanted to rule Christendom. He began
an invasion of Hungary with his hordes. By this time many in Europe
considered Fr. John a saint and Pope Calixtus III summoned him to
raise a crusade against the Turks. The Turks were at the gates to
Belgrade and its king fled. The governor of Hungary strongly urged
Fr. John to come to his aid against Mahomet. Armed with only a crucifix
and a banner with the initials of the Holy Name, I.H.S., Fr. John
led a wing of the Christian army. His speech strongly persuaded
the despairing army to conquer the enemy or die as martyrs. This
so aroused his army over the superior forces that Mahomet's hordes
fled in wild confusion. “The Cross had triumphed over the
Crescent.”
The stresses of his most active and
austere life and the exhaustion of the war, weakened him and he
was seized by a fever and other ailments. In his dying moments he
lay on the bare floor and passed away in 1456 at the age of seventy-one.
After the usual research on his past and miracles attributed to
him he was canonized a Saint by Pope Benedict XIII in 1724.
An interesting praise by former Pope
Pius II who knew him, wrote that “He was short of stature,
already old, desiccated, thin, shrunken, having nothing but skin
on his bones, he was always gay and indefatigable. Every day he
preaches before twenty and even thirty thousand persons, clarifying
the thorniest problems, pleasing the simple as much as the learned.
He pronounces his discourses in Latin and an interpreter translates.”
...more History & Mistory on SJC.net
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