September
1
Saints of the Day
In southeastern France he built a monastery that became a popular stopping-off point for pilgrims making their way to Compostela in Spain and the Holy Land.
Born a wealthy noble. When his parents died, he used his
fortune to help the
poor. Miracle worker. To avoid followers and adulation, he left
Greece c.683
for
France where he lived as a
hermit in a cave in the
diocese of Nimes, a cave whose mouth was guarded by a thick thorn bush,
and a lifestyle so impoverished that, legend says, God sent a hind to him to
nourish him with her milk.
One day after he had lived there for several years in
meditation, a royal hunting party chased the hind into Giles' cave. One
hunter shot an arrow into the thorn bush, hoping to hit the deer, but hit Giles
in the leg instead, crippling him. The
king sent
doctors to care for saint's wound, and though Giles begged to be left alone,
the
king came often to see him.
From this his fame as sage and miracle worker spread, and
would-be followers gathered near the cave. The
French
king, because of his admiration, built the
monastery of Saint Gilles du Gard for these followers, and Giles became its
first
abbot, establishing his own discipline there. A small town grew up around
the
monastery. Upon Giles' death, his grave became a shrine and place of
pilgrimage; the
monastery later became a
Benedictine house.
The combination of the town,
monastery, shrine and pilgrims led to many handicapped
beggars hoping for
alms; this and Giles' insistence that he wished to live outside the walls of
the city, and his own damaged leg, led to his patronage of
beggars, and to
cripples since begging was the only source of income for many.
Hospitals and safe houses for the
poor,
crippled, and
leprous were constructed in
England and
Scotland, and were built so
cripples could reach them easily. On their passage to Tyburn for execution,
convicts were allowed to stop at Saint Giles' Hospital where they were presented
with a bowl of ale called Saint Giles' Bowl, "thereof to drink at their
pleasure, as their last refreshing in this life." Once in
Scotland during the
seventeenth century his relics were stolen from a church and a great riot
occurred.
In
Spain,
shepherds consider Giles the protector of
rams. It was formerly the custom to wash the
rams and color their wool a bright shade on Giles' feast day, tie lighted
candles to their horns, and bring the animals down the mountain paths to the
chapels and churches to have them blessed. Among the
Basques, the
shepherds come down from the Pyrenees on
1 September, attired in full costume, sheepskin coats, staves, and crooks,
to attend Mass with their best
rams, an event that marks the beginning of autumn festivals, marked by
processions and dancing in the fields.
In Germany, Giles was included among the so-called Fourteen Holy Helpers, a popular group of saints to whom people prayed, especially for recovery from disease and for strength at the hour of death. Also among the 14 were Sts. Christopher, Barbara and Blase. Interestingly, Giles was the only non-martyr among them. Devotion to the "Holy Helpers" was especially strong in parts of Germany and in Hungary and Sweden. Such devotion made his popularity spread. Giles was soon invoked as the patron of the poor and the disabled.
Saints of September 1:
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