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Daily Saints / Uncle Eddie’s
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Author: Father John Bartunek, LC | Source: Catholic.net
January 13 -- Saint Hilary of Poitiers
Bishop and Doctor of the Church.



Catholic.net


Uncle Eddy's E-mails -- January 13

Saint Hilary of Poitiers, Bishop and Doctor of the Church (western France) (entered heaven this day [probably] in 368)

Dear Heidi,

You feel like you’re in exile?  Long dark nights, short grey days, cold icy windowpanes and the same boring “gruel” each day (I doubt cafeteria food is THAT bad…).  It does indeed sound a bit exilic.  So you have two choices: transfer (which would mean renouncing all the good reasons that brought you north for college in the first place), or take advantage.  Yes, it is possible to take advantage of being in exile.  Don’t just believe me (though I do have some experience in this regard), believe today’s saint, and follow in his footsteps.

He was born in western France, to well-to-do pagan parents, who dutifully brought him up in the deadening falsity of paganism.  But God had other plans.  After he married and started his family, he decided to dedicate himself to further study (he had already received a solid classical education in rhetoric).  Questions about the meaning of life interested him most, and with the help of Providence, his sincere, inquiring mind made its way step by step towards Christianity, which he eventually embraced wholeheartedly.  So fertile did the soil of his soul show itself that he was soon ordained and then named bishop of his home town of Poitiers.  Tiirelessly, he preached and taught and served the temporal and eternal needs of his flock.  But a few years into it things got complicated.

The Arian heresy was spreading like wildfire at the time (the greatest of heresies, that lasted almost six centuries; it claimed, among other things, that Christ was not truly divine).  And the Emperor got into the fray – on the wrong side.  He started to promote Arian bishops, and demote faithful ones.  Hilary happened to be one of the latter, and he was carted off to Phrygia when he wouldn’t sign the Arian papers.  For four years he was exiled, with all the sufferings that entailed (the ones you listed in your note, plus a host of others), but he was never idle.  He increased his already prolific writing, striving to do through the written word what his exile precluded him from doing in person.  He sent a defense of the truth faith the Emperor, he composed commentaries on books from the Bible, and he redacted a treatise thoroughly defending Catholic truth called “On the Trinity”.  Eventually, he made his way to Constantinople, the seedbed of the rebels, and publicly challenged the leading Arian to a debate.  It was rather embarrassing, but Saturninus declined, and Hilary was sent back to Poitiers, where they thought he would drop into obscurity.  Instead, he called a council of the bishops in Gaul and continued confounding the Arians and supporting Christ’s Church.

So as you can see, he got a lot done in his four years of exile – more than most people do in a lifetime.  If you stay close to Christ, and focus more on what opportunities he gives you than on the sacrifices he demands of you, I will venture a bet that your four year “exile” will be equally fruitful, if not equally dramatic.

Your fellow deportee, Uncle Eddy

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Who is Uncle Eddy?
Uncle Eddy was on a secret evangelizing mission for the Vatican to an undisclosed (and hostile) location. While faithfully carrying out his charge, he was apprehended by enemies of the Church and is currently being held in solitary confinement somewhere in the northern hemisphere. His prison is a corporate office cubicle, with only artificial light (fluorescent, actually, with that ceaseless, annoying buzz). His one relief is access to email (well, actually, he also has the comfort of the complete set of Alban Butler's Lives of the Saints, which he reads assiduously to pass the time). His captors have given it to him with hopes that he will unwittingly reveal Vatican secrets in his e correspondence. To their continued consternation, Eddy has taken advantage of this privilege to keep in contact with his numerous nephews and nieces (all of whom happen to be college students), sharing avuncular advice on the spiritual life and spreading encouragement as much as he can.

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