
The life of
Anthony will remind many people of St. Francis of Assisi. At 20, Anthony was so moved by the Gospel
message, "Go, sell what you have, and give to [the] poor" (Mark 10:21b), that he actually did just
that with his large inheritance. He is different from Francis in that most of Anthony's life was
spent in solitude. He saw the world completely covered with snares, and gave the Church and the
world the witness of solitary asceticism, great personal mortification and prayer. But no saint is
antisocial, and Anthony drew many people to himself for spiritual healing and
guidance.
At 54, he responded to many requests and founded a sort of monastery of
scattered cells. Again like Francis, he had great fear of "stately buildings and well-laden
tables."
At 60, he hoped to be a martyr in the renewed Roman persecution of 311,
fearlessly exposing himself to danger while giving moral and material support to those in prison. At
88, he was fighting the Arian heresy, that massive trauma from which it took the Church centuries to
recover. "The mule kicking over the altar" denied the divinity of Christ.
Anthony is
associated in art with a T-shaped cross, a pig and a book. The pig and the cross are symbols of his
valiant warfare with the devil the cross his constant means of power over evil spirits, the pig a
symbol of the devil himself. The book recalls his preference for "the book of nature" over the
printed word. Anthony died in solitude at 105.
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