During his papacy (1566-1572), Pius V was faced with the almost
overwhelming responsibility of getting a shattered and scattered Church back on its feet. The family
of God had been shaken by corruption, by the Reformation, by the constant threat of Turkish invasion
and by the bloody bickering of the young nation-states. In 1545 a previous pope convened the Council
of Trent in an attempt to deal with all these pressing problems. Off and on over 18 years, the
Church Fathers discussed, condemned, affirmed and decided upon a course of action. The Council
closed in 1563.
Pius V was elected in 1566 and was charged with
the task of implementing the sweeping reforms called for by the Council. He ordered the founding of
seminaries for the proper training of priests. He published a new missal, a new breviary, a new
catechism and established the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine (CCD) classes for the young. Pius
zealously enforced legislation against abuses in the Church. He patiently served the sick and the
poor by building hospitals, providing food for the hungry and giving money customarily used for the
papal banquets to poor Roman converts. His decision to keep wearing his Dominican habit led to the
custom of the pope wearing a white cassock.
In striving to reform
both Church and state, Pius encountered vehement opposition from England's Queen Elizabeth and the
Roman Emperor Maximilian II. Problems in France and in the Netherlands also hindered Pius's hopes
for a Europe united against the Turks. Only at the last minute was he able to organize a fleet which
won a decisive victory in the Gulf of Lepanto, off Greece, on October 7, 1571.
Pius's ceaseless papal quest for a renewal of the Church was grounded in his personal life as a Dominican friar. He spent long hours with his God in prayer, fasted rigorously, deprived himself of many customary papal luxuries and faithfully observed the spirit of the Dominican Rule that he had professed.
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