25 September 2018

25 September: Bl. Herman “the Cripple”

Fr Zed with some information on a fascinating, but little known, Blessed of the Order of St Benedict.

From Fr Z's Blog


One of my Roman interlocutors reminded me by text that today is the Feast of Bl. Herman of Reichenau, “the Cripple”, honored in the Benedictine Tradition.  This was an amazing guy!  He could barely move and hardly speak, stricken with many maladies.
When you might think that you have it bad, try reading about Bl. Herman!
As my interlocutor wrote:
For the Benedictines today is the feast of Bl. Hermann “the Cripple” who wrote the Salve Regina and the Alma Redemptoris  Mater. He was a genius of math, geometry, music and natural sciences.His story is simply amazing. Spina bifida, cleft palate, all sorts of illnesses. He needed a monk to help him for everything. But he had a wicked sense of humor and was admired universally.  But in today’s Europe his birth would have been considered a disgrace and aborted or euthanized. Or called an ossified unreconstructed manualist and neopelagian self-absorbed judgmentalist.
He could barely speak in an intelligible way and suffered excruciating pain all his life. And yet he was always joking with his fellow monks and encouraging them through adversities. Pope Leo IX and Emperor Henry III visited him and his advice was sought by prelates and authorities. This guy was a victory over the damages of the original sin through and through.
Here is a link to some of his works: HERE
The wiki entry on Bl. Herman lists many of his attributes.
He spent most of his life in the Abbey of Reichenau, an island on Lake Constance in Germany. Hermann contributed to all four arts of the quadrivium. He was renowned as a musical composer (among his surviving works are officia for St. Afra and St. Wolfgang). He also wrote a treatise on the science of music, several works on geometry and arithmetics and astronomical treatises (including instructions for the construction of an astrolabe, at the time a very novel device in Western Europe). As a historian, he wrote a detailed chronicle from the birth of Christ to his own present day, ordering them after the reckoning of the Christian era. One of his disciples Berthold of Reichenau continued it.
At twenty, Hermann was professed as a Benedictine monk, spending the rest of his life in a monastery. He was literate in several languages, including Arabic, Greek and Latin and wrote about mathematics, astronomy and Christianity. He built musical and astronomical instruments and was also a famed religious poet. When he went blind in later life, he began writing hymns, the best known of which is Salve Regina (Hail Holy Queen).
Herman died in a monastery on September 24, 1054, aged 40. The Roman Catholic Church beatified him in 1863.
Raise a prayer to Bl. Herman to intercede with God for many graces on those who have children with great challenges.
Listen and think of the gift we have received from Bl. Herman.   Sung by the Benedictines of Mary, Queen of Apostles, who now have the the beautifully, recently consecrated, Gower Abbey.
Alma Redemptoris Mater.
Audio Player
Salve Regina.
Audio Player
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