Saint Hermenegild, Martyr of the Eucharist
Leovigild,
King of the Visigoths, had two sons, Hermenegild and Recared, who
reigned conjointly with him. All three were Arians, but Hermenegild
married a zealous Catholic, the daughter of Sigebert, King of France,
and by her holy example was converted to the faith. His father, on
hearing the news, denounced him as a traitor, and marched to seize
his person. Hermenegild tried to rally the Catholics of Spain in his
defence, but they were too weak to make any stand, and, after a
two-year fruitless struggle, he surrendered on the assurance of a
free pardon. When safely in the royal camp, the king had him loaded
with fetters and cast into a foul dungeon at Seville. Tortures and
bribes were in turn employed to shake his faith, but Hermenegild
wrote to his father that he held the crown as nothing, and preferred
to lose sceptre and life rather than betray the truth of God. At
length, on Easter night, an Arian bishop entered his cell, and
promised him his father’s pardon if he would but receive Communion
at his hands. Hermenegild indignantly rejected the offer, and knelt
with joy for his death-stroke. The same night a light streaming from
his cell told the Christians who were watching near that the martyr
had won his crown, and was keeping his Easter with the Saints in
glory.
Leovigild
on his death-bed, though still an Arian, bade Recared seek out St.
Leander, whom he had himself cruelly persecuted, and, following
Hermenegild’s example, be received by him into the Church. Recared
did so, and on his father’s death labored so earnestly for the
extirpation of Arianism that he brought over the whole nation of the
Visigoths to the Church. “Nor is it to be wondered,” says St.
Gregory, ‘that he came thus to be a preacher of the true faith,
seeing that he was brother of a martyr, whose merits did help him to
bring so many into the lap of God’s Church.”