jeudi 7 avril 2016

Saint AIBERT de CRESPIN (ALBERT de TOURNAI), moine bénédictin, prêtre et confesseur

Peter Paul Rubens  (1577–1640). La délivrance des âmes du purgatoire / The issue of souls in purgatory, circa 1635, 350 x 258, Tournai Cathedral


Saint Aibert

Prêtre et moine, ermite du Hainaut (+ 1140)

Confesseur. 

Natif d'un village près de Tournai, il reçut une bonne éducation chrétienne de ses parents. Il s'attache à un saint ermite et le suivit dans sa prière et ses austérités. Entré dans un monastère, il continua cette mortification continuelle jusqu'au jour où l'évêque de Cambrai l'ordonna prêtre. Il lui demanda plus spécialement le ministère sacerdotal des sacrements de Pénitence et de l'Eucharistie. Il devint ainsi le soutien de nombreux prêtres, évêques et religieux. Il mourut le jour de Pâques.

Près du monastère de Crespin dans le Hainaut, en 1140, saint Aibert, prêtre et moine, qui dans la solitude récitait chaque jour le psautier en entier, en s’agenouillant ou en se prosternant après chaque psaume et, pour les pénitents qui accouraient vers lui, il était le ministre de la miséricorde divine.

Martyrologe romain

SOURCE : http://nominis.cef.fr/contenus/saint/6469/Saint-Aibert.html

Saint Albert of Tournai

Also known as

Albert of Crespin

Aibert…

Aybert…

Memorial

7 April

Profile

A pious youth, Albert received a good education in the faith from his parents, and preferred to spend his time alone and in prayer. One day he heard a travelling musician sing a hymn about the holy hermit Theobald of Provins, and was immediately taken with the idea of a life of prayer and solitude. Spiritual student of a Father John at the Saint-Crespina Monastery in the diocese of Cambrai (in modern France) where he lived an extremely ascetic life. Benedictine monk at Saint-Crespina where he worked as cellar master for 23 years before retreating again to the life of a hermit. His reputation for holiness spread, and he attacted so many would-be students that Bishop Burchard of Cambrai ordained him and built a chapel in his cell so that Albert could hear confessions and celebrate Mass. Known for his devotion to the Eucharist and for endlessly praying the Rosary.

Born

c.1060 in Espain (near Tournai), FlandersBelgium

Died

Easter Sunday, 7 April 1140

Additional Information

Book of Saints, by the Monks of Ramsgate

Lives of the Saints, by Father Alban Butler

Saints of the Day, by Katherine Rabenstein

books

Our Sunday Visitor’s Encyclopedia of Saints

other sites in english

Catholic Online

John Dillon

Wikipedia

sitios en español

Martirologio Romano2001 edición

fonti in italiano

Santi e Beati

nettsteder i norsk

Den katolske kirke

MLA Citation

“Saint Albert of Tournai“. CatholicSaints.Info. 30 May 2020. Web. 17 February 2023. <https://catholicsaints.info/saint-albert-of-tournai/>

SOURCE : https://catholicsaints.info/saint-albert-of-tournai/

Book of Saints – Aibert

Article

AIBERT (Saint) Confessor (April 7) (12th century) A Benedictine monk in the north of France, who passed to the life of a hermit. His long life of eighty years was, almost from infancy, one of continuous prayer and penance. It is related of him that he never missed saying two Masses daily, one for the Dead and one for the Living. He died A.D 1140.

MLA Citation

Monks of Ramsgate. “Aibert”. Book of Saints1921. CatholicSaints.Info. 13 May 2012. Web. 17 February 2023. <http://catholicsaints.info/book-of-saints-aibert/>

SOURCE : https://catholicsaints.info/book-of-saints-aibert/

Aybert of Crespin, OSB (AC)

(also known as Aibert, Albert)

Born in the diocese of Tournai, France; died 1140. A penitent recluse almost from childhood, Saint Aybert spent most of his time in prayer. Even as a child he kept watch through the night on his knees; when he was too tired to support himself, he would then prostrate himself in prayer. But he always tried to hide his devotion from others, so he would pray in the stable or in the fields. He was equally private in his fasts; therefore, he also ate some morsel so that he could answer his parents truthfully that he had eaten.

One day a poor minstrel came to his father's door and sang a hymn about the virtues and recent death of the hermit Saint Theobald. This inspired the young saint to imitate the faith and action of his elder in faith. He immediately went to Father John at the Benedictine monastery of Crespin in the diocese of Cambrai. The good father lived as a recluse in a cell near the monastery and under its direction. John accepted Aybert as his companion, but soon the student traded places with his master. They rarely ate anything but wild herbs, rarely used a fire, and never cooked.

Eventually, Aybert was received by Abbot Rainer at Crespin Abbey where he was provost and cellarer for 25 years. Yet he never let his exterior occupations interrupt his tears, prayer, or penances. After receiving permission from Abbot Lambert, Aybert spent the next 22 years as a recluse under the obedience of the abbey. But he was never entirely alone; many flocked to him for spiritual advice--so many that Bishop Burchard of Cambray promoted him to the priesthood and erected a chapel near his cell. This gave Aybert the power to minister to his visitors in the confessional and in the Eucharist. Each day he said two Masses: one for the dead and the other for the living. His devotional practice of reciting the Ave Maria 50 times in succession is connected with the origin of the rosary (Benedictines, Encyclopedia, Husenbeth).

SOURCE : http://www.saintpatrickdc.org/ss/0407.shtml

April 7

St. Albert, Recluse

HE was born at Espain, a village in the diocess of Tourney, in 1060. From his infancy he so earnestly applied himself to prayer, that he spent in that holy exercise the greater part of his time, being always careful in it to shun, as much as possible, the eyes of men. The earnestness with which he always attended all public devotions in his parish church, and listened to the sermons of his curate, is not to be expressed; much less the deep impressions which every instruction of piety made upon his tender heart. He was discovered to watch a great part of the night upon his knees, and when he was no longer able to support himself upright, to pray prostrate on the ground. When he could not pray in his chamber, without danger of being surprised by others, he retired into the stable or sheep-cot for many hours together. His commerce with God in his heart was uninterrupted while he was abroad in the fields with the cattle. He was no less private in his fasts; and at the time of meals he usually took an apple, or a morsel of bread, that he might tell his parents or the servants that he had eaten. Happening one day to hear a poor man at his father’s door sing a hymn on the virtues and death of St. Theobald, a hermit lately dead, he found himself vehemently inflamed with a desire of imitating his solitary penitential life; and without delay addressed himself to a priest of the monastery of Crepin or Crespin, named John, who lived a recluse in a separate cell, with the leave of his abbot. Being admitted by him as a companion, he soon surpassed his master in the exercise and spirit of virtue. Bread they seldom tasted; wild herbs were their ordinary food; they never saw any fire, nor ate anything that had been dressed by it. The church of Crepin, ever since its foundation by St. Landelin, in the seventh century, had been served by secular canons: in the eleventh it had passed into the hands of monks of the Order of St. Benedict: and under the first abbot, Rainer, St. Albert took the monastic habit. He still practised his former austerities, slept on the ground, and in the night recited the whole psalter privately before matins. He was chosen provost and cellerer; but the exterior occupations of those offices did not interrupt his tears, nor hinder the perpetual attention of his soul to God. After twenty-five years spent in this community, with a fervour which was always uniform and constant, he obtained leave of Lambert, the second abbot, to return to an eremitical life, in 1115. He then built himself a cell in the midst of a barren wilderness, contenting himself for his food with bread and herbs, and after the first three years with herbs alone. Many flocking to him for spiritual advice, Burchard, bishop of Cambray, his diocesan, promoted him to the priesthood, and erected for him a chapel in his cell, giving him power to hear confessions and administer the holy eucharist: which was confirmed to him by two popes, Paschal II. and Innocent II. He said every day two masses, 1 one for the living, and a second for the dead. God crowned his long penance with a happy death about the year 1140, the eightieth of his age, on the 7th of April; on which he is honoured in the Belgic and Gallican Martyrologies. See his life, by Robert the archdeacon, his intimate friend, in Surius, Bollandus, &c.

Note 1. Except on Christmas-day, priests are not allowed to say mass twice the same day, since the prohibition of Honorius III. Cap. Te referente, De celebratione. [back]

Rev. Alban Butler (1711–73).  Volume IV: April. The Lives of the Saints.  1866.

SOURCE : http://www.bartleby.com/210/4/073.html

Sant' Aiberto di Crespin Monaco

7 aprile

m. 1140

Martirologio Romano: Presso il monastero di Crespin nell’Hainault, nell’odierna Francia, sant’Aiberto, sacerdote e monaco, che ogni giorno recitava in solitudine, in ginocchio o prostrato a terra, tutto il Salterio e ai penitenti che accorrevano a lui amministrava la divina misericordia.

Nato a Espain, a pochi chilometri da Tournai, nel 1060 da Albaldo, uomo d'armi, e da Elvide, mostrò fin da fanciullo una grande tendenza alla pietà, al punto di levarsi da letto la notte per poter pregare con maggior raccoglimento e di praticare spesso lunghi digiuni. L'esempio di penitenza di san Teobaldo, di cui venne a conoscenza per mezzo di un mendicante, lo spinse a ritirarsi a vita eremitica nei dintorni del monastero di Crespin, insieme con un monaco di nome Giovanni che già, col consenso dell'abate, serviva Dio in quei luoghi deserti.

Dopo vent'anni di dure penitenze e rigorosi digiuni, Aiberto si recò col suo compagno di solitudine e con l'abate in pellegrinaggio a Roma. Al suo ritorno entrò come monaco nel cenobio di Crespin, dove occupò gli uffici di preposito e di cellerario, senza peraltro abbandonare il rigore della vita fino ad allora condotta. Rimase nel chiostro venticinque anni, quindi, per poter attendere più liberamente alla preghiera e alla mortificazione del proprio corpo, chiese ed ottenne dall'abate il permesso di ritirarsi nuovamente nell'eremo; e poiché il popolo accorreva sempre più numeroso alla cella, che Aiberto si era fabbricata, il vescovo di Cambrai, Burcardo, «Ut populis ad se venientibus melius consuleret, et familiarius secreta confessionum audiret», lo ordinò sacerdote.

Aiberto ebbe dai papi Pasquale II e Innocenzo II facoltà e privilegi speciali e fu visitato da vescovi, arcidiaconi, abati, letterati e nobili; il popolo gli strappava le vesti che indossava e le portava via come preziose reliquie. Morì il 7 aprile 1140, giorno di Pasqua, dopo cinquanta anni di vita religiosa, e fu sepolto nel punto dove sorgeva la sua cella; anche dalla tomba il santo continuò a far miracoli.

I suoi resti furono, in seguito, traslati nell'abbazia di Crespin e collocati nella chiesa; nel 1303 e ancora nel 1464 essi furono messi in nuove e più ricche urne. Nel 1568, dopo essere stati tenuti nascosti due anni per timore che venissero bruciati dai calvinisti, furono sistemati definitivamente in una cappella intitolata alla Santa Croce della Vergine e a sant'Aiberto. La sua festa si celebra il 9 aprile oppure, a ricordo della traslazione del 1568, il 2 maggio. Aiberto è invocato soprattutto per guarire dalla febbre.

Autore: Charles Lefebvre

SOURCE : http://www.santiebeati.it/dettaglio/48770

Den hellige Aibert av Tournai (~1060-1140)

Minnedag: 7. april

Den hellige Aibert (Aybert, Albert) ble født rundt 1060 i landsbyen Espain like ved Tournai i Flandern (det nåværende Belgia). Han fikk en god kristen utdannelse av sine foreldre og var en botgjørende eneboer nesten helt fra barndommen og tilbrakte det meste av tiden i bønn. Selv som barn våket han på sine knær om natten, og når han ble for trett til å holde seg oppe, la han seg nesegrus i bønn (prostrasjon). Men han prøvde alltid å skjule sine fromhetsøvelser for andre, så han pleide å be i stallen eller på markene. Han var like privat i sin faste, og derfor spiste han også noen biter slik at han kunne svare foreldrene sannferdig at han hadde spist.

En dag kom en fattig trubadur til hans fars dør og sang en hymne om den hellige eremitten Theobald av Provins' dyder og nylige død. Dette inspirerte den unge mannen til å imitere Theobald i tro og handling. Han dro straks til p. Johannes ved klosteret Saint-Crespin i bispedømmet Cambrai, som levde som eremitt i en celle nær klosteret og under dets veiledning. Johannes aksepterte Aibert som sin ledsager. De spiste knapt annet enn ville urter, brukte sjelden ild og kokte aldr mat.

Til slutt ble Aibert akseptert av abbed Rainer i klosteret Saint-Crespin som benediktinermunk (Ordo Sancti Benedicti – OSB). Der var han i 23 år forstander og kjellermester, men han lot aldri sine embeter avbryte tårene, bønnen eller botsøvelsene. Etter å ha fått tillatelse fra abbed Lambert trakk han seg deretter tilbake for å leve som eneboer under lydighet til klosteret, og slik levde han de siste 22 årene av sitt liv.

Men han var aldri helt alene, for mange strømmet til for å få andelig rådgivning. De ble så mange at biskop Burchard av Cambrai presteviet ham og bygde et kapell ved hans celle. Dette ga Aibert mulighet til å høre skriftemål og feire messe. Hans hengivenhet til eukaristien ga seg uttrykk i at han feiret den to ganger daglig, en gang for de levende og en gang for de døde. Han hadde for vane å resitere Ave Maria femti ganger på rad, og denne fromhetspraksisen er av betydning i debatten om opprinnelsen til rosenkransen.

Aibert døde på påskedag i 1140. Hans minnedag er 7. april.

Kilder: Attwater/Cumming, Benedictines, Bunson, KIR, CSO, Infocatho, ora-et-labora.net - Kompilasjon og oversettelse: p. Per Einar Odden - Sist oppdatert: 2006-07-16 14:59

SOURCE : http://www.katolsk.no/biografier/historisk/aitournai