Girolamo Savonarola was executed in the main square of Florence on May 23, 1498--it was a brutal execution that came after the Dominican friar had been tortured. He and his companions were stripped of their habits (degradated) and hung by the neck above fires lit to burn their bodies. Their ashes were scattered in the Arno.
Savonarola was a hero to St. Philip Neri, as he had studied at the convent of San Marco (St. Mark's). Blessed John Henry Newman wrote about his patron's admiration of the Florentine friar in the two sermons he preached at the Oratory in Birmingham in 1848.
First, describing Savonarola:
A true son of St. Dominic, in energy, in severity of life, in contempt of
merely secular learning, a forerunner of the Dominican St. Pius [V] in boldness, in
resoluteness, in zeal for the honour of the House of God, and for the
restoration of holy discipline, Savonarola felt "his spirit stirred up within
him," like another Paul, when he came to that beautiful home of genius and
philosophy; for he found Florence, like another Athens, "wholly given to
idolatry." He groaned within him, and was troubled, and refused consolation,
when he beheld a Christian court and people priding itself on its material
greatness, its intellectual gifts, and its social refinement, while it abandoned
itself to luxury, to feast and song and revel, to fine shows and splendid
apparel, to an impure poetry, to a depraved and sensual character of art, to
heathen speculations, and to forbidden, superstitious practices. His vehement
spirit could not be restrained, and got the better of him, and—unlike the
Apostle, whose prudence, gentleness, love of his kind, and human accomplishments
are nowhere more happily shown than in his speech to the Athenians —he burst forth into a whirlwind of
indignation and invective against all that he found in Florence, and condemned
the whole established system, and all who took part of it, high and low, prince
or prelate, ecclesiastic or layman, with a pitiless rigour,—which for the moment
certainly did a great deal more than St. Paul was able to do at the Areopagus;
for St. Paul made only one or two converts there, and departed, whereas
Savonarola had great immediate success, frightened and abashed the offenders,
rallied round him the better disposed, and elicited and developed whatever there
was of piety, whether in the multitude or in the upper class.
It was the truth of his cause, the earnestness of his convictions, the
singleness of his aims, the impartiality of his censures, the intrepidity of his
menaces, which constituted the secret of his success. Yet a less worthy motive
lent its aid; men crowded round a pulpit, from which others were attacked as
well as themselves. The humbler offender was pleased to be told that crime was a
leveller of ranks, and to find that he thus was a gainer in the common
demoralization. The laity bore to be denounced, when the clergy were not spared;
and the rich and noble suffered a declamation which did not stop short of the
sacred Chair of St. Peter. . . .
A very wonderful man, you will allow, my Brethren, was this Savonarola. I shall
say nothing more of him, except what was the issue of his reforms. For years, as
I have said, he had his own way; at length, his innocence, sincerity, and zeal
were the ruin of his humility. He presumed; he exalted himself against a power
which none can assail without misfortune. He put himself in opposition to
the Holy See, and, as some say, disobeyed its injunctions. Reform is not wrought
out by disobedience; this was not the way to be the Apostle either of Florence
or of Rome. Then trouble came upon him, a great reaction ensued; his enemies got
the upper hand; he went into extravagances himself; the people deserted him; he
was put to death, strangled, hung on a gibbet, and then burned in the very
square where he had set fire to the costly furniture of vanity and sin.
And then of St. Philip Neri's connection to Savonarola:
Philip was born in Florence within twenty years after [Savonarola]. The memory of the
heroic friar was then still fresh in the minds of men, who would be talking
familiarly of him to the younger generation,—of the scenes which their own eyes
had witnessed, and of the deeds of penance which they had done at his bidding.
Especially vivid would the recollections of him be in the convent of St. Mark;
for there was his cell, there the garden where he walked up and down in
meditation, and refused to notice the great prince of the day; there would be his crucifix, his habit, his
discipline, his books, and whatever had once been his. Now, it so happened, St.
Philip was a child of this very convent; here he received his first religious
instruction, and in after times he used to say, "Whatever there was of
good in me, when I was young, I owed it to the Fathers of St. Mark's, in
Florence." For Savonarola he retained a singular affection all through his life;
he kept his picture in his room, and about the year 1560, when the question came
before Popes Paul IV. and Pius IV., of the condemnation of Savonarola's
teaching, he interceded fervently and successfully in his behalf before the
Blessed Sacrament, exposed on the occasion in the Dominican church at Rome.
George Eliot--about as far in religious sympathy from Neri and Newman as you can be--placed Girolamo Savonarola's leadership and the great Bonfire of the Vanities at the center of her historical novel Romola. The title character is a follower of the great prophet and through the course of the novel (written for the Cornhill Magazine in fourteen parts) she witnesses his rise and fall. Please note that Eliot includes the story of Sandro Botticelli throwing some of his paintings based on classical mythology on the Bonfire. I read Romola--it is one of the least read of Eliot's works--several years ago and enjoyed the historical background more than the story of the heroine and her duplicitous husband!
Finally, one more Savonarola fan: the American Catholic convert Orestes Brownson (also rather lacking in sympathy with Blessed John Henry Newman!). Brownson addresses how Savonarola is often used to attack the Catholic hierarchy and the papacy, because he opposed Pope Alexander VI:
The name of Savonarola has become popular with the partisans of republican opinions and the adversaries of the Catholic hierarchy; and so often as that name is pronounced at the present day, it seems to recall exclusively the recollection of an ignominious death inflicted on one of the most energetic defenders of civil liberty and liberty of conscience. That which has, more than any thing else, contributed to this error, is the perseverance with which the eyes of posterity have been required to contemplate two facts, which are claimed to exhibit the sum and spirit of Savonarola's public life, namely, his having refused absolution to Lorenzo de' Medici at the point of death, unless he should first restore to his country its liberty, and the boldness with which he is said to have shaken off the authority of the Holy See. Without inquiring to what extent this twofold assertion is confirmed or disproved by the most authentic contemporary authorities, let us put ourselves at once at the point of view with which we are immediately concerned, and let us become spectators of that struggle at once so close, so dramatic, and so imposing which was maintained, in the presence of all Italy, by a simple monk against the spirit of his age. The object for which he strives is the restoration of the kingdom of Christ in the hearts, the intellect, and the imagination of the people, and to extend the advantages of the Redemption to all the faculties of man, and to all the works which they produce. The enemy which he combats is that Paganism, the mark of whose influence he finds impressed upon every thing,upon art as well as upon morals, upon opinions as well as upon conduct, upon the cloisters as well as upon the secular schools.
Read the rest here.
Further research and information on the English Reformation, English Catholic martyrs, and related topics by the author of SUPREMACY AND SURVIVAL: HOW CATHOLICS ENDURED THE ENGLISH REFORMATION
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