| Obeying doctor's orders, Alphonsus later departed from Naples for a bit of rest and
recreation in the hills above the Amalfi coast. There, despite his work in the slums of
Naples, he was shocked by the spiritual abandonment of the poor mountaineers and began
catechizing them in the small chapel of Holy Mary of the Mountains. After returning to
Naples, he continued to worry about these poor souls, wondering where were the priests who
could help them. 
Redemptorist Founder
After he returned to Naples, a woman entered his life! Sister Marie Celeste Crostarosa
(1696-1755) was a Neapolitan just one month younger than Alphonsus. Their encounter
brought about another radical change for Alphonsus. Celeste, a former Carmelite now living
in a Visitation convent at Scala, began to claim divine revelations concerning the
founding of a new institute for women, whose Rule she was to write under divine
inspiration. Gossip about the Scala visionary was rife in Naples, and news of her growing
conflicts with the convent's spiritual director, Thomas Falcoia, spread. Falcoia was
Alphonsus' director as well as Celeste's, and he asked Liguori to examine the troubled
convent.
Alphonsus was impressed with Celeste and concluded that her project was indeed the work of
God. What he did not know then was that within a year she would claim she had received
divinely revealed plans for a new missionary institute of men, of whom Liguori was to be
the founder. But his scrupulosity and his reluctance to make sudden decisions held him
back, and Alphonsus spent almost a year consulting theologians in Naples before he finally
accepted his role as founder of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer, which took its
first shaky steps on November 9, 1732. Immediately, Liguori found himself caught in the
middle of a multipronged conflict involving Sister Celeste and Falcoia (now a bishop), who
was revising Celeste's Rules for the men and the women. An interfering lay theologian also
added fire to the emotional conflagration!
Liguori survived the birth pangs of his
new institute; Celeste was not as fortunate. By 1747 the Redemptorists numbered thirty-six
members and were in great demand throughout the kingdom. They had a reputation of nearness
to the people, a popular and solid preaching style, and a benign pastoral approach in the
confessional. Fifteen years later the Congregation had grown to one hundred and fifty
members.
On Easter Monday, 1733, Celeste was dismissed from the convent at Scala as the result
of a conscience stand against the changes that Falcoia had made in her Rule. She also
objected to his formalistic style of spiritual direction and to what she considered
unreasonable demands for total compliance with his authority. After a hegira (journey to a
more congenial place) to convents at Amalfi, Roccapiemonte, and Pareti, she finally
settled at Foggia and established her own convent according to her original, unadulterated
Rule. She died in1755. |
During his stint as rector major and itinerant missionary, Liguori joined the struggle
against moral rigorism. The battle had raged between two prevalent systems of morality,
the Dominicans supporting the rigorist stance (probabiliorism) and the Jesuits defending
laxism (probabilism). Liguori's approach avoided the extremes of each theory, and he
published his monumental Moral Theology, as well as the eminently pastoral Guide
for Confessors. He also published a number of apologias, including The Moderate Use
of the Probable Opinion. Although he had to walk a tightrope between the rigorists and
the laxists, lest his own Congregation be suppressed, as were the Jesuits, Alphonsus'
moral teachings were vindicated by the Holy See during his lifetime. After his death, Rome
gave its seal of approval, declaring him a Doctor of the Church and the patron of
moralists and confessors.His literary output, however, was not limited to moral
theology. His pen was as apostolic as his preaching. His one hundred and eleven published
works were directed to every category of Christians: bishops, priests, religious, and
laity. His themes were solidly pastoral and his topics diverse. A sample of titles
includes The Eternal Truths; Reflections for Bishops; A Précis of Christian Doctrine;
Prayer, the Great Means of Salvation; Visits to the
Blessed Sacrament and Mary; Considerations on a Religious Vocation; Conformity to the
Divine Will; The True Spouse of Christ; The Dignity and Duties of the Priest; Preparation
for Death; and Against the Errors of the Deists and Materialists. Liguori's
writing spanned fifty productive years.
Bishop
In March 1762, Clement XIII appointed Alphonsus bishop of St.Agatha of the Goths. The
diocesewhich was near Naples, economically stable, and populated with clergy and
religious was considered a "plum". Liguori was unhappy with the appointment,
however, and respectfully asked to be spared the bishopric. But as with his role as
founder, so too with the episcopacy; "holy obedience" won the day. The Pope gave
his final decision in March, on the feast of Saint Joseph. Liguori viewed his appointment
as a punishment for his sins!
The Redemptorists immediately petitioned the Holy See to allow Liguori to remain rector
major of the Congregation, assisted by a vicar general. Though the request was granted, it
later led to conflicts and dissension within the Congregation.
Alphonsus took possession of his diocese in July 1762. Despite his poor health, he
threw himself into this new ministry with vigor. His first order of business was to reform
the serious ecclesiastical abuses in the diocese, beginning with the renewal of the
seminary and a spiritual rehabilitation of the clergy and religious. Second, he attacked
the practice of public concubinage, even soliciting the aid of civil authorities. He
organized general missions for the diocese, utilizing his own Redemptorist missionaries
and those of the Propaganda. He also established social welfare programs for the poor,
even opening his episcopal palace to the needy.
Recurring attacks of ill health and a growing number of complaints against his reformist
zeal, however, prompted Alphonsus to offer his resignation several times. Finally, in May
1775, Pius VI accepted his resignation.
Final Years
Alphonsus returned to Pagani "to prepare for death," as he described it! Here
he was to suffer the biggest disappointment of his life. The Congregation's Rule, which
Benedict XIV had approved in 1749, had never received royal approval, making the continued
existence of the Congregation precarious at best. Thus, in 1779 two Redemptorists, Fathers
Cimino and Caione, were sent to negotiate with the royal court for approval. The
eighty-three-year-old Liguori,deaf, practically blind, and unable to read or write, put
complete trust in his emissaries. Unfortunately, they made extraordinary concessions to
the regalist authorities, watering down the original papal Rule to the point of
unrecognizability. The almost senile rector major was duped into signing this governmental
Regolamento. The vows of religion were changed to mere oaths, the vow of poverty
disappeared altogether, the oath of perseverance was omitted, and the local bishops were
given the power over the internal affairs of the Congregation. General Chapters were wiped
out of the text completely.
This document was delivered to Liguori in March
1780. When the radical changes were explained to him, he went into a severe depression.
The Pope was chagrined at the Congregation's acceptance of the Regolamento, which so
blatantly contradicted the papal Rule, and dismissed Alphonsus and his Neapolitan
confreres from the Congregation. Only the Redemptorists within thePapal States continued
as canonically approved Redemptorists.
Six years after this tragedy, on August 1, 1787, Liguori died at Pagani still
technically outside the Congregation he had founded. The process for his canonization
began a few months after his death. His virtues were declared "heroic" in 1807.
Nine years later he was beatified and in 1839 he was canonized. In March 1871,
Pius IX declared him a Doctor of the Church, and in 1950 Pius XII declared
Alphonsus the official patron of moralists and of confessors.
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