
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


It’s the Feast of St. Romuald, 1st Sat, 3rd Class, with the color of White. In this episode: the meditation: “Vigilance and Confidence”, today’s news from the Church: “Press Release from the General House: Meeting in Rome”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.
Saint Romuald was a restless soul whom God transformed into one of the great renewers of Western monastic life. Born around 951 into a noble family in Ravenna, Romuald grew up surrounded by privilege, politics, and violence. His early years were shaped less by prayer than by ambition, and the turning point of his life came suddenly and painfully. When his father killed a relative in a duel, Romuald was shaken to the core. Though not guilty himself, he felt complicit in the culture of honor and bloodshed that surrounded him. Seeking penance, he withdrew to a Benedictine monastery, expecting a temporary retreat. Instead, he found a calling that would claim his entire life.
Monastic life awakened something fierce in Romuald. He embraced fasting, silence, and prayer with intensity, often exceeding the moderation of those around him. His zeal made him difficult. He was dissatisfied with lax observance and frustrated by compromise. Rather than settle, he became a wanderer, moving from monastery to monastery, desert to forest, seeking a form of life that combined deep solitude with genuine fidelity. Romuald believed that the heart of monasticism was conversion, not comfort, and he refused to let routine replace repentance.
Over time, his vision took shape. Romuald began gathering small communities of hermits who lived alone in cells but came together for prayer and obedience. This way of life reached its fullest expression at Camaldoli in the Apennines, where solitude and community were held in deliberate balance. Romuald did not write a formal rule, but his example became a living one. He taught that silence must be filled with Scripture, that solitude must be guarded by humility, and that obedience was the surest protection against spiritual illusion.
Romuald was not only a hermit but a reformer. Popes, emperors, and bishops sought his counsel, though he avoided courts whenever possible. He challenged corrupt clergy, corrected powerful figures without fear, and encouraged conversion through personal example rather than argument. Despite his austerity, those who knew him spoke of his gentleness and compassion, especially toward sinners. His severity was always directed inward first.
He died around 1027 after decades of prayer, travel, and quiet influence, leaving behind the Camaldolese tradition and a renewed vision of contemplative life in the West. His sanctity was not serene by temperament but purified through struggle, making his witness all the more compelling.
Tradition honors Saint Romuald as a patron of hermits and monastic reformers. His feast on February 7 invites reflection on conversion that does not end, and on the courage required to seek God beyond comfort.
Saint Romuald, restless seeker turned father of silence, pray for us.
By SSPX US District, Angelus Press5
66 ratings
It’s the Feast of St. Romuald, 1st Sat, 3rd Class, with the color of White. In this episode: the meditation: “Vigilance and Confidence”, today’s news from the Church: “Press Release from the General House: Meeting in Rome”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.
Saint Romuald was a restless soul whom God transformed into one of the great renewers of Western monastic life. Born around 951 into a noble family in Ravenna, Romuald grew up surrounded by privilege, politics, and violence. His early years were shaped less by prayer than by ambition, and the turning point of his life came suddenly and painfully. When his father killed a relative in a duel, Romuald was shaken to the core. Though not guilty himself, he felt complicit in the culture of honor and bloodshed that surrounded him. Seeking penance, he withdrew to a Benedictine monastery, expecting a temporary retreat. Instead, he found a calling that would claim his entire life.
Monastic life awakened something fierce in Romuald. He embraced fasting, silence, and prayer with intensity, often exceeding the moderation of those around him. His zeal made him difficult. He was dissatisfied with lax observance and frustrated by compromise. Rather than settle, he became a wanderer, moving from monastery to monastery, desert to forest, seeking a form of life that combined deep solitude with genuine fidelity. Romuald believed that the heart of monasticism was conversion, not comfort, and he refused to let routine replace repentance.
Over time, his vision took shape. Romuald began gathering small communities of hermits who lived alone in cells but came together for prayer and obedience. This way of life reached its fullest expression at Camaldoli in the Apennines, where solitude and community were held in deliberate balance. Romuald did not write a formal rule, but his example became a living one. He taught that silence must be filled with Scripture, that solitude must be guarded by humility, and that obedience was the surest protection against spiritual illusion.
Romuald was not only a hermit but a reformer. Popes, emperors, and bishops sought his counsel, though he avoided courts whenever possible. He challenged corrupt clergy, corrected powerful figures without fear, and encouraged conversion through personal example rather than argument. Despite his austerity, those who knew him spoke of his gentleness and compassion, especially toward sinners. His severity was always directed inward first.
He died around 1027 after decades of prayer, travel, and quiet influence, leaving behind the Camaldolese tradition and a renewed vision of contemplative life in the West. His sanctity was not serene by temperament but purified through struggle, making his witness all the more compelling.
Tradition honors Saint Romuald as a patron of hermits and monastic reformers. His feast on February 7 invites reflection on conversion that does not end, and on the courage required to seek God beyond comfort.
Saint Romuald, restless seeker turned father of silence, pray for us.

5,755 Listeners

4,038 Listeners

6,794 Listeners

695 Listeners

406 Listeners

2,622 Listeners

361 Listeners

938 Listeners

310 Listeners

568 Listeners

449 Listeners

1,217 Listeners

784 Listeners

857 Listeners

120 Listeners