Saint Pius X , the son of a shoemaker and postman

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Rob2

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St Pius X
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Celebrated on August 21st
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Born in 1835, he was the son of a shoemaker and postman who lived near Treviso in Italy.

He went to the local village school before joining the seminary near Padua. He spent the next 17 years in parish work before being appointed chancellor of the diocese in Treviso. Nine years later, he became bishop of Mantua, then patriarch of Venice and cardinal.

He was elected Pope in 1903 and took as his motto: ‘to restore all things in Christ’.

Many of his achievements realised this ideal. He encouraged frequent Communion, allowed children as young as seven to receive the Eucharist, reformed church music encouraging Gregorian chant, reformed Canon Law and reorganised the Roman Congregations.

In the wider field, he redirected Catholic Action, giving it a deeper base than a merely socio-political one. In the field of doctrine he condemned the error of Modernism in his encyclical Pascendi and the decree Lamentabeli. Unfortunately, this led some conservative factions to criticise a number of eminent Catholic scholars and it took years to recover from the crisis.

In the field of church-state relations in France, Pius sacrificed church property for the sake of independence from state control. In France he condemned the extremes of the liberal and conservative political thought.

He found some aspects of the Vatican’s wealth and ceremony profoundly distasteful.

Pius X saw his tireless efforts to avert war frustrated, and died on 20 August 1914, with a reputation for miracles, simplicity and poverty, having written: “I was born poor, I have lived poor, and I want to die poor.”
(from ICN)
 
“To restore all things In Christ”

Pope St. Pius X, Pray for us!

(one of my favorite saints! :smiling_face_with_three_hearts:)
 
He was also the son of a Polish immigrant.
This is a myth. Here’s a polish language article from a publication of the Museum of Polish History which explains the research done. The google translate to English does a pretty good job. An excerpt:
An expert from the University of Padua, a member of the Pontifical Committee for Historical Studies and a biographer of Pius X, prof. Gianpaolo Romanato decided, however, that on the basis of the documents examined by Polish and Italian experts, it should be “without a shadow of a doubt” concluded that Pius X’s family came from Italy.

This was shown, among others, by research also present on Thursday in Opole, prof. Quirino Bortolato. During his presentation, he argued that Italy has a rich bibliography and a number of archival documents regarding Pius X and his family. In the publication, he stated that the information gathered by him confirmed that the Sart family had lived in Veneto (Italy) at least from the beginning of the 18th century. As he emphasized, the hypotheses about Pius X’s Silesian origin “should be finally denied.”
 
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