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  1. Sep 3, 2016 · Pope Gregory I is now known as Saint Gregory the Great. He is “great” because he not only had a major influence upon the people of his time, both religiously and politically, but also because his influence and writings solidified the direction that the Church would take after him.

  2. Sep 3, 2024 · St. Gregory the Great, one of the most influential Popes in the history of the Church, was born in Rome around 540 AD into a prominent patrician family. His father, Gordianus, was a wealthy senator, and his mother, Silvia, would later be canonized a saint.

    • From Prefect to Monk
    • A Pope For A Dire Time
    • A Missionary Heart
    • Servant of The Servants of God

    Gregory was born around 540 A.D. into worldly prestige – his family belonged to the Roman nobility and his father was prefect, or mayor, of the city. He was also heir to a Christianity profoundly lived, for his mother and aunt are saints. The city into which he was born, however, was suffering. In 542, the plague wiped out a third of the Italian po...

    Gregory had too many talents for others to forget, however. In 579, Pope Pelagius II asked him to become the papal ambassador to the Emperor in Constantinople. Reluctantly, Gregory agreed. When he returned home six years later, he found Rome in a dire state. In 589, a flood destroyed the city’s granaries. Refugees were pouring in from invasions to ...

    The Pope who had a heart for the suffering had a heart wide open to those who did not yet know God. Before he was Pope, Gregory had once passed through the marketplace and seen some fair-skinned, fair-haired young slaves. Struck by their appearance, he asked where they were from. “They are Angles,” he was told, from Britain. “Not Angles but angels!...

    Gregory’s heart for the suffering did not disappear with the end of the famine. The Pope was known to invite the poor regularly to his own table, sharing his meals with them. The Church’s lands at the time generated considerable revenue, and Gregory kept meticulous track of it – so that he could give it all away. For the spiritually poor, he preach...

  3. Oct 9, 2024 · Saint Gregory the Great, pope from 590 to 604, considered the founder of the medieval papacy, which exercised both secular and spiritual power. Both a writer and a reformer, he was the fourth and final of the traditional Latin Fathers of the Church and expounded a sacramental spirituality.

  4. Gregory of Tours tells us that in grammar, rhetoric and dialectic he was so skilful as to be thought second to none in all Rome, and it seems certain also that he must have gone through a course of legal studies. Not least among the educating influences was the religious atmosphere of his home.

  5. Jul 11, 2005 · Learn about the remarkable legacy of Pope Saint Gregory the Great and his role in shaping Western Civilization.

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  7. 5 days ago · Who is St. Gregory the Great? Gregory was the son of a wealthy Sicilian who owned large estates in Sicily and a mansion in Rome. It is reported that Gregory was the best student of grammar, logic, and dialectic in the city of Rome and also did a course in legal studies.