Wednesday 5 March 2025

150 Years of St Aloysius’ Church: (5) St Philip’s Chapel

In every Oratory there is place of devotion to our Holy Father, St Philip, who is our patron, spiritual father and a model of holiness and priestly life. He is known as the amabile santo, the lovable saint. His example of evangelical simplicity, as well as his zeal for bringing men and women to know Christ through his compassionate friendship and guidance, is an inspiration to us.

The painting of the saint which hangs above the altar was painted in Rome, a copy of an original by Guido Reni which hangs in St Philip’s rooms at the Roman Oratory. It was painted by Maria Gibberne (1802–1885) as a gift for her friend, Cardinal Newman. The carved, gilt-wood altar frontal is Italian, and was part of the collection of furnishings bequeathed to the church by Hartwell de la Garde Grissell. For St Philip things of beauty were important in the worship of God, the source of all beauty, truth and goodness. They are both an act of reverence in themselves, and draw the heart and mind of worshippers upward to God.

It is quite fitting that the two confessionals are so close by, since it is in the confessional that St Philip did so much to help people grow in holiness:

In those times men lived very remissly in matters of devotion; most people thought it enough to confess once a year. Philip, regarding this as the cause of perdition to a great number of souls, put forward all his industry to induce people to frequent the Sacraments, and other spiritual exercises, but, above all, confession. He was one of the first aided by the holy men already mentioned, who revived in Rome the practice of frequent confession and communion. In order to obtain this object of his desire more easily, he abandoned every other care, and gave himself entirely to hearing confessions. He got a number of good penitents together; and seeing the fruit which he obtained by this means, he was not content to employ the day in the confessional, but gave up a considerable part of the night to it as well. Before sunrise in the morning he had generally confessed a good number of persons in his own chamber; for whose convenience he used to leave the key under the door of his apartments, that they might get in whenever they pleased. When he had retired to the solitude of his room, he still confessed every one who came; but this was not enough for his zeal and charity; if he was at prayer, he broke off instantly; if he was at meals, he rose from table the moment he heard that any one was seeking him in order to confess. When the church was opened at daybreak he went down there, and entered the confessional, and never left it except to say Mass, which he usually did about midday, or for some other cogent reason, always leaving word whither he was gone. If it happened that no penitents came, he remained near the confessional, reading, or telling his beads, or saying office; and sometimes he walked up and down outside the door of the church, expecting people, and that he might be the more readily seen; so that any one could find him with the utmost ease at almost any hour.

In a word, he had such a spiritual relish in hearing confessions, that he said himself, “To do nothing, beyond merely sitting alone in the confessional is an immense pleasure to me;” and this, as well as other sensible heavenly consolations, was bestowed upon him, as he himself declared, in order that he might be able to endure the fatigues caused by the confessional.

From ‘The Life of St Philip Neri, Apostle of Rome’ by Father Pietro Giacomo Bacci

Frequent, regular confession is one of the surest means for growing closer to God. The Church requires us to go to confession and receive Holy Communion at least once a year. Most people can see quite rightly that we should want to receive Communion far more frequently than that, but not everyone has drawn the same conclusion about confession. As we begin this penitential season today, perhaps one of our Lenten resolutions could be to receive this wonderful sacrament of forgiveness every month.