Saint profile
St. Benildus
1805–1862
Associated with Healing, Children, Students; patronage includes Patron of Christian educators.
Biography and devotion
St. Benildus: life, patronage, and devotion
St. Benildus was born Pierre Romançon in 1805 at Thuret in the Auvergne region of France. He is honored as a patron of Christian educators and students, especially those formed by the Brothers of the Christian Schools. His life was not dramatic in the worldly sense. Its power came from decades of faithful teaching, prayer, discipline, and love for the young.
He entered the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools as a teenager and received the name Brother Benildus. The France in which he taught was still feeling the long effects of revolution, social change, and religious disruption. Catholic education was not merely instruction in reading or arithmetic; it was a way of rebuilding Christian habits in families and villages. Most of his life was spent in schools in rural France, especially at Saugues. There he taught boys, prepared them for the sacraments, formed altar servers, encouraged vocations, and made the classroom a place of prayer and moral formation.
Former students remembered his patience, order, reverence at Mass, and deep devotion to the Eucharist and the Blessed Virgin Mary. He was strict when needed, but his discipline was fatherly rather than harsh. His charism was the sanctification of ordinary duties. He corrected handwriting, taught catechism, supervised lessons, and guided boys through adolescence with a steady sense that every child had a soul to be saved. Numerous vocations to the priesthood and religious life were later traced to his influence.
After his death in 1862, devotion grew among those who remembered his school and among the Christian Brothers. Healings and favors were attributed to his intercession, and he was canonized by Pope Paul VI in 1967. St. Benildus shows that the work of Catholic education can be hidden and repetitive yet profoundly fruitful. A teacher who never founded a movement or held public office became a saint because he gave generations of children the habits of prayer, honesty, reverence, and perseverance.
At a glance
- Life dates
- 1805–1862
- Feast day
- August 13
- Patronage
- Patron of Christian educators
Relic in the Chasing Saints collection
A relic of St. Benildus is present in the Chasing Saints Relic Collection. Private registry details, certificate IDs, provenance notes, and storage information are intentionally not shown publicly.
Reported favors
