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Saint profile

St. Dominic of the Mother of God (Dominic Barberi)

1792–1849

Associated with Conversion, Family, Priests; patronage includes Passionists, converts, England, ecumenical return to Catholic faith.

ConversionFamilyPriests
Life dates1792–1849
Feast dayAugust 27
PatronagePassionists, converts, England, ecumenical return to Catholic faith

Biography and devotion

St. Dominic of the Mother of God (Dominic Barberi): life, patronage, and devotion

Blessed Dominic of the Mother of God, born Domenico Barberi in 1792 near Viterbo in the Papal States, was a Passionist priest and missionary to England. He grew up poor, lost his parents young, and worked as a shepherd. Without a formal early education, he nevertheless developed a remarkable mind and an intense interior life.

During the upheavals of the Napoleonic period, Dominic came into contact with Passionists living in exile. He felt called to their congregation and also became convinced that God wanted him to preach in England, a mission that seemed unlikely for an Italian peasant. After entering the Passionists, he studied, taught theology, wrote spiritual and theological works, and waited many years before the English mission opened.

He arrived in England in 1841. The Catholic Church there was emerging from centuries of legal restriction and social suspicion. Dominic’s appearance, accent, poverty, and Passionist habit made him an easy target for mockery. He endured insults, stones, and anti-Catholic hostility with patience. He preached missions, heard confessions, founded houses, and showed a warmth that won hearts more effectively than argument alone.

His most famous act was receiving John Henry Newman into the Catholic Church at Littlemore on 9 October 1845. Newman, later a cardinal and saint, had asked for Dominic because he recognized in him the holiness and authority of a true Catholic missionary. Dominic heard his confession and received him into full communion, becoming forever linked with the Oxford Movement and the return of many English souls to Rome.

Dominic died suddenly at Reading in 1849. He was beatified by Pope St. Paul VI in 1963. His life joins poverty, learning, missionary courage, and patient love for England. He did not conquer by force of personality but by fidelity to the Passion of Christ, accepting rejection in order to open a path of mercy for converts and seekers.

The scene at Littlemore became famous because it joined humility on both sides: Newman, the brilliant Oxford scholar, knelt to confess, and Dominic, the weather-soaked missionary, received him with fatherly simplicity. The moment helped change the future of English Catholicism.

At a glance

Life dates
1792–1849
Feast day
August 27
Patronage
Passionists, converts, England, ecumenical return to Catholic faith

Relic in the Chasing Saints collection

A relic of St. Dominic of the Mother of God (Dominic Barberi) is present in the Chasing Saints Relic Collection. Private registry details, certificate IDs, provenance notes, and storage information are intentionally not shown publicly.

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