Saint Hilary of Poitiers
The collect for today, the Feast of Saint Hilary (c. 315-368), Bishop of Poitiers, Doctor of the Church (source):
Eternal Father,
whose servant Hilary
steadfastly confessed thy Son Jesus Christ to be true God and true man:
We beseech thee to keep us firmly grounded in this faith;
that we may rejoice to behold his face in heaven
who humbled himself to bear our form upon earth,
even the same thy Son Jesus Christ our Lord,
who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
The Epistle: 1 St John 2:18-25
The Gospel: St Luke 12:8-12
Hilary was born in Poitiers, Gaul, of wealthy pagan parents. After receiving a thorough education in Latin classics, he became an orator. He also married and had a daughter. At the age of about 35, he rejected his former paganism and became a Christian through a long process of study and thought. Robert Louis Wilken describes his path to conversion in The Spirit of Early Christian Thought (p. 86):
[Hilary] found himself turning to more spiritual pursuits. In his words he wished to pursue a life that was “worthy of the understanding that had been given us by God.” Like Justin [Martyr] he began to read the Bible, and one passage that touched his soul was Exodus 3:14, where God the creator, “testifying about himself,” said, “I am who I am.” For Hilary this brief utterance penetrated more deeply into the mystery of the divine nature than anything he had heard or read from the philosophers. Shortly thereafter he was baptized and received into the church.
Around 353 he was chosen bishop of Poitiers and became an outspoken champion of orthodoxy against the Arians. St Augustine praised him as “the illustrious teacher of the churches”. St Jerome wrote that Hilary was “a most eloquent man, and the trumpet of the Latins against the Arians”. Hilary became known as “Athanasius of the West”.