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After several years of preparation, Baronius was ordained a priest in 1564. As a sign of his renunciation of worldly ambition, he burned his doctoral diploma. His early priesthood coincided with the initial development of what would become the Congregation of the Oratory. In 1588, he finally began to publish the Annals, which, along with his revision of the Roman Martyrology, brought him wide acclaim and a scholarly reputation. However, Philip kept his young protégée humble through mortifications and continued involvement in apostolic work. Baronius continued to grow in his desire for perfection through prayer and penance.
In 1593, Father Philip hand-picked Baronius as his successor, and he was unanimously elected Superior. The following year he became papal confessor to Clement VIII. After Philip’s death, Baronius reluctantly accepted the title of Protonotary Apostolic, was created Cardinal by Clement VIII in 1596, and served as Vatican Librarian from 1597. When Clement VIII died in 1605, Baronius narrowly escaped being elected pope, and only avoided election because he had angered King Philip II of Spain, the strongest Catholic monarch in Europe.
Desiring to die a simple priest, Baronius returned to the Oratory in 1606, and when he died on June 30, 1607, thirty cardinals attended his funeral. Humble even in death, Baronius is buried at S. Maria in Vallicella with only a simple plaque. Pope Benedict XIV proclaimed him Venerable on January 12, 1745.
Adapted from the biography of Baronius given in Italian on the website of the Procurator General, www.oratoriosanfilippo.org/baronio.html.
Also consulted: Peterson, J.B. (1907). Venerable Cesare Baronius. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved July 2, 2008 from New Advent: http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02304b.htm
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