February 27th 7th century

Saint Baldomer

Galmier

Locksmith and subdeacon in Lyon

Death
Vers le milieu du VIIe siècle (entre 642 et 660) (naturelle)
Categories
subdeacon , artisan , confessor

A 7th-century locksmith from Lyon originally from Forez, Baldomer (or Galmier) was distinguished by his charity toward the poor and his piety. Noticed by Abbot Vivence, he entered the monastery of Saint-Just and was ordained a subdeacon despite his humility. He is famous for his constant expression 'Always thanks be to God'.

Guided reading

4 reading sections

SAINT BALDOMER OR SAINT GALMIER,

Life 01 / 04

Youth and life as a locksmith

A native of Forez, Galmier settled in Lyon as a locksmith, leading a life of evangelical poverty and active charity toward the most destitute.

Baldemer or Galmier Baldemer ou Galmier Locksmith from Lyon who became a subdeacon and saint. , born in France, in the region of Fo pays de Forez Region of origin of the saint. rez, withdrew to L Lyon Episcopal see of Saint Eucher. yon in his youth, and served God there with great zeal and fidelity. He lived poorly and in great simplicity, always occupied with prayer and other good works, practicing the trade of a locksmith, always feeding some poor people with him from what the work of his hands produced, and sometimes giving them even his tools when he had nothing else.

The favorite word he had continually on his lips was: Always thanks be to God, encouraging all those with whom he had dealings to repeat it often with him to remain in perpetual gratitude toward God. He was upright, sincere, obliging, affable, prompt to do all the good that depended on him with an inviolable purity of soul and body. He was very applied to reading, especially that of the Holy Scripture, and he lived in a general mortification of the senses. This did not prevent him from being very cheerful in conversation, but always very edifying, fertile in ingenious ways to lead everyone to bless God continually, skillful in blaming vice without wounding the vicious, learned even and pleasant in his discussions: which appeared mainly after he had retired into a monastery.

Life 02 / 04

Meeting with Abbot Vivence

Noticed for his piety by Abbot Vivence at the village of Ouvac, Galmier is invited to join the monastery of Saint-Just to dedicate himself to prayer.

Abbot Vivence, who then governed the monastery of Saint-Just in Lyon, and who was later bishop of that city, having gone one day to the village of Ouvac or Auditiac to pray in a church where there was some public devotion, saw our Saint there with an exterior so poor, yet at the same time so grave and recollected, that he did not wish to return without knowing and speaking with him. He had no difficulty in judging that he was a great servant of God; and, without allowing him to return to the forge, he took him with him and lodged him in his monastery of Saint-Just, so that he could attend with fewer distractions to prayer and the meditation of divine truths. Saint Galmie r was not a b Saint Galmier Locksmith from Lyon who became a subdeacon and saint. urden to the house; but he lived there on the alms of pious people who had known his holiness in the world, and he was content with so little that he seemed to receive these charities only to distribute them to the poor.

Life 03 / 04

The Subdiaconate

Despite his resistance out of humility, he was ordained a subdeacon by Bishop Gaudry, a rank he would hold for the rest of his life, illustrating it with miracles.

Bishop Gaudry, L'évêque Gaudry Bishop of Lyon who ordained Galmier as a subdeacon. predecessor of Vivence, was so moved by the eminence of his virtue that, to procure a new ornament for his clergy, he made him a subdeacon and desired that he have a share in the ministry of the altars. The humility of our Saint had never before faced such a severe trial as on this occasion. He had recourse to tears and the most pressing supplications to oblige his bishop to leave him in the rank of the laity, of which he believed himself the last before God, just as he had always affected to be in the eyes of men. He was listened to by no one; but he took such just measures to prevent them from raising him any higher that they were obliged to leave him for the rest of his days in his subdiaconate, where God made known how pleasing he was to Him through the power of the miracles He communicated to him, and which He deigned to continue after his death, to confirm the opinion that had been held of his holiness during his life.

Cult 04 / 04

Death and fate of the relics

Dying around the middle of the 7th century, his relics were largely destroyed by the Huguenots in the 16th century, with the exception of an arm preserved in Saint-Galmier.

It is commonly believed that he died on the 27th of February, the day on which his name is marked in almost all the martyrologies that mention him. But the year is not precisely agreed upon, since it is generally believed that it was towards the middle of the 7th century, between 642 and 660. His body was buried in the church of Saint-Just, through the care of the abbot Vivence; and his relics were always held in very great veneration there by the people, until, in the 16th century, they were removed and scattered along with those of several other Saints by Huguenots Group that ransacked Die and destroyed the saint's relics in 1567. the Huguenots. So that there remains only an arm that had been detached from the body, and which was already kept at Saint-Gal Saint-Galmier en Lyonnais Town named after the saint, where his arm is preserved. mier in Lyonnais, a town that bears his name, and which is a day's journey from Lyo n, on t Baillet French hagiographer, author of the Vies des Saints. he side of the Loire.

Baillet.

Official source Les Petits Bollandistes, by Mgr Paul GUÉRIN, chamberlain to His Holiness Pius IX.

Annexes & related entities

Structured data for exploration: events, miracles, quotes, places, attributes, patronages, and important entities cited in the text.

Key Events

  1. Settled in Lyon in his youth
  2. Worked as a locksmith
  3. Meeting with Abbot Vivence at the village of Ouvac
  4. Entered the monastery of Saint-Just
  5. Ordination as subdeacon by Bishop Gaudry
  6. Died c. 660
  7. Dispersion of relics by the Huguenots in the 16th century

Miracles

  1. Miracles performed during his lifetime and after his death to confirm his sanctity

Quotes

  • Always thanks be to God Oral tradition reported by Baillet

Important entities

Ranked by relevance in the text