Like most of   us, Cajetan seemed headed for an “ordinary” life—first as a   lawyer, then as a priest engaged in the work of the Roman Curia.   His life took   a characteristic turn when he joined the Oratory of Divine Love in Rome, a group   devoted to piety and charity, shortly after his ordination at 36. When he was 42   he founded a hospital for incurables at Venice. At Vicenza, he joined a   “disreputable” religious community that consisted only of men of the   lowest stations of life—and was roundly censured by his friends, who thought   his action was a reflection on his family. He sought out the sick and poor of the   town and served them. 
The greatest need of the time was the reformation of   a Church that was “sick in head and members.” Cajetan and three   friends decided that the best road to reformation lay in reviving the spirit and   zeal of the clergy. (One of them later became Paul IV.) Together they founded a   congregation known as the Theatines (from Teate [Chieti] where their first   superior-bishop had his see). They managed to escape to Venice after their house   in Rome was wrecked when Emperor Charles V’s troops sacked Rome in 1527. The   Theatines were outstanding among the Catholic reform movements that took shape   before the Protestant Reformation. He founded a monte de pieta   (“mountain [or fund] of piety”) in Naples—one of many   charitable, nonprofit credit organizations that lent money on the security of   pawned objects. The purpose was to help the poor and protect them against usurers.   Cajetan’s little organization ultimately became the Bank of Naples, with   great changes in policy.
                                   
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