11 saints who had pets or who befriended animals
ACI Prensa Staff, Aug 31, 2025 / 09:00 am
Throughout history, many saints have been remembered not only for their dedication to God and others but also for the special relationship they had with animals. An obedient crow, a wolf that became tame, birds that accompanied their owners — they are all part of stories that reflect the harmony between holiness and creation.
Here are some of those saints:
1. St. Francis of Assisi
According to tradition, in the Italian city of Gubbio, there was a wolf that was terrorizing the townspeople. Given the situation, St. Francis wanted to help and went to the place where the beast was.
When the wolf lunged at the friar, the saint made the sign of the cross. Immediately, the beast calmed down and rested its head in the friar’s hands. He then offered him a deal: If he promised not to attack people or animals again, the townspeople would feed him and he would never go hungry again. The wolf accepted the pact.
It is said that the animal lived for two years. When he died of old age, the entire town mourned him.
The Church of St. Francis “of the Peace” was built on the site of this encounter. In the church’s crypt is displayed a stone sarcophagus that, according to tradition, is from the tomb of the wolf.
2. St. Anthony the Abbot
St. Anthony the Abbot is also invoked as the patron saint of animals. One story tells of two lions appearing along with other animals who helped him dig the grave where the saint buried St. Paul the Hermit.
The second tradition tells of a wild boar living near his hermitage and giving birth to blind piglets. Moved by compassion, St. Anthony cured them, and from then on, the mother followed him as a faithful guardian, never leaving his side.
3. St. Pio of Pietrelcina
St. Pio of Pietrelcina is also remembered for a unique event involving animals. According to what Father Jean Marie Benjamin told ACI Stampa, CNA’s Italian-language news partner, the friar’s reputation had such an impact on him that he decided to travel to San Giovanni Rotondo to meet him.
There, he attended one of his Masses at dawn. He recounted that the saint was bent over by the pain of the stigmata, in a wheelchair, yet all the faithful looked upon him with great emotion.
He described experiencing as something that “was impossible to describe. There are no words or expressions to accurately state what was happening,” because at the moment of the consecration, the birds perched in the church windows who had been chattering away suddenly fell silent, as if participating in the mystery.
4. St. Seraphim of Sarov
The Russian Orthodox saint was a great ascetic who spent long years in solitude in the forest, devoted to prayer and penance. He often fed the wild animals that came to him.
The website of the Orthodox Church in America relates that among these animals, there was an amazing bear that became his companion and docilely obeyed him. The saint fed the animal with bread and, according to tradition, even gave it errands.
Those who visited him were amazed to see the ferocious animal transformed into a gentle servant of the man of God.
5. St. John Bosco
In the “Memoirs of the Oratory of St. Francis de Sales,” an autobiography of St. John Bosco, he recounted the mysterious companionship of a large dog he called “Grey,” an animal that always appeared friendly and accompanied him on several occasions during his journeys.
The saint relates that on several occasions Grey protected him from real danger. Once, when two men tried to attack and gag him on a lonely road, the dog suddenly emerged, leaped at the attackers, and managed to drive them off, remaining by the priest’s side until he was safe.
Don Bosco always considered him “a providential presence in many of the dangerous situations I found myself in.”
6. St. Francis Xavier
According to tradition, in 1546, St. Francis Xavier was traveling to Indonesia when, during the journey, a storm caused the crucifix he was wearing around his neck to fall into the sea.
Upon reaching the island, he was walking along the beach when a crab emerged from the sea holding the crucifix in its claws. The creature carried it to St. Francis Xavier who then retrieved it. The saint knelt and thanked God for this miracle.
According to the website of the Pontifical Mission Societies of Spain, the crucifix remained with St. Francis Xavier during his missionary work and after his death, it was taken to various places in Europe until it arrived in Spain, where it is currently preserved. A bronze crab figure was added to the crucifix, commemorating the miraculous event.
7. St. Gerasimus
St. Gerasimus was a hermit who traveled to the Holy Land to dedicate his life to prayer and solitude.
According to the book “Lives of the Saints,” while on the banks of the Jordan River, he saw a limping lion with a thorn stuck in its paw. St. Gerasimus proceeded to remove the thorn. After being healed by the saint, the animal became his loyal and inseparable companion, helping him with the tasks of the monastery.
The research website on saints, Santi e Beati (Saints and Blesseds), states that the lion remained with St. Gerasimus for about five years, and when the saint died, the animal was so distraught that it collapsed dead on his grave.
It is also noted that, likely due to the similarity of their names, the lion episode has also been attributed to St. Jerome.
8. St. Eutychius
St. Eutychius, originally called Placidus, was a Roman general who was very fond of hunting. According to the book “Lives of the Saints,” while chasing a deer in the mountains between Tivoli and Palestrina, he saw the figure of Jesus Christ on the cross in the animal’s antlers and heard a voice calling him by name. This prodigious vision instantly converted him to Christianity.
In Sant’Eustachio Basilica in Rome, the façade is crowned by a deer’s head, commemorating the vision that transformed his life.
9. St. Benedict
St. Gregory the Great tells in his “Dialogues” a story about St. Benedict, who used to feed a raven that came down from the forest every day to receive bread from his hands.
On one occasion, an enemy tried to kill the saint by sending him poisoned bread. Benedict, realizing the danger, threw the bread to the raven and ordered it to take it far away, to a place where no one could find it.
The bird hesitated, cawed, and fluttered, but finally obeyed: It took the bread in its beak, hid it, and returned later, as always, to receive its usual ration.
10. St. Roch
St. Roch dedicated his life to caring for the victims of the plague in Italy and France, curing many with the sign of the cross. After contracting the disease, he retreated to a cave so as not to be a burden, where a dog brought him bread daily and licked his sores until the animal’s owner discovered him and cared for him.
After recovering, he returned to helping the sick but was unjustly imprisoned and died in prison. His tomb became a place of miracles, and he was soon invoked throughout Europe as the patron saint of those afflicted with the plague, always represented with his faithful dog.
11. St. Martin de Porres
St. Martin de Porres considered animals to be God’s creatures and showed tenderness even toward the tiniest ones: He patiently endured mosquito bites, saying that they too had the right to food, and on another occasion, he talked some mice into leaving the convent’s pantry, sending them peacefully to the garden.
Among his best-known stories is the one in which he brought a dog, a cat, and a mouse together so they could share the same plate in harmony.
This story was published on Oct. 4, 2017, by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner, and has been updated for republication. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.