At the monastery of Mount Cassino, Benedict of Nursia (d. 547 AD) wrote a rule to govern the common life of monks and thereby founded the Benedictine Order.
Several miracles were attributed to Benedict including the event depicted on the capital in which the saint drives a demon from a monk.

Inscribed on the impost: A man of God, Benedict, struck the monk with his rod, and the Lord healed him through his agent.
The inscription and the scene order do not match.

East View: The monastery of Mount Cassino
Inscribed: VIR DEI : BENEDICTVS VIRGA

South View: The companions of the possessed monk.
Inscribed: PERCVSSIT : MONACHVM

West View: A demon enters a monk.
Inscribed: ET : SANAVIT : EVM

North View: Benedict beats the monk possessed by a demon.
Inscribed: DOMINVS : PER : ILLVM

The impost inscription in order: VIR DEI : BENEDICTVS VIRGA PERCVSSIT : MONACHVM ET : SANAVIT : EVM DOMINVS : PER : ILLVM

Related capitals:

Miracles:
Capital 12: Miracles of Christ
Capital 44: Miracles of Peter

Capital 54: Miracles of Martin
Non-Biblical Capitals:
Capital 20: Martyrdom of Peter and Paul
Capital 24: Martyrdom of Lawrence
Capital 35: Martyrdom of Sernin
Capital 37: Martyrdom of Fructuosis, Eulogius, and Augurius
Capital 49: Crusaders before Jerusalem
Capital 54: Miracles of Martin
Capital 75: Ascension of Alexander

Inscriptions based on Robert Favereau, Jean Michaud, and Bernadette Leplant, Corpus des Inscriptions de la France Medievale. Vol. 8, Ariege, Haute-Garonne, Hautes-Pyrenees, Tarn-et-Garonne. Paris: Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 1982.
In this case, Favereau, Michaud, and Leplant mistakenly rotated the capital descriptions a quarter turn counterclockwise, and the inscription one quarter turn clockwise. These mistakes are corrected here.