Send CathInfo's owner Matthew a gift from his Amazon wish list:
https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

Author Topic: Women of Scripture Who Changed History ...and St. Clotilde, Frank  (Read 110 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Twice dyed

  • Supporter

https://www.facebook.com/groups/1903712809765519/posts/3275794682557318/
TRADITIONAL LATIN MASS CATHOLICS  ·
2026
Johnny Zee

  The Women of Scripture Who Changed History
Today I am thinking about the women in Scripture whose faith, courage, and wisdom changed the course of history.

  The Bible is not only filled with kings, prophets, and warriors. It is also filled with remarkable women whose decisions shaped generations.

  Rahab was once known by her past, but her faith rewrote her future. She protected the spies of Israel and became part of the lineage through which Christ came.
  Naomi walked through grief and loss, yet her guidance positioned Ruth in the lineage of kings.
  Ruth herself became a powerful example of loyalty and devotion. A foreign widow who chose faith over comfort, she became the great-grandmother of David.
  Esther risked her life before a king to save her people, proving that courage can change the destiny of a nation.
  Deborah rose as a judge and leader in Israel when the nation needed courage, proving that wisdom and strength are not limited by gender.
  Miriam led Israel in worship after the Red Sea and stood as a prophetic voice in her generation.
Hannah turned her pain into prayer, and from her womb came Samuel, one of the greatest prophets in Israel.
  Elizabeth walked faithfully before God even through years of waiting. In time she gave birth to John the Baptist, the one who would prepare the way for the Messiah.
  Jochebed, the mother of Moses, risked everything to preserve the life of her child, protecting the one who would later deliver Israel.
  Jael displayed fearless courage when she delivered Israel from oppression, proving that sometimes history changes through one decisive act of bravery.
  And Pharaoh's Daughter, though raised in Egypt's palace, showed compassion that preserved the life of a future prophet.
  Hannah turned her pain into prayer, and from her womb came Samuel, one of the greatest prophets in Israel.
  Abigail demonstrated wisdom and humility that prevented bƖσσdshɛd and preserved her household.
  Mary carried the greatest assignment ever given to a human being, she gave birth to the Savior of the world.
  Mary Magdalene was the first witness of the resurrection, entrusted with announcing the greatest news in history.
  The Samaritan Woman encountered Christ at a well and became a messenger who brought an entire city to Him.
  Rebekah demonstrated extraordinary generosity and hospitality at a well, unknowingly stepping into her divine destiny.
  The Shunammite Woman showed remarkable faith and hospitality, and God restored the son she once lost.
  Anna spent her life in prayer and fasting, and she was among the first to recognize the Messiah.
  Dorcas filled her life with kindness and service, and when she died the community mourned deeply because of the lives she had touched.

These women came from different backgrounds.
Some were queens.
Some were widows.
Some were servants.
Some carried painful pasts.

  Yet each of them responded to God with faith, courage, and obedience.
And because of that, their stories are still shaping the world thousands of years later.
(...) celebrate the strength, compassion, wisdom, and faith of women everywhere.
(...)

_______________________________________________________
https://www.ncregister.com/blog/saints-and-art-st-clotilde John Grondelski Blogs
June 3, 2025

Excerpt:
  "... “Behind every man, there’s a great woman.” That’s often especially true in the spiritual realm. Which brings us to St. Clotilde, who is honored in the French liturgical calendar on June 3.

  She was the wife of Clovis, King of the Franks, who thereby managed to Christianize those tribes and bring them into union with Rome. Yes, Christianity was known in France — e.g., St. Hilary of Poitiers, a bishop, precedes Clotilde by about 125 years. But France is a complicated country, its original Gauls from Roman times later having to accommodate Frankish tribes that would come to dominate it. And, after the fall of Rome, the evangelization of northern European tribes...

  Clovis was a pagan. Clotilde was an orthodox Catholic. Arianism, condemned at the Councils of Nicaea and Constantinople I, still had influential advocates in elite circles. Upon her marriage to Clovis, she intended to convert him to orthodox Catholicism and build better ties with the papacy.

  A good Catholic woman, Clotilde prayed for her stubborn husband, who was content to remain in paganism. She had her children baptized (though the death of their firstborn, in an era of infant mortality, supplied Clovis a further excuse to avoid the bath of Baptism). But, in 496, Clovis prevailed in a battle against another Germanic tribe and, like Constantine at Ponte Milvio almost 200 years earlier, Clovis attributed his victory to Christianity. On Christmas Day that year, he was baptized at Reims and he brought his people with him..."


**************
We need to appreciate women more, esp in the modern environment. Many challenges to nurture, educate, counsel teenagers, the next generation of Catholics.
To wit:  No women, no humankind, therefore be charitably kind.
Welcome to CathInfo. :pray:

And it was a woman...Veronica... the only one who had the courage to defy the Romans and step forward to try to comfort Jesus on the way to Calvary!


And it was a woman...Veronica... the only one who had the courage to defy the Romans and step forward to try to comfort Jesus on the way to Calvary!
And it was all women at the foot of the Cross, with the exception of one man, who was the only virgin among the disciples.

https://www.facebook.com/groups/1903712809765519/posts/3275794682557318/
TRADITIONAL LATIN MASS CATHOLICS  ·
2026
Johnny Zee

  The Women of Scripture Who Changed History
Today I am thinking about the women in Scripture whose faith, courage, and wisdom changed the course of history.

  The Bible is not only filled with kings, prophets, and warriors. It is also filled with remarkable women whose decisions shaped generations.

  Rahab was once known by her past, but her faith rewrote her future. She protected the spies of Israel and became part of the lineage through which Christ came.
  Naomi walked through grief and loss, yet her guidance positioned Ruth in the lineage of kings.
  Ruth herself became a powerful example of loyalty and devotion. A foreign widow who chose faith over comfort, she became the great-grandmother of David.
  Esther risked her life before a king to save her people, proving that courage can change the destiny of a nation.
  Deborah rose as a judge and leader in Israel when the nation needed courage, proving that wisdom and strength are not limited by gender.
  Miriam led Israel in worship after the Red Sea and stood as a prophetic voice in her generation.
Hannah turned her pain into prayer, and from her womb came Samuel, one of the greatest prophets in Israel.
  Elizabeth walked faithfully before God even through years of waiting. In time she gave birth to John the Baptist, the one who would prepare the way for the Messiah.
  Jochebed, the mother of Moses, risked everything to preserve the life of her child, protecting the one who would later deliver Israel.
  Jael displayed fearless courage when she delivered Israel from oppression, proving that sometimes history changes through one decisive act of bravery.
  And Pharaoh's Daughter, though raised in Egypt's palace, showed compassion that preserved the life of a future prophet.
  Hannah turned her pain into prayer, and from her womb came Samuel, one of the greatest prophets in Israel.
  Abigail demonstrated wisdom and humility that prevented bƖσσdshɛd and preserved her household.
  Mary carried the greatest assignment ever given to a human being, she gave birth to the Savior of the world.
  Mary Magdalene was the first witness of the resurrection, entrusted with announcing the greatest news in history.
  The Samaritan Woman encountered Christ at a well and became a messenger who brought an entire city to Him.
  Rebekah demonstrated extraordinary generosity and hospitality at a well, unknowingly stepping into her divine destiny.
  The Shunammite Woman showed remarkable faith and hospitality, and God restored the son she once lost.
  Anna spent her life in prayer and fasting, and she was among the first to recognize the Messiah.
  Dorcas filled her life with kindness and service, and when she died the community mourned deeply because of the lives she had touched.

These women came from different backgrounds.
Some were queens.
Some were widows.
Some were servants.
Some carried painful pasts.

  Yet each of them responded to God with faith, courage, and obedience.
And because of that, their stories are still shaping the world thousands of years later.
(...) celebrate the strength, compassion, wisdom, and faith of women everywhere.
(...)

_______________________________________________________
https://www.ncregister.com/blog/saints-and-art-st-clotilde John Grondelski Blogs
June 3, 2025

Excerpt:
  "... “Behind every man, there’s a great woman.” That’s often especially true in the spiritual realm. Which brings us to St. Clotilde, who is honored in the French liturgical calendar on June 3.

  She was the wife of Clovis, King of the Franks, who thereby managed to Christianize those tribes and bring them into union with Rome. Yes, Christianity was known in France — e.g., St. Hilary of Poitiers, a bishop, precedes Clotilde by about 125 years. But France is a complicated country, its original Gauls from Roman times later having to accommodate Frankish tribes that would come to dominate it. And, after the fall of Rome, the evangelization of northern European tribes...

  Clovis was a pagan. Clotilde was an orthodox Catholic. Arianism, condemned at the Councils of Nicaea and Constantinople I, still had influential advocates in elite circles. Upon her marriage to Clovis, she intended to convert him to orthodox Catholicism and build better ties with the papacy.

  A good Catholic woman, Clotilde prayed for her stubborn husband, who was content to remain in paganism. She had her children baptized (though the death of their firstborn, in an era of infant mortality, supplied Clovis a further excuse to avoid the bath of Baptism). But, in 496, Clovis prevailed in a battle against another Germanic tribe and, like Constantine at Ponte Milvio almost 200 years earlier, Clovis attributed his victory to Christianity. On Christmas Day that year, he was baptized at Reims and he brought his people with him..."


**************
We need to appreciate women more, esp in the modern environment. Many challenges to nurture, educate, counsel teenagers, the next generation of Catholics.
To wit:  No women, no humankind, therefore be charitably kind.
Welcome to CathInfo. :pray:
Thank you for this kind post, this has been very consoling to read.

Offline Twice dyed

  • Supporter
Facebook user should have included Judith; I guess some reject the Book Of Judith...

AI:   Judith, a devout Jєωιѕн widow, cut off the head of Assyrian general Holofernes in the Book of Judith (a deuterocanonical...). To save her besieged city of Bethulia, she entered his tent, waited for him to pass out drunk, and killed him with his own sword before returning with his head in a bag.

****************
Judith practised so many mortifications,  Virtue of temperance;  and gained graces from Almighty God... Love her story...so discreet but incredibly effective. Her maid servant could have some recognition too. They risked their lives, but she carried good wine in the tent. The enemy was intemperant.
 Deo gratias!