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Author Topic: Saint of the day  (Read 536374 times)

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Re: Saint of the day
« Reply #15 on: November 19, 2023, 07:53:03 PM »

 Feast of St. Elizabeth of Hungary
     Daughter of King Andrew of Hungary, Elizabeth was betrothed at the age of four to Louis IV, landgrave of Thuringia, who was seven years older than her. Their marriage was celebrated ten years later.
     The profoundly Christian couple brought three children into the world. On September 11, 1227, Louis IV of Thuringia died in Otranto at the age of 26, on his way to the Crusades. The Church venerates him as a Blessed.
     Once a widow, Queen Elizabeth devoted herself to the education of her children and to works of charity, especially for the poor and sick, showing a particularly maternal care for lepers.
     Driven from the royal court with her children, she led a life of penance entirely devoted to the poor and needy for whom she had a hospital built. She died a pious death on November 17, 1231, at the age of 24, having lived a saintly life as a young girl, a wife, a mother and a widow.
     Numerous miracles soon brought crowds flocking to her tomb, and her renown spread throughout the Catholic world, leading to her canonization by Pope Gregory IX.

Source: fsspx.news


Re: Saint of the day
« Reply #16 on: December 03, 2023, 11:55:42 PM »
December 4


Saint Barbara
Virgin and Martyr
(† 235)

[color=rgb(55 65 81 / var(--tw-text-opacity))]Saint Barbara was brought up by a pagan father, Dioscorus. With the intention of protecting her beauty, he kept her jealously secluded in a lonely but very luxurious tower which he built for that purpose; for in his own way he loved her. In her forced solitude, this very gifted young girl undertook to study religion, and soon saw clearly all the vices and absurdities of paganism; her clear mind realized that there could be only one supreme Creator-God, and that He is entitled to the worship of His reasonable creatures. Divine Providence by its wonderful ways contrived to obtain for her the means to send a message to Origen, the famous exegete, asking for knowledge of the Christian faith. That teacher of Alexandria immediately sent to her, at Nicomedia, a disciple named Valentinian. Soon she was baptized, and Our Lord appeared to her, as He would appear to others such as Saint Catherine of Alexandria and Saint Teresa of Avila, to tell her He had chosen her to be His spouse. Saint Barbara, rejoicing, hoped to be able to communicate her precious new faith to her father, but would soon discover that hope was vain.[/color]
When she was of an age to marry, many requests for her hand came to her wealthy father. She was his only heiress, and he rejected her expressed wish not to accept any such offer, although she said she wished to remain his consolation for his declining years. When she continued to refuse every suitor's demands, and when Dioscorus returned from a journey to find all the idols he had placed in her tower broken in pieces and scattered about, he was furious. Discovering his daughter's conversion, he was beside himself with rage. She escaped and dwelt for a time in a cavern, where she was concealed by the vegetation growing at the entrance. But finally her father's threats of chastisement, which he made known during his searches, for anyone who might be concealing her, caused some local shepherds who knew of her whereabouts, to reveal her retreat.

Her father denounced her to the civil tribunal, and Barbara was horribly tortured twice, and finally beheaded. Her own father, merciless to the last, asked to deal her the fatal blow himself. God, however, speedily punished her persecutors. While her soul was being borne by the Angels to Paradise, a flash of lightning struck Dioscorus and Marcian, the civil prefect, and both were summoned in haste to the judgment-seat of God.

Saint Barbara is beloved of the Spanish-speaking peoples. She is the special protectress of the region of Metz in France, where a magnificent church, later destroyed, was built in her honor in the 1500's. She is invoked against sudden and unprovided death, and invariably answers all requests for the favor of receiving the Last Sacraments. A famous instance of her intervention on behalf of a Saint who was on the verge of death, can be read in the life of Saint Stanislaus Kostka.

Reflection: Pray often to be protected from a sudden and unprovided death; and, above all, that you may be strengthened by the Holy Viaticuм against the dangers of your final hour.

Les Petits Bollandistes: Vies des Saints, by Msgr. Paul Guérin (Bloud et Barral: Paris, 1882), Vol. 14; Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints, a compilation based on Butler's Lives of the Saints and other sources, by John Gilmary Shea (Benziger Brothers: New York, 1894)





Re: Saint of the day
« Reply #17 on: December 08, 2023, 01:17:30 PM »

"I will put enmities between thee and the woman." In these words, the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary was announced to our first parents. It was to be the reversal of the friendship with the serpent contracted by Eve when she listened to his voice and fell under his power. The second Eve was never to be under the power of the devil; the enmity between them was to admit of no possible exception. This involved the grace of being conceived immaculate. Mary's Immaculate Conception was the foundation of all her graces. The absence of any stain or spot of sin distinguished her from all the rest of mankind. It distinguished her from the holiest of the saints, since they, one and all, were sinners. Her perfect sinlessness was the source of all her glory and all her majesty; it was this that qualified her for her divine maternity, and raised her to her throne as Queen of heaven.

"O Queen, conceived without original sin, pray for us, who have recourse to thee."

~Roman Catholic Daily Missal


Re: Saint of the day
« Reply #18 on: December 21, 2023, 12:22:23 PM »

 Feast of St. Thomas the Apostle
On December 21, the Holy Church celebrates the Apostle Saint Thomas so that his protection helps the faithful to believe and hope in this God whom they do not yet see, and who comes to them without noise and without splendor, in order to exercise their Faith.
Glorious Apostle Thomas, you who have brought so many unfaithful nations to Christ, it is to you now that faithful souls turn, so that you introduce them to this same Christ who, in five days, will be already manifested to his Church. To deserve to appear in his divine presence, we need, above all things, a light which leads us to him. This light is Faith: ask for Faith for us.
One day, the Lord deigned to condescend to your weakness, and to reassure you in the doubt you felt about the truth of his Resurrection; pray, so that he may also deign to support our weakness, and make himself felt in our heart.
However, O holy Apostle, it is not a clear vision that we ask, but simple and docile Faith; for He who also comes for us has said to you, showing Himself to you: “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed!  We want to be among them. Obtain for us therefore this Faith which is of the heart and of the will, so that in the presence of the divine Child wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in the manger, we can also cry out: “My Lord and my God!"
Pray, O holy Apostle, for these nations whom you have evangelized, and who have fallen back into the shadows of death. May the day come soon when the Sun of Justice will shine a second time for them. Bless the efforts of the apostolic men who devote their sweat and blood to the work of the Missions; obtain that the days of darkness are shortened, and that the regions watered with your blood finally see the beginning of the reign of the God that you announced to them and that we await.


Re: Saint of the day
« Reply #19 on: December 24, 2023, 11:09:18 AM »

 Christmas Eve
Let us therefore make him a little chamber, and put a little bed in it for him and a table, and a stool, and a candlestick, that when he cometh to us, he may abide there" (IV Kings 4:13). Such was the Sunamite woman's regard for the prophet Eliseus, that she would make such preparations for his entertainment! Will we do as much for Christ who is ready to come to us?

Take pains, O Christian, to occupy this night in pious thoughts, and aspirations, for the love of God and for the good of your own soul, making yourself worthy to receive the graces which He is ready when He comes, to give you. Think how Mary, who was near her time, and Joseph her spouse obedient to the Imperial command, and perfectly submissive to the will of God, journeyed with the greatest inconvenience to Bethlehem, and when, because of the multitude of people, they found no place to receive them they took refuge, as God willed it, in a most miserable stable, at the extreme end of the town. What love does not the Savior deserve, who for love of us so humbled Himself!

Taken from Fr. Leonard Goffine's The Church's Year