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

Author Topic: Saint of the day  (Read 41756 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline 2Vermont

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 10132
  • Reputation: +5294/-917
  • Gender: Female
Re: Saint of the day
« Reply #30 on: February 02, 2024, 03:32:04 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Miseremini,

    Would you know of any good books/pamphlets on St Valentine? For adults, not children. 
    Revenge not yourselves, my dearly beloved; but give place unto wrath, for it is written: Revenge is mine, I will repay, saith the Lord. (Romans 12:19)


    Online Miseremini

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3820
    • Reputation: +2841/-240
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #31 on: February 02, 2024, 04:15:20 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • I'll look.
    "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered: and them that hate Him flee from before His Holy Face"  Psalm 67:2[/b]



    Online Miseremini

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3820
    • Reputation: +2841/-240
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #32 on: February 03, 2024, 11:51:41 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0


  • St. Blaise, bishop of Sebaste, was beheaded after terrible torments, under Licinius in 317.

    ~Roman Catholic Daily Missal
     The Blessing of Throats
    The day after Candlemas marks the feast of St. Blaise. On this day it has been the practice in the Church to perform a blessing of the throats.
    Before he was made Bishop of Sebaste (the modern day city of Sivas), St. Blaise practiced as a physician. Much later, he was captured for the Faith, and en route to prison, he encountered a boy who was choking from a fish bone stuck in his throat. After praying over him, the boy was cured. Due to these two facts, St. Blaise is a patron saint of physicians.
     Because of St. Blaise’s miraculous intercession for this young boy, the Church composed a special blessing for throats to be performed on his feast day. This sacramental, just like any other, is a proof that the Church’s motherly care and concern is not only for the spiritual good of the faithful through the Mass and the sacraments, but also for their smaller daily needs. The timing of this blessing is also rather opportune, since sickness is not uncommon around this time of year.  In addition to ailments of the throat, this blessing also wishes a deliverance from every other evil, both material and spiritual.
    Such a blessing is termed a “sacramental”. Sacramentals are not absolutely necessary for us, because Our Lord didn’t institute them to give grace of themselves as the sacraments do. But they do give grace according to the devotion with which they are received. They are also very helpful in encouraging us to live out our Faith more fully, helping us to see that everything we do should become an act of worship, an opportunity for sanctification. Another example of sacramentals is the procession of the preceding day on Candlemas.
    Let us strive to receive this blessing of St Blaise with renewed fervor, especially having in mind the intention of the Church – to deliver us from all evils.

    "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered: and them that hate Him flee from before His Holy Face"  Psalm 67:2[/b]


    Online Miseremini

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3820
    • Reputation: +2841/-240
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #33 on: February 05, 2024, 12:33:20 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0

  •  Feast of St. Agatha
    Born in Sicily of noble parents, St. Agatha suffered dreadful torture at the hands of her persecutors, but she was healed on the following night by St. Peter in a vision. Other sufferings were inflicted upon her, and from these she died in 254.

    ~Roman Catholic Daily Missal

    "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered: and them that hate Him flee from before His Holy Face"  Psalm 67:2[/b]


    Online Miseremini

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3820
    • Reputation: +2841/-240
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #34 on: February 08, 2024, 02:14:57 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0


  • With St. Felix of Valois, St. John of Matha founded the Order of the Trinitarians for the ransoming of captives who had fallen into the hands of the Mohammedans. He died in 1213.

    ~Roman Catholic Daily Missal

    "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered: and them that hate Him flee from before His Holy Face"  Psalm 67:2[/b]



    Online Miseremini

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3820
    • Reputation: +2841/-240
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #35 on: February 09, 2024, 02:45:46 PM »
  • Thanks!1
  • No Thanks!0

  • St. Cyril, Bishop of Alexandria, fought with his pen and his eloquence against the Nestorians. He presided in the name of Pope Celestine at the great Council of Ephesus, where the heresy of Nestorious was condemned, and he successfully defended the truth concerning the Mother of God and our Savior in His twofold nature of God and Man. He died in 444.

    ~Roman Catholic Daily Missal

    "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered: and them that hate Him flee from before His Holy Face"  Psalm 67:2[/b]


    Online Miseremini

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3820
    • Reputation: +2841/-240
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #36 on: February 10, 2024, 11:58:22 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0


  •  Feast of St. Scholastica
    Saint Scholastica and her brother, St. Benedict, lived during the fifth century. Saint Benedict is well known; his sister lived in his shadow, and it is in the life of Saint Benedict that the sanctity of his sister shows its character. Saint Gregory the Great says of her: "Scholastica, sister of our blessed Father, vowed to God in childhood, was accustomed to come once a year to see her brother. The man of God came down for the occasion to a small house belonging to the monastery, not far from the gate. The day came when, according to custom her venerable brother came down with his disciples to meet her. They spent the whole day in praise of God and holy conversation. When day faded and night fell, they took supper together; while they were still at table and it was getting late and the holy talk continued. The saintly nun said to her brother: 'Please do not leave, but let us spend the night discussing the joys of eternal life.' He said in reply: 'What are you asking, my sister? I cannot in any way remain outside the monastery.'
    "The sky was still quite clear and there was not a trace of cloud in the sky. But the holy woman, at her brother's refusal, crossed her fingers on the table and, putting her head on her hands, repeated her request to Almighty God. And when she raised her head, the thunder and wind and such a rainstorm came up, that neither the venerable brother, nor the brethren who came with him, and who now studied the weather from the safety of the threshold, could set foot outdoors.
    "Because the saintly nun, her head on her hands, released a flood of tears and changed a peaceful evening into rain. The response followed the request in an instant; and the prayer and the downpour coincided so perfectly, that Scholastica had scarcely lifted her head from the table when it thundered and the rain fell.
    "So, in the midst of the flashes of lightning, of thunder and of torrents of rain, the man of God, seeing that he could not return to his monastery, became sad and said: 'May Almighty God forgive you, sister, what you have done.' And Scholastica replied: 'I asked you and you did not wish to listen to me. I asked God and He understood. So go now if you can, leave me and return to your monastery.' Saint Benedict, who had refused to remain, now could not leave the protection of the roof, so he remained in spite of himself. They spent the night awake and regaling each other with spiritual talk.
    "The next morning, the venerable woman went back to her monastery and the man of God to his. Three days later, lifting his eyes to heaven in his cell, Benedict saw the soul of his sister leave her body and enter into the heights of heaven in the form of a dove. Rejoicing in the glory of his sister, he gave thanks to God in hymns of praise and announced her death to the brethren. He sent them to find her body and to bring it to the monastery, so that he could bury it in the grave which he had prepared for himself."
    The Church today sings: "Who is she who flies like a cloud and like a dove returns to her nest? God has given me wings like a dove: I will fly away and be at rest." Again: "Rise and come, my sister, my dove, my beautiful; come and take the crown which the Lord has prepared for you for all eternity." Is this not the Christian poetry which some wish to suppress? Let us profit from it, while there is still time: "Under the form of a dove, the soul of Scholastica appeared. The soul of her brother has rejoiced. The soul of Scholastica has appeared. Glory to the Father, to the Son and to the Holy Ghost. In the form of a dove, the soul of Scholastica has appeared."
    This is the antiphon for the Magnificat of First Vespers: "The crowd of the faithful exults in the glory of Scholastica, especially the virgins who celebrate her feast; because, relying on her tears and in prayer to the Lord, she obtained more from Him because she loved much."

    Source: Adapted from angelusonline.org

    "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered: and them that hate Him flee from before His Holy Face"  Psalm 67:2[/b]


    Offline Nadir

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 11742
    • Reputation: +7063/-498
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #37 on: February 10, 2024, 11:47:57 PM »
  • Thanks!1
  • No Thanks!0
  • Help of Christians, guard our land from assault or inward stain,
    Let it be what God has planned, His new Eden where You reign.


    Online Miseremini

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3820
    • Reputation: +2841/-240
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #38 on: February 11, 2024, 11:28:49 AM »
  • Thanks!1
  • No Thanks!0
  • Our Lady of Lourdes: A Remedy to the Evils of the Day



    Originally published by Fideliter in the May-June 2004 issue, Fr. Nicolas Pinaud examines the importance of Our Lady of Lourdes as an answer to the revolutionary spirit of our day.
    The apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary at Lourdes happened in the middle of the 19th century and four years after Blessed Pius IX promulgated the dogma of the Immaculate Conception. This was not happenstance: Lourdes was Heaven's response to the evils from which that epoch suffered and from which we still suffer today, since the message was not heeded...
    On March 25, 1858, the "Lady" that appeared to Bernadette in the grotto near the Gave river at Lourdes finally revealed her name: "I am the Immaculate Conception." Four years before, on December 8, 1854, Pope Pius IX had promulgated the constitution Ineffabilis Deus which declared the Immaculate Conception to be a dogma of the Catholic Faith.
    In 1858 at Lourdes, Mary did not come to bolster our faith. The humble handmaid of the Lord did not come to confirm the solemn act of the Magisterium. On the contrary, she submitted herself to it, just as at Fatima on October 13, 1917, she would say, "I am Our Lady of the Rosary," the title which Leo XIII had inscribed in the Litany of Loreto on December 24, 1884. At Lourdes, Mary came rather to confirm that the remedy to the evils of our time is indeed the Immaculate Conception. The 150th anniversary of the promulgation of this dogma is an opportune time to try to understand how it concerns us.
    Don Sarda y Salvany did not hesitate to write in 1892:
    Quote
    The whole revolutionary dogma can be reduced to three chief denials: the denial of original sin, the denial of the divinity of Jesus Christ, and the denial of the authority of the Church. From these three denials proceed the divinization of human reason, its independence, and its pretended sovereignty. Now, to these three denials the dogma of the Immaculate Conception fully responds.
     
    The Answer to the Revolution
    The same author continues:
    Quote
    Indeed, the exception confirms the rule. To confess that Mary was preserved from original sin by a singular privilege from God is to recognize the original sin of all the other descendants of the first man. The mystery of Mary's conception is thus a flat contradiction of the first revolutionary negation. Moreover, Mary obtains this privilege by the future merits of the Redeemer and in order to be the worthy Mother of the Son of God....To admit the dogma of the Immaculate Conception is thus to confess the divinity of Jesus Christ. Finally, from the divinity of Christ proceeds the divinity of the Church and the authority of its visible head, an authority which he exercised in its fullness in defining the Immaculate Conception. To admit this dogma is thus to admit the authority of the Church which commands us to profess it.
     
    "Pius IX had inaugurated the work of his counterrevolutionary reaction by defining the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary," Dom Besse also remarked. He explained:
    Quote
    There was nothing more theological nor more wise. His contemporaries saw in this act a solemn manifestation of Catholic piety. But there was something more than this. The Revolution had been wrought in the name of the natural goodness of man, with the goal of upholding the three rights which supposedly flow from it [liberty, equality, fraternity]. One might say that its fundamental dogma was the immaculate conception of the human race. To this error it was necessary to oppose the contradictory truth. This the Pope did by declaring that all men were wounded by an original fall, since the Virgin Mary was immaculate by virtue of an incommunicable privilege. It was to confront human reason with a fact which the theoreticians of the Revolution denied or overlooked.
     
    The Apparition of a Beautiful Lady
    On February 11, 1858, Bernadette was gathering wood by the Gave. She had reached the place called the Massabielle grotto when, in the stillness, she heard a sound like a gust of wind. Looking on the right side of the poplar-lined river, she perceived at the edge of the rock in a kind of niche a Lady who beckoned her. The Lady's face was ravishingly beautiful. She was dressed in white with a sash of blue, a white veil on her head and a yellow rose on each of her feet. At the sight, Bernadette was troubled and instinctively fell to her knees, seized her rosary and began to pray. When the child finished her prayers, the Apparition vanished.
    Bernadette returned to the grotto the next Sunday and Thursday, and each time the same phenomenon occurred. On Sunday, to assure herself that the strange being was from the Lord, she sprinkled it three times with holy water, at which she received a tender look. On the Thursday, the Apparition spoke to Bernadette, asking her to return every day for two weeks.
    The girl responded faithfully to this request, and every day but two she contemplated the same spectacle in the presence of a crowd. After these fifteen visits, three more apparitions took place, one on March 25, another on April 5, and the last on July 16. The feast day of the Annunciation, three times Bernadette asked the mysterious Apparition her name. Then the Lady lifted her hands together before her, and raising her eyes to heaven she sweetly exclaimed, "I am the Immaculate Conception."
    The simplicity and modesty of the girl, then the supernatural fruits which flourished at the grotto are proofs of the authenticity of the miracle. Scarcely was the Apparition made known when crowds thronged to the grotto; and while the girl was rapt in ecstasy, the deeply touched witnesses united themselves in the same sentiments of adoration and prayer. Christian souls were strengthened in virtue; indifferentists returned to the faith; obstinate sinners were reconciled to God after Our Lady of Lourdes was invoked on their behalf. Sick people the world over clamored for water from Massabielle when they could not make the trip to the grotto. Consequently, on January 18, 1862, the Most Reverend Laurence, Bishop of Tarbes, declared: "The Apparition calling itself the Immaculate Conception which Bernadette saw and heard is indeed the most Blessed Virgin!" The simplicity and sobriety of this event must not obscure its importance. It recalls the third chapter of the Book of Exodus where it relates that a shepherd who was grazing his flock at the foot of a mountain saw a bush ablaze but which was not consumed. Advancing to contemplate the phenomenon, he received the order to remove his sandals, for it was holy ground. Then God commanded him to deliver His people from the tyranny of the Egyptians. Moses said to God: "Who am I to go before Pharaoh and lead the children of Israel out of Egypt?"
    God Chooses the Humble
    The Blessed Virgin's choice was indeed in keeping with God's, who always chooses "the base things of the world, and the things that are contemptible...and the things that are not" (I Cor. 1:28). Pius XI wrote on December 8, 1933:
    Quote
    Just as God regarded the humility of His handmaid, so too the Queen of angels and men regarded the lowliness of her handmaid Marie-Bernard Soubirous, called in the world by the gracious name of Bernadette.
     
    Bernadette did not know a word of catechism and scarcely knew how to recite the Rosary. She had not yet made her first Holy Communion, and yet it was she, weak and ignorant, who was to be Mary's messenger and who would defend her cause against sly and sometimes brutal adversaries. That the Virgin would choose "such a hussy," as the chief of police called her, is admittedly strange. Nonetheless, the simplicity and common sense of her replies display a heavenly inspiration reminiscent of St. Joan of Arc.
    A monk tries to persuade her that it's the devil who appeared. "The devil is not that pretty!"
    The Rev. Peyramale asks her if the Lady was mute since she did not tell her name. "No, since she told me to come and see you!"
    A traveling salesman who displayed his wares in order to form an idea of the Lady's attire receives this reply: "Oh, the Blessed Virgin didn't go to your shop to get an outfit."
    Finally, to those who disputed her story and demanded proofs: "I'm not responsible for making you believe it; I'm just supposed to tell you."
    As Don Sarda and Dom Besse tell us, Lourdes is a response to the Revolution in so far as it is an expression of the Immaculate Conception. But Lourdes is also the high ground of the supernatural and of miracles. And in this respect Lourdes is equally a remedy to the evils of the time. For in 1858, we were up against a new and formidable heresy: Naturalism. Our Lady of Lourdes came to crush it.
    Remedy to Naturalism
    "O incredulous generation, you want only to believe in reason and nature. For you, you say, the order of Faith and of Revelation is canceled," exclaimed Cardinal Pie in his homily of July 3, 1876, pronounced for the coronation of Our Lady of Lourdes:
    Quote
    To your minds, the Gospel has not been certified enough, the ordinary ministry of the Church is not sufficiently authorized. The supernatural is finished, the men of the 19th century said. Well, look how the supernatural abounds; see how it overflows, how it seeps from the gravel and rock, how it rises from a spring, how it flows in the long undulations of a river of prayers, hymns, and lights; behold how it descends, how it rushes upon countless crowds.
     
     
    Oh, you free-thinkers, you did not want to believe Moses or the prophets, nor Christ and His Apostles, nor the Church and her solemn judgments. And now behold how, in this mountain gorge, Mary appears and talks to a simple country girl, and the country girl tells what she has seen and heard. Ah, it is thus that the heavenly Physician opposes to all the vices the contrary remedy, He who holds in His hands the sources of grace, and whom the laws of nature obey. God will do so well that you will believe Bernadette, and by that means you will be brought back to believing in Him.
     
    To the proud science that insists on measuring everything according to the dimension of reason and rejects everything it cannot explain, Our Lady of Lourdes makes the supernatural palpable: the spring at the site of the apparition restores sight to the blind and hearing to the deaf, restores paralytics, and heals the deepest wounds.
    Fideliter - May/June 2004, The Angelus - December 2004, sspx.org
    "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered: and them that hate Him flee from before His Holy Face"  Psalm 67:2[/b]


    Online Miseremini

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3820
    • Reputation: +2841/-240
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #39 on: February 13, 2024, 12:51:17 PM »
  • Thanks!1
  • No Thanks!0

  • FEAST OF THE HOLY FACE OF JESUS!
    Today is the Feast day of the Holy Face of Jesus. It is a moveable feast and is always on Shrove Tuesday which is the day before Ash Wednesday. 
                                                                                 


    Devotion to the Holy Face was revealed by Jesus to Sr. Marie of St. Peter (1816-1848) a Carmelite nun of Tours in France.
    The primary purpose of the devotion is to make reparation for sins against the first three commandments:

    Denial of God which includes Fɾҽҽmαsσɳɾყ that has infiltrated our Church, Blasphemy - using God's name in vain,
    Profanation of Sundays and Holy Days which are all greatly prevalent today.

    The devotion to the Holy Face of Jesus, based on the life and writings of Sr. Marie of St. Peter, was eventually approved by Pope Leo XIII in 1885 who established the devotion as an Arch-confraternity for the whole world.

    In January 1849 Pope Pius IX had the relic of Veronica’s veil placed for public veneration in Rome. During this time, the Divine Face appeared distinctly, as if living, and was illuminated by a soft light. Reproductions of the veil were later printed, touched to the original and sent abroad for veneration such as the one printed at the top of this article.
    The Holy Man of Tours - Leo Dupont
    Leo Dupont heard of the reported visions of Jesus and Mary by the Carmelite nun Sister Marie of St Peter from 1844 to 1847. Based on this, Dupont started to burn a vigil lamp continuously before a picture of the Holy Face of Jesus based on the painted image on the Veil of Veronica. Dupont used that image because the existence of a clear image on the Shroud of Turin was not known to anyone at that time for the somewhat faded image of the face on the Shroud can not easily be seen with the naked eye and was only observed in May 1898 via the negative plate of Secondo Pia's first photograph. In 1851 Dupont formed the "Archconfraternity of the Holy Face" in Tours. He prayed for and promoted the case for a devotion to the Holy Face of Jesus for around 30 years.
    Blessed Maria Pierina de Micheli & The Holy Face of Jesus Devotion & Medal
    At the age of twelve, when she was in her Parish Church during the 3pm Good Friday service, she heard a Voice saying quite distinctly:
    "No one gives me a kiss of love on My Face to make amends for the Kiss of Judas."

    In her childlike simplicity, she believed that the voice was heard by everyone and was pained to see that only the wounds were kissed but not the face. In her heart exclaiming, "Have patience, dear Jesus, I will give you a kiss of love", and when her turn came she lovingly and devoutly imprinted a kiss on His Face. (This is true - on Good Friday - many feel that kissing His face would be too bold but it would be an act of Reparation for the wounds inflicted by these sins. If one is to think you are bold  - then this too can be offered as an act of Reparation in itself because you know that it is done out of love!)
    Mother Maria Pierina de Micheli obtained permission from her spiritual Director and although she did not have any financial means to get medals of the Holy Face made. She obtained the permission of the photographer Bruner to take copies of the Holy Shroud as reproduced by him, and she received the permission to do so by the Archdiocese of Milan on the August 9, 1940. Since then the devotion and the medal have been spread worldwide with much enthusiasm, accompanied all the while by wonderful graces, conversions and cures as a testament and heavenly sign of God's institution and approval of both.
    St. Therese and the Martin Family
    This devotion was practiced in France where it began, therefore, the Martin family were one of the first to join in this Archconfraternity of the Holy Face and it became a sweet devotion of St. Therese; so much so that she was inspired to take the full title of:

    ‘Sr. Therese of the Child Jesus and of the Holy Face’.

    May we make it a devotion of our own for the many crimes committed today. We can not just sit back but be active in making Reparation. The Holy Face devotion is a great means of grace. Please check out more information on this website under Devotions for more information on the Holy Face.

    "O Bleeding Face, O Face Divine, be every Adoration Thine." (3 times)

    "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered: and them that hate Him flee from before His Holy Face"  Psalm 67:2[/b]


    Online Miseremini

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3820
    • Reputation: +2841/-240
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #40 on: February 18, 2024, 12:28:33 PM »
  • Thanks!1
  • No Thanks!0
  • St. Bernadette who's name I took on my Confirmation day.



    https://catholicharboroffaithandmorals.com/St.%20Bernadette.html
    "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered: and them that hate Him flee from before His Holy Face"  Psalm 67:2[/b]



    Offline Nadir

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 11742
    • Reputation: +7063/-498
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #41 on: February 18, 2024, 04:00:17 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • So beautiful! Thank you, Miseremini.
    Help of Christians, guard our land from assault or inward stain,
    Let it be what God has planned, His new Eden where You reign.

    Online Miseremini

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3820
    • Reputation: +2841/-240
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #42 on: February 22, 2024, 11:08:46 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0

  • The Chair of Saint Peter
    February 22: Chair of Saint Peter, Apostle—Feast
    Liturgical Color: White
    Version: Full – Short
    Quote
    Quote:
    Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah. For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my heavenly Father. And so I say to you, you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of the netherworld shall not prevail against it. I will give you the keys to the kingdom of heaven. Whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven; and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven. ~Matthew 16:17–19
    Reflection: In Saint Peter’s Basilica in Rome, visitors are immediately struck by the large alabaster window on the back wall of the apse that depicts the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove. Below the window is an ancient wooden chair, believed to have been used by Saint Peter. In the seventeenth century, that ancient chair was encased in bronze by the famous artist Bernini and then placed above the altar in the apse. Surrounding the chair are statues of four early Doctors of the Church. Two of them represent the Eastern Church: Saint John Chrysostom and St. Athanasius. Two of them represent the Western Church: Saint Ambrose and Saint Augustine. These great saints represent the universality of the Church, both East and West, as well as the unity of their theological teaching with the authority of the Bishop of Rome. Above the chair are two angels jointly holding the triple crown tiara used by the Bishop of Rome, symbolizing that he is the father of kings, governor of the world, and Vicar of Christ. In their other hands, each angel holds a key, symbolizing the authority of the Bishop of Rome in matters of faith and morals.
    Today’s feast celebrates not only that chair as a precious relic from the time of Saint Peter, it also celebrates all that this chair represents. This feast was formally celebrated in Rome as early as the fourth century, but honor for the supremacy of Saint Peter and his successors was celebrated from the moment Jesus entrusted Peter with his unique mission.
    In the Gospel of Matthew 16:13–20, we have the discourse between Jesus and His disciples, which is the basis of today’s feast and our belief in the unique and universal authority of Saint Peter and his successors. Jesus asked the disciples, “[W]ho do you say that I am?” Simon responded, “You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.” With that profession of faith, Jesus changed Simon’s name to Peter, saying to him, “And I tell you, you are Peter (Petros), and on this rock (petra) I will build my church.” “Peter” in Greek is Petros, meaning a single movable stone. The Greek word petra means a solid rock formation that is fixed, immovable, and enduring. Therefore, Jesus chose to transform Peter from a single stone into a solid, fixed, and immovable foundation of rock on which the Church would be built and endure until the end of time. Jesus went on to tell Peter that He would give him the keys to the Kingdom of Heaven and that whatever he bound and loosed on earth would be bound and loosed in Heaven.
    It’s interesting to note that immediately after this discourse between Jesus and Peter, Jesus rebukes Peter for giving into fear after Jesus spoke about His impending death. While in the Garden of Gethsemane, on the eve of Jesus’ saving Passion, Peter chooses to sleep rather than stay awake and pray with Jesus. Then, after Jesus is arrested, Peter denies three times that he even knows Jesus. God chose a man of weakness and fear to become the rock foundation for the Church. This shows that God’s power is not limited by the instruments to whom He entrusts His power.
    After Jesus’ ascension into Heaven, Peter and the others are filled with the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. After this gift, Peter is more prepared for his mission. He is the first one to go forth courageously to preach the Word of God to the people in Jerusalem. He resolved conflicts within the Church when they arose. He became the first bishop of the newly evangelized city of Antioch and then chose to go to Rome, becoming the first bishop of Rome, where he would die a martyr. However, the death of Saint Peter was not the death of his authority and singular mission. Saint Linus followed him as the second bishop of Rome, and then Saint Cletus, Saint Clement, and so forth until today.
    Of the pope’s authority, Vatican Councils I and II affirmed that when the pope speaks Ex Cathedra, meaning, “From the Chair,” he speaks with the authority of Saint Peter who was entrusted with full, supreme, and universal authority to teach and govern. His teaching extends to all matters of faith and morals, and his governance encompasses the entire world. (Lumen Gentium, #22).
    As we ponder the authority and infallibility of the one who sits in the Chair of Saint Peter, try to see this sacred power, given to one weak and sinful man after another, as an act of the love of Christ for His Church. It is the power of Christ and His divine love that makes it possible for these men to shepherd the Church, providing stability, longevity, certitude, and hope. When popes are also saints, we are doubly blessed. When they are not, our Lord still works through them, providing the Church with the ongoing rock foundation it needs to endure all things until the end of time. Pray for the pope today. Pledge your obedience to him when he speaks Ex Cathedra, and know that your unity with him ensures your unity with Christ, Who governs through him.
    Prayer: Saint Peter, you were a weak and sinful man, but God entrusted you with great responsibility, despite your unworthiness. Please pray for me, that despite my unworthiness, I may be open to all that God entrusts to me and that I may use those gifts for His glory and the salvation of souls. Saint Peter and all your successors in Heaven, pray for me.  Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, I place my trust in Thee.



    "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered: and them that hate Him flee from before His Holy Face"  Psalm 67:2[/b]


    Online Miseremini

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3820
    • Reputation: +2841/-240
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #43 on: February 29, 2024, 12:49:51 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0

  • This saint only gets his feast in leap year
    annee-bissextile.jpg





    Daniel Esparza - published on 02/28/24
    While information about the life of St. Dositheus is rather limited, his legacy is surely inspiring. This year, especially, his feast is needed.

    Dositheus of Palestine, born in the 6th century, is venerated as a saint by the Catholic, Orthodox, and Coptic churches. Considered the patron saint of Gazahis feast day is celebrated on February 29 – thus, only in leap years.
    Dositheus’ life began with a military career. Since Palestine was part of the Byzantine Empire, it is believed that he served as a soldier in the service of Constantinople. However, an unexpected event would change his destiny. While campaigning in Gethsemane (some sources say Golgotha), Dositheus came across a painting depicting the torments of hell. This image, hagiography goes, moved him deeply and caused him to reflect on his life and future.
    Shocked by the vision, Dositheus renounced his military career and decided to dedicate his life to God. He returned to his native Gaza and became a monk under the guidance of St. Dorotheus of Gaza – the famous Hermit of Kemet.
    Monastic life and legacy
    Dositheus became an outstanding disciple of Dorotheus, and ardently embraced the monastic life. He devoted himself to prayer, meditation, and the study of Scripture. His example soon inspired many others to follow the monastic path, devoting themselves to the contemplative life, but also to the welfare of the community. Indeed, Dositheus was widely known known for his charity and work on behalf of the poor and needy.
    After his death, Dositheus was soon recognized as a saint. He is celebrated by the Catholic, Orthodox, and Coptic Churches. He is considered one of the patron saints of Gaza, and his feast day is celebrated on February 29, making his commemoration even more special. While information about the life of St. Dositheus is rather limited, his legacy is surely inspiring. His story exemplifies the transformative power of grace and faith to guide people on a path of holiness and service to others.




    "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered: and them that hate Him flee from before His Holy Face"  Psalm 67:2[/b]


    Online Miseremini

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3820
    • Reputation: +2841/-240
    • Gender: Female
    Re: Saint of the day
    « Reply #44 on: March 21, 2024, 01:56:11 PM »
  • Thanks!1
  • No Thanks!0



  • THE HOLY ABBOT BENEDICT
    by Leonard Goffine, 1871



    Truly, St. Benedict was as his name indicates, a child of blessing. He was born about the year 480 at Nursia in Italy. His parents sent him, when growing up, to Rome, that there he might be instructed in all the fine sciences. Benedict soon perceived the moral corruption of the Romans, and was seized by fear concerning his own innocence. In order to escape the enticements, he left Rome and sought his way into the mountains; thence he went to Subiaco, a day's journey distant from Rome, where he found a desert with inhospitable caverns in the mountain-cliffs. He had resolved to serve his God in solitude and retirement, and to acquire such virtues as would enable him to perform and undergo great labor for the Church and the welfare of his fellowbrethren.

    On his way to the desert he met with a holy monk, named Romanus, to whom he revealed his intention. Romanus gladly approved of the design, promising him to keep his secret, and gave him a monk's garment. Benedict now chose for his dwelling-place an almost inaccessible narrow grotto at the foot of one of the mountain-cliffs. Romanus daily laid aside a portion of his bread, and secretly brought it to the young hermit, lowering it by means of a rope. The sound of a bell attached to the rope was to announce the arrival of the bread.

    Benedict spent his whole time in prayer, until God who was with him, made manifest his chosen instrument. Shepherds, feeding their flocks in the vicinity, one day discovered him. At first they believed him to be a beast, because he was clad with the skin of a brute animal, also because he hid in the shrubs, when perceiving himself discovered. They approached him and found to their astonishment that he was a human being. Our saint addressed them in a friendly manner, and availed himself of the opportunity to impress upon their minds the important and holy doctrines of the Christian religion, and thus effected in many of them an entire change of life.

    In this way the holy man became known. In a very short time the inhabitants of the surrounding countries flocked around him, eager for their salvation. They listened with great attention to the saint's pious instructions, and were so moved and edified by them, that many relinquished the world and all its glory and confided themselves to his care. About this time it pleased God to visit our saint with a severe trial. Base phantoms and representations as also obscene emotions tormented him day and night. He, however overcame them by pious and fervent prayer and by an heroic act of selfcommand which was and will always be admired in him by all following generations; for when the demons already thought themselves victors, our saint undressed, threw himself into a bush of briars near his grotto, and rolled himself most vehemently, until his whole body was dilacerated and formed but one wound. Thus he extinguished the flame of lust.

    The fame of his sanctity daily increased and spread throughout the country. It also penetrated into a monastery, the monks of which entreated him to come and be their director. The holy man reluctantly consented. But some of the monks who were accustomed to an easy and free life, would not comply with the pious rules and regulations which Benedict introduced. To rid themselves of him, they resolved to mingle poison with his wine. Benedict never ate nor drank without first blessing the victuals. But when he came to bless the wine in the chalice, the latter bursted asunder and the mystery of their malice was unveiled. Benedict rose calmly, saying: "Brethren, may God be merciful unto you! Why have you done this to me? Did I not already tell you, that my habit of life could never be reconciled to yours. Find another guide for yourselves, since you can no longer have me as such." Saying this, Benedict returned to his beloved desert with the intention, to live there in the happy communion with God still more retired than ever.

    The Almighty however wished that the light which he had kindled in Benedict, should no longer be hidden. The more the saint endeavored to withdraw from the society of men, so much the more disciples flocked around him. Their number daily increased, since they not appeared one by one but in large troops, and demanded that they should all live together and form a community of which Benedict should be the abbot. The means for erecting the necessary edifices and procuring real estates, were not wanting, because the benefactors were numerous. Thus within the course of some years arose twelve monasteries to each of which the saint gave an abbot. He himself lived in his cell on Mount Cavo, and retained with him only few disciples to whom he was a kind teacher, abbot, and instructor. The saint also wrote a rule for the monks of these monasteries, according to which they were to model the lives. This rule is this very day yet the principle of spiritual life of the Benedictines, blessed by God for all ages. The holy life of St. Benedict and of his disciples was not only known in the surrounding country, but the fame of it reached even Rome. The hearts of many young men burned with the desire of entering this holy community, and parents felt greatly consoled at having found a place of refuge, in which they could preserve their children from the allurements of the world. Many came to the saint, entreating him to accept the tutorship of their young sons. Among these were also two Roman senators who begged admission for their sons, named Maurus and Placidus. Maurus was twelve years of age, and brought the baptismal robe unstained into the monastery. He was loved very much by St. Benedict on account of his unfeigned humility, minute obedience and his purity of heart.

    One day when St. Benedict was in his cell, Placidus whom he no less loved for his pure soul, went to the neighboring sea in order to get some water. Dipping his bucket too hastily into the water, he lost his balance and fell into the sea. Benedict perceiving the danger of the boy, immediately called Maurus. "Maurus," he exclaims, "quick, hasten for the youth that was sent for water, for he has fallen into the sea, and the waves are already carrying him off!" Maurus instantly begged the saint's blessing and hastened in full speed to the sea. He looked at the boy, and thinking of nothing else but the command of saving him, jumped into the water, and, behold the miracle! he runs on the surface of the water as if it were ice. Thus he reached the boy, seized him by the hair and pulled him along with himself. Not until he had reached the shores he became aware that he had been walking on the waters, when he almost fainted from fear and admiration. As soon as he had returned to the house, he narrated to St. Benedict what had taken place. The holy abbot replied that that was the reward of obedience. But Maurus answered that he had only done, what he had been ordered to do, and that on his own part he could not perceive any virtuous act in complying with the command of his father. But behold, when they were thus engaged in holy contest, Placidus entered and acted as the deciding judge, by saying: "I saw when I was drawn out of the water above my head the cloak of the abbot and perceived that it was he who dragged me to the shore."

    More than thirty years Benedict's light had sent its rays over the Sabine Mountains. Every one pronounced his name with reverence, and saw in him the universal spiritual benefactor, pastor and teacher. Whoever was in need of counsel, came to him; and those that sought instruction, asked it of him; those that felt the necessity of prayer, recommended themselves to him; in short, all had recourse to him in their troubles and anxieties, and St. Benedict in this way gained the hearts of all for the love of their crucified Redeemer. Many renounced the world and offered their necks to the sweet yoke of Him who once said, that His yoke was easy and His burden light. Nevertheless, to the virtues of this great man the crown was wanting. Seven beatitudes he had already acquired, only the eighth was missing, namely: "To suffer persecution for justice sake;" but also that he should obtain.

    There lived in the neighborhood a priest, named Florentius. This priest could not bear to see the confidence placed by every one in our saint, and sought by all means to avert the people's hearts from him. Not succeeding in this, Florentius was greatly enraged, and becoming daily more embrittered by jealousy resolved to kill the saint. In those times it was yet a pious custom in the Church to send each other in token of holy love a loaf of blessed bread, called Eulogia. Florentius poisoned one these loafs, and sent it to the holy man who accepted it with thanks. St. Benedict immediately discovered what was wrong with it, and had it carried by a raven who daily received his food at the hand of the saint, to a place where it could not injure anybody. Florentius being aware that he was also foiled in his infernal attempt, meditated revenge on the souls of the saint's holy community. When they were laboring in the garden, in which also the holy abbot was with them, he sent seven unchaste women into the neighborhood of it, and ordered them to dance in a circle taking each other by the hand, that thus they might inflame the hearts of the young men with impurity. When St. Benedict saw this, he also frustrated this devilish trick of Florentius. Seized, however, by fear and pain as to the spiritual welfare of his children, Benedict resolved to leave the country, where eternal perdition was threatening them. Having entrusted the different monasteries to the care of some of the elder monks, he left with the rest for Mount Cassino, which is situated between Rome and Naples. Florentius was almost in a transport of joy, when he perceived his ardent desire at last fulfilled; but the joy was of short duration. Suddenly his dwellinghouse fell in joy, burying him below its ruins.

    St. Benedict found on Mount Cassino many remains of idolatry, as temples and altars, which were visited during the night by the inhabitants of the neighborhood. The saint however was determined on here making an end to heathenism. He tore down the temples and altars of the pagans, and in their places erected two chapels, one in honor of Martin of Tours, the other in honor of St. John the Baptist, adjacent to which he also built a large monastery. While this was done, he did not omit to open the eyes of these blind idolators, and to win them over to the only true faith.

    Unceasingly he preached on the streets and even penetrated into their houses. Incessant were his prayers to God in their behalf. Gradually he succeeded in gaining them over. At first only some demanded holy baptism, but by and by they all flocked to him, earnestly beseeching him, not to deprive them of the grace of this holy sacrament. But Satan, the father of falsehood and prince of darkness, could not suffer to see himself defeated by our saint, and tried in every way to impede the conversion of these souls. He appeared to Benedict in the most hideous forms, raising hellish shouts and yells. The other monks heard his horrible clamors, although they could not see the hideous forms. Benedict's zeal was by no means impaired by these terrific spectacles, but he continued to propagate the holy faith over the whole country.

    Whilst the monastery was being erected, Satan appeared in the saint's cell, mocking and deriding him, saying, that he had come to visit the workmen. The holy man immediately informed the monks by a messenger, saying: Brethren, be on your guard, for in this hour Satan will come to you. Hardly had the messenger pronounced these words, when the wall which they were then erecting, fell into ruins, killing a boy who already wore the habit of the order. The monks greatly afflicted, informed the saint of what had occured, who ordered the dead boy to be brought to him. Since, however, not only all the limbs of the body were broken, but even all the bones of it crushed, they picked up the pieces of it into a bedsheet, and thus carried them to the holy abbot. The saint had the body laid upon a matrass in his cell, on which he was wont to say his prayers. Having ordered the monks to leave him, he locked himself up, and began to pray most fervently to God; when lo! even in that hour the boy was sent back to resume his work.

    Already while the erection of the new monasteries was going on, and especially after they were completed, the number of monks rapidly increased. The saint was most vigilant that the rule, which he had given them, should be observed. He prayed incessantly to God for illumination in order to guide his community in the spirit of prayer and mortification. God granted to him what he had demanded, nay more, for he had the gift to understand things hidden, as also to foresee future events.

    One day while our saint took his evening repast, a monk, who was a lawyer's son, held the lamp for him, in whose heart arose, while performing this charitable act, thoughts of pride; for he thought by himself, "Who is he whom I have to serve at table thus holding the lamp for him, and who am I, that I tolerate this willingly, and execute so degrading a work?" Benedict's spirit penetrated into the heart of the culprit, and soon rebuked him severely in the following terms: "Brother, cross thy breast! "What are you speaking in your heart? Cross thy breast!" Seeing that his reproach was to no effect, he called the other monks, had the lamp taken out of his hand, dismissed him from his occupation, and ordered that he should remain alone for that hour. The haughty monk was bettered by this chastisement, and afterwards humbly confessed his fault to his fellowbrethren who thereby were greatly edified.

    The wicked and haughty king of the Goths, Totila, who in his arrogance acknowledged no superior on earth, saw himself nevertheless impelled to bow before the spirit that dwelled in St. Benedict. He had been informed of the prophetic spirit of Benedict, and not believing in this divine gift, he wished to try the holy man. He, therefore, came to Mount Cassino with his servant Riggo whom he ordered to vest in his royal robes and thus appear before the saint. The saint, however, as soon as he saw him approaching, addressed him at a distance: "My son! depose the vestments you have on, they are not yours!" Riggo and all who accompanied him, were terror stricken at these words. At the thought of having intended to deceive so holy a man, Riggo fell prostrate on the ground, after which he hastened to king Totila, informing him of all that had taken place. Totila struck with consternation, did not hesitate himself to come to the saint. He threw himself at his feet, and did not venture to rise, until the saint approached him, and taking him by the hand raised him up. St. Benedict now reproved the penitent king for his conduct, saying: "You perpetrate many crimes, you have perpetrated many already; forsake at last the ways of injustice. You will enter Rome, will cross the ocean, and will reign nine years hence, but in the tenth you will die!" What St. Benedict here predicted, was minutely fulfilled.

    Not long afterwards when Totila was about to besiege Rome, the bishop of Canosa was with the saint, and remarked to him: the city would be destroyed by this king! and henceforward it would remain uninhabitated. The saint, however, replied, that through these wandering tribes the city would not be destroyed, but that it would be molested by storms, hurricanes and earthquakes in such a manner as finally to dissolve in itself. St. Gregory the great, who afterwards wrote the life of our saint, remarks in relation to this: "The mystery of this prophecy is at hand; it is manifest to us all who witness the downfall of the citywalls, churches and houses by storm and the ruin, of its edifices by age."

    A noble man Theoprobus, who was an intimate friend of the holy man, one day entered his cell and found him weeping bitterly. For some time he remained at a distance, thinking that the saint was absorbed in prayer and was shedding tears as he was wont to do. Seeing, however, that Benedict was not engaged in prayer, he approached him, enquiring for the reason of his affliction. Immediately the holy man replied: "This entire monastery which I have erected and all that I with my brethren have brought in order, is by decree of the Almighty delivered unto the heathens; hardly could I obtain from His majesty the salvation of the souls (that is, the lives) of the monks." Forty years after this prediction, the monastery was destroyed by the Longobardi who invaded it during the night, yet none of the monks was killed. Like all friends of God, so also St. Benedict had compassion with all who were afflicted, and an unshaken confidence in God. During a famine which at that time ravaged the country, the saint distributed among the poor all that he possessed of eatables. Nothing was left save a little oil, when a subdeacon, named Agapitus, came asking for a little of it. The saint ordered that the scanty remnant should immediately be given him. The steward of the monastery, however, refused it. When St. Benedict asked him whether he had given the oil to the poor subdeacon, the brother steward apologized that if he had given it to him, nothing would have remained for the monks. The saint inflamed with holy anger, ordered him to fling the oil vessel out the window. It was done. Outside of the window was a precipice, from which rocks and cliffs projected. Every one thought, that the vessel would be dashed in a thousand pieces. But it was well preserved, not even a drop of oil having been spilled. The saint then gave it to the petitioner. The monastery was now totally destitute of provisions. To whom should the monks have recourse in order to appease their hunger? The saint, however, was not in the least embarassment concerning the imminent danger. They all had recourse to prayer. In the place where they prayed there was a large oil-vessel with a heavy cover. They prayed for a long time. But behold! the cover of the vessel began to rise and the oil rushed forth in abundance from the vessel. Now St. Benedict terminated his prayer and the oil seized flowing. The saint availed himself of this wonderful event to admonish the diffident steward to be more confident in the goodness of God. The saint also by his faithful prayers raised the dead to life. Thus he restored to life the son of a peasant, who had been most ardently entreating him.

    Endowed with the gift of prophecy and decorated with the power of miracles, also ornamented with every virtue, especially that of prayer, our saint broadly diffused heavenly blessings, especially by the erection of so many monasteries, even in far distant countries in which his spirit continued to live among his children. Thousands of youths received in them a religious training and an educational instruction. Popes, bishops, and a host of learned and pious men, went forth from these monasteries.

    The saint had a dear and pious sister, named Scholastica, whose feast the Church celebrates on the 10th of February. She together with other holy virgins led a most holy life in a convent about three miles distant from Mount Cassino. This sister God had taken to Himself. Benedict saw her soul soaring towards heaven in the shape of a dove. He was seized with a longing to be united to his beloved sister in heaven, there to praise God forever. He ardently desired death and foretold the hour of it to his children. On the 15th of March 543, he ordered his grave to be opened. He soon was attacked by a fever and in defiance of the precaution taken in administering him, the illness increased. On the 21st of March he ordered his monks to carry him into the oratory, where he received the holy viaticuм to strengthen himself for the last struggle, and standing upright, supported by his beloved children, with hands raised in prayers towards heaven, he yielded his pure soul into the hands of its creator.


    "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered: and them that hate Him flee from before His Holy Face"  Psalm 67:2[/b]