Posted in EUCHARISTIC Adoration, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY, The HOLY EUCHARIST / The HOLY MASS

Quote/s of the Day – 21 August – The Memorial of St Pope Pius X

Quote/s of the Day – 21 August – The Memorial of St Pope Pius X

“The daily adoration or visit to the Blessed Sacrament
is the practice which is the fountainhead
of all devotional works.”

the daily adoration - st pope pius X

“HOLY COMMUNION is the shortest
and the safest way to heaven.”

holy communion - st pius X

“The greatest obstacle in the apostolate of the Church
is the timidity or rather the cowardice of the faithful.”

the greatest obstacle - st pius X

“Let the storm rage and the sky darken —
not for that shall we be dismayed.
If we trust as we should in Mary,
we shall recognise in her, the Virgin Most Powerful,
who with virginal foot did crush the head of the serpent.”

St Pope Pius X

let the storm rage - st pope pius x

Posted in MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY, The HOLY GHOST

Our Morning Offering – 21 August – The Memorial of St Pope Pius X

Our Morning Offering – August 21 – The Memorial of St Pope Pius X

Prayer for Union with the Holy Spirit
By St Pope Pius X

O Holy Spirit of Light and Love,
to You I consecrate my heart,
mind and will
for time and eternity.
May I be ever docile
to Your Divine inspirations
and to the teachings
of the Holy Catholic Church
whose infallible guide You are.
May my heart be ever inflamed
with the love of God and love of neighbour.
May my will be ever in harmony with Your Divine Will.
May my life faithfully imitate the life and virtues
of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
To Him,
with the Father,
and You, Divine Spirit,
be honour and glory forever.
Amen.

prayer for union with the Holy Spirit by St Pope Pius X

Posted in MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – August 21 – The Memorial of St Pope Pius X

One Minute Reflection – August 21 – The Memorial of St Pope Pius X

You are sad for a time but I shall see you again; then your hearts will rejoice with a joy no one can take from you…………John 16:22john 16 22

REFLECTION – Catholics are part of the Church Militant. They struggle and they suffer for the triumph of Christ.
They must never lose sight of their Divine Model, so that their trials will be turned into joy……..St Pius X

they struggle and they suffer - st pope pius X

PRAYER – Jesus Lord of Sorrows, enable me to struggle and suffer in union with You. Let me keep ever before me the joy that will follow upon these passing sufferings. St Pius X Pray for Us. Amen

st pope pius - pray for us

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 21 August – St Bernardo Tolomei (1272-1348)

Saint of the Day – 21 August – St Bernardo Tolomei (1272-1348) Founder, Theologian, Mystic, Hermit, Lawyer, Soldier, Politician (10 May 1272 at Siena, Tuscany as Giovanni Tolomei – 20 August 1348 in Siena, Italy of natural causes).   He was Beatified on 24 November 1644 by Pope Innocent X (cultus confirmed) and Canonised on 26 April 2009 Pope Benedict XVI.   Patronage – the Order he founded, the Congregation of the Blessed Virgin of Monte Oliveto, known as the Olivetans.   Attributes – White Habit.

san bernado HEADERsan bernado HEADER.2

BERNARDO TOLOMEI, son of Mino Tolomei, was born in Siena on the 10th of May 1272. At his baptism he was given the name Giovanni.   He was probably educated by the Dominicans at their College of San Domenico di Camporegio in Siena.   He was knighted by Rodolfo I d’Absburgo (†1291).   While studying law in his home town, he was also a member of the Confraternity of the Disciplinati di Santa Maria della Notte dedicated to aiding the sick at the hospital della Scala.   Due to a progressive and almost total blindness, he was forced to give up his public career.   In 1313, in order to realize a more radical Christian and ascetic ideal, together with two companions, (Patrizio di Francesco Patrizi †1347 and Ambrogio di Nino Piccolomini †1338) both noble Sienese merchants and members of the same Confraternity, he retired to Accona on a property belonging to his family, about 30km south-east of the city.   It was here that Giovanni, who in the mean time had taken the name Bernardo out of veneration for the holy Cistercian abbot, St Bernard of Clairvaux (Memorial 20 August), together with his two companions, lived a hermitic penitential life characterised by prayer, manual work and silence.

Towards the end of 1318, or the beginning of 1319, while deep in prayer, he saw a ladder on which monks in white habits ascended, helped by angels and awaited by Jesus and Mary.

In order to secure the legal position of his group, Bernardo, together with Patrizio Patrizi, visited the bishop of Arezzo, Guido Tarlati di Pietramala (1306-c.1327) under whose jurisdiction Accona fell at the time.   On the 26th March 1319 he was given a Decree authorising him to build the future monastery of Santa Maria di Monte Oliveto and instituted “sub regula sancti Benedicti”, with certain privileges and exemptions.  Through his legate, the bishop received their monastic profession.   In choosing the Rule of St. Benedict, Bernardo accepted Benedictine coenobitism and, wishing to honour Our Lady, the founders wore a white habit.   Welcoming the small group of monks, the bishop said: “Since your fellow citizens glory in placing themselves under the patronage of the Virgin, and because of the virginal purity of the glorious Mother, it pleases you to wear a white monastic habit, therefore showing outwardly that purity which you harbour within.” (Antonio di Barga, Cronaca 5).   The white habit characterised various forms of medieval monasticism, amongst which the Camaldolese, Carthusians, Cistercians and the monks of Montevergine.

With the laying of the first stone of the church on the 1st of April 1319, the monastery of Santa Maria di Monte Oliveto Maggiore was born.   The hermits became monks according to the Rule of St Benedict to which they made some institutional changes.   The most characteristic element of this institutional change recorded in an episcopal document 28thMarch 1324, was the temporariness of the abbatial office and the abbot-elect would have to be confirmed by the bishop of Arezzo.   When the time came to elect an abbot, Bernardo succeeded in withdrawing himself from those eligible because of his infirmity of sight.   Therefore, Patrizio Patrizi was elected first abbot (1st of September 1319).   Two other abbots followed: Ambrogio Piccolomini (1st of September 1320) and Simone di Tura (1st of September 1321).   On the 1st of September 1322, Bernardo could no longer oppose the wishes of his brethren and so became the fourth abbot of the Monastery he founded, remaining abbot until his death.   An Act dated 24th September 1326 attests that the Apostolic Legate, Cardinal Giovanni Caetani Orsini (†1339), dispensed abbot Bernardo from the Canonical impediment of Infirmity of Sight, hence validating his election.   From Avignone, with three Bulls dated 21st January 1344 (Significant Vestrae Sanctitati: acknowledges the foundation and requests pontifical privileges; Vacantibus sub religionis:  canonical approval of the new community;  Solicitudinis pastoralis officium: the faculty to erect new monasteries in Italy) Clemente VI approved the Congregation which numbered ten monasteries.   Bernardo did not go to Avignone himself but sent two monks:  Simone Tendi and Michele Tani.

Significant evidence of the spiritual personality of Bernardo consists in the fact that, even though the monks had decided not to re-elect an abbot at the end of his annual mandate, they decided to ignore this, re-electing Bernardo for twenty-seven consecutive years, until his death.   Another act of trust in Bernardo’s paternity was seen in the General Chapter of the 4thof May 1347 when the monks granted him the faculty to govern without recourse to the Chapter and the brethren, trusting that he would do all in conformity to God’s Will and for the salvation of all.

Bernardo tried at least twice, in 1326 and 1342, to lay down the abbatial office, declaring to the Pope’s Legate and Jurists that he was not a priest but only in Minor Orders, also citing the existing dispensation from his function as abbot because of his persistent infirmity of vision.   However his leadership was asserted fully legitimate even according to the canonical norms of the time.   With the Pontifical Approbation of a new Benedictine Congregation named “Santa Maria di Monte Oliveto”, Bernardo is the initiator of a resolute Benedictine monastic movement.

abbey of mont-olivet major

Bernardo left his monks an example of a holy life, the practice of the virtues to a heroic level, an existence dedicated to the service of others and to contemplation.   During the Plague of 1348 Bernardo left the solitude of Monte Oliveto for the monastery of San Benedetto a Porta Tufi in Siena.   In the city, the disease was particularly dire.   On the 20th August 1348, while helping his plague-stricken monks, he himself, along with 82 monks, fell victim of the Plague.  Bernard Tolomei died, together with half of the congregation, during the epidemic of plague that ravaged Tuscany in 1348;  he had gone to rescue his brothers from the monastery of St Benedict of Siena.

Bernardo Tolomei2

São Bernardo Tolomei, Presbítero e Fundador (dos Olive (1)ST BERNARDO TOLOMEIL.Mazzanti, Bernardo Tolomei pflegt.. - Mazzanti /Bernard Tolomei w.Plague Vict. - L. Mazzanti, Bernard Tolomeï soignant...

The Blessed Bernardo Tolomei Attending a Victim of the Black Death, 1745

This hero of penance and martyr of charity did not go by unnoticed, as Pius XII observed in a letter sent to Abbot General Dom Romualdo M. Zilianti on the 11th April 1948, to commemorate the forthcoming sixth centenary of the death of Blessed Bernardo.   The venerable abbot was buried near the monastery church in Siena.   All the plague-stricken bodies were put in a common pit of quick-lime outside the church.   Unfortunately the search for the bodies of the victims of the plague, both in Siena and in and around the Abbey of Monte Oliveto Maggiore, has been unsuccessful to this day.

The Congregation underwent a strong development later, in Italy exclusively until the 19th century where the first foreign foundations took place, first in France.   Today of modest size, the monastic family is nonetheless present almost on five continents.   Its institutions have, of course, evolved from the beginning, in order to allow for a greater consistency of local communities and to be able to live real cultural diversity.

San Bernardo Tolome

A statue of San Bernardo Tolomei on the Chiesa di San Cristoforo in the Piazza Tolomei, Siena Italy.

Posted in SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY

Memorials of the Saints and the Feast of Our Lady of Knock – 21 August

St Pius X, Pope (Memorial)
Our Lady of Knock: Our Lady, Saint Joseph and Saint John the Evangelist appeared in a blaze of light at the south gable of Saint John the Baptist Church, Knock, County Mayo, Ireland.   They appeared to float about two feet above the ground and each would occassionally move toward the visionaries and then away from them.   The Blessed Virgin Mary was clothed in white robes with a brilliant crown on her head.   Where the crown fitted to her brow, she wore a beautiful full-bloom golden rose.   She was praying with her eyes and hands raised towards Heaven.   Saint Joseph wore white robes, stood on Our Lady’s right and was turned towards her in an attitude of respect.   Saint John was dressed in white vestment, stood was on Mary’s left and resembled a bishop, with a small mitre.   He appeared to be preaching and he held an open book in his left hand. Behind them and a little to the left of Saint John was a plain altar on which was a cross and a lamb with adoring angels.   The apparition was witnessed by fifteen people. Miraculous healings were reported soon after the area and it is now a major pilgrimage destination. Patronage – Ireland.



St Abraham of Smolensk
St Agapius of Edessa
St Agathonicus of Constantinople
St Anastasius Cornicularius
St Aria of Rome
St Avitus I of Clermont
St Bassa of Edessa
Bl Beatrice de Roelas
St Bernhard of Lérida
St Bernard de Alziva
St Bernardo Tolomeo – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=32y6LTMevbo
St Bonosus
Bl Bruno Zembol
St Camerinus of Sardinia
St Cameron
St Cisellus of Sardinia
St Cyriaca
St Euprepius of Verona
St Fidelis of Edessa
Bl Gilbert of Valenciennes
St Gracia of Lérida
St Hardulph
St Joseph Nien Vien
Bl Ladislaus Findysz
St Leontius the Elder
St Luxorius of Sardinia
St Maria of Lérida
St Maximianus the Soldier
St Maximilian of Antioch
St Natale of Casale Monferrato
St Paternus of Fondi
St Privatus of Mende
St Quadratus of Utica
St Sidonius Apollinaris
St Theogonius of Edessa
Bl Victoire Rasoamanarivo
St Zoticus the Philosopher

Martyred in the Spanish Civil War:
• Blessed Joan Cuscó Oliver
• Blessed Joan Vernet Masip
• Blessed Pedro Mesonero Rodríguez
• Blessed Pere Sadurní Raventós
• Blessed Ramon Peiró Victori
• Blessed Salvador Estrugo Salves

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY

The Memorare by St Bernard of Clairvaux “Doctor of Light”

On the Feast Day of St Bernard, August 20, can we do better than call on our Mother

The Memorare by St Bernard of Clairvaux

REMEMBER, O most gracious Virgin Mary,
that never was it known that anyone who fled
to thy protection, implored thy help, or sought
thy intercession was left unaided. Inspired by
this confidence, I fly unto thee, O Virgin of virgins,
my Mother; to thee do I come; before thee I stand,
sinful and sorrowful. O Mother of the Word Incarnate,
despise not my petitions, but in thy mercy
hear and answer me. Amen.

(The Express Novena you will recall, is 9 times the Memorare)

THE MEMORARE - ST BERNARDst bernard - doctor of light

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY

Thought for the Day – 20 August – The Memorial of St Bernard of Clairvaux

Thought for the Day – 20 August – The Memorial of St Bernard of Clairvaux

Man of the century!   Woman of the century!   You see such terms applied to so many today—“golfer of the century,” “composer of the century,” “right tackle of the century”—that the line no longer has any punch.   But Western Europe’s “man of the twelfth century,” without doubt or controversy, had to be Bernard of Clairvaux. Adviser of popes, preacher of the Second Crusade, defender of the faith, healer of a schism, reformer of a monastic Order, Scripture scholar, theologian, and eloquent preacher: any one of these titles would distinguish an ordinary man.   Yet Bernard was all of these—and he still retained a burning desire to return to the hidden monastic life of his younger days.
His ability as arbitrator and counsellor became widely known.   More and more he was lured away from the monastery to settle long-standing disputes.   On several of these occasions, he apparently stepped on some sensitive toes in Rome.   Bernard was completely dedicated to the primacy of the Roman See.   But to a letter of warning from Rome, he replied that the good fathers in Rome had enough to do to keep the Church in one piece.   If any matters arose that warranted their interest, he would be the first to let them know.

Shortly thereafter it was Bernard who intervened in a full-blown schism and settled it in favour of the Roman pontiff against the antipope.

Bernard felt responsible in some way for the degenerative effects of the crusade.   This heavy burden possibly hastened his death, which came August 20, 1153.

death of st bernard prado (1)
Juan Correa de Vivar (1510 – 16 April 1566)
Death of St Bernard – 1545

Bernard’s life in the Church was more active than we can imagine possible today.  His efforts produced far-reaching results.   But he knew that they would have availed little without the many hours of prayer and contemplation that brought him strength and heavenly direction.   His life was characterised by a deep devotion to the Blessed Mother. His sermons and books about Mary are still the standard of Marian theology….Fr Don Miller OFM

St Bernard Pray for us!

st bernard pray for us 2

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

Quote/s of the Day – The Memorial of St Bernard of Clairvaux

Quote/s of the Day – The Memorial of St Bernard of Clairvaux

“Are you troubled?
Think but of Jesus – speak but the name of Jesus,
the clouds disperse
and peace descends anew from heaven.
Have you fallen into sin? So that you fear death?
..invoke the name of Jesus
and you will soon feel life returning.
No obduracy of the soul, no weakness,
no coldness of heart can resist this holy name –
there is no heart which will not soften
and open in tears at this holy name.”are you troubled - st bernard

“The measure of love is love without measure.”the measure of love - st bernard

“Jesus, what made You so small?
LOVE!”

jesus what made you so small - LOVE - st bernard

“There are those who seek knowledge
for the sake of knowledge – that is curiosity.
There are those who seek knowledge
to be known by others – that is vanity.
There are those who seek knowledge
in order to serve – that is Love.”there are those who seek knowledge - st bernard

“The three most important virtues are:
humility,
humility
and humility.”the 3 most important virtues are - st bernard

“Let us not imagine that we obscure
the glory of the Son by the great praise
we lavish on the Mother –
for the more she is honoured,
the greater is the glory of her Son.
There can be no doubt that whatever we say
in praise of the Mother gives equal praise to the Son.”LET US NOT IMAGINE-ST BERNARD

“Love for Christ pierced Mary’s heart
in such a way that no part of it
was left unkindled.
Mary thus fulfilled
the first commandment of love
in all its fulness
and without the slightest imperfection.”QUOTE ST BERNARD

“Action and contemplation are very close companions;
they live together in one house on equal terms.
Martha and Mary are sisters.”

action and contemplation - st bernard

St Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153) Doctor of the Church

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 20 August – – The Memorial of St Bernard of Clairvaux

One Minute Reflection – 20 August – – The Memorial of St Bernard of Clairvaux

Hold fast to …. a good conscience. Some men, by rejecting the guidance of conscience, have made shipwreck of their faith…1 Timothy 1:191 timothy 1 19

REFLECTION – “A good conscience is a treasury of riches.
Indeed, what greater riches can there be – or what can be sweeter – than a good conscience?….St Bernarda good conscience - st bernard

PRAYER – All-knowing God, let me be able to stand in Your presence with a good conscience.
Help me to avoid anything that would sully my conscience and do all I can to remain united with You.
St Bernard, pray for us, amen.st bernard pray for us

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY

Our Morning Offering – 20 August – The Memorial of St Bernard of Clairvaux

Our Morning Offering – 20 August – The Memorial of St Bernard of Clairvaux

Morning Prayer of St Bernard

High and holy God
Give me this day
a word of truth
to silence the lies
that would devour my soul
and kind encouragements
to strengthen me when I fall.
Gracious One
I come quietly to Your door
needing to receive
from Your hands
the nourishment
that gives life.
Amen and Amen.

MORNING PRAYER OF ST BERNARD.2

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 20 August – St Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153) – Abbot, Confessor Doctor of the Church – “Doctor Mellifluus” and the Last Father of the Church, “The Bard of Mary”

Saint of the Day – 20 August – St Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153) – Abbot Confessor Doctor of the Church and the Last Father of the Church, “The Bard of Mary“- “Doctor Mellifluus”, Theologian, Reformer, Writer, Mystic, Preacher, Mariologist, Advisor, Mediator, Poet.   Born in1090 at Fontaines-les-Dijon, Burgundy, France -and died on 20 August 1153 at Clairvaux Abbey, Ville-sous-la-Ferté, Aube, France).   He was Canonised in 1170, only 17 years after his death, by Pope Alexander III.   Patronages – Cistercians, beekeepers, bees, Burgundy and France, candlemakers, chandlers, Gibraltar,  Knights Templar, Queens College, Cambridge, England, Speyer Cathedral, wax-melters, wax refiners.   Attributes – White Cistercian habit, devil on a chain, white dog.  St Bernard, the Founding Abbot of Clairvaux Abbey in Burgundy, was one of the most commanding Church leaders in the first half of the twelfth century, as well as, one of the greatest spiritual masters of all time and the most powerful propagator of the Cistercian reform.

bernard - info

St-Bernard-cropped

St Bernard’s parents were Tescelin de Fontaine, Lord of Fontaine-lès-Dijon and Alèthe de Montbard, both members of the highest nobility of Burgundy. Bernard was the third of seven children, six of whom were sons.   At the age of nine years, he was sent to a school at Châtillon-sur-Seine run by the secular canons of Saint-Vorles.   Bernard had a great taste for literature and devoted himself for some time to poetry.   His success in his studies won the admiration of his teachers.   He wanted to excel in literature in order to take up the study of the Bible.   He had a special devotion to the Virgin Mary and he would later write several works about the Queen of Heaven, hence his wonderful title “The Bard of Mary.”.

St Bernard would expand upon Anselm of Canterbury’s role in transmuting the sacramentally ritual Christianity of the Early Middle Ages into a new, more personally held faith, with the life of Christ as a model and a new emphasis on the Virgin Mary.   In opposition to the rational approach to divine understanding that the scholastics adopted, Bernard would preach an immediate faith, in which the intercessor was the Virgin Mary.

Bernard was only nineteen years of age when his mother died.   During his youth, he did not escape trying temptations and around this time he thought of retiring from the world and living a life of solitude and prayer.

In 1098 Saint Robert of Molesme had founded Cîteaux Abbey, near Dijon, with the purpose of restoring the Rule of St Benedict in all its rigour.   Returning to Molesme, he left the government of the new Abbey to Saint Alberic of Cîteaux, who died in the year 1109.   At the age of 22, while Bernard was at prayer in a Church, he felt the calling of God to enter the Cistercian Monks of Cîteaux.    In 1113 Saint Stephen Harding had just succeeded Saint Alberic as third Abbot of Cîteaux when Bernard and thirty other young noblemen of Burgundy sought admission into the Cistercian order.   Bernard’s testimony was so irresistible that 30 of his friends, brothers and relatives followed him into the monastic life.

20Ago_Bernardo_Claraval

St.-Bernard

In 1115, St Bernard was sent to begin a new monastery near Aube- Clairvaux, the Valley of Light.    As a young Abbot he published a series of sermons on the Annunciation.   These marked him not only as a most gifted spiritual writer but also as the “cithara of Mary,” especially noted for his development of Mary’s mediatorial role.

The Peacemaker
St Bernard’s spiritual writing as well as his extraordinary personal magnetism began to attract many to Clairvaux and the other Cistercian Monasteries, leading to many new foundations.   He was drawn into the controversy developing between the new monastic movement which he pre-eminently represented and the established Cluniac order, a branch of the Benedictines.  This led to one of his most controversial and most popular works, his Apologia.   Bernard’s dynamism soon reached far beyond monastic circles.   He was sought as an advisor and mediator by the ruling powers of his age.   More than any other he helped to bring about the healing of the Papal schism which arose in 1130 with the election of the antipope Anacletus II.   It cost Bernard eight years of laborious travel and skillful mediation.   At the same time he laboured for peace and reconciliation between England and France and among many lesser nobles.   His influence mounted when his spiritual son was elected Pope in 1145.   At Eugene III’s command he preached the Second Crusade and sent vast armies on the road toward Jerusalem.   In his last years he rose from his sickbed and went into the Rhineland to defend the Jews against a savage persecution.StBernard

The Writer
Although he suffered from constant physical debility and had to govern a Monastery that soon housed several hundred Monks and was sending forth groups regularly to begin new Monasteries (he personally saw to the establishment of sixty-five of the three hundred Cistercian Monasteries founded during his thirty-eight years as Abbot), he yet found time to compose many and varied spiritual works that still speak to us today.   He laid out a solid foundation for the spiritual life in his works on grace and free will, humility and love.   His gifts as a theologian were called upon to respond to the dangerous teachings of the scintillating Peter Abelard, of Gilbert de la Porree and of Arnold of Brescia.   His masterpiece, his Sermons on the Song of Songs, was begun in 1136 and was still in composition at the time of his death.   With great simplicity and poetic grace Bernard writes of the deepest experiences of the mystical life in ways that became normative for all succeeding writers.   For Pope Eugene he wrote Five Books on Consideration, the bedside reading of Pope John XXIII and many other Pontiffs through the centuries.

Final Years
The death of his contemporaries served as a warning to Bernard of his own approaching end.   The first to die was Suger in 1152, of whom Bernard wrote to Eugene III, “If there is any precious vase adorning the palace of the King of Kings it is the soul of the venerable Suger”.   Conrad III and his son Henry died the same year.   From the beginning of the year 1153, Bernard felt his death approaching.   The passing of Pope EugenE had struck the fatal blow by taking from him one whom he considered his greatest friend and consoler.   Bernard died at age sixty-three on 20 August 1153, after forty years spent in the cloister.   He was buried at the Clairvaux Abbey but after its dissolution in 1792 by the French revolutionary government, his remains were transferred to Troyes Cathedral.

Doctor of the Church
Bernard was Canonised by Pope Alexander III on 18 January 1174.   Pope Pius VII declared him a Doctor of the Church in 1830.   At the 800th anniversary of his death, Pope Pius XII issued an encyclical on Bernard, Doctor Mellifluus, in which he labeled him “The Last of the Fathers.”   Bernard did not reject human philosophy which is genuine philosophy, which leads to God;  he differentiates between different kinds of knowledge, the highest being theological.   The central elements of Bernard’s Mariology are how he explained the virginity of Mary, the “Star of the Sea” and her role as Mediatrix.

Legacy
St Bernard was instrumental in re-emphasising the importance of Lectio Divina and contemplation on Scripture within the Cistercian order.    Bernard had observed that when Lectio Divina was neglected monasticism suffered.   He considered Lectio Divina and contemplation guided by the Holy Spirit the keys to nourishing Christian spirituality.

He “noted centuries ago:  the people who are their own spiritual directors have fools for disciples.”   Bernard’s theology and Mariology continue to be of major importance, particularly within the Cistercian and Trappist orders.   Bernard led to the foundation of 163 Monasteries in different parts of Europe.  At his death, they numbered 343.   His influence led Alexander III to launch reforms that would lead to the establishment of canon law.  He was the first Cistercian Monk placed on the calendar of Saints.   He is labelled the “Mellifluous Doctor” for his eloquence.   Cistercians honour him as the Founder of the Order because of the widespread activity which he gave to the Order.

Saint Bernard’s “Prayer to the Shoulder Wound of Jesus, ”  the “Jesu Dulcis Memoria” and the Memorare are probably his most famous prayers.

Bernard is Dante Alighieri’s last guide, in Divine Comedy, as he travels through the Empyrean.   Dante’s choice appears to be based on Bernard’s contemplative mysticism, his devotion to Mary and his reputation for eloquence.   He is also the Author of the Poems often translated in English hymnals as “O Sacred Head, Now Wounded” and “Jesus the Very Thought of Thee“.

The Couvent et Basilique Saint-Bernard, a collection of buildings dating from the 12th, 17th and 19th centuries, is dedicated to Bernard and stands in his birthplace of Fontaine-lès-Dijon.ST BERNARD.3

St Bernard of Clairvaux BY GOYA - Copy

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Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Memorials of the Saints – 20 August

St Bernard of Clairvaux (Memorial) – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxzST45pYDw

St Amadour the Hermit
St Bernard of Valdeiglesius
St Brogan
St Burchard of Worms
St Christopher of Cordoba
St Cristòfol Baqués Almirall
St Edbert of Northumbria
Bl Georg Hafner
Bl Gervais-Protais Brunel
St Gobert of Apremont
St Haduin of Le Mans
St Heliodorus of Persia
St Herbert Hoscam
St Leovigild of Cordoba
Bl Louis-François Lebrun
St Lucius of Cyprus
Bl Maria de Mattias
St Maximus of Chinon
St Oswine of Deira
St Philibert of Jumièges
St Porphyrius of Palestrina
St Ronald of Orkney
St Samuel the Patriarch
Bl Wladyslaw Maczkowski
St Zacchaeus the Publican

Martyred in the Spanish Civil War: 8 Beati
Enrique Rodríguez Tortosa
Francesc Llagostera Bonet
Ismael Barrio Marquilla
José Tapia Díaz
Magí Albaigés Escoda
Manuel López Álvarez
María Climent Mateu
Serapio Sanz Iranzo
Tomás Campo Marín

Posted in MORNING Prayers, SACRED and IMMACULATE HEARTS, SAINT of the DAY

Our Morning Offering – August 19

Our Morning Offering – August 19

O Heart of my Saviour
By St John Eudes

O Heart all lovable
and all loving of my Saviour,
be the Heart of my heart,
the soul of my soul,
the spirit of my spirit,
the life of my life
and the sole principle
of all my thoughts, words and actions,
of all the faculties of my soul
and of all my senses,
both interior and exterior.
this day and always. Amen

o heart of my saviour - st john eudes

Posted in SACRED and IMMACULATE HEARTS, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 19 August – The Memorial of St John Eudes “Apostle of Two Hearts”

Thought for the Day – 19 August – The Memorial of St John Eudes “Apostle of Two Hearts”

How little we know where God’s grace will lead.   Born on a farm in northern France, John died at 79 in the next “county” or department.   In that time he was a religious, a parish missionary, founder of two religious communities and a great promoter of the devotion to the Sacred Heart and the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
He joined the religious community of the Oratorians and was ordained a priest at 24. During severe plagues in 1627 and 1631, he volunteered to care for the stricken in his own diocese.   Lest he infect his fellow religious, he lived in a huge cask in the middle of a field during the plague.   At age 32, John became a parish missionary.   His gifts as preacher and confessor won him great popularity.   He preached over 100 parish missions, some lasting from several weeks to several months.

Holiness is the wholehearted openness to the love of God.   It is visibly expressed in many ways but the variety of expression has one common quality: concern for the needs of others.   In John’s case, those who were in need were plague-stricken people, ordinary parishioners, those preparing for the priesthood, prostitutes and all Christians called to imitate the love of Jesus and his mother. ( Fr Don Miller OFM)

St John Eudes, Pray for us!

st john eudes pray for us 2

Posted in MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SACRED and IMMACULATE HEARTS, SAINT of the DAY

Quotes of the Day – 19 August – The Memorial of St John Eudes “Apostle of Two Hearts”

Quotes of the Day – 19 August – The Memorial of St John Eudes “Apostle of Two Hearts”

“Faith is a beam, radiating from the face of God.”

faith is a beam-st john eudes

“Our wish, our object, our chief preoccupation
must be to form Jesus in ourselves,
to make His spirit, His devotion, His affections,
His desires and His disposition live and reign there.
All our religious exercises should be directed to this end.
It is the work which God has given us to do unceasingly. “

our wish, our object - st john eudes

“The Christian life is a continuation
and completion of the life of Christ in us.
We should be so many Christs here on earth,
continuing His life and His works,
labouring and suffering in a holy
and divine manner in the spirit of Jesus.”

the christian life is a continuation - st john eudes

“The air that we breathe,
the bread that we eat,
the heart which throbs in our bosoms,
are not more necessary for man
that he may live as a human being,
than is prayer for the Christian
that he may live as a Christian.”

the air that we breathe - st john eudes

““If the Church shows respect and veneration for everything
that came in contact with the Saviour’s Body: the Cross,
the Nails, the Thorns, the Winding Sheet of His Sepuchre,
the Swathing-bands of His infancy and similar things – what
honour must be due to this venerable body of the
Blessed Virgin from which the Body of the Redeemer was formed!”

St John Eudesif-the-church-st-john-eudes

Posted in MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SACRED and IMMACULATE HEARTS, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 19 August – The Memorial of St John Eudes “Apostle of Two Hearts”

One Minute Reflection – 19 August – The Memorial of St John Eudes “Apostle of Two Hearts”

yet I live, no longer I but Christ lives in me….Galatians 2:20

GALATIANS 2 20

REFLECTION – “A Christian has a union with Jesus Christ:
more noble,
more intimate
and more perfect
than the members of a human body
have with their head!”

a christian has a union with jesus christ - st john eudes

PRAYER – Father of mercies and God of all consolation, You gave us the loving Heart of Your own beloved Son, because of the boundless love by which You have loved us, which no tongue can describe. May we render You a love that is perfect with hearts made one with His. Grant, we pray, that our hearts may be brought to perfect unity: each heart with the other and all hearts with the Heart of Jesus….and may the rightful yearnings of our hearts find fulfillment through Him: Our Lord Jesus Christ, Your Son, who lives and reigns with You in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, forever and ever. – Collect from Saint John Eudes’ Mass, Gaudeamus, 1668 St John Eudes, Pray for us! amen.

st john eudes - pray for us

Posted in SACRED and IMMACULATE HEARTS, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 19 August – St John Eudes (1601-1680) Confessor, “Apostle of Two Hearts”

Saint of the Day – 19 August – St John Eudes -(1601-1680 “Apostle of Two Hearts” (14 November 1601 at Ri, Normandy, France – 19 August 1680 at Caen, Normandy, France) –  Beatified on 25 April 1909 by Pope Pius X and Canonised on 31 May 1925 by Pope Pius XI.   Confessor, Priest, Missionary, Founder, Preacher, Writer, he founded the Congregation of Jesus and Mary and the Order of Our Lady of Charity and was the author of the propers for the Mass and Divine Office of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.   Patronage – of the Diocese of Baie-Comeau, Québecl.   Attributes – Priest’s garments with the Sacred Heart.

St. John Eudes 02.HEADER

Eudes was born in 1601 on a farm near the village of Ri, in Normandy, the son of Isaac and Martha Eudes.   After studying with the Jesuits at Caen, Eudes joined the Oratorians on 25 March 1623.   His masters and models in the spiritual life were Pierre de Bérulle and the mystic Charles de Condren.   As a student of de Bérulle, Eudes is a member of the French School of Spirituality.   The French School was not a system or philosophy, but a highly Christocentric approach to spirituality, characterized by a sense of adoration, a personal relationship with Jesus, and a rediscovery of the Holy Spirit.

Eudes was ordained a priest on 20 December 1625.   Immediately after his ordination, he came down with an illness that kept him bedridden for a year.   During severe plagues in 1627 and 1631, he volunteered to care for the stricken in his own diocese.   He went about Normandy committing himself to the sick, administering the sacraments, and burying the dead.   To avoid infecting his colleagues, he lived in a huge cask in the middle of a field during the plague.

At age 32, Eudes became a parish missionary, preached over 100 parish missions, throughout Normandy, Ile-de-France, Burgundy and Brittany.   He was called by Jean-Jacques Olier “the Prodigy of his Age”.

He saw that parish priests needed support in becoming men of prayer and action.   He held conferences for them in which he outlined their duties.   Later, John started his own society of priests called the Congregation of Jesus and Mary.   The members were dedicated to promoting good seminary training, which would form Christlike priests.

Christian love impelled John to feel compassion for the women who were trying to escape prostitution.   He wanted a place for them to live, a refuge from their former way of life.   To serve the women in these refuges, he established a society of religious women called the Congregation of Our Lady of the Refuge.   It now serves the needs of troubled girls around the world.

Influenced by the teaching of the French school and St. Francis de Sales, especially as set out in the Treatise on the Love of God, and also by the revelations of St. Gertrude and St. Mechtilde, he was the theoretician, so to speak, of devotion to the Sacred Heart and explained the expressions of his predecessors.   Won over to devotion to the Heart of Jesus by Bérulle’s devotion to the Incarnate Word, he combined with it the gentleness and devotional warmth of St. Francis de Sales.   He changed the somewhat individual and private character of the devotion into a devotion for the whole Church by writing for the benefit of his communities an Office and a Mass, which were later approved by several bishops before spreading throughout the Church.   For this reason, Pope Leo XIII, in proclaiming his virtues heroic in 1903, gave him the title of “Author of the Liturgical Worship of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and Holy Heart of Mary”.

Eudes_Two_Hearts

Eudes dedicated the seminary chapels of Caen and Coutances to the Sacred Heart.   The feast of the Holy Heart of Mary was celebrated for the first time in 1648 and that of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in 1672, each as a double of the first class with an octave.   He composed various prayers and rosaries to the Sacred Hearts. His book “Le Cœur Admirable de la Très Sainte Mère de Dieu” is the first book ever written on the devotion to the Sacred Hearts.

a john
Founder Statue at St Peter’s Rome

Eudes taught the mystical unity of the hearts of Jesus and Mary and wrote, his most famous works are – Devotion to the Adorable Heart of Jesus and The Admirable Heart of the Most Holy Mother of God:

“You must never separate what God has so perfectly united.   So closely are Jesus and Mary bound up with each other that whoever beholds Jesus sees Mary; whoever loves Jesus, loves Mary;  whoever has devotion to Jesus, has devotion to Mary.”

The most striking characteristic of the teaching of St. John Eudes on Devotion to the Sacred Heart—as indeed of his whole teaching on the spiritual life—is that Christ is always its centre.

St John died a month after finishing The Admirable Heart of the Most Holy Mother of God, of natural causes on 19 August 1680 at Caen, Normandy, France.

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Memorials of the Saints for 19 August

St John Eudes (Optional Memorial) – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvnrPXy5CJA

St Andrew the Tribune
St Badulf of Ainay
St Bertulf of Luxeuil
St Calminius
St Credan of Evesham
St Donatus of Mount Jura
St Elaphius of Châlons
St Ezekiel Moreno Y Diaz
St Guenninus
Bl Guerricus
Bl Hugh Green
St Julius of Rome
St Louis of Toulouse
St Magnus of Anagni
St Magnus of Avignon
St Magnus of Cuneo
St Marianus of Entreaigues
St Marinus of Besalu
St Magino of Tarragona
St Mochta
St Namadia of Marsat
St Rufinus of Mantua
St Sarah the Matriarch
St Sebaldus
St Thecla of Caesarea
St Timothy of Gaza

Martyrs of Nagasaki – 15 beati: A group of missionaries and their laymen supporters who were executed for spreading Christianity in Japan.
• Antonius Yamada
• Bartholomaeus Mohyoe
• Iacobus Matsuo Denji
• Ioachim Díaz Hirayama
• Ioannes Miyazaki Soemon
• Ioannes Nagata Matashichi
• Ioannes Yago
• Laurentius Ikegami Rokusuke
• Leo Sukeemon
• Ludovic Frarijn
• Marcus Takenoshita Shin’emon
• Michaël Díaz Hori
• Paulus Sankichi
• Pedro de Zúñiga
• Thomas Koyanagi
Theywere beheaded on 19 August 1622 at Nagasaki, Japan and Beatified on 7 May 1867 by Pope Pius IX.

Martyred in the Spanish Civil War
Martyred Carmelite Sisters of Charity – 9 beati
Martyred Salesians of Ciudad Real – 8 beati
Martyred Subiaco Benedictines of Barcelona – 7 beati
• Blessed Agueda Hernández Amorós
• Blessed Agustí Busquets Creixell
• Blessed Andrés Pradas Lahoz
• Blessed Antolín Martínez y Martínez
• Blessed Antoni Pedró Minguella
• Blessed Càndid Feliu Soler
• Blessed Cipriano González Millán
• Blessed Damián Gómez Jiménez
• Blessed Elvira Torrentallé Paraire
• Blessed Félix González Bustos
• Blessed Francisca de Amézua Ibaibarriaga
• Blessed Francisco de Paula Ibáñez y Ibáñez
• Blessed Ignasi Guilà Ximenes
• Blessed Isidro Muñoz Antolín
• Blessed Joan Roca Bosch

Posted in JESUIT SJ, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES on CHARITY, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 18 August – The Memorial of St Alberto Hurtado

Thought for the Day – 18 August – The Memorial of St Alberto Hurtado

” Hogar de Christo”

Hogar means “hearth” or “home.” Hurtado wanted to welcome the poor into “Christ’s home.”

From all accounts Hurtado was an intensely busy man.   In 1946, he bought a green pickup truck to better bring at-risk children living on the street back to the shelters.   He called them his patroncitos, his “little bosses.”   In addition to his work with Hogar, his retreats and outreach to youth, he wrote several books and found the journal Mensaje, a Catholic magazine designed to highlight the social teachings of the church and which is still proudly published by the Chilean Jesuits.

Despite his hectic schedule, Alberto understood the need for the balance between prayer and work, striving to be a “contemplative in action.”   On the one hand, the activist is the one who at every moment recognises “the divine impulse.”   On the other, prayer should not encourage a “sleepy sort of laziness under the pretext of keeping ourselves united with God.”   I like to think of him as the patron saint of multitaskers.

By the age of 50, though, Alberto seemed to his friends worn out.   After a physician-ordered vacation, he returned to discover that he had pancreatic cancer.   The end would come quickly and painfully.   Yet during his suffering he was often heard to say, “I am content, O Lord, I am content.”   He died at age 51.

His funeral, in the Church of St. Ignatius in Santiago, was filled with so many of the poor who venerated Padre Hurtado that many of his close friends had to remain outside. Alberto Hurtado was canonised by Pope Benedict XVI in 2005.   All of Chile celebrated the man who the country’s president called one of Chile’s “founding fathers.”

In Santiago, near the original Hogar, is a shrine to Alberto, where many come to pray. Inside is his beat-up green pickup.

Let us too ‘build a home for Christ’!

St Alberto, Pray for us!

st alberto - pray for us 2

Posted in MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on CHARITY

Quote of the Day – 18 August

Quote of the Day – 18 August

”To leave our prayer when we are called
to do some act of charity for our neighbour,
is not really a quitting of prayer
but leaving Christ for Christ.
Even in the midst of a crowd
we can be going on to perfection.”

St Philip Nerit lave our prayer - st philip neri

Posted in MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 18 August – The Memorial of St Alberto Hurtado

One Minute Reflection – 18 August – The Memorial of St Alberto Hurtado

‘Amen, I say to you, whatever you did for one of these least brothers of mine, you did for me.’...Matthew 25:40

REFLECTION – “Christ roams through our streets in the person of so many of the suffering poor, sick and dispossessed, and people thrown out of their miserable slums; Christ huddled under bridges, in the person of so many children who lack someone to call father, who have been deprived for many years without a mother’s kiss on their foreheads…Christ is without a home!   Shouldn’t we want to give Him one, those of us who have the joy of a comfortable home, plenty of good food, the means to educate and assure the future of our children?”…St Alberto Hurtado S.J.

christ roams through our streets - st alberto hurtado.jpg

PRAYER – Heavenly Father, teach us to follow Your Son in all things, to give and not to count the cost. Open our eyes to the distress and sadness around us. What we have may we learn to share with others, so that we too may be called “good and faithful servant” which St Alberto lived to fulfil in each moment of his life. St Alberto Hurtado, pray for us, amen.st alberto - pray for us

Posted in JESUIT SJ, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY

Our Morning Offering – 18 August

Our Morning Offering – 18 August

Prayer of St Alberto Hurtado

Lord, help me to speak the truth before the strong
and not lie to gain the applause of the weak.
If You give me fortune, don’t take happiness away from me.
If You give me strength, don’t take reason away from me.
If You give me success, don’t take humility away from me.
If You give me humility, don’t take dignity away from me.
Help we always see the other side of the coin.
Do not let me blame others of treason
for not thinking like me.
Teach me to love people as myself
and to judge myself as others do.
Do not let me fall into pride if I triumph
nor in despair if I fail.
Rather, remind me that failure
is the experience which precedes triumph.
Teach me that forgiving is the grandest for the strong
and that revenge is the primitive sign of the weak.
If You take away my fortune, leave me with hope.
If You take away success, leave me with the strength
to triumph from the defeat.
If I fail people, give me the courage to ask pardon.
If the people fail me, give me the courage to forgive.
Lord, if I forget You, don’t forget me.
Amen

Here’s the Spanish:

Señor, ayúdame a decir la verdad delante de los fuertes
Y a no decir mentiras para ganarme el aplauso de los débiles.

Si me das fortuna, no me quites la felicidad.
Si me das fuerza, no me quites la razón.
Si me das éxito, no me quites la humildad.
Si me das humildad, no me quites la dignidad.

Ayúdame siempre a ver el otro lado de la medalla.
No me dejes inculpar de traición a los demás
por no pensar como yo.
Enséñame a querer a la gente como a mí mismo
y a juzgarme como a los demás.

No me dejes caer en el orgullo si triunfo,
ni en la desesperación si fracaso.
Más bien recuérdame que el fracaso
es la experiencia que precede al triunfo.

Enséñame que perdonar es lo más grande del fuerte,
Y que la venganza es la señal primitiva del débil.

Si me quitas la fortuna, déjame la esperanza.
Si me quitas el éxito, déjame la fuerza para triunfar del fracaso.

Si yo fallara a la gente, dame valor para disculparme.
Si la gente fallara conmigo, dame valor para perdonar.
Señor, si yo me olvido de Ti, no te olvides de mí.

prayer of st alberto hurtado

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 18 August 2017 – Alberto Hurtado Cruchaga S.J. (1901-1952)

Saint of the Day – 18 August 2017 – Alberto Hurtado Cruchaga S.J. (22 January 1901 at Vina del Mar, Chile – 18 August 1952 at Santiago, Chile of pancreatic cancer) Lawyer, Priests, Apostle of the poor and especially of poor/street/orphaned children, Teacher, Catechist, Writer, Apostle of the Youth and of the Homeless Apostle of Social Justice – Fr Hurtado was Beatified by John Paul II on October 16, 1994 and Canonised on 23 October 2005 by Pope Benedict XVI at Rome, Italy.   Patronages – Chile, poor people, street children, social workers.

ALBERTO HURTADO CRUCHAGA was born in Viña del Mar, Chile, on 22 January 1901;  he was orphaned when he was four years old by the death of his father.   His mother had to sell, at a loss, their modest property in order to pay the family’s debts.   As a further consequence, Alberto and his brother had to go to live with relatives and were often moved from one family to another.   From an early age, therefore, he experienced what it meant to be poor, to be without a home and at the mercy of others.

He was given a scholarship to the Jesuit College in Santiago.   Here he became a member of the Sodality of Our Lady and developed a lively interest in the poor, spending time with them in the most miserable neighborhoods every Sunday afternoon.

When he completed his secondary education in 1917, Alberto wanted to become a Jesuit but he was advised to delay the realisation of this desire in order to take care of his mother and his younger brother.   By working in the afternoons and evenings, he succeeded in supporting them; at the same time, he studied law at the Catholic University.   In this period, he maintained his care for the poor and continued to visit them every Sunday.   Obligatory military service interrupted his studies but once he fulfilled this duty he went on to earn his degree early in August 1923.

On 14 August 1923 he entered the Novitiate of the Society of Jesus in Chillán  . In 1925 he went to Córdoba, Argentina, where he studied humanities.   In 1927 he was sent to Spain to study philosophy and theology.

However, because of the suppression of the Jesuits in Spain in 1931, he went on to Belgium and continued studying theology at Louvain.   He was ordained a priest there on 24 August 1933 and in 1935 obtained a doctorate in pedagogy and psychology.   After having completed his Tertianship in Drongen, Belgium, he returned to Chile in January 1936.   Here he began his activity as professor of religion at Colegio San Ignacio and of Pedagogy at the Catholic University of Santiago.   He was entrusted with the Sodality of Our Lady for the students and he involved them in teaching catechism to the poor.   He frequently directed retreats and offered spiritual direction to many young men, accompanying several of them in their response to the priestly vocation and contributing in an outstanding manner to the formation of many Christian laymen.

In 1941 Father Hurtado published his most famous book:  “Is Chile a Catholic Country?” The same year he was asked to assume the role of Assistant for the Youth Movement of the Catholic Action, first within the Archdiocese of Santiago and then nationally.   He performed these roles with an exceptional spirit of initiative, dedication and sacrifice.

In October 1944, while giving a retreat, he felt impelled to appeal to his audience to consider the many poor people of the city, especially the numerous homeless children who were roaming the streets of Santiago.   This request evoked a ready and generous response.   This was the beginning of the initiative for which Father Hurtado is especially well-known:  a form of charitable activity which provided not only housing but a home-like milieu for the homeless: “El Hogar de Cristo”.

ST ALBERTO HEADER

icon - hogar de cristo

By means of contributions from benefactors and with the active collaboration of committed laity, Father Hurtado opened the first house for children;  this was followed by a house for women and then one for men.   The poor found a warm home in “El Hogar de Cristo”.   The houses multiplied and took on new dimensions;  in some houses there were rehabilitation centers, in others trade-schools and so on.   All were inspired and permeated by Christian values.  During all his work he drove a battered old ruck – green it was – it became a little icon of his arrival received with joy and love, wherever he went.

Fr. Hurtado's memorable green pickup truck
Fr Hurtado’s memorable green pickup truck

In 1945 Father Hurtado visited the United States to study the “Boys Town” movement and to consider how it could be adapted to his own country.   The last six years of his life were dedicated to the development of various forms in which “El Hogar” could exist and function.

In 1947 Father Hurtado founded the Chilean Trade Union Association (ASICH) to promote a union movement inspired by the social teaching of the Church.

Between 1947 and 1950, Father Hurtado wrote three important works:  on trade unions, on social humanism and on the Christian social order.   In 1951 he founded “Mensaje”, the well-known Jesuit periodical dedicated to explaining the doctrine of the Church.

Pancreatic cancer brought him, within a few months, to the end of his life.   In the midst of terrible pain, he was often heard to say, “I am content, Lord.”

After having spent his life manifesting Christ’s love for the poor, Father Hurtado was called to the Lord on 18 August 1952.

From his return to Chile after his Tertianship to his death, a matter of only fifteen years, Father Hurtado lived and accomplished all the works described above.   His apostolate was the expression of a personal love for Christ the Lord;  it was characterised by a great love for poor and abandoned children, an enlightened zeal for the formation of the laity and a lively sense of Christian social justice.

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Memorials of the Sains – 18 August

St Agapitus the Martyr
St Alberto Hurtado Cruchaga – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1cANvZdjmG4
Bl Antoine Bannassat
St Crispus of Rome
St Daig Maccairaill
Bl Domenico de Molinar
St Eonus of Arles
St Ernan
St Evan of Ayrshire
St Firminus of Metz
St Florus of Illyria
Bl Francus of Francavilla
Bl Gaspar di Salamanca
St Helena
St Hermas of Rome
St John of Rome
St Juliana of Myra
St Juliana of Stobylum
St Laurus of Illyria
St Leo of Myra
Bl Leonard of Cava
St Maximus of Illyria
Bl Milo of Fontenelle
St Polyaenus of Rome
St Proculus of Illyria
Bl Raynald of Ravenna
St Ronan of Iona
St Serapion of Rome

Massa Candida: Also known as –
• Martyrs of Utica
• White Company
Three hundred 3rd century Christians at Carthage who were ordered to burn incense to Jupiter or face death by fire. Martyrs. Saint Augustine of Hippo and the poet Prudentius wrote about them. They jumped into a pit of burning lime c 253 at Carthage, North Africa.

Martyred in the Spanish Civil War:
Martyred Carmelites of Carabanchel Bajo – 8 beati:
Martyrs of La Tejera – 4 beati:
• Blessed Adalberto Vicente y Vicente
• Blessed Agustín Pedro Calvo
• Blessed Angelo Reguilón Lobato
• Blessed Atanasio Vidaurreta Labra
• Blessed Aurelio García Anton
• Blessed Celestino José Alonso Villar
• Blessed Daniel García Antón
• Blessed Eliseo María Camargo Montes
• Blessed Eudald Rodas Saurina
• Blessed Fermín Gellida Cornelles
• Blessed Francisco Arias Martín
• Blessed Francisco Pérez y Pérez
• Blessed Gregorio Díez Pérez
• Blessed Jaume Falgarona Vilanova
• Blessed José María Ruiz Cardeñosa
• Blessed José Sánchez Rodríguez
• Blessed Joseph Chamayoux Auclés
• Blessed Liberio González Nombela
• Blessed María Luisa Bermúdez Ruiz
• Blessed Micaela Hernán Martínez
• Blessed Nicomedes Andrés Vecilla
• Blessed Patricio Gellida Llorach
• Blessed Rosario Ciércoles Gascón
• Blessed Santiago Franco Mayo
• Blessed Silvano Villanueva González
• Blessed Vicente María Izquierdo Alcón

Posted in DOMINICAN OP, MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY, The HOLY EUCHARIST / The HOLY MASS

Thought for the Day – 17 August – The Memorial of St Hyacinth of Poland – “Apostle of Poland” “Apostle of the North”

Thought for the Day – 17 August – The Memorial of St Hyacinth of Poland – “Apostle of Poland” “Apostle of the North”

“Our readers, we can but fancy, have marvelled at the prodigious labours and travelling of Saint Hyacinth, although we have given only a meager account of them. They extended over a period of nearly forty years and carried him through a large part of Europe and Asia. Doubtless, if they were recorded in detail and in proper sequence, they would be found infinitely more stupendous than we have painted them. He alone could have told them as they should be recounted. Yet it possibly never entered his mind to leave posterity any information on his life. The one thing that engaged his thoughts was, after saving his own soul, to help those of others, to make God known and to extend the kingdom of Christ. The same idea filled the minds of the confrères who were often his companions in labour. In this way, it was only through the scanty records discovered in cities and the early convents that historians have been able to tell us the little we do know about him. Still perhaps never was there a life which should be more completely written than that of Saint Hyacinth Odrowaz.

One may consider the practical, lively faith of the Poles, whether in the home land or in others, as a perpetual miracle of Saint Hyacinth.   In no small measure they owe it to him. To that keen faith we must attribute the magnificent institutions of learning, charity, benevolence and the like, as well as the churches, monasteries and similar edifices, in which Poland abounds and in which it has found expression.   All these are filled with the spirit which the people largely derived from him.   They simply thrill with love and gratitude for him.   This true spirit of Catholicity, we must remember, has been preserved undiminished for centuries through wars of every kind, division, hardships, persecution and every sort of oppression-the like of which the world has seen few parallels.   We have here, it would seem, the greatest miracle of the zealous apostle’s life. At least, it has contributed more to the glory of God, the good of the Church, and the salvation of souls than any miracle he performed.” (Acta; STANISLAUS, Father, O. P., of Cracow, manuscript Vita Sancti Hyacinthi.)

Saint Hyacinth teaches us to spare no effort in the service of God but to rely for success not on our industry but on the assistance of the Holy Eucharist and the prayer of the Immaculate Mother of God.

St Hyacinth of Poland pray for the Poland, the Church and for us all!

st hyacinth pray for us 2

 

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, DOMINICAN OP, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY

Quote/s of the Day – 17 August

Quote/s of the Day – 17 August

As it is the Memorial of St Hyacinth O.P. of the great Marian Miracle,
I am posting Quotations on Mary from some of our great Dominican Saints.
Enjoy!

“Mary is the Divine Page
on which the Father wrote
the Word of God, His Son.”

St Albert the Great O.P. (1200-1280) Doctor of the Church

mary is the divine page - st albert the great

“As mariners are guided into port
by the shining of a star,
so Christians are guided to heaven
by Mary.”

St Thomas Aquinas O.P. (1225-1274) Doctor of the Church

as mariners are guided into port - st thomas aquinas

“Mary is the most sweet bait,
chosen,
prepared
and ordained by God,
to catch the hearts of men.”

St Catherine of Siena T.O.S.D. (1347-1380) Doctor of the Churchmary is the most sweet bait - st catherine of siena

“To ask favours
without interposing Mary,
is to attempt to fly without wings.”

St Antoninus O.P. Bishop of Florence (1389-1459)

to ask favours without interposing mary - st antoninus of florence

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 17 August – The Memorial of St Hyacinth of Poland

One Minute Reflection – 17 August – The Memorial of St Hyacinth of Poland

Come, blessed of my Father, possess the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world…Matthew 25:34

REFLECTION – “Mary, the Mother of our Lord, accompanied by the choirs of Angels, will come to meet you. What a day of joy that will be for you!”….St Jerome (343-420) Doctor of the Church

mnary the moher of our lord - st jerome

PRAYER – O Mary, Mother of God and my mother, watch over me at every moment and keep me free from sin. Then upon my death, come to meet me and lead me to my eternal home in heaven. As you, St Hyacinth, took Mary with you and she made smooth your path, pray that we too may always ‘take Mary with us’ to lead us safely home to her son, who is our Lord, amen.

st hyacinth of poland pray for us

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, DOMINICAN OP, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY

Our Morning Offering – 17 August

Our Morning Offering – 17 August

Our Lord, King of all!
By St Albert the Great O.P. (1200-1280) Doctor of the Church

We pray to You, O Lord,
who are the supreme Truth,
and all truth is from You.
We beseech You, O Lord,
who are the highest Wisdom,
and all the wise depend on You
for their wisdom.
You are the supreme Joy,
and all who are happy
owe it to You.
You are the Light of minds
and all receive
their understanding from You.
We love, we love You above all.
We seek You, we follow You,
and we are ready to serve You.
We desire to dwell under Your power
for You are the King of all.
Amenour lord, king of all - st albert the geat op

Posted in Against DROWNING, DOMINICAN OP, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 17 August – St Hyacinth OP (1185-1257) – “Apostle of Poland” and “Apostle of the North”

Saint of the Day – 17 August – St Hyacinth OP (1185-1257) – (born Jacek Odrowąż)  “Apostle of Poland” and “Apostle of the North” also known as “the Polish St Dominic”– Religious Priest, Confessor, Doctor of Law and Divinity, Missionary, Preacher, Miracle Worker, Mystic (1185 at Lanka Castle, Kamien Slaski, Opole, Upper Silesia (in modern Poland) – 15 August 1257 at Krakow, Poland of natural causes).   His major relics are in Paris, France.   He was Canonised on 17 April 1594 by Pope Clement VIII.   Patronages – against drowning, Camalaniugan, Philippines, Ermita de Piedra de San Jacinto, Tuguegarao, Philippines, Krakow, Poland, archdiocese of, Lithuania (named by Pope Innocent XI in 1686), Poland, Lithuania.   Attributes – statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary; Monstrance or Ciborium.

Hyacinth-O.P HEADER 2.-e1424637742936

Called the “Apostle of Poland” and the “Apostle of the North”, Hyacinth was the son of Eustachius Konski of the noble family of Odrowąż.   He was born in 1185 at the castle of Lanka, at Kamin, in Silesia, Poland.   A near relative of Blessed Ceslaus, he made his studies at Kraków, Prague and Bologna and at the latter place merited the title of Doctor of Law and Divinity.   On his return to Poland he was given a stipend at Sandomir.   He subsequently accompanied his uncle Ivo Konski, the Bishop of Kraków, to Rome.

While in Rome, he witnessed a miracle performed by Saint Dominic and became a Dominican friar, along with the Blessed Ceslaus and two attendants of the Bishop of Kraków – Herman and Henry.   In 1219 Pope Honorius III invited Saint Dominic and his followers to take up residence at the ancient Roman basilica of Santa Sabina, which they did by early 1220.   Before that time, the friars had only a temporary residence in Rome at the convent of San Sisto Vecchio which Honorius III had given to Dominic circa 1218, intending it to be used for a reformation of Roman nuns under Dominic’s guidance. Hyacinth and his companions were among the first to enter the convent.   They were also the first alumni of the studium of the Dominican Order at Santa Sabina out of which would grow the 16th century College of Saint Thomas at Santa Maria sopra Minerva, which became the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum in the 20th century.   After an abbreviated novitiate, Hyacinth and his companions received the religious habit of the Order from St Dominic himself in 1220.

st dominic gives habit to st hyacinth

The young friars were then sent back to their homeland to establish the Dominican Order in Poland and Kiev.   As Hyacinth and his three companions travelled back to Kraków, he set up new monasteries with his companions as superiors, until finally he was the only one left to continue on to Kraków, where he founded two houses.

His apostolic journeys extended over numerous and vast regions, he walked a total of nearly twenty five thousand miles in his apostolic travels.   Austria, Bohemia, Livonia, the shores of the Black Sea, Tartary, Northern China in the east, Sweden, Norway and Denmark to the west, were evangelised by him and he is said to have visited Scotland.   Everywhere he travelled unarmed, without a horse, with no money, no interpreters, no furs in the severe winters and often without a guide, abandoning to Divine Providence his mission in its entirety.   Everywhere multitudes were converted, churches and convents were built;  one hundred and twenty thousand pagans and infidels were baptised by his hands.   He worked many miracles;  at Krakow he raised a dead youth to life.  His progress among these hostile peoples, with their barbarous customs and unknown languages, through trackless forests, in the fierce cold of the North, can be explained as a miracle.st hyaconth op

He had inherited from Saint Dominic a perfect filial confidence in the Mother of God;  to Her he ascribed his success and to Her aid he looked for his own salvation.   Early in his mission career, Our Lady appeared to Hyacinth and promised him that she would never refuse him anything.   Through the years of his arduous labour she kept her promise, and his ministry was rich with a harvest of souls. He performed many astounding miracles, including countless cures. On one occasion he gave sight to two boys who had been born without eyes. He raised several dead people to life.   The best known incident in his life has to do with Our Lady, which is not surprising.

250px-Carracci_Saint_Hyacinth
Apparition of the Virgin to Saint Hyacinth, Ludovico Carracci (1592), in the Louvre Museum

It was at the request of this indefatigable missionary that Saint Thomas Aquinas wrote his famous philosophical Summa contra Gentiles, proving the reasonableness of the Faith on behalf of those unfamiliar with doctrine.

While Saint Hyacinth was at Kiev the Tartars sacked the town but it was only as he finished Mass that the Saint heard of the danger.   Without waiting to unvest, he took the ciborium in his hands and was leaving the church.   Then occurred the most famous of his countless prodigies.   As he passed by a statue of Mary a voice said:  “Hyacinth, My son, why do you leave Me behind? Take Me with you…”   The statue was of heavy alabaster but when Hyacinth took it in his arms it was light as a reed.   With the Blessed Sacrament and the statue he walked to the Dnieper river and crossed dry-shod over the surface of the waters to the far bank.

On the eve of the Assumption, 1257, he was advised of his coming death.   In spite of an unrelenting fever, he celebrated Mass on the feast day and communicated as a dying man.   He was anointed at the foot of altar and died on the great Feast of Our Lady.

A note on the name “Hyacinth”:   Jacek is the common form in Polish, for the name “Hyacinth.”   Literally understood, “Hyacinth” is said to derive from the hyacinth flower or hyacinth stone and thus its meaning has two interpretations.

In the first place he is called “Hyacinth,” because the flower has a stalk with a crimson blossom:   this suits Blessed Jacek well for he was a simple stalk in his docility of heart, a flower in his chastity, a crimson blossom in his vow of poverty and lack of material goods.

Secondly, he is called “Hyacinth” from the hyacinth stone, for he shines brilliantly in the way he handed on the teaching of the gospel, was resplendent in his holy way of life and most steadfast in spreading the catholic faith.

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Memorials of the Saints – 17 August

Bl Marie-Élisabeth Turgeon (Optional Memorial)

St Amor of Amorbach
St Anastasius of Terni
St Beatrice da Silva
St Benedicta of Lorraine
St Carloman
St Cecilia of Lorraine
St Clare of Montefalco
St Donatus of Ripacandida
St Drithelm
St Pope Eusebius
St Eusebius of Sicily
St Hyacinth – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EoOFq6fsiHo
St Jacobo Kyushei Gorobioye Tomonaga
St James the Deacon
St Jeanne of the Cross/Delanoue
St Jeroen of Noordwijk
St Juliana of Ptolemais
St Leopoldina Naudet
St Mamas
St Michaël Kurobyoie
St Myron of Cyzicus
Bl Nicholas Politi
Bl Noël-Hilaire Le Conte
St Paul of Ptolemais
St Theodore of Grammont

Martyred in the Spanish Civil War: Bl Antoni Carmaniú Mercarder, Bl Facundo Escanciano Tejerina, Bl Eugenio Sanz-Orozco Mortera, Bl Enric Canadell Quintana, Florencio López Egea and see below –
Martyrs of Malaga – 8 beati: A priest and seven brothers, all members of the             Hospitallers of Saint John of God, all martyred together in the Spanish Civil War:
• Antonio del Charco Horques
• Eusebio Ballesteros Rodríguez
• Florentino Alonso Antonio
• Isidro Valentín Peña Ojea
• Juan Antonio García Moreno
• Manuel Sanz y Sanz
• Pedro Pastor García
• Silvestre Perez Laguna
17 August 1936 in Málaga, Spain – they were Beatified on 13 October 2013 by Pope Francis.
Martyrs of Maspujols – 3 beati: Three priests in the archdiocese of Tarragona, Spain.         Martyred together in the Spanish Civil War:
• Josep Mañé March
• Magí Civit Roca
• Miquel Rué Gené
17 August 1936 in Maspujols, Tarragona, Spain. They were Beatified on 13 October 2013 by Pope Francis. The beatification ceremony was celebrated in Tarragona, Spain.