Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Memorials of the Saints – 23 June

St Agrippina of Rome
St Bilio of Vannes
St Etheldreda of Ely
Bl Félix of Cîteaux
St Felix of Sutri
Bl Frances Martel
Bl Francis O’Sullivan
St Hidulphus of Hainault
St James of Toul
St John of Rome
St Joseph Cafasso (1811-1860)

Bl Lanfranco Beccari
St Lietbert
Bl Lupo de Paredes
Bl Mary of Oignies
St Moeliai of Nendrum
Bl Peter of Juilly
Bl Thomas Corsini of Orvieto
St Thomas Garnet
Bl Walhere of Dinant
St Zenas of Philadelphia
St Zeno of Philadelphia

Martyrs of Ancyra: A family of converts who were arrested, tortured and sent in chains to Ancyra, Galatia (modern Ankara, Turkey) where he was tortured more by order of governor Agrippinus during the persecutions of Diocletian. Martyr. They were – Eustochius, Gaius, Lollia, Probus, Urban. They were roasted over a fire and finally beheaded c 300 in Ancyra, Galatia (modern Ankara, Turkey).

Martyrs of Nicomedia: During the persecutions of Diocletian, many Christians fled their homes to live in caves in the area of Nicomedia. In 303 troops descended on the area, systematically hunted them down and murdered all they could find.

Posted in MORNING Prayers, ON the SAINTS, POETRY, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 22 June – The Memorial of St Paulinus of Nola (c 354-431)

Thought for the Day – 22 June – The Memorial of St Paulinus of Nola (c 354-431)

Of him, Pope Benedict XVI said:

“In our catechesis on the great teachers of the early Church, we now turn to Saint Paulinus, the Bishop of Nola in southern Italy.
A native of Bordeaux in Gaul, Paulinus became the Roman governor of Campania, where, after encountering the depth of popular devotion to Saint Felix Martyr, he was led to embrace the Christian faith.   After the tragic loss of their first child, he and his wife sold their goods and undertook a life of chastity and prayer.
Ordained a priest and then Bishop of Nola, Paulinus distinguished himself by his charity to the poor during the troubled times of the barbarian invasions.
A man of letters and a gifted poet, Paulinus placed his art at the service of Christ and the Church. In his poetry and his vast correspondence, Paulinus expressed his deep faith and his love of the poor.   

His letters to such contemporary churchmen as Saints Ambrose, Augustine, Jerome and Martin of Tours, reflect his asceticism, his deep sense of the Church’s communion and his cultivation of the practice of spiritual friendship as a means of experiencing that communion within the mystery of Christ’s mystical Body, enlivened by the Holy Spirit.”

Many of us are tempted to “retire” early in life, after an initial burst of energy.   Devotion to Christ and His work is waiting to be done all around us.   Paulinus’ life had scarcely begun when he thought it was over, as he took his ease on that estate in Spain.   “Man proposes, but God disposes.”

The life of Saint Paulinus is one of great accomplishments and positions—none more important than those which began with his baptism into the faith.   As with all baptism, Paulinus was made anew, filled with the Holy Spirit and through this rebirth, was able to devote himself to the holy work of God, serving others and bringing many to the faith. Today, we pray for a renewal of our own baptismal promise, awake and alive in our faith!

The Word of the Cross

by Saint Paulinus of Nola

Look on thy God, Christ hidden in our flesh.
A bitter word, the cross, and bitter sight:
Hard rind without, to hold the heart of heaven.
Yet sweet it is; for God upon that tree
Did offer up His life: upon that rood
My Life hung, that my life might stand in God.
Christ, what am I to give Thee for my life?
Unless take from Thy hands the cup they hold,
To cleanse me with the precious draught of death.
What shall I do? My body to be burned?
Make myself vile? The debt’s not paid out yet.
Whate’er I do, it is but I and Thou,
And still do I come short, still must Thou pay
My debts, O Christ;  for debts Thyself hadst none.
What love may balance Thine? My Lord was found
In fashion like a slave, that so His slave
Might find himself in fashion like his Lord.
Think you the bargain’s hard, to have exchanged
The transient for the eternal, to have sold
Earth to buy Heaven? More dearly God bought me.

St Paulinus of Nola, Pray for us!st paulinus of nola pray for us - 22 june 2018

Posted in MORNING Prayers, ON the SAINTS, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on DIVINE PROVIDENCE, QUOTES on FAITH, QUOTES on the CHURCH, QUOTES on TRUTH, SAINT of the DAY

Quote/s of the Day – 22 June – The Memorial of St Paulinus of Nola (c 354-431) and St John Fisher (1469-1535) and St Thomas More (1478-1535) Martyrs

Quote/s of the Day – 22 June – The Memorial of St Paulinus of Nola (c 354-431) and St John Fisher (1469-1535) and St Thomas More (1478-1535) Martyrs

“To my mind the only art, is the faith
and Christ is my poetry.”

“It is not surprising if, despite being far apart,
we are present to each other and
without being acquainted, know each other
because we are members of One Body,
we have One Head,
we are steeped in One Grace,
we live on One Loaf,
we walk on One Road
and we dwell in the Same House.”

St Paulinus of Nola

St Paulinus of Nola (c 354-431)

“A good man is not a perfect man;
a good man is an honest man,
faithful and unhesitatingly responsive
to the voice of God in his life.”

St John Fishera good man is not a perfect man - st john fisher - 22 june 2018

“I reckon in this realm no one man,
in wisdom, learning
and long approved virtue together,
meet to be matched and compared with him.”

St Thomas More speaking of St John Fisheri reckon in this realm - st thomas more speaking of st john fisher - 22 june 2018

“The things we pray for, good Lord,
give us grace to labour for.”the things we pray for good lord give us grace to labour for - st thomas more - 22 june 2018.jpg

“We cannot go to heaven in featherbeds.”we cannot go to heaven - st thomas more - 22 june 2018

“One of the greatest problems of our time,
is that many are schooled
but few are educated.”one of the greatest problems - st thomas more - 22 june 2018

“If we lived in a state where virtue was profitable,
common sense would make us saintly.
But since we see that avarice, anger,
pride and stupidity commonly profit,
far beyond charity, modesty, justice and thought,
perhaps we must stand fast a little,
even at the risk of being heroes.”if we lived in a state - st thomas more - 22 june 2018

“You wouldn’t abandon ship in a storm,
just because you couldn’t control the winds.”

St Thomas Moreyou wouldn't abandon ship - st thomas more - 22 june 2018

Posted in MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on DEATH, QUOTES on DIVINE PROVIDENCE, QUOTES on FAITH, QUOTES on FEAR, QUOTES on HOPE, QUOTES on MERCY, QUOTES on PEACE, QUOTES on SUFFERING, QUOTES on TRUST and complete CONFIDENCE in GOD, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 22 June – The Memorial of St John Fisher (1469-1535) and St Thomas More (1478-1535) Martyrs

One Minute Reflection – 22 June – The Memorial of St John Fisher (1469-1535) and St Thomas More (1478-1535) Martyrs

More than that, I even consider everything as a loss because of the supreme good of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord.  For his sake I have accepted the loss of all things and I consider them so much refuse, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having any righteousness of my own based on the law but that which comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God, depending on faith to know him and the power of his resurrection and the sharing of his sufferings by being conformed to his death, if somehow I may attain the resurrection from the dead…Philippians 3:8-11i even consider everything as a loss - phil 3-8 - st paul - 22 june 2018

REFLECTION – “Although I know well, Margaret, that because of my past wickedness, I deserve to be abandoned by God, I cannot but trust in His merciful goodness.   His grace has strengthened me until now and made me content to lose goods, land and life as well, rather than to swear against my conscience.   God’s grace has given the king a gracious frame of mind toward me, so that as yet he has taken from me nothing but my liberty.   In doing this His Majesty has done me such great good, with respect to spiritual profit, that I trust, that among all the great benefits he has heaped so abundantly upon me, I count my imprisonment the very greatest.

I cannot, therefore, mistrust the grace of God. By the merits of His bitter passion joined to mine and far surpassing in merit for me, all that I can suffer myself, His bounteous goodness, shall release me from the pains of purgatory and shall increase my reward in heaven besides.

I will not mistrust Him, Meg, though I shall feel myself weakening and on the verge of being overcome with fear. I shall remember, how Saint Peter at a blast of wind, began to sink because of his lack of faith and I shall do as he did, call upon Christ and pray to Him for help.   And then I trust He shall place His holy hand on me and in the stormy seas, hold me up from drowning.

And finally, Margaret, I know this well, that without my fault He will not let me be lost.   I shall, therefore, with good hope commit myself wholly to Him.   And if He permits me to perish for my faults, then I shall serve as praise for His justice.   But in good faith, Meg, I trust that His tender pity shall keep my poor soul safe and make me commendHhis mercy.

And, therefore, my own good daughter, do not let you mind be troubled over anything that shall happen to me in this world.   Nothing can come but what God wills.   And I am very sure, that whatever that be, however bad it may seem, it shall indeed be the best.” – from a letter written by Saint Thomas More from prison to his daughter Margareti will not distrust him Meg - st thomas more - 11 jan 2018nothing can happen to me - st thomas more - 16 march 2018

PRAYER – Almighty, ever-living God, You set the perfection of true faith in martyrdom. Strengthen us by the prayers of the martyrs, St Thomas More and St John Fisher , so that our lives may bear witness to the faith we profess. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, with You in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God forever, amen.sts thomas moe and john fisher - pray for us

Posted in MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS

Our Morning Offering – 22 June – The Memorial of St Thomas More (1478-1535)

Our Morning Offering – 22 June – The Memorial of St Thomas More (1478-1535)

During his address to the Roman Curia on the occasion of the presentation of Christmas greetings, Pope Francis affirmed, “A bit of good humour is very good for us!   It will do us much good to pray St Thomas More’s prayer frequently, I pray it every day and it helps me.”pope francis laughing

Prayer for Good Humour
By St Thomas More (1478-1535)

Grant me O Lord, good digestion,
and also something to digest.
Grant me a healthy body
and the necessary good humour to maintain it.
Grant me a simple soul that knows
to treasure all that is good
and that doesn’t frighten easily at the sight of evil,
but rather finds the means to put things
back in their place.
Give me a soul that knows not boredom,
grumbles, sighs and laments,
nor excess of stress,
because of that obstructing thing called “I.”
Grant me O Lord, a good sense of humour,
Allow me the grace to be able to take a joke
to discover in life a bit of joy,
and to be able to share it with others.
Amenprayer for good hmour - st thomas more - 22 june 2018

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 22 June – St Paulinus of Nola (c 354-431)

Saint of the Day – 22 June – St Paulinus of Nola (c 354-431) Bishop, Confessor, Poet, Writer, Apostle of Charity, Preacher, Orator, Senator and Governor,  – born Pontius Meropius Anicius Paulinus in c354 at Burdigala, Gaul (modern Bordeaux, France) and died on 22 June 431 of natural causes. 768px-Linzer_Dom_-_Fenster_-_Paulinus_von_NolaSt Paulinus was an inspiration to many—including six great saint of the Church who referenced him in letters of encouragement to others: St Augustine, St Jerome,  Melania, St Martin of Tours, St Gregory and St Ambrose .   St Augustine wrote, “Go to Campania– there study Paulinus, that choice servant of God.   With what generosity, with what still greater humility, he has flung from him the burden of this world’s grandeurs to take on him the yoke of Christ and in His service how serene and unobtrusive his life!”

It is believed that St Ambrose would have chosen him to replace him as bishop of Milan, but Paulinus was far from Milan when Ambrose died.   He said of him that “Christians should follow and imitate Paulinus,” and that the greatest good fortune of the century in which they were living was to be “witness to the life of so rare and admirable a man.”  Throughout his life, Saint Paulinus devoted himself to the care and service of the poor, giving away all that he had to improve the lives of others.

Paulinus was born to a Roman family noteworthy for the long line of senators, prefects, consuls and other important governmental figures it produced.   Given the family’s status and station, Paulinus received the finest of educations available at the time.   He was soon recognised for his eloquence in oratory, prose and verse and was admired by many for his hymns, poetry and eloquent speeches.   Paulinus first served as Roman Consul, and then Prefect (or Governor) of Rome and had amassed a large fortune, which he promptly doubled by marring Theresia, a virtuous (yet rich!) Spanish noblewoman.   The couple became one of the wealthiest and most respected couples in Europe, owning property in several nations across the continent. Despite the admiration and respect he earned from many of his contemporaries (now saints), Paulinus was a catechumen and had yet to devote himself to the faith.   Rather, he attempted to maintain his status and riches in the world.   Only through suffering and sorrow was Paulinus more fully drawn into the holy life the Lord had planned for him. Sadly, the first and only child of Paulinus and Theresia died shortly after his birth.   Not long afterward, Paulinus was baptised into the faith, at the age of 38. 

st paulinus of nola 4

Paulinus and Theresia moved to Spain, and began to live lives of solitude and prayer and St Paulinus was ordained.   He and his wife liberated the slaves that worked in the area and then piece by piece, sold off their vast fortunes in real estate and holdings, distributing the earnings throughout the world—so widely and generously that St Jerome wrote “both East and West were filled with his alms.”He and his wife then moved to Nola, near Naples.   He had a great love for Saint Felix of Nola (died in 255),  he credited his conversion to S. Felix and each year would write a poem in honour of the saint and he spent much effort in promoting devotion to St Felix. Paulinus gave away most of his remaining property—to the consternation of his relatives—and continued his work for the poor.   Supporting a host of debtors, the homeless and other needy people, he lived a monastic life in another part of his home.   He had the beautiful Church of Saint Felix constructed, where he devoted himself at all hours of the day in service to others.   Paulinus undertook a life of extreme abstinence and toil, living a celibate life as brother to his wife, exchanging their fine robes for rough clothing and the fine silver furnishings of their home for wood.   Together, they embraced a life of true poverty, embracing the Gospel and giving all they had—sometimes to excess—to those in need.   They also founded a small community of monks in Nola and opened a hospice for the poor and for travellers to the region.At the age of 55, Paulinus was elected Bishop of Nola (by this time his wife had died) a post he served faithfully for 21 years.   He comforted his peoples during the invasion of the Vandals and subsequent enslavement of the community.   It is said that following the ransom of the captives, a poor widow, whose only son had been taken away by the Vandal king came to see Saint Paulinus, recounting her tale.   “What I have I give you,” said the Saint to her. ”We will go to Africa and you will offer me to the prince, saying I am one of your slaves, in exchange for the prisoner.”   This they did, and Paulinus was accepted in place of the widow’s son and employed as gardener.   After a time the king discovered, by divine interposition, that this valuable slave was the renowned Bishop of Nola.   He at once set him free, granting him also the freedom of the remainder of the townsmen of Nola who were enslaved.

Paulinus, having returned to Nola, died in 431.   His holy remains were transferred several times but restored to the cathedral of Nola in 1908.   Although some of his wonderful writings have been lost, thirty-two poems and fifty-one letters remain.   His writings contain one of the earliest examples of a Christian wedding song.

The life of St Paulinus is one of great accomplishments and positions—none more important than those which began with his baptism into the faith.   As with all baptism, Paulinus was made anew, filled with the Holy Spirit and through this rebirth, was able to devote himself to the holy work of God, serving others and bringing many to the faith.

St Paulinus is credited with the introduction of bells in Christian worship and ecclesiastical celebrations and helped resolve the disputed election of Pope Boniface I.The people of modern-day Nola and the surrounding regions remain devoted to St Paulinus.   His feast day is celebrated annually in Nola during “La Festa dei Gigli” (the Feast of the Lilies), in which lilies and other flowers are arranged around large statues in honour of the saint which are then placed on tower-like structures,and carried upon the shoulders of the faithful around the city.   In the United States the descendants of Italian immigrants from Nola and Brusciano continue the tradition in Brooklyn.768px-StatuadiSanPaolinodaNola

2011 Franklin Square Giglio
Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Memorials of the Saints – 22 June

St John Fisher (1469-1535) (Optional Memorial)

St Paulinus of Nola (c 354-431) (Optional Memorial)

St Thomas More (1478-1535) (Optional Memorial)


St Aaron of Brettany
St Aaron of Pais-de-Laon
St Alban of Britain
Bl Altrude of Rome
St Consortia
St Cronan of Ferns
St Eberhard of Salzburg
St Eusebius of Samosata
St Exuperantius of Como
St Flavius Clemens
St Gregory of Agrigento
St Heraclius the Soldier
St Hespérius of Metz
Bl Pope Innocent V
St John IV of Naples
St Julius of Pais-de-Laon
Bl Kristina Hamm
Bl Marie Lhuilier
St Nicetas of Remesiana
St Precia of Epinal
St Rotrudis of Saint-Omer
St Rufinus of Alexandria

Martyrs of Samaria – 1480 saints: 1480 Christians massacred in and near Samaria during the war between the Greek Emperor Heraclius and the pagan Chosroas of Persia. c 614 in the vicinity of Samaria, Palestine.

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

Thought for the Day – 21 June – The Memorial of St Aloysius de Gonzaga S.J. (1568-1591)

Thought for the Day – 21 June – The Memorial of St Aloysius de Gonzaga S.J. (1568-1591)

Aloysius also volunteered to work at the local hospital.   On closer inspection, this was heroic of him since he was very sensitive to disgusting sores and odors.   He strove to conquer his inborn squeamishness and attend to the most repulsive cases.   A fellow novice, Decio Striverio, remembers approaching a particularly loathsome patient, full of bleeding sores.   Aloysius turned completely pale as they approached but as if summoning some hidden strength, his colour returned and he approached the victim as if he were Christ Himself.   “Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of Mine, you did it for Me.” (Mt. 25:40)

Aloysius worked first at the overcrowded hospital of St Sixtus.   He traversed the streets of Rome and carried the ill on his back to the hospital;  when there, he undressed and washed the victims, gave them fresh clothing, placed them in a bed and fed them. However, the Jesuit superiors took alarm, as some of the novices started dying.   They assigned Aloysius to the hospital of Santa Maria di Consolazione, reserved for non-contagious patients.

While assisting at this hospital, he lifted an unknowingly infected man out of his bed, tended his needs and returned him to his bed.  Unfortunately, this act of charity cost Aloysius his life.   He received the diagnosis of infection on 3 March 1591, and died on 21 June 1591.   He was 23 years old.   In a letter addressed to his mother shortly before his death, he wrote, “Our parting will not be for long; we shall see each other again in heaven;  we shall be united with our Saviour;  there we shall praise Him with heart and soul, sing of His mercies forever, and enjoy eternal happiness.”aloysius gonzaga tending patients

Aloysius’ patronage extends foremost over the youth.   Thus, artists have made the effort to emphasise his angelic purity, as a role model for chastity.   While undoubtedly commendable, the realisation of this virtue in pictorial form often results in a caricature. There is a fine line between heroic purity and honey-dripping effeminacy, at least in artistic terms.   Interestingly, St Aloysius is also the patron of AIDS patients and caregivers, due to his compassionate care and ultimate infection of an incurable disease. In the final analysis, the sugarcoated holy card depiction of St Aloysius is misleading, as he possessed ferocious will power.   Moreover, one can easily absolve his youthful quirkiness before entering the Jesuits, in light of his large-hearted compassion revealed in the end….(Reference – The Life of St. Aloysius Gonzaga, Patron of Christian Youth by Maurice Meschler, S.J.)

Aloysius seems an unlikely patron of youth, in a society where asceticism is confined, to training camps of football teams and boxers and sexual permissiveness has little left to permit.   Can an overweight, sin-soaked and air-conditioned society deprive itself of anything?   It will, when it discovers a reason, as Aloysius did.   The motivation for letting God purify us is the experience of God loving us in prayer.  Prayer is our most urgent work!

St Aloysius Gonzaga, help us to pray and please Pray for us all!st-aloysius-gonzaga. - pray for us - 21 june 2018.pg

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

Quote of the Day – 21 June – The Memorial of St Aloysius de Gonzaga S.J. (1568-1591)

Quote of the Day – 21 June – The Memorial of St Aloysius de Gonzaga S.J. (1568-1591)

“May the comfort and grace of the Holy Spirit be yours for ever, most honoured lady.

Your letter found me lingering still in this region of the dead but now I must rouse myself to make my way on to heaven at last and to praise God for ever in the land of the living; indeed I had hoped that before this time my journey there would have been over.

If charity, as Saint Paul says, means “to weep with those who weep and rejoice with those who are glad,” then, dearest mother, you shall rejoice exceedingly that God in His grace and His love for you, is showing me the path to true happiness and assuring me, that I shall never lose Him.
Take care above all things, most honoured lady, not to insult God’s boundless loving kindness;  you would certainly do this, if you mourned as dead, one living face to face with God, one whose prayers, can bring you in your troubles, more powerful aid, than they ever could on earth.

And our parting will not be for long;  we shall see each other again in heaven;  we shall be united with our Saviour; there we shall praise Him with heart and soul, sing of His mercies forever and enjoy eternal happiness.”

– from a letter to his mother by Saint Aloysius Gonzagatake care above all things - st aloysius gonzaga - 21 june 2018

Posted in JESUIT SJ, MARIAN PRAYERS, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on SUFFERING, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 21 June – The Memorial of St Aloysius de Gonzaga S.J. (1568-1591)

One Minute Reflection – 21 June – The Memorial of St Aloysius de Gonzaga S.J. (1568-1591)

So they left the presence of the Sanhedrin, rejoicing that they had been found worthy, to suffer dishonour, for the sake of the name...Acts 5:41

REFLECTION – “He who wishes to love God, does not truly love Him, if he has not an ardent and constant desire, to suffer for His sake.”…St Aloysius de Gonzaga (1568-1591)acts 5-41 - he who wishes - st aloysius gonzaga - 21 june 2018

PRAYER – “O Holy Mary! My Mother;  into your blessed trust and special custody and into the bosom of your mercy, I this day and every day and in the hour of my death, commend my soul and body.   To you, I commit all my anxieties and sorrows, my life and the end of my life, that by your most holy intercession and by your merits, all my actions may be directed and governed by your will and that of your Son.”… by St Aloysius de Gonzaga (1568-1591)o holy mary my mother - daily prayer of st aloysius gonzaga - 21 june 2018

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

Our Morning Offering – 21 June – The Memorial of St Aloysius de Gonzaga S.J. (1568-1591)

Our Morning Offering – 21 June – The Memorial of St Aloysius de Gonzaga S.J. (1568-1591)

Prayer of a First Jesuit
By St Peter Faber S.J. (1506-1546)

With great devotion and new depth of feeling,
I hope and beg, O God, that it finally be given to me
to be the servant and minister of Christ the consoler,
the minister of Christ the redeemer,
the minister of Christ the healer,
the liberator, the enricher the strengthener.
To be able through You to help many–
to console, liberate and give them courage;
to bring them light not only for their spirit
but also for their bodies,
and bring as well other helps
to the soul and bodyof each and every one
of my neighbours.
I ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.

– from his Memorialewith great devotion and a new depth of feeling - prayer of a first jesuit - st peter faver - 21 june - feast of st aloysius gonzaga

Posted in CHILDREN / YOUTH, EYES - Diseases, of the BLIND, JESUIT SJ, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 21 June – St Aloysius de Gonzaga S.J. (1568-1591)

Saint of the Day – 21 June – St Aloysius de Gonzaga S.J. (1568-1591) Jesuit Seminarian, Mystic, Marian devotee, Apostle of Charity – born as Luigi de Gonzaga on 9 March 1568 in the family castle of Castiglione delle Stivieri in Montua, Lombardy, Italy and died on 21 June 1591 at Rome, Italy of plague, fever and desire to see God.   His relics are entombed under the Altar of Saint Ignatius Church, Rome.  Patronages – Catholic youth, Jesuit scholastics, the blind, eye ailments, AIDS patients, care-givers, Jesuit students, for relief from pestilence, young people, Castiglione delle Stiviere, Italy, Valmonte, Italy.   His attributes are a lily, referring to innocence;  a cross, referring to piety and sacrifice;  a skull, referring to his early death  and a Rosary, referring to his devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary.st aloysius infoaloysius info 2

Aloysius de Gonzaga was born the eldest of seven children, at his family’s castle in Castiglione delle Stiviere, between Brescia and Mantua in northern Italy in what was then part of the Duchy of Mantua, into the illustrious House of Gonzaga.   “Aloysius” is the Latin form of Aloysius de Gonzaga’s given name in Italian, Luigi.   He was the son of Ferrante de Gonzaga (1544–1586), Marquis of Castiglione, and Marta Tana di Santena, daughter of a baron of the Piedmontese Della Rovere family.   His mother was a lady-in-waiting to Isabel, the wife of Philip II of Spain.beautiful lg - st aloysius

As the first-born son, he was in line to inherit his father’s title and status of Marquis.   His father assumed that Aloysius would become a soldier, as that was the norm for sons of the aristocracy and the family was often involved in the minor wars of the period.   His military training started at an early age but he also received an education in languages and the arts.   As early as age four, Luigi was given a set of miniature guns and accompanied his father on training expeditions so that the boy might learn “the art of arms.”   At age five, Aloysius was sent to a military camp to get started on his training. His father was pleased to see his son marching around camp at the head of a platoon of soldiers.   His mother and his tutor were less pleased with the vocabulary he picked up there.

He grew up amid the violence and brutality of Renaissance Italy and witnessed the murder of two of his brothers.   In 1576, at age 8, he was sent to Florence along with his younger brother, Rodolfo, to serve at the court of the Grand Duke Francesco I de’ Medici and to receive further education.   While there, he fell ill with a disease of the kidneys, which troubled him throughout his life.   While he was ill, he took the opportunity to read about the saints and to spend much of his time in prayer.   He is said to have taken a private vow of chastity at age 9.    In November 1579, the brothers were sent to the Duke of Mantua.   Aloysius was shocked by the violent and frivolous lifestyle he encountered there.

Aloysius returned to Castiglione where he met St Cardinal Charles Borromeo (1538-1584 – feast day 4 November) and from him received First Communion on 22 July 1580.   After reading a book about Jesuit missionaries in India, Aloysius felt strongly that he wanted to become a missionary.   He started practising by teaching catechism classes to young boys in Castiglione in the summers.   He also repeatedly visited the houses of the Capuchin friars and the Barnabites located in Casale Monferrato, the capital of the Gonzaga-ruled Duchy of Montferrat where the family spent the winter.   He also adopted an ascetic lifestyle.

aloysius and charles borromeo
St Aloysius receives his First Holy Communion from St Charles Borromeo

The family was called to Spain in 1581 to assist the Holy Roman Empress Maria of Austria.   They arrived in Madrid in March 1582, where Aloysius and Rodolfo became pages for the young Infante Diego.   Aloysius started thinking in earnest about joining a religious order.   He had considered joining the Capuchins but he had a Jesuit confessor in Madrid and decided instead to join that order.   His mother agreed to his request but his father was furious and prevented him from doing so.

In July 1584, a year and a half after the Infante’s death, the family returned to Italy. Aloysius still wanted to become a priest but several members of his family worked hard to persuade him to change his mind.   When they realised there was no way to make him give up his plan, they tried to persuade him to become a secular priest and offered to arrange for a bishopric for him.   If he were to become a Jesuit he would renounce any right to his inheritance or status in society.   His family’s attempts to dissuade him failed, Aloysius was not interested in higher office and still wanted to become a missionary.

In November 1585, Aloysius gave up all rights of inheritance, which was confirmed by the emperor.   He went to Rome and, because of his noble birth, gained an audience with Pope Sixtus V.   Following a brief stay at the Palazzo Aragona Gonzaga, the Roman home of his cousin, Cardinal Scipione Gonzaga, on 25 November 1585, he was accepted into the novitiate of the Society of Jesus in Rome.   During this period, he was asked to moderate his asceticism somewhat and to be more social with the other novices.

Aloysius’ health continued to cause problems.   In addition to the kidney disease, he also suffered from a skin disease, chronic headaches and insomnia.   He was sent to Milan for studies but after some time he was sent back to Rome because of his health.   On 25 November 1587, he took the three religious vows of chastity, poverty and obedience.   In February and March 1588, he received minor orders and started studying theology to prepare for ordination.   In 1589, he was called to Mantua to mediate between his brother Rodolfo and the Duke of Mantua.   He returned to Rome in May 1590.   It is said that later that year, he had a vision in which the Archangel Gabriel told him that he would die within a year.

In 1591, a plague broke out in Rome.   The Jesuits opened a hospital for the stricken and Aloysius volunteered to work there.   After begging alms for the victims, Aloysius began working with the sick, carrying the dying from the streets into a hospital founded by the Jesuits.   There he washed and fed the plague victims, preparing them as best he could to receive the sacraments.   But though he threw himself into his tasks, he privately confessed to his spiritual director, Fr Robert Bellarmine (St Robert Bellarmine (1542-1621) Doctor of the Church), that his constitution was revolted by the sights and smells of the work;  he had to work hard to overcome his physical repulsion.

At the time, many of the younger Jesuits had become infected with the disease, and so Aloysius’s superiors forbade him from returning to the hospital.   But Aloysius—long accustomed to refusals from his father—persisted and requested permission to return, which was granted.   Eventually he was allowed to care for the sick but only at another hospital, called Our Lady of Consolation, where those with contagious diseases were not admitted.   While there, Aloysius lifted a man out of his sickbed, tended to him, and brought him back to his bed.   But the man was infected with the plague.   Aloysius grew ill and was bedridden by 3 March 1591, a few days before his 23rd birthday.Gonzaga3

Aloysius rallied for a time but as fever and a cough set in, he declined for many weeks.   It seemed certain that he would die in a short tie, and he was given Extreme Unction. While he was ill, he spoke several times with his confessor, the cardinal and later saint, Robert Bellarmine.   Aloysius had another vision and told several people that he would die on the Octave of the feast of Corpus Christi.   On that day, 21 June 1591, he seemed very well in the morning but insisted that he would die before the day was over.   As he began to grow weak, Bellarmine gave him the last rites and recited the prayers for the dying.   He died just before midnight.   As Fr Tylenda tells the story, “When the two Jesuits came to his side, they noticed a change in his face and realised that their young Aloysius was dying.   His eyes were fixed on the crucifix he held in his hands and as he tried to pronounce the name of Jesus he died.”San_Luigi_Gonzaga_AU

Aloysius was buried in the Church of the Most Holy Annunciation, which later became the church of Saint Ignatius of Loyola (Sant’Ignazio) in Rome.   His name was changed to “Robert” before his death, in honour of his confessor.   Many people considered him to be a saint soon after his death and his remains were moved into the Sant’Ignazio church, where they now rest in an urn of lapis lazuli in the Lancellotti Chapel.   His head was later translated to the basilica bearing his name in Castiglione delle Stiviere.   He was beatified only fourteen years after his death by Pope Paul V, on 19 October 1605.   On 31 December 1726, he was canonised together with another young Jesuit novice, Stanislaus Kostka, by Pope Benedict XIII.

Purity was his notable virtue.   The Carmelite mystic St Maria Magdalena de Pazzi had a vision of him on 4 April 1600.   She described him as radiant in glory because of his “interior works,” a hidden martyr for his great love of God.The Life and Miracles of St. Aloysius Gonzagast aloysius by Fr Lawrence OPv lg - st aloysius gonzaga

Posted in FEASTS and SOLEMNITIES, MARIAN TITLES, MIRACLES, SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY

Feast of Our Lady of Miracles – 21 June

Feast of Our Lady of Miracles – 21 June – the patron of the town of Alcamo, Sicily.header - Maria_SS_dei_Miracoli_-_ALCAMO_processione_2010_198

The cult of Madonna of Miracles in Alcamo dates back to 21 June 1547, the day people remember the Madonna’s apparition to some women near a stream running north of Alcamo.   According to tradition while washing their clothes in the stream, the women, with a blind and a deaf one among them, saw the apparition of a woman with a child and were hit by a gust of pebbles, during the apparition but without receiving any injury or pain;   on the contrary, after being hit by the pebbles, they strangely felt a certain sense of wellbeing and recovered their health.   After learning the news, the women’s husbands, thinking that it was a joke, went to investigate, thinking that someone was hidden among the bushes around there but they didn’t find anybody.

Then the local authorities inquired on the spot, cut down the near grove and found the ruins of a “cuba”, an old arc of a mill that nobody remembered any longer and inside there was a fresco on a stone made by an anonymous painter of the 13th century representing Our Lady with the Child Jesus, which at first the believers called “Madonna Fons Misericordiae” (that is Our Lady Source of Mercy).

Chiesa_Basilica_S_Maria_Assunta_Alcamo_128
A representation of the discovery of Our Lady of Miracles’ image (inside its chapel in the Basilica of Our Lady of the Assumption in Alcamo).

After this discovery all the people started praying before the rediscovered image and in the following days there were several miracles.7, Our Lady of Miracles became the patron saint of Alcamo, in substitution of the Holy Crucified, who was the patron saint of Alcamo and other near small towns (among which Calatafimi and Salemi).   The old patron saint’s memory however remains in Alcamo people’s mind:  in fact they call San Francesco di Paola “santu patri” (whose translation means “patron saint”) as the Church named after him was called the Holy Crucified Church.

The Madonna’s discovered image was first called “Our Lady Source of Mercy” but thanks to the high number of subsequent miracles, in 1583 the name was changed into “Our Lady of Miracles”.

Further to these events, Don Fernando Vega, Alcamo’s governor, ordered the construction of the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Miracles, which hosts the Madonna’s image. Inside the Church there is a white marble sarcophagus containing the mortal remains of the governor Don Fernando Vega, according to his will.

Calata_al_Santuario_della_Madonna_dei_Miracoli_di_Alcamo_-_14
The Crowned Painting of the Madonna of Miracles in the Sanctuary at Alcamo

Calata_al_Santuario_della_Madonna_dei_Miracoli_di_Alcamo_-_11
Dome fresco “The Madonna of Miracles’ Glorification”

Celebrations:
Every year in Alcamo there are the celebrations in honour of Our Lady of Miracles from 19 June until 21 of June.   This is the most important religious festivity in Alcamo.   The real celebrations are often anticipated by other events, so extending the feast to about two weeks, in this way the beginning of the celebrations changes every year, while the last day is always the 21 June.

The celebrations include:
“The pealing of church bells” which opens the celebrations together with the burst of fireworks and the passing of the band through the town streets;  in the past Alcamo’s band also joined the musical band of Partinico (a neighbouring small town).
The holy Mass in honour of Our Lady of Miracles in the Basilica di Santa Maria Assunta (also called “mother church”), in which all confraternities and laity groups in Alcamo take part.
The procession to the Sanctuary of Madonna of Miracles (called “calata”), in which all civil and religious authorities of the town (together with the Mayor) take part;  they are preceded by the band of the town.   In old times people took also the animals that had recovered from an illness.   Inside the sanctuary they sing Vespers and then there is the Eucharistic Blessing/Benediction.

Calata_al_Santuario_della_Madonna_dei_Miracoli_di_Alcamo_-_04
Façade of the sanctuary of Madonna of Miracles

Santuario_della_Madonna_dei_Miracoli_(Alcamo)_-_Discesa_al_Santuario
Route to the Sanctuary

Dance, music and theatrical performances.
Sport events.
Exhibitions of various kinds, including one about local Craftmanship.
“The Market Fair” at Piazza della Repubblica.
The Streets entertainers (called “Madonnari”).
The Procession of Our Lady of Miracles’ statue along the town streets and return to the mother church. Before this solemn procession, the statue of Our Lady of Miracles, createdin 1720 by Lorenzo Curti from Castelvetrano (see the image of the statue above and the back below), is adorned with a silver 12 star crown (“stellario” in Italian), a crown and a hairpin embellished by precious stones (called “tuppu di la Maronna”) which is placed behind the Madonna’s nape.   After that, the statue goes out from the Church, taken along the streets by a group of believers on their shoulders and accompanied by the band and it comes back to the mother church at the end of the procession.

Maria_SS_dei_Miracoli_-_ALCAMO_preparazione_2010_032Maria_SS_dei_Miracoli_-_ALCAMO_processione_2010_042
Fireworks near the “bastione” in Piazza Bagolino.   They take place at the end of the feast, soon after the statue’s return into the church, at about midnight.
The traditional descent to the sanctuary takes place during the so-called “Historical Cortege” with period costumes.   This cortege, which anticipates the real “calata”, passes through Corso 6 Aprile and Piazza Ciullo and finally ends at the Castle of the Counts of Modica (also called “Castle of Alcamo”).   The workmen of the association “I Cavalieri di San Giorgio” (San Giorgio’s knights) and the Civil Authorities take part in the cortege too.  Translated from the Italian).I_Cavalieri_di_San_Giorgio_-_AlcamoCalata_al_Santuario_della_Madonna_dei_Miracoli_di_Alcamo_-_06

Posted in FEASTS and SOLEMNITIES, MARIAN TITLES, MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY, Uncategorized

Feast of Our Lady of Miracles and Memorials of the Saints – 21 June

St Aloysius Gonzaga S.J. (1568-1591) (Memorial)

Madonna of Miracles – Our Lady of Miracles (or Madonna of Miracles) is the patron saint of the town of Alcamo, Italy.

Calata_al_Santuario_della_Madonna_dei_Miracoli_di_Alcamo_-_14

St Agofredus of La-Croix
St Alban of Mainz
St Apollinaris of Africa
Bl Colagia
St Corbmac
St Cyriacus of Africa
St Demetria of Rome
St Dominic of Comacchio
St Engelmund
Bl Jacques-Morelle Dupas
St John Rigby
St José Isabel Flores Varela
Bl Juan of Jesus
St Lazarus
St Leutfridus
St Martia of Syracuse
St Martin of Tongres
Bl Melchiorre della Pace
St Mewan of Bretagne
Bl Nicholas Plutzer
St Ralph of Bourges
St Raymond of Barbastro
St Rufinus of Syracuse
St Suibhne the Sage
St Terence
St Ursicenus of Pavia

Martyrs of Taw – 3+ saints: Three Christians of different backgrounds who were martyred together – Moses, Paphnutius, Thomas. They were beheaded in Taw, Egypt, date unknown.

Posted in MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on HUMILITY, QUOTES on REPENTANCE

Thought for the Day – 20 June – Wednesday Eleventh Week of Ord Time Year B – Today’s Gospel Matthew 6:1-6.16-18

Thought for the Day – 20 June – Wednesday Eleventh Week of Ord Time Year B – Today’s Gospel Matthew 6:1-6.16-18

“We are Nothing in Ourselves”
St John Marie Baptiste Vianney (1786-1859)

“When we do nothing to be ashamed of, when everything is going along according to our wishes, we dare to believe that nothing could make us fall.   We forget our own nothingness and our utter weakness.   We make the most delightful protestations that we are ready to die rather than to allow ourselves to be conquered.   We see a splendid example of this in St Peter, who told our Lord that although all others might be scandalised in Him, yet he would never deny Him.

Alas!   To show him how man, left to himself, is nothing at all, God made use, not of kings or princes or weapons but simply of the voice of a maidservant, who even appeared to speak to him in a very indifferent sort of way.   A moment ago, he was ready to die for Him and now Peter protests, that he does not even know Him, that he does not know about whom they are speaking.   To assure them even more vehemently that he does not know Him, he swears an oath about it.

Dear Lord, what we are capable of when we are left to ourselves!   There are some who, in their own words, are envious of the saints who did great penances.   They believe that they could do as well.   When we read the lives of some of the martyrs, we would, we think, be ready to suffer all that they suffered for God;  the moment is short lived, we say, for an eternity of reward.   But what does God do to teach us to know ourselves or, rather, to know that we are nothing?   This is all He does:   He allows the Devil to come a little closer to us.   Look at this Christian who a moment ago was quite envious of the hermit who lived solely on roots and herbs and who made the stern resolution to treat his body as harshly.   Alas!   A slight headache, a prick of a pin, makes him, as big and strong is he is, sorry for himself.   He is very upset.   He cries with pain.   A moment ago he would have been willing to do all the penances of the anchorites — and the merest trifle makes him despair!

Look at this other one, who seems to want to give his whole life for God, whose ardour all the torments there are cannot damp.   A tiny bit of scandalmongering …. a word of calumny …. even a slightly cold reception or a small injustice done to him …. a kindness returned by ingratitude …. immediately gives birth in him to feelings of hatred, of revenge, of dislike, to the point, often, of his never wishing to see his neighbour again or at least of treating him coldly with an air which shows very plainly what is going on in his heart.   And how many times is this his waking thought, just as it was the thought that almost prevented him from sleeping?   Alas, my dear brethren, we are poor stuff and we should count very little upon our good resolutions!”

St John Vianney, Pray for us!

st john vianney pray for us - 20 june 2018

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on HUMILITY, SPEAKING of ....., The WORD

Quote/s of the Day – – 20 June – Wednesday Eleventh Week of Ord Time Year B – Today’s Gospel Matthew 6:1-6.16-18

Quote/s of the Day – 20 June – Wednesday Eleventh Week of Ord Time Year B – Today’s Gospel Matthew 6:1-6.16-18

“Speaking of:  Humility”

“God resists the proud
but gives grace to the humble”

James 4:6god resists the proud - james 4 - 6

“Humility is the foundation of all the other virtues,
hence, in the soul in which this virtue does not exist,
there cannot be any other virtue,
except in mere appearance.”HUMILITY IS THE FOUNDATION-STAUGUSTINE

“It was pride that changed angels into devils;
it is humility that makes men as angels.”

St Augustine (354-430) Doctor of Graceit was pride - st augustine - 20 june 2018

“As patience leads to peace
and study to science,
so are humiliations,
the path that leads to humility.”

St Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153) Mellifluous Doctor

as patience leads to peace - st bernard - 20 june 2018

“In the difficulties which are placed before me,
why should I not act like a donkey?
When one speaks ill of him – the donkey says nothing.
When he is mistreated – he says nothing.
When he is forgotten – he says nothing.
When no food is given him – he says nothing.
When he is made to advance – he says nothing.
When he is despised – he says nothing.
When he is overburdened – he says nothing.
The true servant of God must do likewise
and say with David:
“Before Thee I have become like a beast of burden.”

St Alphonsus Rodriguez (1532-1617)in the difficulties which are placed before me - st alphonsus rodriguez - 20 june 2018

“True humility
scarcely ever
utters words
of humility.”

“Humility consists
in not esteeming ourselves above other men
and in not seeking
to be esteemed above them.”

“Humility makes our lives
acceptable to God,
meekness makes us
acceptable to men.”true humility - humility consists - humility makes our lives - st francis de sales - 20 june 2018

“If, when stung by slander or ill-nature,
we wax proud and swell with anger,
it is a proof that our gentleness
and humility are unreal
and mere artificial show.”

“The highest point of humility
consists in not merely acknowledging one’s abjection
but in taking pleasure therein,
not from any want of breadth or courage
but to give the more glory to God’s Divine Majesty
and to esteem one’s neighbour,
more highly than one’s self.”

St Francis de Sales (1567-1622) Doctor of Charityif when stung by slander - the highest point of humility - st francis de sales - 20 june 2018

“The truly humble
reject all praise for themselves
and refer it all to God.”

St Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696-1787) Most Zealous Doctorthe truly humble reject - st alphonsus liguori - 20 june 2018

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on HUMILITY, QUOTES on PRAYER

One Minute Reflection – 20 June – Wednesday Eleventh Week of Ord Time Year B – Today’s Gospel Matthew 6:1-6.16-18

One Minute Reflection – 20 June – Wednesday Eleventh Week of Ord Time Year B – Today’s Gospel Matthew 6:1-6.16-18

Jesus said to his disciples: ” “Beware of practicing your piety before men in order to be seen by them; for then you will have no reward from your Father who is in heaven.”…Matthew 6:1

REFLECTION – “Jesus says, “When you pray, go into your chamber.”   Now, what are these chambers but the heart signified in the Psalm where it is said:  “The things you say in your hearts, be sorry for in your room.”   He then continues: “And closing the doors, pray in secret to our Father.”   Our entering the room is not enough if the door is left open to the importunate, for external things enter brazenly in through this door and lay hold on our interior affections.   Temporal and visible penetrate through this door, that is, one of the senses, they enter our thoughts and by a swarm of fancies noisily disturb us while engaged in prayer.   Therefore, the door must be closed;  that is to say, the bodily sense must be resisted, so that a wholly spiritual prayer may be offered to the Father.   For this prayer is formed in the depths of the heart where a man prays in secret to the Father.   “And your Father, who sees in secret, will reward you…”

The Lord does not admonish us to pray but teaches us how to pray, just as the preceding passage does not admonish us to give alms but tells us what our intention ought to be when we are giving them.   This is due to the fact that He demands the purity of heart that one can only obtain by a continuous and undivided striving for eternal life through no other motive than a pure love of wisdom…St Augustine (354-430), Father & Doctor of the Church – Commentary on the Sermon on the Mount, Bk. II, 3, 11beware of practising your piety - therefore the door must be closed - st augustine - 20 june 2018

PRAYER – Lord God, in Your wisdom, You created us, by Your providence You rule us, penetrate our inmost being with Your light, so that our way of life may always be one of faithful service to You, as we follow the way of Your Son.   Holy Mother, guide us as you guided Your Son. Through Christ our Lord, with the Holy Spirit, one God, amen.holy mary-mother of god - pray-for-us.- 1 may 2017 and 2018

Posted in MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, QUOTES on HUMILITY

Our Morning Offering – 20 June – Wednesday Eleventh Week of Ord Time Year B – Today’s Gospel Matthew 6:1-6.16-18

Our Morning Offering – 20 June – Wednesday Eleventh Week of Ord Time Year B – Today’s Gospel Matthew 6:1-6.16-18

Litany of Humility
By Servant of God Cardinal Merry del Val (1865-1930)

He was accustomed to recite this prayer daily after the celebration of Holy Mass.

O Jesus meek and humble of heart, Hear me.
From the desire of being esteemed, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being loved, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being extolled, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being honored, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being praised, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being preferred to others, Deliver me Jesus.
From the desire of being consulted, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the desire of being approved, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being humiliated, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being despised, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of suffering rebukes, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being calumniated, Deliver, me, Jesus.
From the fear of being forgotten, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being ridiculed, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being wronged, Deliver me, Jesus.
From the fear of being suspected, Deliver me, Jesus.

That others may be loved more than I,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may be esteemed more than I,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That in the opinion of the world, others may increase
and I may decrease,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may be chosen and I set aside,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may be praised and I unnoticed,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may be preferred to me in everything,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
That others may become holier than I,
provided that I become as holy as I should,
Jesus, grant me the grace to desire it.
Amenlitany of humility - card merry del val - 20 june 2018

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 20 June – St Adalbert of Magdeburg (910-981) “Apostle of the Slavs”

Saint of the Day – 20 June – St Adalbert of Magdeburg (910-981) Apostle of the Slavs” – Bishop, Monk, Missionary – born in 910 at Lorraine region and died on 20 June 981 at Merseburg, Germany of natural causes.   St Adalbert was the first Archbishop of Magdeburg (from 968) and a successful missionary to the Polabian Slavs to the east of what is contemporarily Germany.

Adalbert_of_Magdeburg

Adalbert was a monk at the Benedictine Monastery of St Maximinus in Trier, Germany. He was consecrated a Roman Catholic bishop and in 961 was sent to Kievan Rus – (was a loose federation of East Slavic tribes in Europe from the late 9th to the mid-13th century, under the reign of the Rurik dynasty.   The modern peoples of Belarus, Russia and Ukraine all claim Kievan Rus’ as their cultural ancestors, with Belarus and Russia deriving their names from it.).

Princess Olga of Kiev had asked Emperor Otto I (the Great) to provide her a missionary from the Roman Catholic Church.   Her son, Svyatoslav opposed her and stole her crown as soon as Adalbert arrived in Kievan Rus.   Adalbert’s missionary companions were slain and Adalbert barely escaped.   Kievan Rus subsequently was converted by missionaries from Constantinople and became part of Byzantine Christianity.

Upon escaping Kievan Rus, Adalbert traveled to Mainz, Germany, where he became the Abbot of Wissembourg in Alsace.   There he worked to improve the education of the monks.   He later became the first Archbishop of Magdeburg, Saxony-Anhalt, in contemporary Germany.

The Archepiscopacies of Hamburg and Bremen had been established with the intention that they would serve as bases for missions in northern and eastern Europe.   The Archdiocese of Magdeburg was designated to provide missionaries to the eastern European Slavs.   Adalbert also established dioceses for Naumburg, Meissen, Merseburg, Brandenburg; Havelberg and Poznań, Poland.   He died on 20 June 981 in Zscherben (contemporarily in (former) Geusa, in Merseburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany).

A student of Adalbert for some years named Wojciech Sławnikowic, who at his Confirmation took the very name of his tutor, went on from Adalbert’s tutelage to successfully evangelise many Slavic peoples, receive the crown of martyrdom in Prussia and was canonisded as St Adalbert of Prague (c 956 – 23 April 997).   Evidently St Adalbert of Magdeburg transmitted something of his wisdom, zeal and own mission to his student, the younger St Adalbert (of Prague)

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Memorials of the Saints – 20 June

St Adalbert of Magdeburg (910-981)
St Bagne of Thérouanne
St Edburga of Caistor
St Gemma of Saintonge
St Goban of Picardie
St Helen of Öehren
St John of Pulsano
St Macarius of Petra
Bl Margareta Ebner
St Methodius of Olympus
Bl Michelina of Pesaro
St Novatus of Rome

Irish Martyrs – 17 beati – This is the collective title given to the 260 or more persons who are credited with dying for the faith in Ireland between 1537 and 1714. Seventeen of them were beatified together on 27 September 1992 by St Pope John Paul II.

• Blessed Conn O’Rourke
• Blessed Conor O’Devany
• Blessed Dermot O’Hurley
• Blessed Dominic Collins
• Blessed Edward Cheevers
• Blessed Francis Taylor
• Blessed George Halley
• Blessed John Kearney
• Blessed Matthew Lambert
• Blessed Maurice Eustace
• Blessed Patrick Cavanagh
• Blessed Patrick O’Healy
• Blessed Patrick O’Loughran
• Blessed Peter Higgins
• Blessed Robert Meyler
• Blessed Terrence Albert O’Brien
• Blessed William Tirry

Martyrs of Lower Moesia: Martyred on the Black Sea at Lower Moesia (in modern Bulgaria), date unknown.
St Cyriacus
St Paul

Martyred in Nagasaki: 9 Beati : burned alive on 20 June 1626 in Nagasaki, Japan. Their ashes were thrown into the sea and no relics remain. They were Beatified on 7 May 1867 by Pope Pius IX.
• Blessed Baltasar de Torres Arias
• Blessed Francisco Pacheco
• Blessed Gaspar Sadamatsu
• Blessed Giovanni Battista Zola
• Blessed Ioannes Kisaku
• Blessed Michaël Tozo
• Blessed Paulus Shinsuke
• Blessed Petrus Rinsei
• Blessed Vincentius Kaun

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

Thought for the Day – 19 June – The Memorial of St Romuald (c 951-1027)

Thought for the Day – 19 June – The Memorial of St Romuald (c 951-1027)

Saint Romuald’s body was buried at the monastery in Paranzo.   Three decades later, his incorrupt body was transferred to Fabriano in 1481.   Many miracles have been reported at his tombside in the great Cathedral of Fabriano.   The Order he founded continues to operate today, with five distinct congregations.   The most austere of those, the hermits, continue to live in a manner much like that of Saint Romuald—strict adherence to silence and prayer for the reparation of the sins of mankind.

The quiet and contemplative life of Saint Romuald reminds us, that humility, meekness and a deep desire for the Lord are the hallmarks of our faith.   These simple tenets, lived as model for others, are a powerful witness to the depth of our hope and confidence in the Lord, a reminder of our obedience to Him and a powerful call to prayer.   When we pray, as Saint Romuald said, our bodies, hearts, souls and minds should be focused solely on God:  “Better to pray one psalm with devotion and compunction than a hundred with distraction.”

Prayer is the gauge of our love for God.   If we pray, we love Him but if we don’t pray, we do not love Him.   It is as simple as that, for surely we want always to speak to the one we love?   Let us ask Saint Romuald to obtain for us the grace of prayer and perseverance in prayer, particularly when we find the going hard.

St Romuald, pray for usst romuald - pray for us - 19 june 2018

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, EUCHARISTIC Adoration, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES - J R R Tolkien and MORE, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on PRAYER, SPEAKING of ....., The HOLY EUCHARIST / The HOLY MASS

Quote/s of the Day – 18 June – The Memorial of St Romuald (c 951-1027)

Quote/s of the Day – 18 June – The Memorial of St Romuald (c 951-1027)

Speaking of: Prayer

“It is better to say
one Our Father fervently
and devoutly
than a thousand,
with no devotion
and full of distraction.”

St Edmund (841-869)it is better to say one our father - st edmund - king and martyr - 18 june 2018

“Sit in your cell as in paradise.
Put the whole world
behind you and forget it.
Watch your thoughts
like a good fisherman
watching for fish.”

St Romuald (c 951-1027)sit in your cell as in paradise - st romuald - 18 june 2018

“Were you to ask,
‘what are the means
of overcoming temptations’,
I would answer:
The first means is prayer;
the second is prayer;
the third is prayer;
and should you ask me,
a thousand times,
I would repeat the same.”

St Alphonsus Liguori (1696-1787)
Most Zealous Doctorwere you to ask - st alphonsus - 18 june 2018

“When we speak to Jesus
with simplicity and with all our heart,
He does like a mother
who holds her child’s head with her hands
and covers it with kisses and caresses.”

St John Vianney (1786-1859)when we speak to jesus - st john vianney - 19 june 2018

“Jesus is waiting
for you
in the chapel.
Go and find Him.”

St Jeanne Jugan (1792-1879) 30 Augustjesus is waiting for you in the chapel - st jeanne jugan - 19 june 2018

“To clasp the hands in prayer
is a beginning of an uprising
against the disorder of the world.”

Karl Barth (1886-1968)to clasp the hands in prayer - karl barth - 19 june 2018

“Friends,
do not be afraid
of silence or stillness.
Listen to God.
Adore Him in the Eucharist.”

Pope Benedict XVIfriends, do not be afraid - pope benedict - 18 june 2018

“Turn your car into a monastery.”

Bishop Robert Barronturn your car into a monastery - bishop robert barron - 18 june 2018

“Seek a relationship
when you pray, not answers.
You won’t always find answers
but you will always find Jesus.”

Father Mike Schmitzseek a relationship when you pray - fr mike schmitz - 18 june 2018

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

One Minute Reflection – 19 June – The Memorial of St Romuald (c 951-1027)

One Minute Reflection – 19 June – The Memorial of St Romuald (c 951-1027)

And we have this confidence in him, that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us.   And if we know that he hears us, in regard to whatever we ask, we know that, what we have asked him for, is ours...1 John 5:14-15and we have this confidence in him - 1 john 5-14-15 - 19 june 2018

REFLECTION – “Better to pray one psalm with devotion and compunction than a hundred with distraction.”…St Romualdbetter to pray one psalm with devotion - st romuald - 19 june 2018

PRAYER – Father, through St Romuald You renewed the life of solitude and prayer in your Church.   By our prayer and self-denial as we follow Christ our Lord, bring us the joy of heaven.   Kindly receive the intercession of St Romuald still, as we beg his prayers for all of your Church.   We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, forever and ever.  Amenst romuald - pray for us no 2 - 19 june 2018

Posted in CATHOLIC DEVOTIONS of the Month, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, SACRED and IMMACULATE HEARTS

Our Morning Offering – 19 June – Month of the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Our Morning Offering – 19 June – Month of the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Prayer to the Two Loving Hearts
By St John Eudes (1501-1680)

O Jesus, only Son of God, only Son of Mary,
I offer You the most loving Heart
of Your divine Mother
which is more precious
and pleasing to You than all hearts.

O Mary, Mother of Jesus,
I offer you the most adorable Heart
of your well-beloved Son,
who is the life and love and joy of your Heart.

Blessed be the Most Loving Heart
and Sweet Name of Our Lord Jesus Christ
and the most glorious
Virgin Mary, His Mother,
in eternity and forever.
Amenprayer to the two loving hearts by st john eudes - 18 june 2018

Posted in INCORRUPTIBLES, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 19 June – St Romuald (c 951-1027)

Saint of the Day – 19 June – St Romuald (c 951-1027) – Monk, Abbot, Ascetic, Founder of the Camaldolese order and a major figure in the eleventh-century “Renaissance of eremitical asceticism”.    St Romuald was born in c 951 at Ravenna, Italy and died on 19 June 1027 at Val-di-Castro, Italy of natural causes.   Patronages – the Camaldolese order and Suwalki, Poland.   St Romuald’s body is incorrupt.

619romuald5

According to the vita (life) by St Peter Damian O.S.B. (1007-1072), himself a Benedictine and Doctor of the Church , written about fifteen years after Romuald’s death, Romuald was born in Ravenna, in northeastern Italy, to the aristocratic Onesti family.    As a youth, according to early accounts, Romuald indulged in the pleasures and sins of the world common to a tenth-century nobleman.   At the age of twenty he served as second to his father, who killed a relative in a duel over property.   Romuald was devastated and went to the Basilica of Sant’Apollinare in Classe to do 40 days of penance.   After some indecision, Romuald became a monk there.   San Apollinare had recently been reformed by St Maieul of Cluny Abbey (906-994) but still was not strict enough in its observance to satisfy Romuald.   His injudicious correction of the less zealous aroused such enmity against him that he applied for and was readily granted, permission to retire to Venice, where he placed himself under the direction of a hermit named Marinus and lived a life of extraordinary severity.

Saint_Romuald

About 978, Pietro Orseolo I, Doge of Venice, who had obtained his office by acquiescence in the murder of his predecessor, began to suffer remorse for his crime.   On the advice of Guarinus, Abbot of San Miguel-de-Cuxa, in Catalonia and of Marinus and Romuald, he abandoned his office and relations and fled to Cuxa, where he took the habit of St Benedict, while Romuald and Marinus erected a hermitage close to the monastery. Romuald lived there for about ten years, taking advantage of the library of Cuxa to refine his ideas regarding monasticism.

Giovanni da Brescia, Orseolo vor Romuald - Giovanni da Brescia, Orseolo and Romuald -
Pietro Orseolo I, Doge of Venice before St Romuald

After that he spent the next 30 years going about Italy, founding and reforming monasteries and hermitages.   His reputation being known to advisers of the Holy Roman Emperor Otto III, Romuald was persuaded by him to take the vacant office of abbot at Sant’Apollinare to help bring about a more dedicated way of life there.   The monks, however, resisted his reforms and after a year, Romuald resigned, hurling his abbot’s staff at Otto’s feet in total frustration.   He then again withdrew to the hermetical life.romuald with church-2

In 1012 he arrived at the Diocese of Arezzo.   Here, according to the legend, a certain Maldolus, who had seen a vision of monks in white garments ascending into Heaven, gave him some land, afterwards known as the Campus Maldoli, or Camaldoli.   St Romuald built on this land five cells for hermits, which, with the monastery at Fontebuono, built two years later, became the famous motherhouse of the Camaldolese Order.   Romuald’s daunting charisma awed Rainier of Tuscany, who was neither able to face Romuald nor to send him away.   Romuald founded several other monasteries, including the monastery of Val di Castro, where he died in 1027.

Camaldoli_Church
The church in Eremo di Camaldoli, the famous motherhouse of the Camaldolese

St Romuald’s feast day was added to the Liturgical Calendar in 1594, today, the day of his death and entry into life.

St Romuald’s Rule:
Romuald was able to integrate these different traditions in establishing his own monastic order.   The admonition in his rule Empty yourself completely and sit waiting places him in relation to the long Christian history of intellectual stillness and interior passivity in meditation also reflected in the nearly contemporary Byzantine ascetic practice known as Hesychasm.

Romuald (FaceBk)

Sit in your cell as in paradise.   Put the whole world behind you and forget it. Watch your thoughts like a good fisherman watching for fish.   The path you must follow is in the Psalms — never leave it.

If you have just come to the monastery and in spite of your good will, you cannot accomplish what you want, take every opportunity you can to sing the Psalms in your heart and to understand them with your mind.   And if your mind wanders as you read, do not give up; hurry back and apply your mind to the words once more.

Archbishop Cosmo Francesco Ruppi noted that, “Interiorisation of the spiritual dimension, the primacy of solitude and contemplation, slow penetration of the Word of God and calm meditation on the Psalms are the pillars of Camaldolese spirituality, which St Romuald gives as the essential core of his Rule.”

Romuald’s reforms provided a structural context to accommodate both the eremitic and cenobitic aspects of monastic life.

San Romualdo, from the San Marco altarpiece by Fra Angelico
St Romuald, from the San Marco altarpiece by Fra Angelico

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Memorials of the Saints – 19 June

St Romuald (c 951-1027) (Optional Memorial)

St Adleida of Bergamo
Bl Arnaldo of Liniberio
St Culmatius of Arezzo
St Deodatus of Jointures
St Deodatus of Nevers
St Gaudentius of Arezzo
St Gervase
St Hildegrin of Châlons-sur-Marne
Bl Humphrey Middlemore
St Innocent of Le Mans
St Julia Falconieri
St Lambert of Saragossa
St Lupo of Bergamo
St Modeste Andlauer
St Nazario of Koper
Bl Odo of Cambrai
St Protase
St Rémi Isoré
Bl Sebastian Newdigate
Bl Thomas Woodhouse
Bl William Exmew
St Zosimus of Umbria

Posted in MORNING Prayers, PAPAL SERMONS, QUOTES - J R R Tolkien and MORE, QUOTES on LOVE, QUOTES on PERSECUTION, QUOTES on PRAYER, QUOTES on the DEVIL/EVIL

Thought for the Day – 18 June – Pope Francis: to love your enemies, prayer is the way

Thought for the Day – 18 June – Monday of the Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time, Year B – Today’s Gospel Matthew 5:38-42

Pope Francis: to love your enemies, prayer is the way

“Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.”

“Pray for the one who hurt me?” the Pope asked. “Yes,” he answered, “because it changes lives.”   If we think it is impossible, then pray, the Pope said.   Pray every day for the grace to forgive and the grace to love.

“This advice: ‘Be holy, for I the Lord your God, am holy.’   And then: ‘You shall be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect’,” the Pope remarked.   Forgiveness and prayer are the way to do this.   “This is the way of holiness,” he said. “If all men and women of the world learned this, there would be no wars, there would not be.”

Wars begin “in bitterness, rancour, the desire for revenge, to make someone pay.   But that destroys families, destroys friendships, destroys neighbourhoods, destroys so much,” he said.   For Pope Francis, this is why we must pray always for the grace not to hold grudges and for “the grace to pray for our enemies, to pray for the people that do not love us, the grace of peace.”

If we make this our daily prayer, the Pope continued, even just praying one prayer a day for our enemies, this is how we will “win” and make progress “on the path of holiness and perfection.”   In the end, “evil is overcome by good,” he said, and “sin is won with generosity.”   “Prayer is an antidote against hatred, against wars, these wars that start at home, which start in the neighbourhood, which begin in families,” he said.

The Pope said if he knows that someone wants to hurt him and does not love him, “I pray especially for him.”

“Pray for there to be peace.”

“Prayer is an antidote against hatred.”

Pope Francis 19 February 2017prayer is an antidote against hatred - pope francis - 18 June 2018

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on LOVE, QUOTES on PRAYER

Quote of the Day – 18 June

Quote of the Day – 18 June – Monday of the Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time, Year B – Today’s Gospel Matthew 5:38-42

“You don’t love in your enemies
what they are
but what you would have them become,
by your prayers!”

St Augustine (354-430) Father & Doctoryou don't love in your enemies what they are but what you would have them become by your prayers - st augustine - 18 june 2018

Posted in MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on CHARITY, QUOTES on LOVE, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 18 June

One Minute Reflection – 18 June – Monday of the Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time, Year B – Today’s Gospel Matthew 5:38-42

“You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I say to you, Do not resist one who is evil.   But if any one strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also...”Matthew 5:38-39

REFLECTION – “Whoever keeps the whole Law but falls short in one particular has become guilty in respect to all of it” (Jas 2:10).   What is this one law if not true love, perfect charity?   It is of this that Saint Paul also said : “For the whole Law is fulfilled in one statement, namely:  ‘You shall love your neighbour as yourself’” (Gal 5:14)…

For true charity is patient in adversity and moderate in prosperity;  strong in painful suffering, joyful in good works;  completely safe in temptation.   It is very gentle among genuine brothers, very patient among the false.   It is innocent in the midst of snares, groans in the midst evildoing and breathes naturally in the truth.   It is chaste in the married woman, Susannah, in the widow, Anna, in the virgin, Mary (Dn 13:1f.;  Lk 2:36). It is humble in Peter’s obedience and free in Paul’s arguments.   It is human in the witness of Christians, divine in the forgiveness of Christ.   For true charity, beloved brethren, is the soul of the whole of Scripture, the strength of prophecy, the structure of knowledge, the fruit of faith, the wealth of the poor, the life of the dying.   So keep it faithfully;  cherish it with all your heart and all the strength of your soul (cf Mk 12:30).”…St Caesarius of Arles (470-543), monk and Bishop (Sermons to the people, no. 23, 4-5, which draws its inspiration from Saint Augustine)mt 5-38-39 - an eye for an eye discourse - for true charity dear brethren - st caesarius of arles - 18 june 2018

PRAYER – King of heaven and earth, Lord God, rule over our hearts this day.   Sanctify us and guide our every thought, word and deed according to Your commandments.   That we may grow in love, patience, strength, gentleness, forgiveness and all the ways of our guide, Your Son, Jesus Christ our Saviour.   Holy Mother Mary, pray for us and keep us ever in your care that we may not go astray.   We make our prayer through our Lord Jesus Christ, one God with You and the Holy Spirit, forever, amen.holy mother mary - pray for us - 18 june 2018

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

Our Morning Offering 18 June – Monday of the Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time, Year B

Our Morning Offering 18 June – Monday of the Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time, Year B

Excerpt from Jesus, My Friend
By St Claude de la Colombiere (1641-1682)

O Jesus!
You are my true Friend,
my only Friend.
You take a part in all my misfortunes;
You take them on Yourself;
You know how to change them into blessings.
You listen to me with the greatest kindness
when I relate my troubles to You,
and You have always balm to pour on my wounds.
I find You at all times;
I find You everywhere;
You never go away;
if I have to change my dwelling,
I find You wherever I go.
You are never weary of listening to me;
You are never tired of doing me good.
O Jesus!
Grant that I may die praising You,
that I may die loving You,
that I may die for the love of You.
Amenjesus my friend by st claude de la colombiere - 18 june 2018