Posted in GOD ALONE!, In the PRESENCE of GOD, JUNE-THE SACRED HEART, Meditations on the HIDDEN LIFE, QUOTES for CHRIST, QUOTES on LOVE of GOD, QUOTES on SANCTITY, QUOTES on UNITY/with GOD, SACRED HEART QUOTES, SACRED HEART REFLECTIONS

Thought for the Day – 26 January – Meditation 4, Part One – Of the Presence of God Considered in the Hidden Life

Thought for the Day – 26 January – Meditations on the Hidden Life: From the 1906 Edition of The Heart of Jesus of Nazareth; it has the Imprimatur of Bishop John Baptist Butt, Diocese of Southwark, England, 5 February 1890. Author’s name known simply as Author of “The Voice of the Sacred Heart.” 
(We return to Fr Clarke for February with his Meditations on The Great Truths.)

Meditation 4, Part One – Of the Presence of God
Considered in the Hidden Life

If there is one exercise which conduces more efficaciously than another, to our sanctification, it is assuredly that of the Presence of God. If one means be more conducive than another, to attain that holy exercise, it would seem to be, a true and solid devotion, to the Heart of Jesus.
His most holy Soul, being united to the Word, never lost the view of the Beatific Vision, although, the beatitude and the joy of that Vision, were by a miracle, withheld from overflowing into the lower functions of His Soul, in order that He might be able to suffer, in His Humanity.

The nearest resemblance to our Lord which some of the Saints have attained, in this respect, may be found in such transient glimpses of the Divine Beauty, as we find revealed in their lives.
With those extraordinary ways, by which God sometimes vouchsafes to visit a few favoured souls, we have nothing to do at present. When we speak, therefore, in this meditation, of the habitual Presence of God, we refer but to that union of the soul, with Him, which was ordinary in the Saints and which may be attained – in more or less degree – by faithful correspondence with grace.

Our facility in maintaining the Divine Presence, will be measured, by the extent of our knowledge of God, since, in proportion to our knowledge of Him, will be our love and, it is love which keeps us in the recollection of His Presence and that impels us, to think of Him and of all which relates to Him.
This the Heart of Jesus teaches us. His Soul saw God. It knew Him with a knowledge which no other soul but His, could have supported. His love equalled His knowledge and it was in the mysterious light of such knowledge and such love, that He walked on earth – never alone, even in the midst of the most cruel abandonment on the part of creatures, (John 16:32) – and, He was never forsaken, even when given up to the pangs of supreme agony and dereliction.

That which proved, the consolation of the human Heart of Jesus and, after Him, of all His Saints, maybe the same in the case of each one of us!
Let us but apply ourselves to know God’s Beauty and to hear His Voice and our hearts will quickly learn to turn towards Him, to seek His Face and delight in His Presence. The consciousness of that Presence will then become an abiding source of tranquil devotion and of peace of heart, if not of sensible joy. It will greet us, at our first awakening, with encouragement to commence another day of trial; it will follow us amidst our occupations, console us in our sorrows, support us in our temptations, until we shall sink to rest, when the day is over, in the bosom of that Father Whom we have felt so near to us and Whose Presence will be our last thought, lulling us to sleep in the calm consciousness of His protection.

As the appreciation of the excellence of this holy exercise increases, the soul finds more facility and more charm in occupying itself with God and becomes, by degrees, more familiar with the thought of Him.
It will love to recall the Gospel narratives of the Life of our Blessed Lord. It will, in time, learn to feel at home, as it were, amongst them and thus ,it will be enabled, to make for itself a solitude, a hidden life apart from the material life which externally surrounds it. This habit the Sacred Scripture calls “walking with God” for by it we make Him our Companion here below.

It is of this habitual dwelling in the Divine Presence that Jesus affords us, so perfect a model in the Holy House of Nazareth.

Posted in QUOTES on CHARITY, St PAUL!

Quote/s of the Day – 26 January – St Polycarp

Quote/s of the Day – 26 January – St Polycarp (69-155) Martyr, Bishop of Smyrna, Apostolic Father

The Epistle of St Polycarp

St Paul, when absent from you,
wrote letters to you which,
if you study them closely,
will enable you to be built up in that faith
which has been given to you
‘which is the mother of us all’ (Gal. iv: 29),
in hope which follows and, in that love of God,
of Christ and of our neighbour
which leads the way.
If anyone is in these things, then,
he has fulfilled the law of justice;
for he who has charity
is far removed from all sin.

St Polycarp (69-155)
Martyr, Bishop, Apostolic Father

MORE:
https://anastpaul.com/2023/01/26/quote-s-of-the-day-26-january-st-polycarp/

Posted in "Follow Me", AUGUSTINIANS OSA, CHRIST the WORD and WISDOM, CHRIST, the WAY,TRUTH,LIFE, DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, GOD ALONE!, In the PRESENCE of GOD, ONE Minute REFLECTION, QUOTES for CHRIST, QUOTES on ETERNAL LIFE, QUOTES on HEAVEN, QUOTES on LOVE of GOD, QUOTES on THE VOICE OF GOD, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 26 January – ‘ … I am inviting you into My Life. …’

One Minute Reflection – 26 January – “The Month of the Holy Name of Jesus and the Holy Family” – St Polycarp (69-155) Martyr, Bishop of Smyrna (Asia Minor), Apostolic Father – Romans 12:16-21; Matthew 8:1-13 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/

“Lord, I am not worthy … ”- Matthew 8:8

REFLECTION – “When He came here from another country, Christ found nothing here but what there is in abundance – afflictions, sorrows and death. This is what you have here – this is what there is here in abundance. He has eaten with you that which is to be found in abundance, in the poor house of your misfortune. He has drunk vinegar, He has tasted gall (Jn 19:29) – this is what He has found in your poor house.

Yet, He has invited you to His splendid table, His table in Heaven, to the table of Angels, where He Himself is the bread (Jn 6:35). Coming down to be with you and finding misfortune in your poor house, He was not too proud to be seated at your table, such as it was and promised you His own … He has taken away your misfortune; He will give you His own happiness. Yes indeed, He will give it you, He has promised us His Life!

And what He has accomplished is yet more unbelievable – He has given us His own Death in pledge. As if He were to say to us – “I am inviting you into My Life, to the place where none dies, where true happiness is to be found, where the food never stales, where it revives, where it never lacks but satisfies all. See, this is where I Am inviting you – to the Land of Angels, to friendship with the Father and Holy Ghost, to the meal of eternity, to My brotherly friendship. In sum, I invite you to Myself, to My Qwn Life. Are you unwilling to believe that I will give you My Life? Take My Death as your witness!” – St Augustine (354-430) Father and Doctor of Grace (Sermon 231).

PRAYER – O God, Who gave us joy by the annual solemnity of blessed Polycarp, Thy Martyr and Bishop, mercifully grant that we may rejoice in his protection, whose birthday we celebrate. Through Jesus Christ, Thy Son our Lord, Who lives and reigns with Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end. Amen (Collect).

Posted in BREVIARY Prayers, HYMNS, Our MORNING Offering, QUOTES on MARTYRDOM

Our Morning Offering – 26 January – Deus, Tuorum Militum, O God of Those Who Fought Thy Fight

Our Morning Offering – 26 January – St Polycarp (69-155) Martyr, Bishop of Smyrna (Asia Minor), Apostolic Father

Deus, Tuorum Militum
O God of Those Who Fought Thy Fight
Unknown Author

(6th Century)

O God, of those who fought Thy fight,
Portion and Prize and Crown of Light,
Break every bond of sin and shame
As now we praise Thy Martyr’s name.

He recked not of the world’s allure
But sin and pomp of sin forswore:
Knew all their gall and passed them by
And reached the throne prepared on high.

Bravely the course of pain he ran
And bore his torments, as a man,
For love of Thee his blood outpoured
And thus obtained the great reward.

With humble voice and suppliant word
We pray Thee, therefore, Holy Lord,
While we Thy Martyr’s Feast-day keep,
Forgive Thy loved and erring sheep.

All honour, laud and glory be,
O Jesu, Virgin-born, to Thee,
All glory, as is ever meet,
To Father and to Paraclete.
Amen

An Ambrosian Hymn historically assigned for Matins and Vespers for the Common of a Martyr in the Roman Breviary. It dates probably from the s6th Century and is attributed to the unknown Author of Rex gGoriose Martyrum and Jesu, Redemptor Omnium.
The Hymn exists in a longer version of eight strophes and a shorter one, of four, which is probably earlier.

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 26 January – Saint Theogenes (Died c262) Martyr and the 1st Bishop of Hippo

Saint of the Day – 26 January – Saint Theogenes (Died c262) Martyr and the 1st Bishop of Hippo in North Africa (present day Algeria) with 36 Companions. St Augustine wrote of him. Also known as – Theogenes of Hippo,… of Bona … of Ippona, Teógene…

The Roman Martyrology reads today: “At Hippo Regius, in Africa, the holy Bishop Theogenes and 36 others, who despising temporal death, obtained the crown of eternal life in the persecution of Valerian.”

Saint Augustine Basilica overlooking the ruins of Hippo Regius

Very little is known about St Theogenes, as the sources available to us are scarce and fragmentary.

According to the Roman Martyrology, Theogenes was Martyred in Hippo, Numidia, in present-day Algeria. He died during the persecution of Valerian, the Roman Emperor who, in 257, ordered the persecution of Christians.

The Basilica from the ruins of Hippo

Another source, St Augustine’s Sermon 301, provides a little more detail about the life of Theogenes. From this sermon we learn that Theogenes was the Bishop of Hippo, and that he was a man of great faith and devotion.
Augustine says that Theogenes was arrested by Roman soldiers and brought before the Prefect of the City. The Prefect tried to convince him to renounce the Christian Faith but Theogenes firmly refused.

Faced with his refusal, the Prefect ordered that Theogenes be tortured. Theogenes endured the torture with courage and patience and was eventually beheaded.

Theogenes’ death was a great sorrow for the Christians of Hippo. However, his testimony of faith and courage, inspired many others to follow in his footsteps. Although not confirmed by St Augustine, some say that 36 of his flock were also Martyred.

St Theogenes was succeeded by Saint Leontius (Died c303). Then came St Fidentius (Martyr c304), alerius who Ordained St Augustine (354– 8 August 430, co-adjutor in 395, Bishop in 396). After St Augustine came Heraclius (co-adjutor in 426, Bishop in 430).

Posted in MARIAN TITLES, SAINT of the DAY

Nuestra Señora de Atocha / Our Lady of Long Fields, Madrid, Spain (1261), St Polycarp (69-155) Martyr, Bishop, Apostolic Father, Day 3 of the Candlemas Novena and Memorials of the Saints – 26 January

Nuestra Señora de Atocha / Our Lady of Atocha/Our Lady of Long Fields, Madrid, Spain (1261) – 26 January:
HERE:

https://anastpaul.com/2021/01/26/our-lady-of-atocha-our-lady-of-long-fields-madrid-spain-1261-and-memorials-of-the-saints-26-january/

NOVENA In Preparation for the
Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary – LINK to DAY THREE, 26 January: DAY THREE, 26 January

St Polycarp (69-155) Martyr, Bishop of Smyrna (Asia Minor) Apostolic Church Father. Polycarp was a disciple of Saint John the Apostle Consecrated by St John, as the Bishop of Smyrna. Polycarp is regarded as one of three chief Apostolic Fathers, along with Saint Clement of Rome and Saint Ignatius of Antioch. Patron against dysentery and earache.
Dear St Polycarp:

https://anastpaul.com/2022/01/26/saint-of-the-day-26-january-saint-polycarp-69-155-martyr/
https://anastpaul.com/2018/02/23/saint-of-the-day-23-february-st-polycarp-c-69-c-155-martyr-and-father-of-the-church/
AND (His Feast was moved in 1969 to 23 February):
https://anastpaul.com/2018/02/23/saint-of-the-day-23-february-st-polycarp-c-69-c-155-martyr-and-father-of-the-church/

St Alberic of Citreaux O.Cist (Died 1109)
St Robert of Molesme O.Cist (1028-1111)
St Stephen Harding O.Cist (c 1060-1134)
The Story of the 3 Founders of the Cistercian Abbey:

https://anastpaul.com/2019/01/26/saints-of-the-day-26-january-the-3-founders-of-the-cistercian-order/

St Alphonsus of Astorga
St Athanasius of Sorrento

Blessed Eystein Erlandssön (Died 1188) Bishop. Born in the 12th century in Norway and died in 1188 in Nidaros, (modern Trondheim), Norway of natural causes.
Blessed Eystein’s Life:

https://anastpaul.com/2023/01/26/saint-of-the-day-26-january-blessed-eystein-erlandsson-died-1188-bishop/

St Paula of Rome (347-404) Widow, Foundress of the Order of St Jerome, life-long friend and associate of St Jerome. early Desert Mother.
Biography:

https://anastpaul.com/2021/01/26/saint-of-the-day-26-january-saint-paula-of-rome-347-404/

St Theofrid of Corbie
St Theogenes (Died c262) and Companions Bishop and Martyr
St Tortgith of Barking

Posted in ASPIRATIONS and EJACULATIONS, GOD ALONE!, Meditations on the HIDDEN LIFE, QUOTES on CONSOLATION, QUOTES on LOVE of GOD, SACRED HEART ASPIRATIONS

Thought for the Day – 25 January –  Meditation 3 – The Utility and Consolation of the Hidden Life

Thought for the Day – 25 January – – Meditations on the Hidden Life: From the 1906 Edition of The Heart of Jesus of Nazareth; it has the Imprimatur of Bishop John Baptist Butt, Diocese of Southwark, England, 5 February 1890. Author’s name known simply as Author of “The Voice of the Sacred Heart.” 
(We return to Fr Clarke for February with his Meditations on The Great Truths.)

Meditation 3 – The Utility and Consolation
Which the Hidden Life of Jesus Christ Affords Us

Notwithstanding the magnitude of the external Work for which our Lord came down upon earth, He led the life of a recluse, up to three short years before He closed His mortal career, exercising the lowly trade of a carpenter in the obscurity of Nazareth.
Let us linger longer on this reflection, pregnant with matter for years of meditation and with usefulness and consolation for ourselves.

It discloses to us, in the first place, that no state of life no occupation – no deprivation of those things which the world esteems great and which, the natural man highly values, need form an obstacle to our co-operation with the Divine Mission of Jesus Christ on earth. Had He spent the whole, or the greater part of His Life, in working miracles, in preaching, in bearing testimony to His Divinity, in various ways, during the short time of His Public Ministry, we might indeed have hesitated to associate ourselves with a Work, so far beyond and above us. Had He placed before us but the example of the terrible sufferings of His Passion, we might justly have persuaded ourselves that our frailty could not attain to the imitation of so exalted a model.
But, it is Jesus of Nazareth who invites us to contemplate Him, during the long years of His Hidden Life and, to learn of Him the lessons He will so gently teach us. He asks us but to clothe ourselves with His Spirit, to form our hearts on His, in order to enable us to participate in His Mission, whatever may be our state of life.

It is not simply the exterior Life of our Blessed Lord that we are about to consider. It is, above all, the life of His Sacred Heart in the solitude of Nazareth which forms the chief matter for our meditation and, in this lies abundant consolation and instruction.

Our state of life maybe one with which the Actions we behold Jesus performing in Joseph’s workshop, are not compatible but are, for that reason, precluded from the imitation of His virtues, from appropriating to ourselves, the spirit which animated His Sacred Heart, from adopting as our own, the intentions for which He lived and laboured? Not so. The Heart of Jesus was the same in every phase of His Life and, the object of that Heart’s devotedness never changed. Whether He planed wood at Nazareth, or wrought miracles in Judea, the glory of His Father and the salvation of the world, were the One Aim ever kept in view.
What an immense source of consolation for countless hearts, would this thought be, if only they could be made to grasp it:
I, too, can live and act for the same great end, regardless of the sphere of life in which Providence has placed me and of the exterior actions which my state of life requires of me.

We know, it is the spirit which animates our works which renders them precious in the Sight of God, or otherwise. He asks not from us those which are beyond our reach. He does not desire any which would oblige us to do violence to the circumstances with which He has Himself surrounded us. He would fain possess our hearts, He yearns to be the Final End of all their aspirations, of all their intentions, so that His interests may be the main-spring of all our outward acts.
This He seeks throughout the world, amongst rich and poor, learned and ignorant, secular and religious alike and the souls, in whom He finds the closest union of sentiment with the Heart of the Great Solitary of Nazareth, will be found best disposed for receiving His choicest benedictions! And they will not deem it the least of these benedictions that they are enabled to sanctify the duties of their state, whatever it may be?

Yes, dear lovers of the Heart of Jesus, many of whom are perhaps weighed down with the fear that you have it not within your power to do anything great for God, go to Nazareth and learn of the Heart of Jesus, how to render your lives holy, not only with a view to your own sanctification but also, to their fruitfulness, for God’s glory. Your actions, even the most indifferent in themselves, will thus become ennobled, made almost Divine because,, by reason of your union with the Heart of Jesus, the sap of true spiritual life, will be infused into the spirit which animates them.

All praise, honour and glory to the Divine Heart of Jesus!
(Indulgence 50 Days. Once a day, Pope Leo XIII. 14 June 1901).

Posted in CONFESSION/PENANCE, DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, QUOTES on CONVERSION, QUOTES on REPENTANCE, The WORD

Quote/s of the Day – 25 January – Rise from the Dead

Quote/s of the Day – 25 January – Feast of the Conversion of St Paul, Apostle – Acts 9:1-22, Matthew 19:27-29 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/

Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me?”

Acts 9:4

Awake, O Sleeper and Rise from the Dead

Ephesians 5:14

It is written, ‘God is not mocked.’ (Gal 6: 7)
Indeed, God cannot be mocked,
nor circumvented, nor deluded
by any man’s astute deceit. …
Let each of you, then, I beg you, brethren,
confess his fault while the sinner is yet in this world,
while Confession is still possible,
while the satisfaction and remission
granted by the Priests,
is still acceptable to God
!”

St Cyprian of Carthage (c200-258)
Martyr, Bishop of Carthage,
Father of the Church

Let us then, my brethren, endure in hope.
Let us devote ourselves, side-by-side with our hoping,
so that the God of all the universe,
as He beholds our intention,
may cleanse us from all sins,
fill us with high hopes from what we have in hand
and grant us the change of heart which saves.
God has called you and you have your calling
!”

St Cyril of Jerusalem (315-387)
Father and Doctor of the Church

O Heavenly Father, have compassion for my cry
as Thou did for the prodigal son,
for I, too, am throwing myself at Thy feet
and crying aloud as he cried:
“Father, I have sinned!”
Do not reject me,
Thy unworthy child, O my Saviour
but cause Thy Angels
to rejoice too, on my behalf,
O God of goodness Thou,
Who desires that all should be saved.

St Romanos Melodios (c490-c556)
Monk, Composer of hymns, Poet

Truly, matters in the world,
are in a bad state
but if you and I begin, in earnest,
to reform ourselves,
a really good beginning
will have been made.

St Peter of Alcantara (1499-1562)

Posted in AUGUSTINIANS OSA, CHRIST the LIGHT, CHRIST the WORD and WISDOM, DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, FEASTS and SOLEMNITIES, GOD ALONE!, I BELIEVE!, ONE Minute REFLECTION, QUOTES on THE VOICE OF GOD, QUOTES on THE WORLD, St PAUL!, The LAMB of GOD, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 25 January – ‘… At the very moment he no longer saw anything of this world, he saw Jesus! … ‘

One Minute Reflection – 25 January – The Feast of the Conversion of St Paul, Apostle – Acts 9:1-22, Matthew 19:27-29 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/

He fell to the ground and heard a Voice saying to him, “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me?” – Acts 9:4.

REFLECTION – “From Heaven’s height Christ’s Voice overturned Saul. He received a command to carry out his persecutions no more and fell face downwards to the ground. He had first to be knocked down and afterwards raised up – first struck, then healed. For Christ would never have come to live in him, if Saul had not died to his former life of sin. Cast down to the earth in this way, what was it he heard? “Saul, Saul, why are thou persecuting MeIt is hard for thou to kick against the goad” (Acts 9:4-5). And he replied: “Who are You, Lord?” Then the Voice from on high continued: “I am Jesus of Nazareth, Whom thou art persecuting.” The members are still on the ground, while the Head cries out, from the heights of Heaven. He is not saying: “Why art thou persecuting My servants?” but “Why art thou persecuting Me!?

And Paul, who had put all his energy into his persecutions, is already preparing to obey: “What do Thou want me to do?” The persecutor is already transformed into the preacher, the wolf has become a sheep, the enemy, a defender. Paul learns what he is to do – if he has become blind, if this world’s light is held back from him for a while, it is so as to make the light within shine in his heart. Light is taken away from the persecutor, so that it may be given to the preacher; at the very moment he no longer saw anything of this world, he saw Jesus! This symbolises the believer – those who believe in Christ, must fix the eyes of their soul on Him, without paying attention to outward things…

So Saul was led to Ananias – the ravaging wolf is led to the sheep. But the Shepherd, Who guides everything from Heaven above, reassures him… “Do not fear, I will show him what he will have to suffer, for My Name’s sake” (Acts 9:16). What wonder is this! The wolf is led, a captive, to the sheep… The Lamb who died for the sheep, teaches it not to be afraid any more!” – St Augustine (354-430) Bishop, Father and Doctor of Grace of the Church (Sermon 279).

PRAYER – O God, Who taught the whole world by the preaching of Thy blessed Apostle Paul, grant, we beseech Thee that we, who today celebrate his conversion, may draw closer to Thee, by way of hia example.Through Jesus Christ, Thy Son our Lord, Who lives and reigns with Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end. Amen (Collect).

Posted in BREVIARY Prayers, CATHOLIC-PRAYERS OF THE CHURCH, DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, FEASTS and SOLEMNITIES, Our MORNING Offering, PRAYERS of the CHURCH, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, St PAUL!

Our Morning Offering – 25 January – Paule Doctor Egregie, Let Gentiles Raise the Thankful Lay By St Peter Damian

Our Morning Offering – 25 January – Feast of the Conversion of St Paul, Apostle

Paule Doctor Egregie
Let Gentiles Raise the Thankful Lay
By St Peter Damian (1007-1072)
Father and Doctor of the Church

Trans. John Mason Neale, 1854

Let Gentiles raise the thankful lay
Upon their great Apostle’s Day,
Whose doctrine, like the thunder, sounds
To the wide world’s remotest bounds.

O bliss of Paul beyond all thought!
To Paradise, yet living, caught,
He hears the heav’nly myst’ries there,
Which mortal tongue can not declare.

The Word’s blest seed around he flings
And straight a mighty harvest springs
And fruits of holy deeds supply,
God’s everlasting granary.

The lamp his holy lore displays
Hath fill’d the world with glorious rays
And doubt and error are o’erthrown,
That Truth may reign, and reign alone.

Long as unending ages run,
To God the Father laud be done,
To God the Son our equal praise
And God the Holy Ghost, we raise.
Amen.

Posted in DOMESTIC ANIMALS, Of ANIMALS / ANIMAL WELFARE, Of the SICK, the INFIRM, All ILLNESS, PATRONAGE, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 25 January – St Dwynwen (Died c460) Virgin

Saint of the Day – 25 January – St Dwynwen (Died c460) Virgin, Princess, Nun. Patronages – lovers (especially in Wales where her Feast today is celebrated in a similar as that of St Valentine’s Feast on 14 February), of the sick and of animals in danger. Also known as – Donwen, Donwenna, Dunwen, Dwyn – this last is the ‘pet’ name of our Saint and the most often used.

Dwynwen lived in the 5th Century, the daughter of Saint Brychan of Brecknock (6 April), a prolific Welsh King who fathered 24 sons and daughters, all venerated as Saints and very famous especially in the Celtic world. Dwynwen, another daughter of the august parent King was then naturally a Princess. She was a beautiful and virtuous girl and fell madly in love with a Welsh Prince, Maelon Dafodrill,but the idea of ​​marriage faded naturally from her heart.

Several legends have attempted to find an explanation for this loss of the romantic fervour – one of them could be that King Brychan had already promised his daughter to another Prince. The Saint, however, understood that her calling was to dedicate her existence to God by undertaking a religious life. She then tried to separate from Maelon but he reacted by drastically changing towards her and becoming unbearable.

Dwynwen took refuge in the woods, raising fervent prayers to God to help her and put an end to her miseries. She fell asleep and when she awoke she had been given a sweet drink which immediately deprived her of Maelon’s attentions and the sadness of her heart. The same drink was given to Maelon but in him, it had the effect of transforming him into an ice statue. Dwynwen then prayed again for three of her requests to be granted – that Maelon be freed from the ice, that she might never wqish to marry again and finally, that all lovers, with the help of God, find happiness through the fulfillment of their love or be healed of their passions.

God granted all her prayers and she did not hesitate to devote her entire existence to Him. She then founded a Convent on the Island of Llanddwyn, just opposite the Island of Anglesey (Yns Mon). She died there around the year 460.

St Dwynwen’s Church, Llanddwyn c1778

Here a fountain of fresh water called Ffynnon Dwynwen was considered a holy spring and soon became a place of pilgrimage. Over time the Saint was also invoked for the healing of the sick and animals in danger, a tradition which has survived to the present day.

The ruins of Llanddwyn Chapel, a 16th Century Tudor Church built on the site of an ancient priory, can still be seen today. St Dwynwen’s name is also invoked in the Town of Porthddwyn and a Church remains dedicated to her in the British peninsula of Cornwall.

St Dwynwen is celebrated especially throughout Wales and by lovers, on 25 January. One of the Dwynwen’s favourite maxims was: “Nothing wins hearts like joy.

St Dwynwen’s Church, Llanddwyn
Posted in FEASTS and SOLEMNITIES, SAINT of the DAY, St PAUL!

Feast of the Conversion of St Paul, Apostle and the Saints for 25 January

Feast of the Conversion of St Paul, Apostle – 25 January:
The Church is to have one more Apostle – an Apostle for the Gentiles – and he is to be the fruit of the Martyrdom and prayer of St Stephen.

https://anastpaul.com/2023/01/25/feast-of-the-conversion-of-st-paul-apostle-25-january/
AND:
https://anastpaul.wordpress.com/2018/01/25/feast-of-the-conversion-of-st-paul-25-january/
AND:
https://anastpaul.com/2019/01/25/feast-of-the-conversion-of-st-paul-25-january-2/

NOVENA In Preparation for the
Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary – LINK to DAY TWO, 25 January: DAY TWO, 25 January

St Agape the Martyr
St Agileus of Carthage
St Amarinus of Clermont
St Ananias of Damascus

Blessed Antonio Migliorati OSA (1355-1450) Priest and Friar of the Order of St Augustine, Missionary Preacher, Confessor, Mystc. His body is incorrupt.
His Life:
https://anastpaul.com/2021/01/25/saint-of-the-day-24-january-blessed-antonio-migliorati-osa-1355-1450/

St Apollo of Heliopolis
St Artemas of Pozzuoli
St Auxentius of Epirus

St Bretannion of Tomi (Died c380) Bisho, Confessor, Defender of the Faith against heresy.
The Roman Martyrology reads today: “At Tomi in Scythia, St Bretannion, Bishop, who by his great sanctity and his zeal for the Catholic Faith, shone in the Church under the Arian Emperor Valens,. whom he opposed with fortitude.
His Courageous Life:

https://anastpaul.com/2024/01/25/saint-of-the-day-25-january-saint-bretannion-of-tomi-died-c380-bishop-confessor/

St Donatus the Martyr
St Dwynwen (Died c460) Virgin Princess, Nun.
St Eochod of Galloway
St Joel of Pulsano
St Juventinus of Antioch
St Maximinus of Antioch
St Palaemon

St Poppo of Stavelot (977-1048) Abbot, Reformer, Ascetic. He became one of the best known Abbots of Stavelot and was one of the first recorded Flemish pilgrims to the Holy Land.
Biography:

https://anastpaul.com/2020/01/25/saint-of-the-day-25-january-saint-poppo-of-stavelot-977-1048/

St Praejectus (625–676) Bishop, Martyr. The Roman Martyrology reads: “In Clermont-Ferrand in the Aquitaine region, in France, Saints Preietto, Bishop and Amarino, man of God, both killed by the notables of the City.”
His Life and Death:

https://anastpaul.com/2022/01/25/saint-of-the-day-25-january-saint-praejectus-625-676/

St Publius of Zeugma
St Racho of Autun
St Sabinus the Martyr

Posted in CHRIST the WORD and WISDOM, Meditations on the HIDDEN LIFE, QUOTES on WISDOM

Thought for the Day – 24 January –  Meditation 2 – Meaning and Design of the Hidden Life

Thought for the Day – 24 January – Meditations on the Hidden Life: From the 1906 Edition of The Heart of Jesus of Nazareth; it has the Imprimatur of Bishop John Baptist Butt, Diocese of Southwark, England, 5 February 1890. Author’s name known simply as Author of “The Voice of the Sacred Heart.” 
(We return to Fr Clarke for February with his Meditations on The Great Truths.)

Meditation 2 – Meaning and Design of the Hidden Life

There are two ways of understanding what is called a hidden life.
From one point of view it is simply a life withdrawn from the busy world – from the society of men. In this sense it bears no essential sanctity and is a mode of life, chosen by many ,who have no acquaintance with the nature of holiness, such as the Pagan philosophers and others, who withdrew from the society of their fellow-men merely, as the result of their own natural inclination and, in pursuit of a purely natural object.
Under another point of view, a hidden life means distinctly one led by each person in the solitude of. his own heart and, it is this alone which, imparts sanctity and value to that external and material seclusion which, for the most part, the world understands, by the term “hidden life.”

It is under this second aspect we are about to regard our Lord Jesus Christ, in His solitude at Nazareth, learning of Him that the sanctity and merit of our whole outer life, depends on the intentions, the motives – in a word, the life of the Sacred Heart itself.
Have we ever asked ourselves, For what do I live, if Placed as I am, in the midst of society, have I at heart any higher aim, or any end more worthy of a Christian, than the gratification of self, or the possession of some temporal interest? “” –

If I am a Religious, do I live for that which is the end and object of the Order, to which I belong? – just as every aspiration, every beat of the Heart of Jesus was directed towards the object which brought Him down from Heaven.
Or is it still – perhaps unconsciously – self, who I am seeking under the mask of a religious life?

We know, the sole aim of our Lord in coming down upon earth, was the reparation of the Divine glory and the salvation of the world. We can have no doubt, as to the infallibility of the means He took, for accomplishing this end. Nevertheless, it is with astonishment perhaps, we behold Him passing nearly the whole of His mortal career in solitude, employed in the most ordinary occupations and withholding the manifestation of any of those marvellous deeds which we should imagine, could alone be in proportion, to so sublime an end.

Jesus, the Eternal Wisdom, knew that the lives of the greater part of men, would be passed in a routine of ordinary actions, according to their state and, He foresaw, the necessity of teaching them how to sanctify this common life, generally, so little esteemed or understood, as well as of correcting, in them, the universal error which imagines that only those actions, are meritorious or worthy of admiration which are great, or brilliant, in themselves.

Have we not been sometimes tempted to consider, our state of life, an excuse for doing nothing for God’s glory, or for the promotion of His interests?
If we are in Religion, have we not deluded ourselves with the idea that, the material and commonplace nature of the employments confided to us, are an obstacle to our labouring for God and to our union with Him by prayer and recollection?

Let us fix our thoughts upon Jesus of Nazareth and ask ourselves, whether the uninteresting character of His Life, in that obscure home, was any impediment to the accomplishment of the One Great Work, He had ever in His Heart, or to the union of His Heart, with that Eternal Father to Whose Love it ever corresponded?

Posted in "Follow Me", CHRIST the LIGHT, CHRIST the WORD and WISDOM, DOCTORS of the Church, DOMINICAN OP, FATHERS of the Church, JESUIT SJ, QUOTES on CHARITY, QUOTES on DISCIPLESHIP, QUOTES on EVANGELISATION, QUOTES on GRACE, QUOTES on MISSION, QUOTES on TRUTH, The APOSTLES & EVANGELISTS, The WORD

Quote/s of the Day – 24 January – ‘ It is up to you to keep burning’

Quote/s of the Day – 24 January – St Timothy (1st Century) Disciple of St Paul, Bishop and Martyr – 1 Timothy 6:11-16; Luke 14:26-33. – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/

So likewise, everyone of you,
who does not renounce all
that he possesses,
cannot be My disciple.

Luke 14:33

Go into the whole world
and preach the Gospel to every creature.

Mark 16:15

I have lit the light of your torch
but it is up to you to see it is kept burning,
not just to your personal advantage
but also, in the interest of all who will see it
and who, through it, will be led to the Truth.
The worst wickedness would not put
a shadow over your light,
if you live with the vigilance of those
who are called to bring the whole world to good.
So, let your life correspond
to the holiness of your mission,
so that God’s grace may be proclaimed everywhere.

St John Chrysostom (347-407)
Father and Doctor of the Church

If you truly wish to help
the soul of your neighbour,
you should firstly approach God
with all your heart.
Ask Him simply,
to fill you with charity,
the greatest of all virtues.

St Vincent Ferrer OP (1350-1419)

Can we think, the life of man,
better employed than in this good work?
What do I say? Would not all the labours
of a thousand men, be well rewarded,
in the conversion of a single soul
gained to Jesus Christ?
I have always felt a great love
for this kind of life
and for a profession so excellent
and so akin to that of the Apostles.

St Isaac Jogues (1607-1646)
Martyr

Posted in "Follow Me", CHRIST the WORD and WISDOM, CHRIST, the WAY,TRUTH,LIFE, FATHERS of the Church, GOD ALONE!, ONE Minute REFLECTION, Quote on SELF-ABANDONMENT, QUOTES on DISCIPLESHIP, QUOTES on HUMILITY, QUOTES on PRIDE, QUOTES on SELF-DENIAL, The APOSTLES & EVANGELISTS, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 24 January – ‘ … Would you follow Christ? …’

One Minute Reflection – 24 January – “The Month of the Holy Name of Jesus and the Holy Family” – St Timothy (1st Century) Disciple of St Paul, Bishop and Martyr – 1 Timothy 6:11-16; Luke 14:26-33 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/

So likewise, everyone of you, who does not renounce all
he possesses, cannot be My disciple.
” – Luke 14:33

REFLECTION – “When the Lord tells us in the Gospel that anyone who wants to be His follower must renounce himself, the injunction seems harsh; we think He is imposing a burden on us. But an order is no burden when it is given by One Who helps in carrying it out.

To what place are we to follow Christ, if not where He has already gone? We know that He has Risen and Ascended into Heaven, there, then, we must follow Him. There is no cause for despair — by ourselves we can do nothing but we have Christ’s promise. Heaven was beyond our reach before our Head ascended there (Col 1:18) but now, if we are His Members, why should we despair of arriving there ourselves? Is there any reason? True, many fears and afflictions confront us in this world but if we follow Christ, we shall reach a place of perfect happiness, perfect peace and everlasting freedom from fear.

Yet, let me warn anyone bent on following Christ, to listen to Saint John the Apostle: “One who claims to abide in Christ, ought to walk as He walked” (1 Jn 2:6). Would you follow Christ? Then be humble as He was humble; do not scorn His lowliness if you want to reach His exaltation!” – St Caesarius of Arles (470-543) Bishop, Father of the Church (Sermon 159 1:4-6).

PRAYER – Be mindful of our weakness, Almighty God and because the burden of our sins weighs heavily upon us, may the glorious intercession of blessed Timothy, Your Martyr and Bishop, sustain us. Through Jesus Christ, Thy Son our Lord, Who lives and reigns with Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end. Amen (Collect).

Posted in CATHOLIC-PRAYERS OF THE CHURCH, FATHERS of the Church, HYMNS, PRAYERS of the CHURCH, The APOSTLES & EVANGELISTS

Our Morning Offering – 24 January – O Fathers of Our Ancient Faith

Our Morning Offering – 24 January – Feast of Saint Timothy, Bishop and Martyr

O Fathers of Our Ancient Faith

O Fathers of our ancient faith,
With all the heav’n, we sing your fame
Whose sound went forth in all the earth
To tell of Christ and bless His Name.

You took the Gospel to the poor,
The Word of God alight in you,
Which in our day is told again,
That timeless Word, forever new.

You told of God, Who died for us
And out of death triumphant rose,
Who gave the Truth which made us free
and changeless through the ages goes.

Praise Father, Son and Holy Spirit,
Whose gift is faith that never dies,
A light in darkness now, until
The Day-Star in our hearts arise.

O Fathers of Our Ancient Faith is written by the Benedictine Nuns of Stanbrook Abbey. In the Divine Office it is sung at Morning Prayer in the Common of Apostles. It is set to the anonymous tune associated with the 7th century Latin hymn, Creator Alme Siderum.

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 24 January – St Zama (Died c268)

Saint of the Day – 24 January – St Zama (Died c268) the 1st Bishop of Bologna in Italy. It is believed that he was Consecrated and sent forth by Pope St Dionysius (Died 268) (the Bishop of Rome from 22 July 259 until his death on 26 December 268). Also known as – Zamas.

The Roman Martyrology reads today: “At Bologna, St Zamas, the first Bishop of that City, who was consecrated by Pope St Denis (Dionysus’s) and there wonderfully propagated the Christian Faith.

We have almost no information of our Saint except that he was sent by St Dionysius to Bologna and there he fulfilled his Ecclestical Office with immense zeal, devotion and success.

There is a famous Crypt in Bologna, see the image below. The story of the Crypt is linked to the birth of the first Christian community in Bologna. It has long been believed that St Zama established this first Cathedral because, in this sacred place, were buried the remains of the first Bishops of Bologna, starting with our St Zama himself.

Most probably this area was one of the first Christian cemeteries where too, the Bishops of Bologna were buried. At that time, until the 5th Century, to bury the dead within the City walls was illegal.

Faustinian, the Bishop successor to St Zama, contributed to increasing the fame of the Sanctuary by building a larger Basilica and changed the title of the Church to SaintiNaborre and Felice, Martyrs of the Milanese Church, from which See, Bologna depended. All the Bishops of the Bolognese diocese were inhumed here until the 8th-9th Centuries.

The current Cathedral stands on the ruins of what was the house of Sts Vitale and Agricola , the two holy Protomartyrs of Bologna . The Crypt is a monument of great importance from both an artistic and historical point of view, because the Christian roots of the Emilian Capital, Bologna, are rooted in this place.

The Altar in the Crypt
A Freco in the Crypt depicting Archangel St Raphael with St Tobias
Posted in SAINT of the DAY, The APOSTLES & EVANGELISTS

St Timothy (1st Century) Disciple of St Paul, Bishop and Martyr, DAY ONE of the CANDLEMAS NOVENA and the Saints for 24 January

St Timothy (1st Century) Disciple of St Paul, Bishop and Martyr
His Life and Death:

https://anastpaul.com/2022/01/24/saint-of-the-day-24-january-saint-timothy-died-c-97/

DAY ONE of the CANDLEMAS NOVENA
Today marks the start of the
Novena in preparation for the great Feast
of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
This is an Indulgenced Novena LINKE HERE:
(The Candlemas Novena)

St Artemius of Clermont
St Bartlomiej Osypiuk
St Bertrand of Saint Quentin
St Exuperantius of Cingoli

St Felician of Foligno (c158-c 250) Bishop and Martyr, Confessor.
St Felician’s Life and Death:

https://anastpaul.com/2021/01/24/saint-of-the-day-24-january-saint-felician-of-foligno-c-158-c-250-martyr/

St Guasacht
Bl John Grove

Blessed Marcolino Amanni of Forli OP (1317-1397) Priest and Friar of the Order of Preachers, the Dominicans, Mystic, Assistant Prior and Procurator of his Convent. He was confirmed as a saint on 9 May 1750 by Pope Benedict XIV.
His Life:

https://anastpaul.com/2023/01/24/saint-of-the-day-24-january-blessed-marcolino-amanni-of-forli-op-1317-1397/

Blessed Paola Gambara Costa TOSF (1463-1515) a Countess and member of the Third Order of St Francis, Laywoman, Mother, Widow, Apostle of the poor and sick. Her cult was confirmed by Beatification on 14 August 1845 by Pope Gregory XVI.
Her Life:

https://anastpaul.com/2020/01/24/saint-of-the-day-24-january-blessed-paola-gambara-costa-tosf-1463-1515/

St Projectus Martyr. No other information has survived
St Sabiniana of Troyes Holy woman. No details of her life have survived.
St Suranus
St Thyrsus Martyr. No other information has survived

Bl essed William Ireland SJ (1636-1679) Priest Martyr. He was Beatified on 15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI.
His Life and Death:

https://anastpaul.com/2024/01/24/saint-of-the-day-24-january-blessed-william-ireland-sj-1636-1679-priest-martyr/

St Zama (Died c268) Bishop

Martyrs of Asia Minor – 4 Saints: A group of ChristiansMmartyred together for their faith. The only details to survive are four of their names – Eugene, Mardonius, Metellus and Musonius. They were burned at the stake in Asia Minor.

Martyrs of Antioch:
Babylas
Epolonius
Prilidian
Urban

Posted in CHRIST the WORD and WISDOM, CHRIST, the WAY,TRUTH,LIFE, JUNE-THE SACRED HEART, Meditations on the HIDDEN LIFE, SACRED HEART QUOTES, SACRED HEART REFLECTIONS

Thought for the Day – 23 January – The Grandeur of the Hidden Life

Thought for the Day – 23 January – – Meditations on the Hidden Life: From the 1906 Edition of The Heart of Jesus of Nazareth; it has the Imprimatur of Bishop John Baptist Butt, Diocese of Southwark, England, 5 February 1890. Author’s name known simply as Author of “The Voice of the Sacred Heart.” P.S: The will NOT all be as long as this Introduction.
(We return to Fr Clarke for February with his Meditations on The Great Truths.)

Meditation 1 – The Grandeur of the Hidden Life

The period of our Lord’s Life on earth which still remains least known, even to many devout souls, is that which He spent in the retirement of Nazareth.

Devotion to the Sacred Passion, or even to the Divine Infancy, is more or less prevalent and yet, it is too often only very superficially understood. But the Mysteries of the Hidden Life, although it occupied the greater portion of the three-and-thirty years, is well-nigh a sealed book, or at least, it is a volume of which the pages have scarcely been turned. When we ask ourselves why it is so, the answer comes to us without much difficulty.

The generality of minds find nothing attractive in that which bears upon its surface the character of monotony, nothing great in that which fails to wear a brilliant appearance. Men will not take the trouble to seek a treasure which is hidden beneath a commonplace exterior and hence, the Hidden Life of Nazareth, putting forward no brilliant show, marked by no externally striking incidents, has but little attraction for those who know not how to recognise grandeur in abasement, or who care not to seek what is supernatural and Divine, when it is veiled under a common and everyday life appearance.

It is true that the natural craving of the human heart seeks to attain to something great. In fact, the misapplication of this imperious necessity, is that which causes the fearful state of the world at the present day. Many a fall has doubtless begun, in the yearning of the heart, after some apparently greater work than that which lay within its grasp. False lights have been followed and souls, losing in those cases the right track, have drifted away and been shipwrecked on the rocks of pride and infidelity. Whereas others, directed by a similar yearning, have followed the True Light, and have found, in the imitation of the Life of Jesus Christ, the real greatness which their souls were seeking. Many a high vocation has probably been abandoned because the soul did not grasp the truth which the humility, obedience and self-annihilation which were demanded of it, placed within its reach, the very means requisite for attaining the most sublime of all ends which it could propose to itself.

This seems to have been the thought of Saint Ignatius, when, in the striking contemplation of “The Kingdom of Christ” which has inspired countless souls with contempt for the world and has led them to enroll themselves under the only banner worthy of their nobility, as brethren and co-heirs with Christ, he remarks that everything in the enterprise to which we are invited, is great. The same may be said of the Hidden Life – that school wherein we learn to become truly great, inasmuch as it constantly places before us, in our Lord, the most perfect end to aim at in all our actions and the highest of all examples to guide our interior intentions.

The Model proposed to us is the Incarnate Wisdom Himself; the means for attaining our end, is the practice of the virtues and the adoption of the aspirations and desires, of His Sacred Heart; the end itself, is the same as that which brought Him down from Heaven, for which He lived and died; our companions should be the Saints of every age for whom Nazareth has ever been, at once, a school and a dwelling of predilection for their souls.

The very limited attention, then, which even the greater number of pious persons give to this portion of our Lord’s Life, must be attributed to the absence of that spirit of faith which, enables us to pierce the veils and to discern true greatness, beneath what, in the eyes of human wisdom, appears contemptible!

This same absence of attraction maybe accounted for, by the monotonous character which each year externally presents. The restless thirst for something exciting and ‘sensational’ which now penetrates, even into matters of religion, here finds no satisfaction. Hence, it is that the name of Nazareth which, to souls who have dwelt much in thought and affection with Jesus in His years of solitude, awakens such thrilling memories and elicits such burning acts of love, falls coldly and without significance, on the ears of many, for whose sake, nevertheless, He chose to bear that title, at once so despised and so glorious – Jesus Nazarenus, Jesus of Nazareth.

We must, then, in order to give ourselves efficaciously to the Meditation of the Hidden Life of Jesus, in the first place, disabuse our minds of that false judgement which would lead us to esteem only that which displays its utility and its greatness, upon the surface. In the next place, we must remember that the Life of Jesus at Nazareth is, in more senses than one, His Hidden Life. It is pre-eminently His Interior Life there, we wish to study – the life of His Sacred Heart and, it is precisely in that light, that it forms a fitting subject for the closest attention of all those who claim to be numbered amongst the lovers of the Sacred Heart and whose, desire it is, to know it more profoundly, in order that they may love it more intensely.

It is not sufficient to read of the exterior actions which our Blessed Lord performed, or of the exterior sufferings to which He submitted. These are, it is true, the outward expressions of the Love which inwardly consumed Him. But, a far more perfect knowledge, of the character of Jesus, will be obtained by him who, through prayer and meditation, shall penetrate into the source within, whence flowed every action He wrought and, every word He uttered, than can ever be reached by the soul which regards only the exterior – however full of meaning and expression, as in the Person of our Lord that exterior may have been.

There were those who, while He was on earth, beheld His works and heard His words and were in no way touched by them. The thoughts and intentions which moved Him in acting, speaking and suffering, remained hidden from them, their ignorance being, in great measure, an effect of their willful blindness, as it is written: “If you will not believe, you shall not understand.” (Isaias 7:9, Septuagint Version)

The same may be said of a number of persons at the present day. The outward expression of the humility, patience, obedience and other virtues of our Lord, together with that of His Love for His Heavenly Father and for men, makes little impression upon us becausewe are, through our own indifference, strangers to the living furnace of Love within His Breast. Thus, we fail to recognise in what we read of Jesus, the true character of His Words and actions, the manifestation of His inmost desires and yearnings – the throbbing of His Heart for us.

All that has been said applies in a special manner to the portion of our Lord’s Life which He passed at Nazareth. The very monotony, the daily round of commonplace duties and ordinary actions, necessitates our penetrating into the hidden source, wherein is to be found the motive for the prolonged hidden life of One ,Who had such a stupendous work before Him to accomplish on earth and Who allowed Himself, so short a space in which to fulfill it.

Let us, then, in our love for the Sacred Heart, endeavour to become more intimately acquainted with its Life at Nazareth, so that, charmed with the marvels we shall there discover, we may be filled with desire to act and suffer with the same motives and intentions, which led to the actions and sufferings of Jesus and thus, arrive in time, at a more just appreciation, of the true character and blessed fruits, of a life formed on the model of the Hidden Life at Nazareth. Amen

Posted in DOMINICAN OP, GOD ALONE!, GOD is LOVE, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, QUOTES on ETERNAL LIFE, QUOTES on PEACE, QUOTES on the CROSS of CHRIST, QUOTES on TRUST and complete CONFIDENCE in GOD, SEPTEMBER-The SEVEN SORROWS of MARY and The HOLY CROSS, St PAUL!, The HOLY CROSS

Quote/s of the Day – 23 January – St Raymond of Peñafort

Quote/s of the Day – 23 January – St Raymond of Peñafort OP (1175-1275) Confessor, “Father of Canon Law” Dominican Priest, Co-Founder of the Mercedarian Friars with St Peter Nolasco, Miracle-Worker. – Patronages – Lawyers, Canonists, Medical Record Librarians, Barcelona, Spain, Navarre, Spain.

“This is that enviable
and blessed Cross of Christ . . .
the Cross in which alone,
we must make our boast,
as Paul,
God’s chosen instrument,
has told us.”

this is that enviable and blessed cross of christ - st raymond of penafort 7 jan 2019

“May the God of love and peace,
set your hearts at rest
and speed you on your journey,
may He meanwhile,
shelter you from disturbance by others,
in the hidden recesses of His Love,
until He brings you, at last,
into that place of complete plenitude,
where you will repose forever,
in the vision of peace,
in the security of trust
and in the restful enjoyment of His riches.”

MORE:
https://anastpaul.com/2024/01/23/quote-s-of-the-day-23-january-st-raymond-of-penafort-1175-1275/

St Raymond of Peñafort
(1175-1275)

Posted in "Follow Me", CHRIST the LIGHT, CHRIST the SUN of JUSTICE, CHRIST the WORD and WISDOM, CHRIST, the WAY,TRUTH,LIFE, DIVINE Mercy, Goodness, Patience, DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, GOD ALONE!, In the PRESENCE of GOD, ONE Minute REFLECTION, QUOTES on GRACE, QUOTES on LOVE of GOD, QUOTES on PEACE, QUOTES on PRIDE, QUOTES on SIMPLICITY, QUOTES on TRUST and complete CONFIDENCE in GOD, QUOTES on UNITY/with GOD, QUOTES on WATCHING, SELF-DISTRUST, The SECOND COMING, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 23 January –  ‘ … Open the door to Him at once, when He Comes and knocks. Luke 12:35

One Minute Reflection – 23 January – “The Month of the Holy Name of Jesus and the Holy Family” – St Raymond of Peñafort (1175-1275) – Sirach 31:8-11, Luke 12:35-40 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/

“Stay dressed for action and keep your lamps burning and be like men who are waiting for their master to come home from the wedding feast, so that they may open the door to Him at once, when He Comes and knocks.” – Luke 12:35-36

REFLECTION – “God is the Supreme Being, therefore, direct the thoughts of your mind to Him and do not think of anything else, except to watch for His Coming. Let the soul gather together its thoughts, dispersed by sin, as though it were gathering together children romping about! Let it take them back to the house of its body and there, wait for the Lord, at all times with fasting and love, until He Comes and gathers them up in truth…

If our hearts are not swollen with pride and, if we do not send our thoughts out to feed in the pastures on the mad weeds of sin and if, to the contrary, we lift up our minds and lead our thoughts into the Lord’s Presence with fervent wills, then, in His good Will, the Lord shall certainly Come to us and truly unite us to Himself …

So make haste to please the Lord, wait for Him in your heart without ceasing, seek Him in your thoughts, stir up your will and your love, to reach out towards Him at every moment!Then you will see how He Comes to you and makes His home within you.” – St Macarius of Egypt (c300-390) (Attrib) Monk, Father (Sermon 31).

PRAYER – O God, Thou Who chose blessed Raymond to be a renowned minister of the Sacrament of Penance and miraculously brought him through the waves of the sea, grant that, by his intercession, we may produce good results from our penance and reach the Heaven of eternal salvation Through Jesus Christ, Thy Son our Lord, Who lives and reigns with Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end. Amen (Collect).

Posted in CHRIST the LIGHT, In the PRESENCE of GOD, Our MORNING Offering, PRAYERS of the SAINTS

Our Morning Offering – 23 January – Lord, Kindle our Lamps

Our Morning Offering – 23 January – “The Month of the Holy Name of Jesus and the Holy Family”

Lord, Kindle our Lamps
By St Columban (543-615)

Lord, kindle our lamps,
Saviour most dear to us,
that we may always shine
in Thy Presence
and always receive Light
from Thee,
the Light Perpetual,
so that our own
personal darkness,
may be overcome
and the darkness
of the word driven from us.
Amen

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 23 January – Saint Colman of Lismore (Died 702) Bishop/Abbot

Saint of the Day – 23 January – Saint Colman of Lismore (Died 702) Bishop of Lismore and simultaneously the Abbot of the renowned teaching Monastery of Lismore. In 695, Colman succeeded Saint Hierlug (Zailug) as the Abbot and Bishop of Lismore. During his rule, the fame of Lismore reached its peak. Also known as – Choimoc, and ‘Mo’ Choimoc. Additional Memorial – 22 January in Lismore.

The School of Lismore was the most celebrated in the South of Ireland. It was founded in the year 635 by St Carthach the Younger, in a most picturesque site, steeply rising from the southern bank of the Blackwater.

Lismore was founded in 635 and the founder survived only two years, for he died in 637 but Providence blessed his work and his Monastery grew to be the greatest centre of learning and piety, in all the South of Erin. The Rule of St Carthach is the most notable literary monument which the Founder left behind him. It is fortunately still extant in the ancient Gaelic verse in which it was written.

Colman was the son to Finnbar. He was a member of the noble family which ruled over Ith-Liathain territory, in the County of Cork. Colman was born, some time in the earlier part of the 7th Century. Whilst our saint was yet a young man, he took the monastic Habit in the celebrated Lismore Monastery. There he was distinguished for all those virtues of which he made profession.

At this time, Lismore, delightfully situated on the Blackwater, was a celebrated asylum of sanctity and learning. It was famous on this account, not only throughout Ireland but even in Britain and more distant countries on the Continent.An innumerable body of Monks or scholars filled its cloisters and schools. While many holy Prelates, Abbots and religious received their education and early training.

St Hierlog ruled over the See and Monastery of Lismore, during the years of our Saint’s sojourn there and when he died on 16 January 698, Colman was immediately appointed his successor, both in the Bishopric and in the Abbey.

Thus, our Saint was the spiritual father of many Monks and an instructor of many Prelates. These exhibited in their lives and actions, the excellence of that discipline and training, to which they had been subjected.

At an advanced age, full of virtues and merits, our Saint was called away to receive the reward of his labours but after a short Episcopate and term of Abbatial rule, lasting only four years, Colman died in the year of our Lord 702, on the 22nd day of January.

Posted in MARIAN TITLES, SAINT of the DAY

Espousal of the Blessed Virgin Mary, St Raymond of Peñafort Confessor, St Emerentiana Virgin Martyr and the Saints for 23 January

Espousal of the Blessed Virgin Mary, approved by Pope Paul III (1546) – 23 January:
HERE:

https://anastpaul.com/2021/01/23/feast-of-the-espousal-of-the-blessed-virgin-mary-and-memorials-of-the-saints/

St Raymond of Peñafort OP (1175-1275) “Father of Canon Law” Dominican Priest, Doctor of Canon Law, the Third Master of the Order of Preachers, Founder of the Mercedarian friars, Writer, Teacher, Miracle-Worker.
St Raymond of Peñafort’s Feast day was inserted in the General Roman Calendar in 1671 for celebration on 23 January. In 1969 it was moved to 7 January, the day after that of his death. He is the Patron Saint of Canon lawyers, specifically and lawyers, in general.
Miraculous Raymond!
:
https://anastpaul.com/2019/01/07/saint-of-the-day-st-raymond-of-penafort-op-1175-1275-father-of-canon-law/


St Agathangelus
St Amasius of Teano
St Aquila the Martyr
St Asclas of Antinoe
St Clement of Ancyra
St Colman of Lismore (Died 702) Bishop and Abbot
St Dositheus of Gaza

St Eusebius of Mount Coryphe

St Ildephonsus (506-667) Archbishop of Toledo. Theologian, Scholar, Marian devotee, Writer, Evangeliser. Abbot Dom Guéranger calls him the Doctor of the Virginity of Mary. Saint Ildephonsus established the Feast of the Expectation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, which is still kept in some places on 18 December.
Wonderful Ildephonsus:

https://anastpaul.wordpress.com/2018/01/23/saint-of-the-day-23-january-st-ildephonsus-607-667/

St John the Almoner (Died c620) Bishop of Alexandria, Confessor, Widower, Apostle of the poor, Reformer – both within the Church and within the civic structures.
About St John:

https://anastpaul.com/2021/01/23/saint-of-the-day-23-january-st-john-the-almoner-died-c-620/

St Jurmin
St Lufthild

St Maimbod (Died c880) Martyr, Irish Pilgrim in France, Missionary Preacher. Maimbod is regarded as an unofficial Patron of eye diseases and ailments.
His Life and Death:

https://anastpaul.com/2023/01/23/saint-of-the-day-23-january-saint-maimbod-died-c-880-martyr/

St Martyrius of Valeria (6th Century) Monk and Hermit
St Messalina of Foligno
St Ormond of Mairé
St Parmenas the Deacon
St Severian the Martyr

Posted in JANUARY month of THE MOST HOLY NAME of JESUS, QUOTES on TRUST and complete CONFIDENCE in GOD, SELF-DISTRUST, St JOSEPH, The FLIGHT into EQYPT, The HOLY FAMILY, THE HOLY FAMILY - FAMILIAE SANCTAE, The HOLY INFANCY, The WILL of GOD

Thought for the Day – 22 January – “The Arrival in Palestine”

Thought for the Day – 22 January – Meditations with Fr Richard Frederick Clarke SJ (1839-1900)

Meditations for AChristmastide
“The Holy Infancy”
From “The Devout Year
By Fr Richard Frederick Clarke SJ (1839-1900)

“The Arrival in Palestine”

+1. When Joseph with Mary and her Divine Son arrived in their own land, his first thought was to turn to Bethlehem and to dwell in peace where he had dwelt so peaceably before. But to his sorrow he learned that the son of the impious Herod was ruling in his father’s place.
He was not going to expose, to any risk, the treasure committed to him and at once, he determined to turn his steps elsewhere.
Notice his prudence and beware of running any risk with the treasures of grace which God has committed to you. One serious sin will lose them all.

+2. Whither should he go? It was all one to St Joseph, as long as he went where God sent him. He was quite as ready to go to Nazareth as anywhere else, if God directed his steps .
This should be my disposition, to be ready to go anywhere and live in any place, where God may send me.

+3. How did St Joseph decide where he was to dwell? By prayer and by good counsel. He asked of God to turn his steps whither He Willed and he also did not neglect the rules of human prudence.
This is St. Ignatius’ advice:
(1) Act with prudence but never forget to consult God.
(2) While you trust all to God, do not lose sight of the importance of using natural means.

Posted in CARMELITES, CATECHESIS, FATHERS of the Church, GOD ALONE!, JANUARY month of THE MOST HOLY NAME of JESUS, QUOTES on LOVE of GOD, QUOTES on PERSECUTION, QUOTES on PRAYER, QUOTES on SUFFERING, The HOLY NAME

Quote/s of the Day – 22 January – Roses and thorns

Quote/s of the Day – 22 January – “The Month of the Holy Name of Jesus and the Holy Family” – St Vincent of Saragossa (Died 304) Protomartyr of Spain and St Anastasius the Persian (Died 628) Martyr – Wisdom 3:1-8; Luke 21:9-19

And you shall be hated by all men,
for My Name’s sake.
But, not a hair of your head shall perish.

Luke 21:17-18

Pray in the spirit and sentiment of love,
in which the royal Prophet said to Him,
‘Thou, O Lord, art my portion.’
Let others choose to themselves,
portions among creatures,
for my part, Thou art my portion,
Thou alone I have chosen
for my whole inheritance.

St Augustine of Canterbury (Died c605)
“The Apostle to the English”

O strong love of God!
I really think, nothing seems impossible,
to one who loves. O happy soul
which has obtained this peace, from its God
! ”

St Teresa of Jesus of Avila (1515-1582)
Carmelite Reformer

You must choose – is it better
that there should be thorns in your garden,
in order to have roses,
or that there should be no roses
in your garden,
in order to have no thorns
?”

St Francis de Sales (1567-1622)
Doctor Caritatis

Prayer is the inner bath of love
into which the soul plunges itself.

St Jean-Marie Baptiste Vianney (1786-1859)

Posted in CHRIST the LIGHT, CHRIST the WORD and WISDOM, DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, ONE Minute REFLECTION, QUOTES on FEAR, SOLDIERS/ARMOUR of CHRIST, The SECOND COMING, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 22 January – ‘The nearer the King approaches …’

One Minute Reflection – 22 January – “The Month of the Holy Name of Jesus and the Holy Family” – St Vincent of Saragossa (Died 304) Protomartyr of Spain and St Anastasius the Persian (Died 628) Martyr – Wisdom 3:1-8; Luke 21:9-19 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/

Jesus said to His disciples: When you shall hear of wars and seditions, be not terrified.” – Luke 21:9

REFLECTION – “The nearer the King approaches, the more we should pray. The nearer the moment arrives for bestowing the trophy on the combatant, the more fervently we should struggle. This is what they do at the races – as the end of the course nears and they are reaching the goal, they stir up the horses’ enthusiasm even more. In the same way, Saint Paul says: “Now is salvation nearer to us than when first we believed. The night is far gone, the day is at hand” (Rm 13:11-12).

Since night is disappearing and day is coming into view, let us carry out the works of day and leave behind the works of darkness. This is what we do in the course of life – when we see night giving way to dawn and hear the swallows singing, then we rouse one another even though it is still dark … We hurry to our daily tasks, we clothe ourselves after being snatched from sleep, so that the sun will find us ready. What we do then, let us do now. Let us shake off our dreams, rouse ourselves from thoughts of this present life, leave our heavy slumber and put on the garment of virtue. This is what the Apostle clearly says to us: “Cast off the works of darkness and put on the Armour of Light” (v.12). For day is calling us to the battle, to the fight!

But do not be afraid when you hear these words about fighting and combat! For if it is uncomfortable to put on heavy material armour, it is pleasant, on the other hand, to put on spiritual armour, for this is an Armour of Light! In this way you will shine more brightly than the sun and, even as you sparkle brightly, you will be safe because these are weapons … weapons of Light. So then? Are we excused from fighting? Not at all! We are to fight but without being overcome by fatigue and without pain. For it is not so much a war to which we are being summoned as a feast and celebration!” – St John Chrysostom (347-407) Bishop of Constantinople, Father & Doctor of the Church (Homilies on the Epistle to the Romans, 24).

PRAYER – Give heed to our humble prayers, O Lord, that we who know we are guilty of our own sin, may be saved by the intercession of Thy blessed Martyrs Vincent and Anastasius.Through Jesus Christ, Thy Son our Lord, Who lives and reigns with Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end. Amen (Collect).

Posted in BLESSED TRINITY PRAYERS, CHRIST the KING Prayers, CHRIST the WORD and WISDOM, DIVINE Mercy, Goodness, Patience, franciscan OFM, GOD ALONE!, GOD is LOVE, GOD the FATHER, Our MORNING Offering, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, QUOTES on ETERNAL LIFE, QUOTES on LOVE of GOD, QUOTES on TRUST and complete CONFIDENCE in GOD, QUOTES on UNITY/with GOD, The MOST HOLY REDEEMER, Our SAVIOUR

Our Morning Offering – 22 January – Prayer in Praise of God By St Francis

Our Morning Offering – 22 January – “The Month of the Holy Name of Jesus and the Holy Family”

Prayer in Praise of God
By St Francis of Assisi (c1181-1226)

Thou art Holy, Lord, the only God
and Thine Deeds art wonderful.
Thou art Strong.
Thou art Great.
Thou art the Most High.
Thou art Almighty.
Thou, Holy Father art King of Heaven and earth.
Thou art Three and One, Lord God, all Good.
Thou art Good, all Good, Supreme Good,
Lord God, Living and True.
Thou art Love. Thou art Wisdom.
Thou art Humility. Thou art Endurance.
Thou art Rest. Thou art Peace.
Thou art Joy and Gladness.
Thou art Justice and Moderation.
Thou art all our Riches and Thou art Suffice for us.
Thou art Beauty. Thou art Gentleness.
Thou art our Protector.
Thou art our Guardian and Defender.
Thou art our Courage.
Thou art our Haven and our Hope.
Thou art our Faith, our great Consolation.
Thou art our Eternal Life,
Great and Wonderful Lord, God Almighty,
Merciful Saviour.
Amen

Posted in Against SNAKE BITES / POISON, Against STORMS, EARTHQUAKES, THUNDER & LIGHTENING, FIRES, DROUGHT / NATURAL DISASTERS, Against Unexplained FEVER or HIGH Temperatures, PATRONAGE - TOOTHACHE and Diseases of the TEETH,, of DENTISTS, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 22 January – Saint Dominic of Sora (951-1031) Abbot

Saint of the Day – 22 January – Saint Dominic of Sora (951-1031) Abbot, Priest, Founder of many Monasteries, Miracle-worker. Born in 951 at Foligno, Etruria (Tuscany district of modern Italy) and died on 22 January 1031 in his Monastery in Sora, Campania, Italy of natural causes. Patronage – against fever, against toothache, against poisonous snakes and snake bites, against rabid dogs, protection from storms and hail, of the Italian Towns of Sora and Cocullo. Also known as – Dominico.

The Roman Martyrology reads today: “At Sora, the holy Abbot Dominic, renowned for miracles.

The Monk Giovanni, who was Dominic’s companion on all his travels, wrote his ‘Life’ which is, therefore, very accurate and truthful.

Domenic was born in Foligno in 951. He was entrusted as a child by his parents, to the Monks of St Silvester of Foligno, to carry out the necessary studies. When he became a young man, Dominic left everyone and went to the Monastery of St Maria di Pietrademone, where he was Ordained a Priest and vowed his profession as a Monk.
But Dominic desired a Hermit’s life, so he began to alternate solitude with the community life – he retired to a mountain in the Province of Rieti. But he was immediately followed by disciples from the surrounding area, for them he founded the Monastery of St Salvatore, becoming its Abbot.

Since his fame of sanctity attracted many people, to hide he moved towards L’Aquila, where he founded the Monastery of St Pietro del Lago, in the same way he founded the Monastery of St Pietro di Avellana in the Sangro region. During his journeys he arrived in Campania, where he remained unknown, for three years, until the population recognised him through some hunters, surrounded him with devotion and there was a rush of sick people. The reports of his miracles consisted above all, in curing the illness and death caused by snake bites, hence his Patronage.

In Trisulti he founded the Monastery of St Bartolomew which achieved much fame, it was richly endowed by the inhabitants of the nearby municipalities which Domenic then visited, urging them to a life woven with charity, penance and good works.

Dominic met with Pope John XVIII, from whom he asked for Papal protection for his foundations. Thanks to a donation of land, made by Count Pietro Rainerio, the Lord of Sora, he was able to build another Monastery, which remained, due to its importance, linked to his name, permanently.

Dominic fell ill while undertaking yet another journey to Tusculum but he returned back to Sora and died there on 22 January 1031 and was buried in the Monastery Church, where he is still preserved.

Dominic of Sora, like other great Founders of that era, remains a reformer of the life of the medieval Church, all intent on expanding monastic life with its great flowering, also a precursor of the great Orders which, a few centuries later, would appear in the Church, starting with his great namesake St Dominic of Guzman.

In Sora, as in the whole Liri Valley, he is invoked against the bites of poisonous snakes and rabid dogs, from storms and hail but also against fever and toothache.

His Feast is celebrated with solemnity, both in Sora, of which he is the Patron and where there is a Sanctuary containing his body and in Arpino and nearby Towns but above all, for his particularity in Cocullo, where his Statue is carried in procession covered in real live snakes! Once, after the Mass, the snakes were killed or sold to tourists, today with a different environmentalist culture, they are set free. The ‘snake catchers’ are very careful to capture the harmless snakes, while they leave the poisonous vipers alone, the population participating in the celebrations has an almost sacred respect for reptiles, a legacy of a pagan cult of pre-Christian times which the Church had to make its own and this union, between pagan use and Christian celebration, in this case occurred through St Domenic of Sora, the great miracle- worker, who from the Middle Ages until today, attracts a multitude of imploring faithful ever venerating and imploring his aid in all their needs.

A Processional Statue of St Dominic I believe the one used in Cocullo and covered with live snakes
Posted in SAINT of the DAY

St Vincent of Saragossa, St Valerius of Saragossa, St Anastasius the Persian – Martyrs and all the Saints for 22 January

REMINDER – The CANDLEMAS NOVENA BEGIND on FRIDAY 24 JAN (the Novena in preparation for the great
Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary)

St Vincent of Saragossa (Died 304) Deacon – The Protomartyr of Spain, Deacon, Deacon, Archdeacon, Preacher, assistant to St Valerius of Saragossa (Died 315), who was his Bishop and whose Feast is also today.
His Life and Deathy:

https://anastpaul.com/2019/01/22/saint-of-the-day-22-january-st-vincent-of-saragossa-died-304-protomartyr-of-spain/

St Valerius of Saragossa (Died 315) Bishop,of Saragossa, Spain. There are few records of Valerius but tradition holds that he had a speech impediment and that the Protomartyr of Spain, Deacon, St Vincent of Saragossa, (also celebrated today), acted as his spokesman.
His Life and Death:

https://anastpaul.com/2021/01/22/saint-s-of-the-day-22-january-saint-valerius-of-saragossa-died-315-and-saint-vincent-of-saragossa-died-304-deacon-protomartyr-of-spain/

St Anastasius the Persian (Died 628) Martyr, Monk.
The Roman Martyrology reads: “At Rome, at Aquiae, Salviae, St Anastasius, a Persian Monk, who, after suffering much at Caesarea in Palestine, from imprisonment, stripes and fetters, had to bear many afflictions from Chosroes, King of Persia, who caused him to be beheaded. He had sent before him, to Martyrdom, seventy of his companions, who were precipitated into rivers. His head was brought to Rome, together with his venerable likeness, by the sight of which, the demons are expelled and diseases cured, as is attested by the Acts of the Second Council of Nicacea.
His Life and Death:

https://anastpaul.com/2023/01/22/saint-of-the-day-21-january-st-anastasius-the-persian-died-628-martyr-monk/

Blessed Antonio della Chiesa OP (1394-1459) Priest and Friar of the Order of Preachers, Prior, Reformer. Antonio was a known Miracle worker and was able to read the consciences of all which gifts made him a sought-after Spiritual Counsellor. Antonio was a Mystic and had a special devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary and he was known to have conversed with her several times, in ecstasy. Beatified on 15 May 1819 by Pope Pius VII.
Blessed Antonio:

https://anastpaul.com/2024/01/22/saint-of-the-day-22-january-blessed-antonio-della-chiesa-op-1394-1459-priest/

St Blaesilla of Rome
St Brithwald of Ramsbury
St Caterina Volpicelli
St Dominic of Sora (951-1031) Abbot
St Guadentius of Novara

Blessed Maria Mancini of Pisa OP (1356-1431) Widow, Second Order Sister of the Order of Preachers, spiritual disciple of St Catherine of Siena, Prioress, Mystic, Reformer, Apostle of the poor and the sick. The Roman Martyrology states: “In Pisa, Blessed Maria Mancini, who, twice widowed and all her children lost, under the exhortation of St Catherine of Siena, began community life in the Monastery of St Domenic, which she led for ten years.
Her Life:

https://anastpaul.com/2022/01/22/saint-of-the-day-22-january-blessed-maria-mancini-of-pisa-op-1356-1431/

Bl Walter of Himmerode
Bl William Patenson