Thought for the Day – 16 June – Meditations with Antonio Cardinal Bacci (1881-1971)
The Divine Worker
“We should accept our daily work and sanctify it with prayer as Jesus did. “To pray and to work” was the ancient motto of the Benedictines.
All work which is done with and for God, becomes, as it were, a sacrament which purifies and sanctifies us. When we offer the sweat of our brow to God it becomes like holy water which washes away our faults, while our weariness is converted into prayer.
Aspiration: Jesus, Divine Worker, bless me, help me and makle me holy.”
Quote/s of the Day – 16 June – St John Francis Régis SJ (1597-1640) Priest, Confessor, Missionary
“The Catholic religion was the religion of your forefathers and the only one Jesus Christ founded; – the one which He promised would endure till the end of time. It is in the Catholic religion alone that you can save your soul.”
“How long are you going to be deaf to His call? Or are you going to lose your soul, which Jesus Christ bought at the price of His Precious Blood?”
“My child, it is indeed the Voice of God you have heard. He has given you a great grace in thus calling you into His one true Church. While you live, never cease to thank Him and bless Him for it.”
(All the above from – Rev Fr D. Chisholm, The Catechism in Examples (London: R & T Washbourne, Ltd
“Brother, I see our Lord and our Lady opening the gates of Paradise for me. Into Your hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit.” St John Francis Regis on his deathbed
One Minute Reflection – June – “The Month of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus” – Resumed Mass of Sunday – Ferial Day – St John Francis Régis SJ (1597-1640) Priest, Confessor, Missionary – Rom 11:33-36 – Matthew 28:18-20 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/
“Go, therefore and make disciples of all nations, Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you.” – Matthew 28:19-20
REFLECTION – “God gave me to see clearly the truth of the most Holy Trinity. It is just as learned theologians told me but I did not understand it as I do now… What I have seen is this – Three distinct Persons, Each One visible and Who speaks and to Whom we can speak. Afterwards, I thought how the Son alone took human flesh, which shows clearly that the Three Persons are distinct. The Persons love each other, communicate and know each other. But, if Each One is distinct, how can we say that the Three are One Essence? For this is what we believe. This is deepest truth and I would die for it a thousand times. In these Three Persons there is but One Will and One Power and One Might; neither can One be without the Others. There is One Sole Creator of all created things. Could the Son create an ant without the Father? No! because Their Power is One. The same is to be said of the Holy Ghost.
Thus, there is one God Almighty and the Three Persons are One Majesty. Is it possible to love the Father without loving the Son and the Holy Ghost? No, for those who please One of the Three Persons, please all Three Persons and those who offend One, offend all. Can the Father exist without the Son and without the Holy Ghost? No, for they are One in Being and where One is, there are the Three; they cannot be divided.
How is it, then, that we see that the Three Persons are distinct? And how is it that the Son, not the Father, nor the Holy Ghost, took human flesh? This is what I have never understood – theologians know it. What I know is that the Three were there when that marvellous work was done. I do not busy myself with much thinking about this, all my thinking comes down to this – God is Almighty, that He has done what He would do and can do what He wills. The less I understand it, the more I believe it and the greater the devotion it excites in me. May He be blessed for ever! Amen.” – St Teresa of Avila (1515-1582) Carmelite, Founder, Reformer, Doctor of the Church (Relations, 33).
PRAYER – Grant, we beseech Thee, O Lord God, unto all Thy servant, that they may remain continually in the enjoyment of soundness, both of mind and body and by the glorious intercession of the Blessed Mary, always a Virgin, Thy Saints, remembering Thy Confessor John Francis Regis, may be delivered from present sadness, and enter into the joy of thine eternal. Through the same 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).
MAY the Heart of JESUS in the most Blessed Sacrament be praised, adored and loved with grateful affection, at every moment, in all the Tabernacles of the world, even to the end of time. – Indulgence 100 Days, Once a Day. Raccolta 161 Blessed Pius IX, 29 February 1868.
Our Morning Offering – 16 June – “The Month of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus”
Be the Heart of My Heart By St John Eudes (1601-1680) Apostle of the Sacred Heart
O Heart all Lovable and all Loving of my Saviour, be the Heart of my heart, the Soul of my soul, the Spirit of my spirit, the Life of my life and the sole Principle of all my thoughts, words and actions, of all the faculties of my soul and of all my senses, both interior and exterior. Amen
St John Eudes is the Author of the Proper for the Mass and Divine Office of the Sacred Heart of Jesus Christ and the Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin. St John was an ardent proponent of the Sacred Heart and dedicated himself to it’s promotion and celebration. The Masses he compiled for both the Sacred Heart of Jesus and for the Immaculate Heart of Mary, were both first celebrated during his lifetime. He preached missions across France, including Paris and Versailles, while earning recognition as a popular Evangelist and Confessor. St John Eudes was also a prolific writer and wrote on the two Holy Hearts despite opposition from the Jansenists.
Saint of the Day – 16 June – Blessed Thomas Redyng (Died 1539) O.Cart. Monk of the Carthusian Charterhouse of London, Enland, Martyr. Born in England and died by being starved to death in Newgate Prison on 16 June 1539. Also known as – Thomas Reding. He was Beatified on29 December 1886 by Pope Leo XIII. Additional Memorial – 4 May as one of the Carthusian Martyrs.
In the great persecution against Catholics, decreed by Henry VIII, King of England, every Religious Order of the time, together with the Diocesan Clergy, left a tribute of blood and Martyrdom for the defence of the Catholic Church.
Even the Carthusians, although well-liked as Monks not involved in any political activity, contributed to this river of blood and field of the Palms of Martyrdom. The Monks of the Charterhouse of London, received a visit from the King’s Officials who, according to the decree issued, asked all adults, including Religious, for the approval of the repudiation by the King, by Queen Catherine of Aragon and, therefore, the acceptance of Anne Boleyn as Sovereign.
The Prior and the Procurator were arrested and confined in prison for having objected to the legitimacy of the repudiation but after a month, convinced that this oath did not affect the Faith, they did in fact alter their position to the Oath and were then released. Upon returned to the Charterhouse they convinced the other Monks of their arguments and so on 25 May 1534, they swore to the Officials, who had returned accompanied by soldiers.
The hoped-for peace did not last long, however, at the end of 1534 a new decree of the King and Parliament established that all subjects had to disown the authority of the Pope and instead, recognise the Henry VIII as the head of the English Church even in spiritual matters and, whoever did not consent, was guilty of High Treason. Having heard of this, the Prior John Houghton gathered all the Carthusians and communicated this and this time everyone said they were ready to die for the Roman Catholic Church. Two Priors from other Houses had also arrived at the Charterhouse, who, informed of the dangerous situation of the Monks, went in common agreement to the Vicar of the King, Thomas Cromwell, to ask him to convince King Henry VIII to exempt them from this Oath.
The two priors, after making their requests, were arrested by an indignant Cromwell and locked up in the Tower of London as rebels and traitors. After a week they were put on trial at Westminster where they reiterated their refusal and then sentenced to death and locked up again, where they were joined by two other Religiouswho had also been condemned for the same reason.
On 4 May 1535, the two Priors, Father Robert Laurence and Father Augustine Webster, together with Father Richard Reynolds of the Order of St Bridget and the Priest John Haile, Parish Priest of Isleworth, robed in their Religious Habits, were tied, stretched out on mats and dragged through the stony and muddy streets which led to Tyburn Tree, the infamous place of capital executions.
Father John Houghton, Prior of London Charterjhouse was then also arrested and condemned, was the first to ascend the scaffold and collaborated with the executioner in the hanging, uttering words of forgiveness and trust in God but he had not yet suffocated to death, when one of those present cut the rope and the Father fell to the ground, the executioner stripped him and took out his entrails while still alive so as to be able to show his heart to the King’s advisors. The execution of the other four followed and their bodies were cut to pieces and exposed to the people to strike terror into the ‘papists’.
Three other Carthusians – Humphrey Middlemore, vicar, William Exmew, a learned Latinist and Sebastian Newdigate, of noble origins, were arrested, tortured and Martyred on 19 June 1535. Two other,s who had moved from London to Hull Charterhouse were denounced, arrested and hanged on 11 May 1537.
Ten more Carthusians were imprisoned on 29 May 1537 in Newgate Prison, where they died of hardship and suffering in a short time – among them, on 16 June 1537, it was Thomas Reding ‘s turn . Only William Horn survived the prison and was hanged on 4 November 1540.
Eighteen other Monks remained in the Charterhouse, who, hoping to save the Monastery, had adhered to the Oath but after some time they were expelled and the Charterhouse was sold to private individuals.
The 18 Carthusians of London, together with 35 other Martyrs of that period, were Beatified by Pope Leo XIII on 9 December 1886. A common Feastday is celebrated on 4 May, while the individuals are remembered on their respective anniversaries of Martyrdom, today 16 June being the Feastday of Blessed Thomas Redyng.
St Berthaldus St Ceccardus of Luni St Cettin of Oran St Colman McRhoi St Crescentius of Antioch St Cunigunde of Rapperswil St Curig of Wales St Cyriacus of Iconium (c 301-c 304) Child MartyrSt Elidan St Felix of San Felice St Ferreolus of Besançon St Ferrutio of Besançon Bl Gaspare Burgherre St Graecina of Volterra St Ismael of Wales St Julitta of Iconium St Justina of Mainz
St Maurus of San Felice St Palerio of Telese St Similian of Nantes Bishop and Confessor Blessed Thomas Redyng (1537) O.Cart. Monk Martyr St Tycho of Amathus
Martyrs of Africa: A group of 5 Christians Martyred together. We know nothing else but the names – Cyriacus, Diogenes, Marcia, Mica, Valeria. They were martyred in an unknown location in Africa, date unknown.
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