Quote/s of the Day – 23 August – Twenty First Sunday in Ordinary Time and the Memorial of St Rose of Lima (1586-1617)
โMy grace is sufficient for thee, for my strength is made perfect in weakness. Therefore, I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christโs power may rest on me.โ
2 Corinthians 12:7-9
โThe thief on the cross certainly did not receive the Kingdom of Heaven as a reward for his virtues but as a grace and a mercy from God. He can serve as an authentic witness that our salvation is given to us only by Godโs mercy and grace. All the holy masters knew this and unanimously taught that perfection in holiness can be achieved only through humility.โ
St John Cassian (c 360- c 435)
โChrist shall minister to us and show us His radiant Face and His glorious Body with all the marks of faithfulness and love therein impressed. And we shall see all the glorious bodies clothed with all the many tokens of love won in the service of God since the beginning of the worldโฆ And our living hearts shall flame with burning love for God and all His saintsโฆโ
Bl Jan van Ruusbroec (1293-1381) Canon Regular, โDoctor Divinus Ecstaticus,โ Mystic, Spiritual Writer โ The seven steps of the ladder of spiritual love
โThere is no sinner in the world, however much at enmity with God, who cannot recover Godโs grace, by recourse to Mary and by asking her assistance.โ
St Bridget of Sweden (c 1303 โ 1373)
Prayer of Blessed Paolo Giustiniani
โLord, I dare not say to You: โShow me the light that I may believe in Your Lightโ but it is enough for me, that You make me see my darkness โฆ Bring me back to myself. In my misery I have distanced myself not only from You but from myself, becoming a stranger to myself. Make me know my darkness, that then I may look at the light. Yes, I tell You and repeat to You incessantly, Show me to myself, so that I may know my sins.โ
Blessed Paolo Giustiniani (1476-1528)
โGive me grace to amend my life and to have an eye to mine end, without grudge of death, which to them that die in You, good Lord, is the gate of a wealthy life.โ
St Thomas More (1478-1535) Martyr
โOur Lord and Saviour lifted up His voice and said with incomparable majesty: “Let all men know that grace comes after tribulation. Let them know that without the burden of afflictions, it is impossible to reach the height of grace. Let them know, that the gifts of grace increase, as the struggles increase. Let men take care not to stray and be deceived. This is the only true stairway to paradise and without the cross, they can find no road to climb to heaven.โ
One Minute Reflection โ 23 August โ Twenty First Sunday in Ordinary Time, Readings: Isaiah 22: 19-23, Psalms 138: 1-2, 2-3,6, 8 (8bc), Romans 11:33-36, Matthew 16:13-20 and the Memorial of St Tydfil (Died c 480) Martyr of Wales
โBlessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you but my Father who is in heaven. And I tell you, you are Peter and on this rock I will build my church and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. โ โฆ Matthew 16:17-18
REFLECTION – “We feel Ourself perfectly safe on the rock of Holy Church. โฆ Supernatural force has never โฆ been found wanting in the Church, nor have Christ’s promises failed; โฆ nay, they are endowed with even greater force for Us after having stood the test of centuries and so many changes of circumstances and events.
Kingdoms and empires have passed away; peoples once renowned for their history and civilisation have disappeared; time and again the nations, as though overwhelmed by the weight of years, have fallen asunder; while the Church, indefectible in her essence, united by ties indissoluble with her heavenly Spouse, is here today radiant with eternal youth, strong with the same primitive vigour with which she came from the Heart of Christ dead upon the Cross. Men powerful in the world have risen up against her. They have disappeared and she remains! Philosophical systems without number, of every form and every kind, rose up against her, arrogantly vaunting themselves her masters, as though they had at last destroyed the doctrine of the Church, refuted the dogmas of her faith, proved the absurdity of her teachings. But those systems, one after another, have passed into books of history, forgotten, bankrupt; while from the Rock of Peter the light of truth shines forth as brilliantly as on the day when Jesus first kindled it on His appearance in the world and fed it with His Divine words: “Heaven and earth shall pass, but my words shall not pass” (Mt 24:35). (โฆ)
Wherefore, โฆ turn your steps towards this unshaken rock upon which Our Saviour founded the Universal Church, so that the path of him, who is sincere of heart, may not be lost in devious windings.” โฆ St Pope Pius X (1835-1914) (Papal reign: 1903 to 1914 – Encyclical “Iuncunda sane”
PRAYER โ God our Father, for love of You, St Tydfil the Martyr, left the world and gave herself to a life of penitence, austerity and charity, loving You and Your Church with the greatest of all loves. Help us by her prayers, so to follow the path of life on earth, in complete love of You and thus of Your children, that we may obtain the fullness of joy in Your presence in heaven and be clothed fit for the wedding feast. We make our prayer through Christ our Lord, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God forever, amen.
Our Morning Offering โ23 August โ Twenty First Sunday in Ordinary Time
Late Have I Loved You By St Augustine (354-430) Father and Doctor of Grace
Late have I loved You, Beauty so ancient and so new, late have I loved You! Lo, you were within, but I outside, seeking there for You, and upon the shapely things You have made I rushed headlong โ I, misshapen. You were with me but I was not with You. They held me back far from You, those things which would have no being, were they not in You. You called, shouted, broke through my deafness. You flared, blazed, banished my blindness. You lavished Your fragrance, I gasped and now I pant for You. I tasted You and now I hunger and thirst. You touched me and I burned for Your peace. Amen
Saint of the Day – 23 August – Saint Tydfil (Died c 480) Martyr of Wales, Princess daughter of King Brychan, Confessor, Evangeliser and Apostle of Mercy to the sick and the needy – born in the 5th century as a Princess in Wales and died by being Martyred in c 480 in Wales. She was murdered with her brother Rhun in Merthyr Tydfil, by either Welsh or Saxon pagans, and buried in the town. Also known as Tudful.
Tydfil gave her name to Merthyr Tydfil (Merthyr meaning Martyr in the Welsh language). Her Martyrdom took place during a pitched battle between her family and a band of marauding Picts during the fifth century. Although much of what is known about her comes from monks writing long after she lived, evidence shows that she did exist and that she did meet with a violent end for her faith in Jesus Christ.
Tydfil was the daughter of King Brychan, the half-Irish, half-Welsh ruler of Garth Madry (Brecon today). Brychan had four wives had 11 sons and 25 daughters. Tydfil was his 23rd daughter by his fourth wife. Most of Brychan’s children were well educated, girls and boys, at a school in Gwenddwr on the Wye and went on to live deeply holy lives folowing our Saviour. They founded Churches all over Wales, Cornwall and Brittany and were known as the “Wandering Saints.”
Tydfil chose as her home, the Taff River valley, sparsely populated by Celt farmers and their families. She became known for her compassion and skills as she nursed both sick humans and animals. She established an early Celtic Monastic community, leading a small band of men and women. She built a hermitage or enclosure around a small wattle and daub Church, much as other saints of the time. Her home included a hospice, outhouses and a scriptorium. There she lived quietly, bringing hope and support to the people of the Taff valley.
In his old age, King Brychan decided to visit his children one last time. He took with him his son Rhun Dremrudd, his grandson Nefydd and Nefydd’s own son, along with servants and warriors. They visited his third daughter, Tanglwstl, at her religious community at Hafod Tanglwstl, what is now known as the village of Aberfan, south of Merthyr Tydfil. Brychan wanted to stay with his daughters a little longer, so he sent most of his warriors and Nefydd on ahead, along the homeward journey. The King went on to Tydfil’s home while Rhun and Nefydd’s son were still at Hafod Tanglwstl.
So the party was spread out along the Taff Valley; a distance of about seven miles and all uphill. Wales at this time was suffering from raids from Scottish Picts free to roam around now that the Romans had long gone. Some had even settled at South Radnorshire, near Brychan’s kingdom. Perhaps the news of the King’s absence had reached the Pict settlement and they decided to take advantage of the King’s vulnerability. In retrospect, Brychan would appear to have made a very foolish decision in allowing his party to split up.
Rhun Dremrudd was attacked by a raiding party, a mile from Hafod Tanglwstl and he died defending a bridge over the river at what is now the village of Troedyrhiw. The bridge gave the Picts free access to the King’s party and Rhun Dremrudd put up a good fight. The Picts then split into two groups – one devastated the Hafod Tanglwstl community and the other pursued the King.
The King and his followers were robbed of their jewellery, money and clothes. Servants and family were all cut down. While the others ran and fought and panicked, Tydfil knelt and calmly prayed, before she too was brutally slain. Then the Picts retreated over the Aberdare mountain. By then, Nefydd and his warriors caught up with them and avenged the deaths of his family at “Irishman’s Hill” before returning to bury their dead.
Tydfil was buried within the Church she founded, amongst the people she had cared for. A Celtic Cross was put up in a clearing near the Taff which became a meeting place for the people of the valley. In the 13th century the Cross and wattle and daub Church were replaced by a stone Church dedicated to Saint Tydfil the Martyr. This was in turn replaced in 1807, and rebuilt again in 1894. The church still stands at its place by the River Taff (below) and is one of the first things the tourist sees as he or she enters the town centre from the south side.
When the Norman Church was demolished, a stone coffin was found, forming part of the foundations. Also, there were two stone pillars, one of which was dedicated to Brychan’s son Arthen, who also died in the battle. The site was probably still being kept sacred to the memory of Tydfil and her murdered family.
What contributed to the veneration of Tydfil as a Saint?
First of all, her quiet witness to her beloved Lord. Tydfil was not an Abbess although she did lead a community of Christian men and women who were probably living under some kind of semi-monastic Rule. But it was never a big community just a small group of people comprised of farming families with a few Monks and Nuns serving the local people in whatever way they could through works of mercy. Jesus called his disciples to be lights in a dark world (Matthew 5:14-16) but He didn’t say how big those lights should be, just that they should shine. Tydfil certainly lived in dark times but her ‘good deeds’ (verse 16) and those of her community, attracted people like moths to a flame. And although her individual ‘light’ was extinguished by death, she lit a fire that burnt on throughout those dark and difficult times, showing others the way to God.
Secondly, her great faith and dignity in the face of death. She did not resist or run but ‘turning the other cheek’ she awaited her death with quiet courage and a sincere belief that she would go to be with Jesus in the place prepared for her (John 14:1-7).
In the Letter to the Romans Paul, himself awaiting Martyrdom, writes that “neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers. nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.” (Romans 8:37-39) Beautiful words, which we all believe in the comfort and safety of our peaceful, ordered and affluent society. But it is in the heat of battle and in the face of suffering or death, when that belief is truly tested. Tydfil faced that test head on and passed. She is rightly remembered both here and in heaven as a consequence of her great fidelity to Christ and His Church.
Thirdly, her love and compassion towards others – human and animal. For those of us living in a ‘Christianised’ society we very much take those qualities for granted as they are built into the very fabric of our society after centuries saturated in the teachings of Christ. And so, they can often appear to us as necessary and hardly regarded attributes. We take as read, the fairness of our laws, the peace we enjoy and the great benefits of a health services, which provides us with such wonderful care. We forget that no such things existed in Tydfil’s day. Christianity was still trying to win the Celts, never mind the Saxons, Jutes, Picts and others. There was very little law in Tydfil’s time other than the survival of the fittest. Love and compassion no doubt were seen as a sign of weakness in a disordered and fragmented society where the power went to the strongest In such a time Christians inevitably stood out and the teachings of Christ must have seemed counter-cultural with it’s insistence on love, meekness and humility. Tydfil lived those qualities out in a society starved of love and compassion and her example is needed, as much as ever today, as more and more people are distancing themselves from their Christian past. And in that sense – as well as the fact, that she continues to live with the Saints – Tydfil will always be our contemporary and of her we request her intercession for ourselves and for our world. Amen.
St Abbondius of Rome St Altigianus St Apollinaris of Rheims St Archelaus of Ostia St Asterius of Aegea St Claudius of Aegea St Domnina of Aegea St Eleazar of Lyons St Eonagh St Flavian of Autun Bl Franciszek Dachtera Bl Giacomo Bianconi of Mevania St Hilarinus St Ireneus of Rome Bl Jean Bourdon Blessed Ladislaus Findysz (1907-1964) Martyr His Life and Death: https://anastpaul.com/2019/08/23/saint-of-the-day-23-august-blessed-ladislaus-findysz-1907-1964-martyr/ St Lupo of Novi St Luppus St Maximus of Ostia St Minervius of Lyons St Neon of Aegea
St Quiriacus of Ostia St Theonilla of Aegea St Timothy of Rheims St Tydfil (Died c 480) Martyr of Wales St Victor of Vita St Zaccheus of Jerusalem โ Martyrs of Agea โ 4 saints: A group of Christian brothers, Asterius, Claudius and Neon, denounced by their step-mother who were then tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Pro-consul Lysias. They were crucified in 285 outside the walls of Aegea, Cilicia (in Asia Minor) and their bodies left for scavengers.
Martyred in the Spanish Civl War: โข Blessed Constantino Carbonell Sempere โข Blessed Estanislau Sans Hortoneda โข Blessed Florentรญn Pรฉrez Romero โข Blessed Josรฉ Polo Benito โข Blessed Lorenzo Ilarregui Goรฑi โข Blessed Manuela Justa Fernรกndez Ibero โข Blessed Mariano Garcรญa Mรฉndez โข Blessed Nicolรกs Alberich Lluch โข Blessed Pere Gelabert Amer โข Blessed Petra Marรญa Victoria Quintana Argos โข Blessed Ramรณn Grimaltos Monllor โข Blessed Urbano Gil Sรกez โข Blessed Vicente Alberich Lluch
Thought for the Day โ 22 August โ Meditations with Antonio Cardinal Bacci (1881-1971)
The Crowning of the Blessed Virgin Mary as Queen of Heaven and Earth
“When the Virgin Mary was borne into Heaven, soul and body, by the Angels, she was received with great rejoicing by the entire company of the blessed. A halo of light surrounded her, as her Divine Son, Jesus Christ, placed her on His right hand and proclaimed her Queen of Heaven and Earth. It was fitting that this supreme dignity should have been accorded her, for she was the beloved daughter of the Eternal Father, the Immaculate spouse of the Holy Spirit and the Mother of God, the Word made man and the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity.
Mary is Queen of the Angels because, even though she is inferior to them, by reason of her human nature, she is superior to them, by reason of her dignity as Mother of God. What Angel could say to the Incarnate Word: “You are my son?” What Angel could command Him, as she could, in her role of Mother?
Mary has yet another claim to her title which no Angel could ever have. She participated in the Passion of her Son Jesus,offering herself along with Him, as a victim of expiation. She made a contribution, in the supernatural order of the Redemption, which neither Angel nor Saint, could have made. With Jesus, through Jesus and in Jesus, she is the co-redemptrix of the human race. Let us bow low before such greatness and join with the choirs of the blessed, in paying homage to her.”
Quotes of the Day โ 22 August – The Memorial of the Queenship of Mary
โEvery Saint belongs to the court of the Queen of All Saints.โ
St John Eudes (1501-1680)
โLet all the children of the Catholic Church, who are so very dear to us, hear these words of ours. With a still more ardent zeal for piety, religion and love, let them continue to venerate, invoke and pray to the most Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God, conceived without original sin. Let them fly with utter confidence to this most sweet Mother of mercy and grace in all dangers, difficulties, needs, doubts and fears. Under her guidance, under her patronage, under her kindness and protection, nothing is to be feared; nothing is hopeless. Because, while bearing toward us a truly motherly affection and having in her care, the work of our salvation, she is solicitous about the whole human race. And since, she has been appointed by God, to be the Queen of heaven and earth and is exalted above all the choirs of angels and saints and, even stands at the right hand, of her only-begotten Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, she presents our petitions in a most efficacious manner. What she asks, she obtains. Her pleas can never be unheard!โ
Bl Pius IX (1792-1878)
Ineffabilis Deus (which proclaimed the Dogma of the Immaculate Conception on 8 December 1854)
โTo serve the Queen of Heaven is already to reign there and to live under her commands, is more than to govern.โ
St John Vianney (1786-1859)
โShe is more Mother than Queen.โ
St Therese of the Child Jesus (1873-1897) Doctor of the Church
โWith the certainty of faith, we know that Jesus Christ is king in the full, literal and absolute sense of the word; for He is true God and man. This does not, however, prevent Mary from sharing His royal prerogatives, though in a limited and analogous manner; for she was the Mother of Christ and Christ is God and she shared in the work of the divine Redeemer, in His struggles against enemies and in the triumph He won over them all. From this union with Christ the King she assuredly obtains so eminent a status that she stands high above all created things and upon this same union with Christ is based that royal privilege, enabling her to distribute the treasures of the kingdom of the divine Redeemer.โ
Venerable Pope Pius XII (1876-1958)
Excerpted from Ad Caeli Reginam
โMary โฆ as the Mother of our Lord, comes nearer to Him than any angel, nearer even than the Seraphim who surround Him and cry continuall, “Holy Holy Holy” โฆ The Blessed Mother of God has hosts of angels who do her service and she is their Queen.โ
“Her Son will deny her nothing that she asks and herein lies her power. While she defends the Church, neither height nor depth, neither men nor evil spirits, neither great monarchs, nor craft of man, nor popular violence, can avail to harm us; for human life is short but Mary reigns above, a Queen forever.โ
One Minute Reflection โ 22 August – Saturday of the Twentieth week in Ordinary Time, Readings: Ezekiel 43: 1-7ab,ย Psalms 85: 9ab,10, 11-12, 13-14,ย Matthew 23:1-12 and The Memorial of the Queenship of Mary
“Whoever exalts himself will be humbled and whoever humbles himself will be exalted.” โฆ Matthew 23:12
REFLECTION – “Humility is a secret power the saints receive when they bring all their life’s ascetical practices to a successful conclusion. For indeed, this power is only bestowed on those who attain to the perfection of virtue through the strength of grace โฆ It is the same power the blessed Apostles received in the form of fire. Our Saviour commanded them, in fact, not to leave Jerusalem until they had received the power from on high (Acts 2:3; 1:4). Here Jerusalem stands for virtue; the power is humility and the power from on high, is the Paraclete, in other words the Consoler Spirit.
Now this is exactly what Sacred Scripture had said – these mysteries are revealed to the humble (Lk 10:21). To the humble it is given to receive within themselves that Spirit of revelation that uncovers mysteries. That is why certain saints have said that humility is what brings the soul to fulfilment in divine contemplation. So let no-one start thinking they have attained complete humility because at some moment a thought of compunction came to them or because they shed a few tears โฆ. But if someone has overcome every contrary spirit โฆ, if he has overturned and subjected all the strongholds of the enemy and if he then feels that he has received that grace in which โthe Spirit bears witness to our spiritโ (Rom 8:16), in the apostle Paul’s words, then there is the perfection of humility. Blessed are they who possess it. For they continually embrace the breast of Jesus (cf. Jn 13,25).” โฆ St Isaac the Syrian of Nineveh (c 613-c 700) Bishop of Nineveh, Monk at Mosul – Ascetical discourses, 1st series, no 20
PRAYER โ Almighty God, our Father, You have given us Mary, the Mother of Your Son, to be our Mother and our Queen. Grant that, supported by her example and her prayers, we may learn true humility and come to the kingdom of heaven and to the glory destined for Your children. We make our prayer through our Lord Jesus Christ, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God forever, amen.
Our Morning Offering โ 22 August – Saturday of the Twentieth week in Ordinary Time and The Memorial of the Queenship of Mary
Salve Regina Hail Holy Queen By Blessed Herman the Cripple (1013โ1054)
Hail, holy Queen, Mother of Mercy Hail our life, our sweetness and our hope. To thee do we cry, Poor banished children of Eve, To thee do we send up our sighs, Mourning and weeping in this vale of tears. Turn then, most gracious advocate, Thine eyes of mercy toward us And after this our exile, Show unto us the blessed fruit of thy womb, Jesus
This line, below, by St Bernard (1090-1153) Doctor of the Church O clement, O loving, O sweet Virgin Mary.
โฃ Pray for us, O holy Mother of God, โ that we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.
Saint of the Day – 22 August – Blessed Timoteo da Monticchio OFM (1444-1503) Priest and Friar of the Franciscan Order,he ws endowed with mystical gifts, especially of the Blessed Virgin and of St Francis of Assisi – born in 1444 in Monticchio, L’Aquila and died on 22 August 1504 in the San Angelo convent in Ocra, L’Aquila, Abruzzo, Italy of natural causes. He was distinguished for his austerity of life, his visions and his fervour of prayer. His body is incorrupt.
Blessed Timoteo was born in 1444 in Monticchio, therefore, in a period of great affirmation of the Franciscan Order, so much so, that in the same L’Aquila, not far away, the reformer St Bernardine of Siena, the great Franciscan preacher, preached and lived.
He was born into a peasant family and while growing up poor, he was completely absorbed by the spirit of prayer. As a young man he entered the Franciscan Order of Friars Minor, where he studied and was Ordained a Priest.
After his Ordination he was sent to Campli in the province of Teramo as the Master of Novices. His life was a succession of mystical phenomena – he had frequent visions of the Blessed Virgin and the holy founder Francis of Assisi. It was said that Timoteo’s life was more celestial than earthly.
He faithfully adhered to the spirit of those Franciscan saints, who restored observance in the Order, such as the aforementioned St Bernardine of Siena, St Giacomo della Marca, St John da Capestrano and the Blessed Bernardino da Fossa.
From Campli, he was transferred to the small Convent of St Angelo d’Ocre, here too, he led a life interwoven with prayer and contemplation, becoming for his brothers an example of the active and contemplative Priesthood and of heroic fidelity to the Franciscan Rule.
He died holy in the latter convent on 22 August 1504. For his reputation for holiness, already known in life and continued after his death, in the lands of Abruzzo, especially in the Aquila and Teramo area, he was given a cult of blessed, which continued uninterruptedly over the centuries, until on 10 March 1870, his Beatification was confirmed by Pope Pius IX. His feast is celebrated today, 22 August.
Queenship of Mary (Memorial): On 22 August, the Roman Catholic Church celebrates a memorial in honour of the Queenship of Mary. This memorial is placed an octave, that is, eight days after celebrating Maryโs Assumption into Heaven. The Queenship can be considered a prolongation of the celebration of the Assumption. The Memorial of the Queenship of Mary โ 22 August โ A Marian feast day decreed by Pope Pius XII on 11 October 1954, in his encyclical Ad caeli reginam to recognise and celebrate the Blessed Virgin Mary as Queen of the world, of the universe, of the angels, of heaven, Prophets, Apostles, Martyrs, Confessors, Virgins, all Saints,of Families, Queen conceived without original sin Queen assumed into Heaven, Queen of the Most Holy Rosary, Queen of Mercy, Queen of Peace. Amen, Holy Queen and Mother!
St Andrew of Fiesole St Anthusa of Seleucia St Antoninus of Rome St Arnulf of Eynesbury St Athanasius of Tarsus Bl Bernard Perani St Dalmau Llebarรญa Tornรฉ Bl รlie Leymarie de Laroche St Epictetus of Ostia St Ethelgitha of Northumbria St Fabrician of Toledo St Felix of Ostia Bl Giacomo/James Bianconi OP (1220โ1301) Biography: https://anastpaul.com/2019/08/22/saint-of-the-day-22-august-blessed-giacomo-bianconi-op-1220-1301/ St Gunifort St Joan Farriol Sabatรฉ St John Kemble (1599 โ 1679) Martyr Biography: https://anastpaul.com/2018/08/22/saint-of-the-day-22-august-st-john-kemble-1599-1679-martyr/ St John Wall St Josep Rosellรณ Sans St Julio Melgar Salgado St Maprilis of Ostia St Martial of Ostia St Maurus of Rheims St Narciso de Estรฉnaga y Echevarrรญa St Philibert of Toledo Bl Richard Kirkman St Saturninus of Ostia Bl Simeon Lukach St Sigfrid of Wearmouth St Symphorian of Autun Blessed Timoteo da Monticchio OFM (1444-1503) Priest St Thomas Percy St Timothy of Rome Bl William Lacey _ Martyred in the Spanish Civil War: โข Blessed Dalmau Llebarรญa Tornรฉ โข Blessed Joan Farriol Sabatรฉ โข Blessed Josep Rosellรณ Sans โข Blessed Julio Melgar Salgado โข Blessed Narciso de Estรฉnaga y Echevarrรญa
Thought for the Day โ 21 August โ Meditations with Antonio Cardinal Bacci (1881-1971)
Frequent Communion
“Even as our bodies need their daily sustenance of good to restore the energy which they have lost, so it is with out souls. The nourishment of the soul, is the grace of God. There is no better way of acquiring and increasing this grace, than by Holy Communion because, Communion gives us Jesus Himself, Who is the origin of grace. Spiritual perfection consists in union with God. We can achieve perfect union with God in Holy Communion, by means of which, we live the life of Jesus. “He who eats me, he also shall live because of me.” (Jn 6:58)
Anyone who loves Jesus fervently, receives Holy Communion everyday. If a man does not do this, it is a sign that he does not love Jesus perfectly.
The early Christians were “continuing daily with one accord in the temple and breaking bread in their houses;” (Cf Acts 2:46) in other words, they received Communion everyday. It was Jesus, in the Blessed Eucharist Who nourished their faith and gave them the strength to endure Martyrdom. This custom prevailed in many places up to the time of St Jerome and St Augustine, who wrote “This is your daily bread; receive it daily in order to benefit daily from it” (De Verbo Domini, Serm 28). To those who believe that they were unworthy to receive everyday, St Ambrose said: “A man who is unworthy to receive everyday, will still be unworthy in a year’s time” (Bk 5, De Sacramentis, c 4).
We should not stay away from daily Communion because of our unworthiness, nor because of our lapses into sin. “Because I am always sinning,” said St Ambrose, “I am always in need of medicine” (Ibid). Humility is the basic virtue necessary in a Christian but it should not be a reason for abstaining from Holy Communion. St Thomas Aquinas commented that, although it may be pleasing to God to stay away from Holy Communion out of humility, He is far better pleased with the love and confidence of a soul, which receives Him. (Cf Summa Theologiae, III, q 8, a 10 ad 3).
The Church, like Jesus, desires us to receive Communion daily, although it only binds us under pain of sin, to receive once a year during Paschaltide, in accordance with the decree of Innocent III, which was confirmed by the Council of Trent. We are also required to receive the Blessed Eucharist, if we are in danger of death.”
Quote/s of the Day – 21 August – The Memorial of St Pope Pius X (1835-1914) (Pontiff 1903-1914)
โIs it permitted for Catholics to be present at, or to take part in, conventions, gatherings, meetings, or societies of non-Catholics which aim to associate together under a single agreement everyone who, in any way, lays claim to the name of Christian? IN THE NEGATIVE! โฆ It is clear, therefore, why this Apostolic See has never allowed its subjects, to take part in the assemblies of non-Catholics.”
โThe Church alone, being the Bride of Christ and having all things in common with her Divine Spouse, is the depository of the truth.โ
โThere is one way in which the unity of Christians may be fostered and that is, by furthering the return to the one true Church of Christ for those who are separated from Her.โ
โThe daily Adoration or visit to the Blessed Sacrament, is the practice which is the fountainhead of all devotional works.โ
โThe ROSARY is the most beautiful and the most rich in graces of all prayer. It is the prayer that touches most, the Heart of the Mother of Godโฆ and if you wish peace to reign in your homes, recite the FAMILY ROSARY.โ
โIf there were one million families praying the Rosary every day, the entire world would be saved.โ
“I was born poor, I have lived poor, I wish to die poor.”
One Minute Reflection – 21 August – “Month of the Immaculate Heart of Mary” – Friday of the Twentieth week in Ordinary Time, Readings: Ezekiel 37: 1-14,ย Psalms 107:2-3,ย 4-5,ย 6-7,ย 8-9,ย Matthew 22:34-40 and the Memorial of St Pope Pius X (1835-1914) (Pontiff 1903-1914)
“On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets.โ โฆ Matthew 22:40
REFLECTION – “When our Master was asked which was the greatest of the commandments, He replied: โYou shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your strength. There is no other commandment greater than thisโ (Mk 12:30-31). I think so, too, since it concerns primary and essential Being, God our Father, through whom all things were made, all things remain in being and to whom all who are saved will return. He it is who loved us the first, who gave birth to us. It would be sacrilege to think there exists any being more ancient or more wise. Our thanksgiving may be insignificant compared to his great gifts, yet we cannot offer him any other recognition, he who is perfection itself and has no need of anything. Let us love our Father with all our strength and ardor of soul and we shall win immortality. The more we love God, the more is our nature incorporated and mingled with his own.
The second commandment, Jesus says, yields in nothing to the first: โYou shall love your neighbour as yourselfโ (โฆ) When the scholar of the Law asks Jesus: โAnd who is my neighbour?โ (Lk 10:29), he does not reply by giving the Jewish definition of neighbour โ family, fellow Jews, proselytes, those who live according to the same Law โ but tells the story of a traveller who was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho. Wounded by robbers (โฆ), the man was cared for by a Samaritan who โshowed himself a neighbourโ (v. 36).
And who is even more of a neighbour to me than our Saviour? Who showed more compassion to us when the powers of darkness had left us battered by blows? (โฆ) Jesus alone knew how to heal our wounds and root out the evils planted in our hearts (โฆ). That is why we should love Him just as much as we love God our Father. And loving Christ Jesus, is to carry out His will and keep His commandments.” โฆ St Clement of Alexandria (150-215) Theologian and Father of the Church – Homily โCan the rich be saved?โ
PRAYER โ Lord God, You filled the saints with strength and courage and gave them the knowledge of unity with You. Grant, we pray, that in imitation of St Pope Pius X, we may defend the Catholic faith and renew all things in Christ, Your Son. Help us Holy Father, to follow the example of St Pius and finally inherit eternal life, with You and all the saints. We make our prayer through Christ, our Lord with the Holy Spirit, one God forever, amen.
Our Morning Offering – 21 August – “Month of the Immaculate Heart of Mary” – Friday of the Twentieth week in Ordinary Time and the Memorial of St Pope Pius X (1835-1914) (Pontiff 1903-1914)
O Most Holy Virgin By St Pope Pius X (1835-1914)
Most holy Virgin, who pleased our Lord and became His Mother, Virgin Immaculate in your body and soul, in your faith and love, at this solemn jubilee of the promulgation of the dogma which proclaimed you to the entire world as conceived without sin, look kindly on us, unfortunate ones, who implore your powerful protection. The infernal serpent, upon whom the primeval curse was laid, continues, alas, to attack and tempt the hapless children of Eve. Ah! Do you, our blessed Mother, our Queen and Advocate, who at the first moment of your conception did crush the enemy’s head, do you gather together our prayers and we beseech you (our hearts one with yours), present them before God’s throne, that we may never allow ourselves to be caught in the snares laid for us but that we may reach the portal of salvation and that the Church and Christian society may once more chant the hymn of deliverance, of victory and of peace. Amen
Composed for the fiftieth anniversary of the definition of the Immaculate Conception, 8 September 1903.
Saint of the Day – 21 August – Saint Sidonius Apollinaris (c 430 โ 489) Bishop, Copnfessor, Poet, Diplomat, Writer, Scholar, Apostle of the poor and of exiles – Sidonius is “the single most important surviving author of 5th Century Gaul.” Also known as Caius Sollius Apollinaris Sidonius – Born in c 420 in Lugdunum, Gaul (modern Lyon, France) and died in 489 at Clermont, France. He is one of four Gallo-Roman aristocrats of the fifth- to sixth-century whose letters survive in quantity. The others are St Ruricius, Bishop of Limoges (died 507),St Alcimus Ecdicius Avitus, Bishop of Vienne (died 518) and St Magnus Felix Ennodius of Arles, Bishop of Ticinum (died 534). All of them were linked in the tightly bound aristocratic Gallo-Roman network that provided the Bishops of Catholic Gaul.
Sidonius Apollinaris was born at Lyons about the year 431, and was of one of the most noble families in Gaul, where his father and grandfather, both named Apollinaris, had commanded successively in quality of prefects of the prรฆtorium.
He was educated in arts and learning under the best master, and was one of the most celebrated orators and poets of the age in which he lived. From his epistles, it is manifest that he was always religious, pious, humble, affable, extremely affectionate, beneficent and compassionate and no lover of the world, even whilst he lived in it.
For some time he had a command in the imperial army and he married Papianilla, by whom he had a son called Apollinaris and two daughters. Papianilla was daughter of Avitus, who after having been thrice prefect of the prรฆtorium in Gaul, was raised to the imperial throne at Rome in 455 but being obliged to quit the purple after a reign of ten months, died on the road to Auvergne. Majorian, his successor, prosecuted his relations, and coming to Lyons, caused Sidonius to be apprehended but, admiring the constancy with which he bore his disgrace and becoming acquainted with his extraordinary qualifications and virtue, restored his estates to him and created him Count. Majorian was a good soldier and began to curb the barbarians who laid waste the fairest provinces of the empire, but was slain in 461, by Ricimer the Goth, his own general, who placed the diadem upon the head of Severus. Upon this revolution Sidonius left the court, and led a retired life in Auvergne, where he protected his Province from the Goths and divided his time between studies and the exercises of piety. Severus was poisoned by Ricimer after a reign of four years, and Anthemius chosen Emperor in 467, who immediately called Sidonius again to Rome and created him prince of the Senate, Patrician and Prefect of the City. His piety and devotion suffered no prejudice in his elevation and amidst the distraction of his secular employments, in which he made use of his authority only to promote the divine honour and to render himself the servant of others in studying to advance every oneโs happiness and comfort.
God soon called him from these secular dignities to the government of His Church. The Bishopric of Arvernum, since called Clermont, in Auvergne, falling vacant in 471, the people of that extensive Dioces, and the Bishops of the whole country, who had long regretted his absence whilst he was detained in the capital of the world, unanimously demanded that he should be restored to them in order to fill the episcopal chair.
Sidonius was then a layman, and his wife was yet living he, therefore, urged the authority of Canons against such an election and opposed it with all his might, till, fearing at length to resist the will of heaven, he acquiesced; it having been customary on extraordinary occasions to dispense with the canons which forbid laymen to be chosen Bishops. He, therefore and his wife, agreed to a perpetual separation and from that moment, he renounced poetry, which till then had been his delight, to apply himself only to those studies which were most agreeable to his ministry. He was no stranger to them whilst a layman and he soon became an oracle whom other Bishops consulted in their difficulties; though he was always reserved and unwilling to decide for them and usually referred them to others, alleging that he was not capable of acting the part of a doctor among his brethren, whose direction and science he stood himself infinitely in need of.
St Lupus, Bishop of Troyes, who had loved and honoured him whilst he was yet wandering in the dry deserts of the world, found his affection for him redoubled when he beheld him become a guide of souls in the paths of religion and virtue. Upon his promotion to the Episcopal dignity, he wrote him an excellent letter of congratulation and advice, in which, among other things, he told him: โIt is no longer by pomp and an equipage that you are to keep up your rank but by the most profound humility of heart. You are placed above others but must consider yourself as below the meanest and last in your flock. Be ready to kiss the feet of those whom formerly you would not have thought worthy to sit under your feet. You must render yourself the servant of all.โ This Sidonius made the rule of his conduct. He kept always a very frugal table, fasted every second day, prayed much and though of a tender constitution, often seemed to carry his penitential austerities to excess. He was frequently in want of necessaries, because he had given all away to the poor. His love and compassion for them, even whilst he lived in the world, was such, that he sometimes had sold all his plate for their relief.
After he was Bishop, he looked upon it as his principal duty to provide for the instruction, comfort and assistance of the poor. In the time of a great famine he maintained, at his own charge, with the charitable succours which Ecdicius, his wifeโs brother, put into his hands, more than four thousand Burgundians and other strangers, who had been driven from their own country by misery and necessity and, when the scarcity was over, he furnished them with carriages and sent them to their respective homes. St Sidonius made frequent visitations of his Diocese, and performed every office of his ministry with all the care and prudence possible.
The city of Clermont being besieged, in 475, by Alaric, king of the Visigoths, who then reigned in the southern provinces of France, the zealous Bishop encouraged the people to stand upon their defence, by which he exposed himself to the rage of the conquerers after they were masters of the place. He entreated the Arian king to grant several articles in favour of the Catholics, which the barbarian was so far from allowing, that he sent the holy prelate prisoner to Liviane, a castle near Carcassone, where he suffered much. However, Alaric some time after, restored him to his Se, and he continued to be the comfort and support of the distressed Catholics in that country.
He was again expelled by two factious wicked priests, but some time after recovered the government of his Church and died in peace in the year 482, on the 21 August. His festival was kept soon after his death with solemnity at Clermont, where his memory is in great veneration. His body lay first in the old church of St Saturninus, but was afterwards translated into that of St Genesius.
St Gregory of Tours speaks of Sidonius as a man who could celebrate Mass from memory (without a sacramentary) and give unprepared speeches without any hesitation.
Our Lady of Knock: Our Lady, Saint Joseph and Saint John the Evangelist appeared in a blaze of light at the south gable of Saint John the Baptist Church, Knock, County Mayo, Ireland, on 21 August 1879. They appeared to float about two feet above the ground and each would occasionally move toward the visionaries and then away from them. The Blessed Virgin Mary was clothed in white robes with a brilliant crown on her head. Where the crown fitted to her brow, she wore a beautiful full-bloom golden rose. She was praying with her eyes and hands raised towards Heaven. Saint Joseph wore white robes, stood on Our Ladyโs right and was turned towards her in an attitude of respect. Saint John was dressed in white vestment, stood was on Maryโs left and resembled a Bishop, with a small mitre. He appeared to be preaching and he held an open book in his left hand. Behind them and a little to the left of Saint John was a plain altar on which was a cross and a lamb with adoring angels. The apparition was witnessed by fifteen people. Miraculous cures were reported soon after in the area and it is now a major pilgrimage destination. Patronage โ Ireland.
St Abraham of Smolensk (Died c 1222) His Life: https://anastpaul.com/2019/08/21/saint-of-the-day-21-august-saint-abraham-of-smolensk-died-c-1222/ St Agapius of Edessa St Agathonicus of Constantinople St Anastasius Cornicularius St Aria of Rome St Avitus I of Clermont St Bassa of Edessa Bl Beatrice de Roelas St Bernhard of Lรฉrida St Bernard de Alziva St Bonosus Bl Bruno Zembol St Camerinus of Sardinia St Cameron St Cisellus of Sardinia St Cyriaca St Euprepius of Verona St Fidelis of Edessa Bl Gilbert of Valenciennes St Gracia of Lรฉrida St Hardulph St Joseph Nien Vien Bl Ladislaus Findysz St Leontius the Elder St Luxorius of Sardinia St Maria of Lรฉrida St Maximianus the Soldier St Maximilian of Antioch St Natale of Casale Monferrato St Paternus of Fondi St Privatus of Mende St Quadratus of Utica St Sidonius Apollinaris (c 430 โ 489) Bishop St Theogonius of Edessa Bl Victoire Rasoamanarivo St Zoticus the Philosopher
Martyred in the Spanish Civil War: โข Blessed Joan Cuscรณ Oliver โข Blessed Joan Vernet Masip โข Blessed Pedro Mesonero Rodrรญguez โข Blessed Pere Sadurnรญ Raventรณs โข Blessed Ramon Peirรณ Victori โข Blessed Salvador Estrugo Salves
Thought for the Day โ 20 August โ Meditations with Antonio Cardinal Bacci (1881-1971)
Confidence in the Providence of God
“Sometimes we grow discouraged and lose confidence in God. This may be the result of sickness, or of misfortune, or of misundstanding on the part of others. At any rate, on such occasions, we may feel as if we have been forgotten by God.
Jesus Christ willed to endure a trial of this nature when He was hanging upon the Cross, derided and jeered at by those whom He had come to redeem. “My God. my God,” He cried, “why hast thou forsaken me?” (Mt 27:46). In the Garden of Gethsemane, however, He had already seen, in a terrifying vision, the sins and acts of ingratitude of the human race. He had begged His Father, to take away from Him, the chalice of suffering which had ben offered to Him but, He had added immediately: “Yet not my will but thine be done” (Lk 22:62).
We must behave in the same manner. Whether it is a physical or moral anguish which torments us, we must gaze upon the Crucifix and remember that Jesus suffered much more in obedience to the will of His Heavenly Father. We must never lack confidence in Divine Providence and resignation to the will of God. In the mysterious designs of God for us, this evil which we experience, is intended for our own good. It may have been sent to ennoble us or to purify us or to give us an opportunity of making reparation for our sins.
God has endowed suffering with a very purposeful mission n the world. It should have the effect of making us detached from earthly things and more preoccupied with spiritual matters. Let us trust in God, then and remember the words of the Holy Spirit: “Has anyone hoped in the Lord and been disappointed?” (Ecclus 2:10).
Quote/s of the Day – 20 August – The Memorial of St Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153) Mellifluous Docotr, โDoctor of Lightโ
“In every lodging, at every corner, have reverence for thy Angel. Do not dare to do in his presence what you would not dare to do, if I were there. Or do you doubt that he is present whom you do not behold? What if you should hear him? What if you should touch him? What if you should scent him? Remember, that the presence of something is not proved only by the sight of things.”
” It is true that the creature loves less because she is less. But if she loves with her whole being, nothing is lacking, where everything is given.”
โThere are those who seek knowledge for the sake of knowledge; that is Curiosity. There are those who seek knowledge to be known by others; that is Vanity. There are those who seek knowledge in order to serve; that is Love.โ
โThe road to hell is paved with good intentions.โ
โA saint is not someone, who never sins, but one who sins less and less frequently and gets up more and more quickly.โ
โJust as Mary surpassed in grace all others on earth, so also in heaven is her glory unique. If eye has not seen or ear heard or the human heart conceived what God has prepared for those who love Him (1 Corinthians 2:9), who can express what He has prepared for the woman who gave Him birth and who loved Him, as everyone knows, more than anyone else?โ
โRest is in Him alone. Man knows no peace in the world but he has no disturbance when he is with God.โ
Jesu Dulcis Memori
Jesus, the very thought of Thee with sweetness fills my breast, But sweeter far Thy face to see and in Thy presence rest.
Nor voice can sing nor heart can frame, Nor can the memory find a sweeter sound than Jesusโ name, O Saviour of mankind.
O hope of every contrite heart, O joy of all the meek to those who fall, how kind Thou art, how good to those who seek!
But what to those who find? Ah this nor tongue nor pen can show, the love of Jesus, what it is none but His loved ones know.
Jesus our only joy be Thou as Thou our prize wilt be. Jesus, be Thou our glory now and through eternity. Amen
One Minute Reflection – 20 August – “Month of the Immaculate Heart of Mary” – Thursday of the Twentieth week in Ordinary Time, Readings: Ezekiel 36: 23-28,ย Psalms 51:12-13,ย 14-15,ย 18-19,ย Matthew 22:1-14 and the Memorial of St Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153) โDoctor of Lightโ
“The kingdom of heaven may be likened to a king who gave a wedding feast for his son.” – Matthew 22:2
REFLECTION – “There are three kinds of marriage – the one that concerns union, the one that is about justification and the one that is about glorification. The first kind were celebrated within the temple of the Virgin Mary; the second kind are celebrated daily within the temple of faithful souls and the third, will be celebrated in the temple of heavenly glory. The purpose of a wedding is to unite two people, the bridegroom and the bride. If two families are against each other, marriage usually unites them, when a man from one side marries a woman from the other. Between ourselves and God, there used to be a great division – to wipe it out and establish peace, the Son of God had to take His bride from someone of our lineage. To realise this marriage, numerous intermediaries and peacemakers intervened who, through their insistent prayers, were able to win it, at great cost. Finally, the Father Himself gave His consent and sent His Son, who joined Himself to our nature in the marriage chamber of the Virgin Mary’s womb. Thus the Father “gave a marriage feast for his Son.” In the same way, the second kind of marriage is celebrated when the grace of the Holy Spirit intervenes and the soul is converted (โฆ) The grace of the Holy Spirit is the bridegroom of the soul. When He calls it to repentance with His interior inspiration, all appeal from the vices is without effect. Finally, the third kind of marriage will be celebrated at the coming of the bridegroom, Jesus Christ, on the Day of Judgement. Of Him it is written: “Behold, the bridegroom is coming! Go out to meet him” (Mt 25:6). He will take the Church itself as bride, as John says in the Book of Revelation: “Come here. I will show you the Bride, Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, gleaming with the splendour of God” (cf. Rv 21:9-11). The Church of the Faithful comes down from heaven, from beside God, for it has obtained from God that it’s dwelling should be in the heavens. And so, at present, it lives by faith and hope but very soon it will celebrate it’s espousals with it’s bridegroom: “Blessed,” says the Book of Revelation, “are those who have been called to the wedding feast of the Lamb!” (Rv 19:9).” โฆ St Anthony of Padua OFM (1195-1231) Doctor of the Church
PRAYER โ All-knowing God, let me be able to stand in Your presence with a good conscience. Send Your Holy Spirit to fill my soul with the enlightenment of repentance and then to guide my steps towards the wedding feast You have prepared for Your Son. You made St Bernard burn with zeal for Your house and gave him the grace to enkindle and enlighten others in Your Church. Grant that by his prayer, we may be filled with the same spirit and always live as children of the Light. Through Christ our Lord, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God forever, amen.
Our Morning Offering – 20 August – “Month of the Immaculate Heart of Mary” – Thursday of the Twentieth week in Ordinary Time and the Memorial of St Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153) โDoctor of Lightโ
Run, hasten, O Lady, I Call upon You By St Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153) Mellifluous Doctor
Run, hasten, O Lady, and in your mercy help your sinful servant, who calls upon you, and deliver him from the hands of the enemy. Who will not sigh to you? We sigh with love and grief, for we are oppressed on every side. How can we do otherwise than sigh to you, O solace of the miserable, refuge of outcasts, ransom of captives? We are certain that when you see our miseries, your compassion will hasten to relieve us. O our sovereign Lady and our Advocate, commend us to your Son. Grant, O blessed one, by the grace which you have merited, that He who through you was graciously pleased to become a partaker of our infirmity and misery, may also, through your intercession, make us partakers, of His happiness and glory. Amen
Saint of the Day – 20 August – Saint Oswine of Deira (Died 651) King, Martyr, King of Deira in northern England. Also known as Osuine, Oswin. Born a Prince, the son of King Osric of Deira in Northumbria and died by being murdered on 20 August 651 at Gilling, Yorkshire, England on the orders of his cousin Oswy. Patronage – betrayal victims (his location was betrayed to his murders by a one of his supposedly loyal nobles).
“King Oswine was of a goodly countenance and tall of stature, pleasant in discourse and courteous in behaviour; and bountiful to all, gentle and simple alike.
[โฆ] He had given a beautiful horse to Bishop Aidan, to use either in crossing rivers, or in performing a journey upon any urgent necessity, though the Bishop was wont to travel ordinarily on foot. Some short time after, a poor man meeting the Bishop and asking alms, he immediately dismounted and ordered the horse, with all his royal trappings, to be given to the beggar; for he was very compassionate, a great friend to the poor and, in a manner, the father of the wretched.
This being told to the King, when they were going in to dinner, he said to the Bishop, โWhat did you mean, my lord Bishop, by giving the poor man that royal horse, which it was fitting that you should have for your own use? Had not we many other horses of less value, or things of other sorts, which would have been good enough to give to the poor, instead of giving that horse, which I had chosen and set apart for your own use?โ
Thereupon the Bishop answered, โWhat do you say, O King? Is that son of a mare more dear to you than that son of God?โ
Upon this they went in to dinner and the Bishop sat in his place but the King, who had come in from hunting, stood warming himself, with his attendants, at the fire. Then, on a sudden, whilst he was warming himself, calling to mind what the Bishop had said to him, he ungirt his sword and gave it to a servant and hastened to the Bishop and fell down at his feetโ beseeching him to forgive him:
โFor from this time forward,โ said he, โI will never speak anymore of this, nor will I judge of what or how much of our money you shall give to the sons of God.โ [โฆ] The King, at the Bishopโs command and request, was comforted but the Bishop, on the other hand, grew sad and was moved even to tears. His Priest then asking him, in the language of his country, which the King and his servants did not understand, why he wept.
โI know,โ said he, โthat the King will not live long, for I never before saw a humble King, whence I perceive that he will soon be snatched out of this life, because this nation is not worthy of such a ruler.โ Not long after, the Bishopโs gloomy foreboding was fulfilled by the Kingโs sad deathโฆ.”
The Venerable Bede (673-735): Ecclesiastical History of England, 3
St Oswine ruled as King of Deira (southern Northumbria) from 644-651, in the second generation after England’s conversion to Christianity by St Augustine of Canterbury. His father had been murdered by the warlord Cadwalla and young Oswine had been spirited away to safety in Wessex shortly afterwards. Following the death of his kinsman, Oswald, at the hands of King Penda of Mercia in 642, he returned to Deira and became King around 644 . His kinsman Oswy ruled Bernicia, the northern part of Northumbria.
Oswine had a great reputation for sanctity and justice and for seven years the kingdom of Deira enjoyed great happiness and prosperity. But his kinsmen Oswy, jealous of his power, made war upon Oswine. Oswine found himself unable to best the armies of Oswy and so he disbanded them and fled to Humwald of Gilling, whom had recently pledged allegiance to Oswine. But the unscrupulous Humwald quickly betrayed the saintly King Oswin to some of Oswy’s officers who murdered him at Gilling in 651. The slain king was immediately venerated as a Saint as St Bede explained above.
He was buried at Gilling, but his remains were lost during the Danish troubles. Only one year before the Norman Conquest (1065), St Oswine appeared in a vision to a monk named Edmund and revealed the location of his body. On 20 August 1103 his body was transferred solemnly to its final resting place. During the Dissolution of the Monasteries during Henry VIII’s reign, his body was found to be intact in the tomb but it was sacrilegiously destroyed. Only a fragment remained, which is now kept at Durham Cathedral.
As a side note, Eanfleda, the wife of Oswine’s murderer Oswy and daughter of St Edwin, persuaded her husband to do penance for Oswine’s murder by endowing a Monastery at Gilling, which he promptly did. Some remains of the Monastery can still be seen today, though it was destroyed by the Danes in the 11th century.
St Brogan St Burchard of Worms St Christopher of Cordoba St Cristรฒfol Baquรฉs Almirall St Edbert of Northumbria Bl Georg Hafner Bl Gervais-Protais Brunel St Gobert of Apremont St Haduin of Le Mans St Heliodorus of Persia St Herbert Hoscam St Leovigild of Cordoba Bl Louis-Franรงois Lebrun St Lucius of Cyprus Bl Maria de Mattias ASC (1805-1866) Biography: https://anastpaul.com/2018/08/20/saint-of-the-day-20-august-st-maria-de-mattias-a-s-c-1805-1866/
St Maximus of Chinon St Oswine of Deira (Died 651) King, Martyr St Philibert of Jumiรจges (c 608โ684) About St Philibert: https://anastpaul.com/2019/08/20/saint-of-the-day-20-august-saint-philibert-of-jumieges-c-608-684/ St Porphyrius of Palestrina St Ronald of Orkney St Samuel the Patriarch Bl Wladyslaw Maczkowski St Zacchaeus the Publican โ Martyred in the Spanish Civil War: 8 Beati Enrique Rodrรญguez Tortosa Francesc Llagostera Bonet Ismael Barrio Marquilla Josรฉ Tapia Dรญaz Magรญ Albaigรฉs Escoda Manuel Lรณpez รlvarez Marรญa Climent Mateu Serapio Sanz Iranzo Tomรกs Campo Marรญn
Thought for the Day โ 19 August โ Meditations with Antonio Cardinal Bacci (1881-1971)
Divine Providence
“The Book of Wisdom, speaks to us of Divine Providence. “Your providence, O Father, guidesโฆ (14:3). You love all things that are and loathe nothing that you have made; for what you hated, you would not have fashioned (11:24). God โฆ is the guide of Wisdom and the director of the wise. For both we and our words, are in his hand โฆ” (7:16). Wisdom “reaches from end to end mightily and governs all things well” (Wisd 8:1). The Lord of all, shows not partiality โฆ because he, himself, made the great, as well as the small and he provides for all alike (Wisd 6:8). You have disposed of all things by measure and number and weight” (Wis 11:21).
We have only to look around us and to think about ourselves, in order to understand the truth of these words from Sacred Scripture. We need only consider a few of the outstanding elements in the universe – the sun, which rises and sets with such perfect regularity and the myriads of the stars, clusters of planets and solar systems, ranging the vast spaces of the firmament. Then there are the smaller objects of creation which nonetheless, proclaim the greatness of Divine Providence – from the invisibly tiny insects, each with it’s own independent existence, to the flowers which draw their nourishment from the earth and the birds, for whose sustenance, God provides all that is necessary.
Lastly, there is the human body, that masterpiece of harmony. The eyes, ears and other organs, display, in a marvellous manner, the wisdom of the Creator. The soul, too, is the living image of God. It transcends the limits of space and time by the speed of it’s thought, continually discovers new secrets of the universe by means of it’s intellectual power and is capable of willing, commanding and loving.
When confronted with so much order and beauty and goodness, we can only bow down and adore, the Providence of God!“
Quote/s of the Day โ 19 August โ The Memorial of St John Eudes Orat. (1601-1680) โApostle of Two Heartsโ
“I ask you to consider, that our Lord Jesus Christ is your true head and that you are a member of His body. He belongs to you as the head belongs to the body. All that is His is yours – breath, heart, body, soul and all His faculties. All of these you must use, as if they belonged to you, so that in serving Him, you may give Him praise, love and glory.”
“A man is no true Christian if he has no devotion to the Mother of Jesus Christ.
“Every Saint belongs to the Court of the Queen of All Saints.”
St John Eudes (1601-1680) โApostle of Two Heartsโ
One Minute Reflection -19 August – Wednesday of the Twentieth week in Ordinary Time, Readings: Ezekiel 34: 1-11, Psalms 23:1-3a, 3b-4, 5, 6, Matthew 20:1-16 and The Memorial of St John Eudes Orat. (1601-1680) โApostle of Two Heartsโ and St Louis of Toulouse OFM (1274-1297)
“Am I not allowed to do what I choose with what belongs to me? Or do you begrudge my generosity?โ So the last will be first and the first last.โ โฆ Matthew 20:15-16
REFLECTION – “One of the robbers crucified with Jesus cried out: โLord, remember me; it is to you I now turn (โฆ). Remember not my works, for of these I am afraid. Every man has a feeling for his fellow-traveller; I am travelling with you towards death; remember me, your fellow-wayfarer. I do not say, Remember me now, but, โwhen you come in your kingdomโ (Lk 23:42).
What power, O robber, led you to the Light? Who taught you to worship that despised Man, your companion on the cross? O Light Eternal, which gives light to them that are in darkness! (Lk 1:79) โTake courage! Amen, I say to you, today you will be with me in paradiseโ because โtoday you have heard my voice, and have not hardened your heartโ (Ps 95[94]:8). Very speedily I passed sentence upon Adam (โฆ) but you, who today have obeyed the faith, today is your salvation. By the tree Adam fell away; by the tree you are brought into paradise (โฆ)
O mighty and ineffable grace! The faithful Abraham had not yet entered but the robber enters! Paul also wondered at this before you, saying, โWhere sin increased, grace overflowed all the moreโ (Rom 5:20). They who had borne the heat of the day had not yet entered and he of the eleventh hour entered. Let none murmur against the Master of the House, for He says, โMy friend, I am not cheating you. Am I not free to do as I wish with what is my own?โ The robber has a will to work righteousness โฆ I accept his faith โฆ I, the Shepherd, have โfound the sheep that was lostโ; I lay it on my shoulders (Lk 15:5); since he himself has said, โI have gone astray like a lost sheep; Lord, remember me when You come in Your kingdom.โ โฆ St Cyril of Jerusalem (315-387) Bishop of Jerusalem, Father, Doctor of the Church
PRAYER โ Father of mercies and God of all consolation, You gave us the loving Heart of Your own beloved Son, because of the boundless love by which You have loved us, which no tongue can describe. May we render You a love that is perfect with hearts made one with His. Grant, we pray, that our hearts may be brought to perfect unity, each heart with the other and all hearts with the Heart of Jesusโฆ.and may the rightful yearnings of our hearts find fulfilment through Him, Our Lord Jesus Christ, Your Son, who lives and reigns with You, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, forever and ever. โ Collect from Saint John Eudesโ Mass, Gaudeamus, 1668 St John Eudes and St Louis of Toulouse, Pray for us! amen.
Our Morning Offering โ 19 August โ Monday of the Twentieth week in Ordinary Time and The Memorial of St John Eudes Orat. (1601-1680) โApostle of Two Heartsโ
Be the Heart of My Heart By St John Eudes (1501-1680)
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
Saint of the Day – 19 August – Saint Louis of Toulouse OFM (1274-1297) Prince and Bishop, Neapolitan prince of the Capetian House of Anjou, Franciscan Friar and Priest, Apostle of prayer, of penance and of the poor and the sick – born in February 1274 at Nocera, Italy and died on 19 August 1297 at Brignolles, Italy of natural causes, aged just 23. Also known as Louis of Anjou. Patronages – Valencia (Spain), Mission San Luis Obispo de Tolosa, Baler (Philippines).
Louis was the son of Charles II of Naples and Sicily and was born in 1274 and named after his uncle, the holy St Louis IX (1214-1270), King of France. (His life here https://anastpaul.com/2017/08/25/saint-of-the-day-25-august-st-louis-king-of-france/). It was the great concern of his mother, the niece of St Elizabeth, to rear her many children as true servants of the King of Kings.
The devout queen observed in her son, Louis, particularly blessed results of her maternal solicitude. He loved prayer, was reserved and gentle and his whole conduct radiated angelic purity. Even as a child he practised mortification. On a certain occasion, after he had retired, his mother found him sleeping on a rug on the floor of his room instead of in his comfortable bed.
Sweets and delicious foods he carried to the poor and sick with his mother’s permission. It is related that once he was leaving the dining room with a roasted pullet under his mantle and so met his father. The King wished to see what he was carrying. Timidly the boy laid back his mantle and lo, it was a beautiful bouquet of flowers!
When he was 14, Louis was taken to Barcelona with two of his brothers, as a hostage for the release of his father, who had been taken a prisoner of war. Gladly did Louis accept this misfortune to obtain his father’s freedom but, at the same time, the disposition with which he accepted it was astonishing in a boy of his age.
“Misfortune,” he said, “is more useful to the friends of God than good fortune, for on such occasions they can prove their loyalty to their Lord.”
Under the guidance of several excellent Franciscan friars who were appointed teachers to the young princes, Louis made remarkable progress in virtue as well as in secular knowledge. In public debates he manifested his mastery of the various branches of knowledge, both sacred and secular. Theology was his favourite subject. So devoid was he of ambition, that he planned to renounce his claims to the throne in order to devote himself entirely to the service of God.
About this time he became seriously ill. He made a vow that if he recovered, he would join the Order of Friars Minor. The sickness immediately took a turn for the better but the Superiors of the Order hesitated to receive the young prince without the consent of the king, his father. Louis was thus obliged to defer his pious design.
At the end of six years his captivity ended. On returning home, after much pleading, he finally obtained the permission of his father to settle his claims on his brother Robert and to become a Priest.
Not very long after his Ordination and although he was only 21 years old, he was selected by Pope Boniface VIII for the Bishopric of Toulouse.
“Whatever is lacking to the young Priest in age and experience,” said the Pope, “his extraordinary knowledge, his maturity of mind and his holiness of life will amply supply.”
Saint Louis had to yield to the Pope’s wishes but he requested that he might first be admitted into the Order of Friars Minor. That request was granted. The royal Prince was overjoyed to be permitted, for a time at least, to perform the humblest exercises in the garb of a son of St Francis; in Rome he went from door to door gathering alms.
The Pope himself, officiated at the ceremony of Episcopal Consecration and shortly afterward, Saint Louis left to assume the government of his Diocese His noble birth and above all the fame of his sanctity, caused him to be received at Toulouse like a messenger from heaven. The entire city went out to meet him and everybody was enchanted with his modesty, sweetness and angelic virtue which radiated from his face and bearing.
A sinner who for many years had lived a wicked life, cried out at the sight of him: “Truly, this man is a saint!” and then turned away from his sinful habits and led a better life.
A woman who doubted the sanctity of the young man went to church one morning to attend the Mass which the Bishop was celebrating. Then she, too, cried out: “Ah, yes, our Bishop is a saint!”
Bishop Louis led the poor and rigorous life of a Friar Minor and devoted himself with all solicitude to the welfare of his Diocese. The poor were his best friend, and he fed 25 of them daily at his own table. His ministry, however, was destined to be short-lived.
Saint Louis died in the 24th year of his life, having been Bishop no longer than a year and a half.
He had received the last sacraments on the Feast of the Assumption of Our Lady and on the 19th of August, 1297, while pronouncing the holy name of Mary, he yielded his soul to God. Because of the many miracles that were wrought at his tomb, he was Canonised as early as 1317, during the lifetime of his mother.
St Andrew the Tribune St Badulf of Ainay St Bertulf of Luxeuil St Calminius St Credan of Evesham St Donatus of Mount Jura St Elaphius of Chรขlons St Ezekiel Moreno Y Diaz St Guenninus Bl Guerricus Bl Hugh Green Blessed Jordan of Pisa OP (c 1255โ1311) His Life: https://anastpaul.com/2019/08/19/saint-of-the-day-blessed-jordan-of-pisa-op-c-1255-1311/ St Julius of Rome St Louis of Toulouse OFM (1274-1297) Prince and Bishop
St Magnus of Anagni St Magnus of Avignon St Magnus of Cuneo St Marianus of Entreaigues St Marinus of Besalu St Magino of Tarragona St Mochta St Namadia of Marsat St Rufinus of Mantua St Sarah the Matriarch St Sebaldus St Thecla of Caesarea St Timothy of Gaza โ Martyrs of Nagasaki โ 15 beati: A group of missionaries and their laymen supporters who were executed for spreading Christianity in Japan. โข Antonius Yamada โข Bartholomaeus Mohyoe โข Iacobus Matsuo Denji โข Ioachim Dรญaz Hirayama โข Ioannes Miyazaki Soemon โข Ioannes Nagata Matashichi โข Ioannes Yago โข Laurentius Ikegami Rokusuke โข Leo Sukeemon โข Ludovic Frarijn โข Marcus Takenoshita Shinโemon โข Michaรซl Dรญaz Hori โข Paulus Sankichi โข Pedro de Zรบรฑiga โข Thomas Koyanagi They were beheaded on 19 August 1622 at Nagasaki, Japan and Beatified on 7 May 1867 by Pope Pius IX.
Martyred in the Spanish Civil War Martyred Carmelite Sisters of Charity โ 9 beati Martyred Salesians of Ciudad Real โ 8 beati Martyred Subiaco Benedictines of Barcelona โ 7 beati โข Blessed Agueda Hernรกndez Amorรณs โข Blessed Agustรญ Busquets Creixell โข Blessed Andrรฉs Pradas Lahoz โข Blessed Antolรญn Martรญnez y Martรญnez โข Blessed Antoni Pedrรณ Minguella โข Blessed Cร ndid Feliu Soler โข Blessed Cipriano Gonzรกlez Millรกn โข Blessed Damiรกn Gรณmez Jimรฉnez โข Blessed Elvira Torrentallรฉ Paraire โข Blessed Fรฉlix Gonzรกlez Bustos โข Blessed Francisca de Amรฉzua Ibaibarriaga โข Blessed Francisco de Paula Ibรกรฑez y Ibรกรฑez โข Blessed Ignasi Guilร Ximenes โข Blessed Isidro Muรฑoz Antolรญn โข Blessed Joan Roca Bosch
Thought for the Day โ 18 August โ Meditations with Antonio Cardinal Bacci (1881-1971)
Renouncing All Things
“If we want God to take possession of our souls, we must drive out every inordinate affection to earthly things.
It is not possible for God to dwell within us, if we are still attached to sin or preoccupied with worldly aims.
God should reign supreme in us and inspire all our desires and actions.
This can never happen if we retain an attachment to deliberate sin, even if it is not grave sin.
In the case of venial sin, it is not so much the sin which prevents God from ruling us absolutely, as the attachment to sin.
It is possible for anybody to fall through human weakness, “for the just man falls seven times and rises again” (Prov 24:16).
It is when we remain willingly in the state of sin, that we offend God and weaken our faith and charity.
At such times, it is as if Jesus were asleep within us, as He slept in the boat during the storm on the lake of Galilee, when the terrified Apostles cried out:ย ย “Lord save us! We are perishing!” (Mt 8:25).
We must keep ourselves free from all trace of sin, if we wish to remain intimately united with God and to be governed only by Him!”
You must be logged in to post a comment.