Dedication of the Basilicas of Peter and Paul: From the twelfth century the Dedications of the Vatican Basilica of St Peter and the Basilica of St Paul on the Via Ostiense, have been celebrated on this day, as the anniversary of their dedication by St Pope Silvester and St Pope Siricius in the fourth century. In more recent times, this feast has been extended to the whole Roman Rite. As the anniversary of the Dedication of the Basilica of St Mary Major (5 August) honours the motherhood of Our Lady, so this Feast honours the memory of the two Princes of the Apostles. About this Feast: https://anastpaul.wordpress.com/2017/11/18/feast-of-the-dedication-of-the-basilicas-of-sts-peter-and-paul-at-rome-18-november/
St Amandus of Lérins Bl Andreas Murayama Tokuan St Anselm of Lérins St Augusto Cordero Fernández St Barulas St Constant Bl Cosmas Takeya Sozaburo Bl Domingos Jorge St Emiliano Martínez de La Pera Alava St Esteban Anuncibay Letona St Francisco Marco Alemán St Germán García y García Bl Guilminus Bl Ioannes Yoshida Shoun St José María Cánovas Martínez St Keverne Bl Leonard Kimura St Mawes St Maximus of Mainz St Modesto Sáez Manzanares St Mummolus of Lagny St Nazarius of Lérins St Noah the Patriarch
St Oriculus St Patroclus of Colombier St Romfarius of Coutances
St Romanus of Antioch (Died c 303) Deacon Martyr. The Roman Martyrology reads: “At Antioch, the birthday of St Romanus, Martyr in the time of the Emperor Galerius. When the Prefect Asclepiades broke into the Churches and strove to destroy them completely, Romanus exhorted the Christians to resist him and, after being subjected to dire torments and the cutting out of his tongue (without which, however, he spoke the praises of God), he was strangled in prison and crowned with a glorious Martyrdom. Before him suffered a young boy, named Barula, who, being asked by him. whether it was better to worship one God, Whom the Christians adore, was scourged and beheaded.” His Life and Death: https://anastpaul.com/2022/11/18/saint-of-the-day-18-november-saint-romano-of-antioch-died-c-303-deacon-
St Teofredo of Vellaicum St Thomas of Antioch (Died 782) Hermit
Thought for the Day – 17 November – Meditations with Saint Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696-1787) Bishop, Confessor, Most Zealous Doctor of the Church
“How to Pray at All Times” By St Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696-1787)
How God Answers the Soul Excerpt from Chapter Four
In a word, if you wish to please the loving Heart of God, endeavour to speak to Him as often as you can and, with the fullest confidence which He will answer and speak to you in return. When you withdraw yourself from conversation with creatures to speak to God alone, He will not speak in a Voice which strikes the ear but, in a Voice which reaches the heart
… He will speak by inspiration, by interior light, by manifestations of His Goodness, by a tenderness which touches the heart, by assurance of pardon, by a feeling of peace, by the hope of Heaven, by intimate happiness, by the sweetness of His Grace, by loving and tender embraces of the soul – in a word, He will speak in a Voice easily understood by those whom He Loves and who have given their hearts to Himalone.”
One Minute Reflection – 17 November – “The Month of the Holy Souls in Purgatory” – St Gregory Thaumaturgus (c 213-c 270) “the Wonder-Worker,” Bishop, Confessor – 1 Thessalonians 1:2-10; Matthew 13:31-35 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/
“I will utter things hidden, from the foundation of the world.” – Matthew 13:35
REFLECTION – “In one of the Psalms the Prophet says: “My soul pines for Thy salvation; I hope in Thy Word” (118:1) … Who is expressing this ardent desire if not “the chosen race, the royal priesthood, the people set apart for God” (1 Pt 2:9) each in their own day, in each one of those, who have lived, are living or will live, from humanity’s first beginning until the end of the world? … This is why our Lord Himself, says to His disciples: “Many Prophets and righteous men have wished to see that which you see.” It is their voice, then, we must recognise in this Psalm … Their longing has never come to an end in the Saints, nor does it end even now in “the Body of Christ, the Church” (Col 1:18) until “the Desired of all nations” comes (Hag 2:8) …
So, the beginning of the Church’s era, before the Virgin had given birth, comprised Saints who longed to see Christ’s coming in the flesh and, the period where we are now, following the Ascension, comprises other Saints who long to see the revealing of Christ to judge the living and the dead. From the beginning to the end of time, the Church’s longing has never lost its intensity, excepting only, when our Lord was alive on earth in the company of His disciples.” – St Augustine (354-430) Bishop of Hippo, Father and Doctor of Grace (Discourses on the Psalms Ps 118 No 20).
PRAYER – Grant, we beseech Thee, Almighty God that the venerable feast of Thy blessed Gregory Confessor and Bishop may increase our devotion and promote our 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).
Our Morning Offering – 17 November – Pentecost XXVI
Soul of My Saviour, Sanctify My Breast Trans. Attri. to Fr John Hegarty (1752-1834)
Soul of my Saviour, sanctify my breast; Body of Christ, be Thou my saving Guest; Blood of my Saviour, bathe me in Thy tide; Wash me with water flowing from Thy side.
Strength and protection, may Thy Passion be; O Blessed Jesus, hear and answer me; Deep in Thy Wounds, Lord, hide and shelter me; So shall I never, never, part from Thee.
Hear me, Lord Jesus, listen as I pray; “Lead me from night, to never-ending day. Fill all the world, with love and grace Divine, And glory, laud and praise, be ever Thine.”
This Hymn is based on the original Latin text of the Anima Christi. Fr Hegarty is attributed with its translation and/or arrangement. He was born in County Derry, Ireland, educated at Dublin University and was Ordained in June 1890 and spent most of active apostolic years in Brisbane, Australia. He died aged 82 years.
Saint of the Day – 17 November – St Gregory of Tours (c538-594) Bishop Confessor, Writer, Historian, Miracle-worker, Born in Auvergne, in Clermont-Ferrand, France on 30 November 538 as George Florentius and died at Tours on 17 November 594. Patronages – Tours and Auvergne, France. Also known as – George Florentius, “The Father of French History.” Saint Gregory of Tours wrote a great deal but his main work, is his Historia Francorum, without which the history and customs of the second half of the 6th Century would be almost unknown to us. He can be considered “The Father of French History.”
George Florentine, who took the name Gregory on the occasion of his Episcopal Consecration, in memory of a great-grandfather who was the Bishop of Langres, was born in Auvergne, in Clermont, on 30 November 538. The year of his birth is known to us from some references contained in his writings. However, historians of Gregory have interpreted these chronological data differently; the majority, however, agree on the date of 538 and it seems that this interpretation is definitive.
Gregory belonged to one of the most spirituallyand materially illustrious families of the Gallo-Roman nobility; it counted a Martyr, 5 Bishops later honoured as Saints and Senators. His father, in poor health, died young without ever having held public office, leaving his widow Armentaria to raise their three sons, George, Peter, who would become a Deacon and be murdered by an envious man and a daughter, whose name is unknown, who would marry a certain Justin.
After her husband’s death, Armentaria left Clermont and came to settle in the kingdom of Burgundy near Cavaillon, where she had a property. Little Gregory was then eight years old, One of his uncles, the future Bishop of Lyons, St Nicetius, took charge of his education. Another uncle, St Gall, had founded a school in Clermont, his Episcopal City, directed by St Avitus, also a future Bishop. Gregory attended this school and developed a great taste for study and a love of books, in fact, when he became the Bishop, one of his first aims was to gather and collect a well-stocked library in the Bishops Palace.
He read a great deal, especially historical volumes. From the quotations and reminiscences found among his own works, it is possible to affirm that he read the Chronicle of St Eusebius, translated by St Jerome and his Ecclesiastical History, translated by St Rufinu. He read many others especially the Passions of the Martyrs and Vitas of Saints, among them most loved, the books of St Sulpicius Severus on St Martin and he also read St Sidonius Apollinaris. He studied long fragments of Virgil’s works by heart allowing him to often quote the Aeneid. He also read Sallust and perhaps Aulus Gellius and Pliny but he did not know Cicero except through St Jerome. He was above all attracted by the Sacred Scriptures as he himself informs us.
At the age of twenty-five, Gregory was Ordained a Deacon of the Church of Auvergne; shortly afterward, he fell seriously ill but made a pilgrimage to the Tomb of St Martin, where he obtained a cure. He remained for some time at Tours with Bishop Euphronius, his cousin.
Gregory then visited Burgundy and then Lyons, where he served as Deacon for his uncle Nicetius. During his stay in Rheims in 578 he received news of the death of his cousin, the Bishop of Tours and of his own election to succeed him which took place eighteen days later. He received Episcopal Consecration in Rheims from the hands of Bishop Giles and then went to his residential City. Among the Bishops of Tours, only five were not from his own family, so it is not surprising that he succeeded his cousin and, in the Frankish Church, he had a reputation as a wise and holy man.
After the division of 567, Tours was in the kingdom of Sigebert, a kingdom which was actually composed of separate territories, with Rheims and Tours as its capitals. When Gregory acceded to the Episcopate, the Church was in a period of adaptation to a new situation. Gaul was losing its Roman aspect and entering the barbarian period. Politically, the country, reunited by Clotaire I, had been divided after his death in December 561 between his four sons, Charibert, Gunter, Sigebert and Chilperic. Charibert was king of the West, from Amiens to the Pyrenees with Paris as its capital (Tours was in this part). But Charibert having died in 567, his three brothers divided the territory again.
Given the instability caused by these frequent divisions, civil war was a constant threat and often a sad reality. Furthermore, the rough customs of the time meant that, even without wars and raids, assassinations and sieges of Cities were frequent. The Church suffered in its clergy, in its lands and possessions and especially, in its buildings, often ruined or burned.
The City of Tours was then of great importance, its geographical position, its wealth made it enviable. It was also a spiritual centre of Gaul. Our Gregory, the Bishop of Tours, was in fact, the successor of the beloved St Martin and guardian of his Tomb, making him one of the great figures of the Frankish Church.
In 594 he went on a pilgrimage to Rome to venerate the Tombs of the holy Apostles. Saint Gregory the Great, who had been newly elected as the Pope, received him with great honours, however, seeing him of very small stature, he admired that God had enclosed such a beautiful soul and so many graces in so small a body. The Bishop knew this thought by revelation and said to him: “The Lord has created us and we have not made ourselves but He is the same in the small, as in the great.” The Pope was astonished to see that he had penetrated the secret of his heart and from then, he honoured him as a Saint, gave him a gold chain, to put in his Church of Tours and, granted in his favour, beautiful privileges to the same Church
Saint Gregory of Tours, during his life, performed a very great number of miracles but, as he was extremely humble, to hide the grace of the cures with which God had favoured him, he always applied to the sick the Relics he carried with him. He also received from the goodness of God, quite extraordinary favours and assistance. Thieves having come to mistreat him, they were forced to flee by a terror which seized them. A storm, accompanied by lightning and thunder, having arisen suddenlywhile he was travelling, he only opposed his Reliquary to it and it dissipated in a moment. On the same occasion, this miracle having given him some vain joy and a sort of complacency, he immediately fell from his horse and learned thereby to stifle in his heart, the smallest feelings of pride. One Christmas Day, in the morning, in a deep sleep after having watched all night, a person appeared to him in a dream and woke him, three times,, saying to him the third time, by allusion to his name, Gregory which means vigilant – ‘Will you always sleep, you who must awaken others?’ Finally, his life was filled with so many wonders, it would take a whole volume to relate them.
Since his return from Rome, he applied himself more than ever to the visitation of his Diocese, to the correction and sanctification of the souls committed to his care, to the preaching of the word of God and to all the other functions of a good Bishop. It was in these exercises that he completed the course of his life, being only fifty-six years old, on 17 November in the year 594 which was the twenty-first of his Episcopate. The humility which he had practiced during his life appeared again after his death, by the choice he made of his burial.
His Clergy could not consent to his Tomb being established on the ground where one could walk, as he had requested, so he was buried next to the Tomb of Saint Martin. He was Canonised a few years after his death.
St Gregory of Tours, 19th Century statue by Jean Marcellin, in the Louvre in Paris, France
Thought for the Day – 16 November – Meditations with Saint Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696-1787) Bishop, Confessor, Most Zealous Doctor of the Church
“How to Pray at All Times” By St Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696-1787)
Speak to God of Heaven Excerpt from Chapter Three:VII
“It is said that souls who, in this life, have but little longing for Heaven are punished in Purgatory with a peculiar pain, called the pain of languor. This surely is only just because, to have but little longing for Heaven is to set little value on the happiness of that eternal Kingdom which our Lord opened to us, by His Death.
Remember then, frequently to think of, and long for Heaven. Say to God that your life seems an endless span, so great is your desire to go to Him, to see Him face-to-face and, to love Him. Long to be set free from your exile, from this world of sin, from the danger of losing Divine Grace in order that you may arrive at that land of love where your heart will be given wholly to God. Say to Him, over and over again, Lord, as long as I live on this earth, I am in danger of forsaking Thee and of losing Thy Love. When shall I leave this life, wherein I am forever offending Thee? When shall I come to Thee, to love Thee with all my soul and unite myself to Thee, without any danger of losing Thee again?
St Teresa was ever sighing for Heaven in this manner. She used to rejoice when she heard the clock strike because, another hour of life and of the danger of losing God, had passed. She so earnestly desired to die, in order that she might see God, she was dying with the desire to die. This was the subject of the loving poem which she composed: ‘I Die because I Do Not Die‘.”
Quote/s of the Day – 16 November – St Gertrude the Great (1256-1302) Virgin
“I understand that, each time we contemplate the Host, with desire and devotion, in which is hidden Christ’s Eucharistic Body, we increase our merits in Heaven and secure special joys to be ours later in the Beatific Vision of God.”
“O Sacred Heart of Jesus, Fountain of Eternal Life, Thine Heart is a glowing furnace of Love. Thou art my Refuge and my Sanctuary.”
One Minute Reflection – 16 November – “The Month of the Holy Souls in Purgatory” – St Gertrude the Great (1256-1302) Virgin – 2 Corinthians 10:17-18; 11:1-2: Matthew 25:1-13 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/
“But the wise took oil in their vessels” – Matthew 25:4
REFLECTION – “It is some great thing, some exceedingly great thing, that this oil signifies. Do you think it might be charity? If we try out this hypothesis, we hazard no precipitate judgement. I will tell you why charity seems to be signified by the oil. The Apostle says, “I will show you a still more excellent way.” “If I speak with the tongue of mortals and of angels but do not have love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal.” This is charity. It is “that way above the rest,” which is, with good reason, signified by the oil. For oil swims above all liquids. Pour in water and pour in oil upon it, the oil will swim above. If you keep the usual order, it will be uppermost, if you change the order, it will be uppermost. “Charity never fails!” … St Augustine (354-430) Father & Doctor (Sermon 93).
PRAYER – O God, Who prepared a pleasing dwelling place for Thyself in the heart of blessed Gertrude the Virgin, by her merits and intercession, mercifully wipe away all sinful stain from our heart and grant that we may enjoy her companionship. 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).
Our Morning Offering – 16 November – Feast of St Gertrude the Great (1256-1302) Virgin
O Sacred Heart of Jesus By St Gertrude the Great (1256-1302)
O Sacred Heart of Jesus, Fountain of eternal life, Your Heart is a glowing Furnace of Love. You are my Refuge and my Sanctuary. O my adorable and loving Saviour, consume my heart with the burning fire with which Your Heart is enflamed. Pour down on my soul those graces which flow from Your love. Let my heart be united with Your Heart. Let my will be conformed to Your Will in all things. May Your Will be the Rule of all my desires and actions. Amen
Saint of the Day – 16 November – Saint Eucherius of Lyons (c380-c449) Bishop and Confessor, a learned Scholar and renowned Poet and Writer, Married but later he and his wife separated to lead ermetical lives of prayer and fasting, father of 2 sons and a daughter, both sons became Bishops.
The Roman Martyrology reads today: “At Lyons, the birthday of St Eucherius, Bishop and Confessor, a man of extraordinary faith and learning. He renounced the Senatorial dignity to embrace the Religious life and, for a long time voluntarily shut himself up in a cavern where he served Christ in prayer and fasting. Afterwards, through the revelationm of an Angel, he was solemnly installed in the Episcopal Chair of the City of Lyons.”
Next to St Ireaneus, no name has done so great honour to the Church of Lyons, as that of the great Eucherius. By birth he was most illustrious in the world but the Saint by despising the empty honours and riches of the world, became far more illustrious in the school of Christ.
Having become a Senator and married Galla, he had two sons, Veranus, who would become the Bishop of Vence and Salonius, later the Bishop of Geneva. Both were educated in the Monastery of Lérins by Hilary, the future Archbishop of Arles. A daughter, Consortia, is also attributed to him.
Statue of St Eucherius of Lyon in Beaumont-de-Pertuis
Around 422 Eucherius, with the consent of his wife, himself retired to the Monastery of Lérins, then, to the nearby Island of Sainte-Marguerite, where he led a Hermit’s life. St Cassian dedicated the prologue of his last seven conferences to him and he himself then showed some literary activity.
Many works are attributed to him. In addition to the letters, the homilies on the Martyrs of Lyon , Sts Epipodius and Alexander and the Passio Acaunensium Martyrum can be considered authentic.
Around 435 he was elected to the Episcopal see of Lyons, where he carried out a great pastoral activity. In 441 he attended the 1st Council of Orange. In 449 Poleminus Silvius dedicated his Laterculus to him. He died that year. He is registered on 16 November in the Martyrology of Hieronymus and in the Roman.
St Elpidius the Martyr St Eucherius of Lyons (c380-c449) Bishop and Confessor St Eustochius the Martyr St Felicita of Capua St Fidentius of Padua St Gobrain of Vannes St Ludre St Marcellus the Martyr
Thought for the Day – 15 November – Meditations with Saint Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696-1787) Bishop, Confessor, Most Zealous Doctor of the Church
“How to Pray at All Times” By St Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696-1787)
Pray For Your Neighbour Excerpt from Chapter Three:VI
“Recommend to God with confidence not only your own needs but also the needs of others. How pleasing to Him it will be if you sometimes forget yourself and speak to Him of His own glory, of the miseries of others, especially those who mourn in sorrow; of the souls in purgatory, His spouses, who long to behold Him in Heaven and of poor sinners, who live deprived of His grace.
Pray to Him for sinners thus – ‘Lord, Thou art all goodness and worthy of an infinite love – how, then, canst Thou endure in the world, so many souls on whom Thou hast lavished Thy favours and who yet, have no desire to know Thee, who have no desire to love Thee, who even offend and despise Thee?’ Ah, my most amiable God, make Thyself known-make Thyself loved. Hallowed be Thy Name, Thy Kingdom come. May Thy Name be adored and loved by all men. May Thy love reign in all hearts. Do not let me depart from Thee without granting me some grace for the unhappy souls for whom I pray.”
Quote/s of the Day – 15 November – St Albert the Great OP (1200-1280) Bishop, Confessor, Doctor of the Church
“The greater and more persistent your confidence in God, the more abundantly you will receive, all you ask for.”
“The surest and quickest way to attain perfection, is to strive for purity of heart. Once the obstacles have been removed, God finds a clear path and does wonders, both in and through, the soul.”
“Govern my heart O Lord, lest it drift into useless and disordered thoughts. Do not permit me to become excessively preoccupied with anything at all, even matters and concerns which are useful and good in themselves. Temper the affections of my soul, so that I may neither love, nor hate anything in a way which exceeds due proportions. Let me neither rejoice, nor be saddened, beyond the measure which is fitting and rational.”
Guide Me Lord By St Albert the Great (1200-1280) Doctor of the Church
O Lord Jesus Christ, Who seeks those who stray and receives them when returning, make me approach Thee through the frequent hearing of Thy Word, lest I sin against my neighbour, by the blindness of human judgement, through the austerity of false justice, through comparing his inferior status, through too much trust in my merits or through ignorance of the Divine Judgement. Guide me to search diligently, each corner of my conscience, lest the flesh dominate the spirit! Amen
One Minute Reflection – 15 November – “The Month of the Holy Souls in Purgatory” – St Albert the Great OP (1200-1280) Bishop, Confessor, Doctor of the Church – 2 Timothy 4:1-8; Matthew 5:13-19 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/
“You are the light of the world.” – Matthew 5:14
REFLECTION – “I shall always love and reverence the Apostles sent by Christ and their successors, in sowing the seed of the Gospel, those zealous and tireless co-operators in propagating the Word, who may justly say of themselves: Let a man so account of us as the ministers of Christ and the dispensers of the Mysteries of God. For Christ, like a most watchful and most faithful householder, wished that the Gospel lamp should be lit by such ministers and delegates, with fire sent down from Heaven and once lit, should not be put under a measure but set upon a candlestick, so that it may spread its brightness far and wide and put to flight, all darkness and error, rife among both Jews and Gentiles.
Now it is not enough for the Gospel teacher to be a brilliant speaker in the eyes of the people; he must also be as a voice crying in the desert and endeavour, by his eloquence, to help many to lead good lives, lest, if he omit his duty of speaking, he be called the dumb dog that is not able to bark, spoken of by the prophet. Yes, he should also burn, in such a way, that, equipped with good works and love, he may adorn his evangelical office and follow the leadership of Paul. He indeed was not satisfied with bidding the Bishop of the Ephesians: This command and teach: conduct thyself in work as a good soldier of Christ Jesus but he unflaggingly preached the Gospel to friend and foe alike and, said with a good conscience to the Bishops gathered at Ephesus: You know how I have kept back nothing that was for your good but have declared it to you and taught you in public and from house to house, urging Jews and Gentiles to turn to God in repentance and to believe in our Lord Jesus Christ.
Such should be the shepherd in the Church who, like Paul, becomes all things to all men, so that the sick may find healing in him; the sad, joy; the desperate, hope; the ignorant, instruction; those in doubt, advice; the penitent, forgiveness and comfort and finally, everyone, whatever is necessary for salvation. And so Christ, when He wished to appoint the chief teachers of the world and of the Church, did not limit Himself to saying to His disciples: You are the light of the world but also added these words: A city seated on a mountain cannot be hid. Neither do men light a candle and put it under a measure but upon a candlestick, that it may shine to all who are in the house. Those churchmen err, who imagine that it is by brilliant preaching, rather than by holiness of life and all-embracing love, they fulfil their office.” – St Peter Canisius SJ (1521-1597) Doctor of the Church (Sermon excerpt).
PRAYER – O God, Who made blessed Albert, ThyBishop and Doctor, eminent in the submission of human wisdom to divine faith, grant us, we beseech Thee, so to follow the path of his teaching that we may enjoy perfect light in Heaven.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).
Our Morning Offering – 15 November – St Albert the Great (1200-1280) Bishop, Confessor, Doctor of the Church
Supreme Lord and King of All! By St Albert the Great (1200-1280) Universal Doctor of the Church
We pray to Thee, O Lord, Who art the Supreme Truth, and all truth is from Thee. We beseech Thee, O Lord, Who art the highest Wisdom and all the wise depend on Thee, for their wisdom. Thou are the supreme Joy, and all who are joyous, owe it to Thee. Thou art the Light of minds and all receive their understanding from Thee. We love, we love Thee above all! We seek Thee, we follow Thee and we are ready to serve Thee. We desire to dwell under Thy Power for Thou art the King of all! Amen
Saint of the Day – 15 November – Saint Malo (c520-621) the 1st Bishop of Aleth in Brittany, France, Missionary, one of the Seven Founding Saints of Brittany, disciple and companion of St Brendan the Navigato on his renowned voyages, Founder of Monateries, Churches and a City names after him, Miracle-worker. Born on 27 March c520 at Llancarfan, Wales and died possibly on 15 November 621 (aged 101) in Archambiac, Aquitaine, France. Patronages – of his hometown of Llancarfan, Wales and of Saint-Malo, the City name for him in Brittany, France. Also known as – Malo of Aleth, Malo de Phily, Malo of Brittan, Mac’h Low… Machutus… Maclou… Maclovio… Maclovius… Macuto…
The Roman Martyrology reads today: “At Bretagne, the birthday of St Malo, Bishop, who was glorious for miracles from his early years.”
Malo was the son of Dervel, sister of Amwn Ddu and, therefore, a cousin to St Samson. He was placed in the Abbot’s care in the Llancarfan Abbey in Wales, at a tender age and grew up at the Abbey, where he was Ordained Priest and assigned the office of preacher.
As a Monk at Llancarfan Abbey, Malo was known for his participation in the voyages of St Brendan the Navigator. Malo became Brendan’s favourite disciple.
This window of St Malo resides in Réguiny Church in Brittany,
A number of legendary tales of the adventures of Brendan and Malo survive. According to the Voyage of St Brendan the Abbot, they and their companions discovered the ‘Island of the Blest.’ Another tale tells of an encounter with Maclovius, a dead giant whom Brendan temporarily revived and baptised.
On a second voyage, Brendan and Malo visited and evangelised locations including the Orkney Islands and the northern isles of Scotland.
They travelled to the coast of France and landed in Brittany . At Aleth, Malo served under a venerable Hermit named Aaron. Upon Aaron’s death in 544, Malo continued the spiritual rule of the district subsequently known as Saint-Malo and was Consecrated as the 1st Bishop of Aleth (now Saint Servan). Many miracles are related of his missionary work there.
In old age, the disorder on the island compelled Malo to leave but the people soon begged him to return. He obliged his faithful and returned to restore order. Feeling near the end of his life, Malo was determined to spend his last days in solitary penance. He died at an advanced age during a journey from Aleth to a neighbouring Town.
The City of Saint-Malo is one of the Seven stages in the ‘Tour of Brittany’ a pilgrimage celebrating the Seven Founding Saints.
Pontoise Cathedral near Paris, is dedicated to Saint Malo. Lesmahagow Priory in South Lanarkshire is also dedicated to him in the Latin form of his name, Machutus. He is the Patron Saint of the Churches of St Maughans and Llanfaenor in Monmouthshire and Llanfechell in Anglesey.
St Anianus of Wilparting St Arnulf of Toul Bl Caius of Korea St Desiderius of Cahors St Eugene of Toledo St Felix of Nola St Findan St Fintan the Missionary St Gurias of Edessa Bl Hugh Faringdon Bl John Eynon Bl John Rugg Bl John Thorne
Blessed Lucia (Lucy) of Narni OP (1476-1544) Virgin, Tertiary of the Order of Preachers, Mystic, Stigmatist, Her body is incorrupt. So many miracles occurred at her Shrine that Lucia was finally Beatified on 1 March 1710 by Pope Clement XI. It is thought that Lucia was the inspiration for th little girl Lucy, who could see many things that no-one else could, in C S Lewis’ The Chronicles of Narnia. Her Life: https://anastpaul.com/2021/11/15/saint-of-the-day-15-november-blessed-lucia-of-narni-op-1476-1544/
St Luperius of Verona St Machudd of Llanfechell St Malo (c520-621) Bishop St Marinus of Wilparting
St Paduinus of Le Mans Bl Richard Whiting Bl Roger James St Shamuna of Edessa St Sidonius of Saint-Saens
Martyrs of Hippo – 20 Saints: 20 Christians Martyred together and celebrated by Saint Augustine. The only details about them to survive are three of the names – Fidenziano, Valerian and Victoria. Hippo, Numidia (in north Africa).
Martyrs of North Africa – 3 Saints: A group of Christians murdered for their faith in imperial Roman north Africa. The only details that have survived are the names of three of them – Fidentian, Secundus and Varicus.
Thought for the Day – 14 November – Meditations with Saint Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696-1787) Bishop, Confessor, Most Zealous Doctor of the Church
“How to Pray at All Times” By St Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696-1787)
Pray In Your Doubts Excerpt from Chapter Three:V
“Whenever you are in doubt about anything -whether it regards yourself or others – act like good friends do who always consult one another in their difficulties. Show the same mark of confidence to God; consult Him; ask Him to enlighten you, that you may decide on that which is most pleasing to Him.
Put Thou words in my mouth and strengthen the resolution in my heart (Jud 9:18). Lord, make known to me that which Thou wouldst have me do and I will obey Thee: Speak, Lord, for Thy servant heareth (i Kings 3:10).”
Quote/s of the Day – 14 November – St Josaphat Kuncewicz OSBM (1584-1623) Confessor, Archbishop, Martyr – Hebrews 5:1-6, John 10:11-16 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/
“I am the Good Shepherd, I know My Own and My Own know Me.”
John 10:14
“My sheep hear My Voice; I know them and they follow Me.”
John 10:27
“I am like the sick sheep which strays from the rest of the flock. Unless the Good Shepherd takes me on His shoulders and carries me back to His fold, my steps will falter and, in the very effort of rising, my feet will give way!”
St Jerome (343-420) Father and Doctor of the Church
“Christ said that the shepherd enters through the gate and that He is Himself the Gate, as well as the Shepherd. Then, it is necessary, that He enter through Himself. By so doing, He reveals Himself and through Himself, He knows the Father. But we enter through Him because through Him, we find happiness.”
St Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274) Doctor Angelicus/ Doctor Communis
“The measure of love, is to love without measure.”
St Francis de Sales (1567-1622) Doctor of the Church
One Minute Reflection – 14 November – “The Month of the Holy Souls in Purgatory” – St Josaphat Kuncewicz OSBM (1584-1623) Confessor, Archbishop, Martyr – Hebrews 5:1-6, John 10:11-16 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/
“ I lay down My Life for My sheep.” – John 10:15
REFLECTION – “The service of the Good Shepherd is Love. That is why Jesus says He “lays down His Life for His sheep.” For we must know what distinguishes Him – the Good Shepherd watches over the needs of His flock, the bad one seeks his own interest. That is what the Prophet said: “Woe to the shepherds of Israel, who seek only to feed themselves! Should they not feed their flock?” (Ezek 34:2). Those who only use the flock for their own interest are not good shepherds … A good shepherd, in the natural sense, bears with much for the sake of the flock over which he watches, as Jacob testified: “By day the heat consumed me and the cold by night.” (Gen 31:40)…
But the spiritual flock’s salvation, is more important, than even the life of the shepherd. That is why, when the flock is in danger, its shepherd must accept to lose his physical life for the salvation of the flock. The Lord said: “The good shepherd lays down his life for his sheep” his physical life in the loving exercise of authority … Christ gave us an example: “He laid down His Life for us – and we ought to lay down our lives for one another.” (1 Jn 3:16).” – St Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274) Dominican Priest and Friar, Theologian, Doctor of the Church (Lectura super Ioannem, X lect 3, 1-20).
PRAYER – Arouse in Thy Church, O Lord, the spirit with which blessed Josaphat, Thy Martyr and Bishop, was filled, when he laid down his life for his flock; so that, by his intercession, we, also moved and strengthened by the same spirit, may not fear to lay down our lives for our brethren. 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).
Our Morning Offering – 14 November – Thursday being the day devoted to the Most Holy Eucharist
Prayer in Adoration of the Sacred Heart By St Margaret Mary Alacoque (1647-1690) Visionary and Apostle of the Sacred Heart of Jesus
Jesus Christ, my Lord and my God, Whom I believe to be really present in the Blessed Sacrament of the Altar, receive this most profound Act of Adoration to supply for the desire I have, to adore Thee unceasingly and in thanksgiving, for the sentiments of love which Thy Sacred Heart has for me in this Sacrament. I cannot better acknowledge them, than by offering Thee, all the Acts of Adoration, resignation, patience and love which this same Heart has made during its mortal life and which it makes still and which it shall make eternally in Heaven, in order that through it, I may love Thee, praise Thee and adore Thee worthily, as much as it is possible for me. I unite myself to this Divine Offering which Thou dost make to Thy Divine Father and I consecrate to Thee, my whole being, praying Thee, to destroy in me, all sin and not to permit that I should be separated from Thee, in time and eternally. Amen
Saint of the Day – 14 November – Saint Dubricius of Wales (c465-c545) Bishop and Confessor, Monk and Founder of Monasteriest, becoming an Abbot, highly renowned and learned Scholar, Hermit, Miracle-worker. Born in Madley (?) near Hereford in England around 465 and died in c545 of natural causes. on Bardsey Island, Wales. Dubricius is one of the greatest of Welsh Saints. He is usually represented holding two Crosiers which signify his jurisdiction over the Sees of Caerleon and Llandaff. Patronages – of Hereford (his birth City in England), of Caldey Island and Monmouth in Wales. Also known as – Dubricius Dubritius, Dubric, Dyfig, Devereux. Additional Memorial – 9 February (on some calendars), 29 May (translation of his Relics).
Dubricius was the illegitimate son of Efrddyl, the daughter of King Peibio Clafrog of Ergyng. His grandfather threw his mother into the River Wye when he discovered she was pregnant, but failed to drown her. Dubricius was born in Madley in Herefordshire, England. He and his mother were reconciled with Peibio when the child Dubricius touched him and cured him of his leprosy.
Noted for his precocious intellect, by the time he attained manhood, Dubricius was already known as a scholar throughout Britain. Dubricius founded a Monastery at Hentland and then one at Moccas, both of these in Herefordshire.
Later moving to Wales, he became the teacher of many well-known Welsh Saints, including Teilo and Samson and also healed the sick of various disorders through the laying on of hands.
Dubricius was Consecrated as the Bishop of Llandaff by Saint Germanus of Auxerre and legend says he later crowned King Arthur. He lalso became the Bishop of Ergyng, possibly with his seat at Weston and probably held sway over all of Glamorgan and Gwent, an area which was then incorporated into the Diocese of Llandaff. Dubricius was a good friend of Saints Illtud and Samson. He attended the Synod of Llanddewi Brefi in 545, where he is said to have resigned his See in favour of Saint David.
Stained glass depiction of St Dubricius, designed by William Burges, at Castell Coch, Cardiff, Wales
It is believed that he died not long after having retired to Bardsey Island to live his last years as a Hermit. This is where he was eventually buried before his body was translated to Llandaff Cathedral in 1120. There are many Churches dedicated to our Saint across England and Wales.
All Saints of the Carmelite Order: On this day, the Carmelite Family celebrates the memory of all its holy men and women, those known and those unknown, those living on Earth and those living in Heaven, who reflect the glory of God.
St Joseph Maria Pignatelli SJ (1737 – 1811) Priest of the Society of Jesus known as “The Restorer of the Society of Jesus” and “The Second Founder of the Society of Jesus” following the suppression of the Society of Jesus by Pope Clement XIV in 1773. He was Beatified on 21 May 1933 by Pope Pius XI and was Canonised on 12 June 1954 by Venerable Pope Pius XII. His Life: https://anastpaul.com/2019/11/14/saint-of-the-day-14-november-saint-joseph-maria-pignatelli-sj-1737-1811/
St Jucundus of Bologna
St Laurence O’Toole/Lorcán Ua Tuathail (c 1128 – 1180) Archbishop of Dublin, Abbot, Reformer, Mediator, Preacher, Apostle of Charity, Papal Legate to Ireland, he established new Churches and Monasteries. Due to the great number of miracles that rapidly occurred either at his tomb or through his intercession, Lorcán was canonised only 45 years after his death in 1225 by Pope Honorius III. Biography: https://anastpaul.com/2018/11/14/saint-of-the-day-14-november-st-laurence-otoole-c-1128-1180/
St Modanic St Pierre of Narbonne St Ruf of Avignon St Serapion of Alexandria
St Serapion of Algiers OdeM (c 1179–1240) Mercedarian Priest and Martyr, Soldier and Crusader. The Roman Martyrology states today: “At Algiers in Africa, the blessed Serapion, of the Order of Our Blessed Lady of Ransom, for the Redemption of the faithful in captivity and the preaching of the Christian Faith. He was the first of his Order to deserve the Palm of Martyrdom by being crucified and cut to pieces.” On 14 July 1728, a decree was issued confirming his immemorial cult. he was Canonised on 14 April 1728 by Pope Benedict XIII and on 24 August 1743, he was included in the Roman Martyrology. His Life and Death: https://anastpaul.com/2021/11/14/saint-of-the-day-14-november-saint-serapion-of-algiers-odem-c-1179-1240-martyr/
St Siard OPraem (Died 1230) Abbot of the Premonstratensian Order or the “Norbertines.”Siard of Friesland in the Netherlands, was a holy Abbot of the Norbertine Abbey in Mariëngaard by Hallum in Friesland. He was a powerful and hardworking Administrator, abiding strictly by the Rule of the Order, Apostle of the poor and needy, a holy Abbot of deep and mystical piety and prayer, on occasion he was seen in ecstasy, Peace-maker. Patronage – against blindness, bodily ailments. His Zealkous and Holy Life: https://anastpaul.com/2022/11/14/saint-of-the-day-14-november-saint-siard-opraem-died-1230/
St Venerando the Centurian St Venerandus of Troyes
Martyrs of Emesa: Group of Christian women tortured and executed for their faith in the persecutions of the Arab chieftain Mady. They died in Emesa (modern Homs, Syria).
Martyrs of Heraclea – (3 Saints): Group of Christians murdered together for their faith. The only details we have are three of their names – Clementinus, Philomenus and Theodotus. They were Martyred in Heraclea, Thrace.
Thought for the Day – 13 Noivember – Meditations with Saint Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696-1787) Bishop, Confessor, Most Zealous Doctor of the Church
“How to Pray at All Times” By St Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696-1787)
Pray After a Fault Excerpt from Chapter Three:IV
“Another mark of confidence, highly pleasing to our most loving God, is this – that when you have committed any fault, you are not ashamed to go at once to Him and seek His pardon. Consider that God is so willing to pardon sinners that He laments their perdition, when they depart far from Him and live lives dead to His grace.
… He promises to receive a soul who has forsaken Him, if only the soul returns to His arms … If you come to Me and repent, though your soul be dyed deep crimson with crime, by My grace it shall be made white as snow.
… Attend, especially, devout soul, to what is commonly taught by masters of the spiritual life, who recommend you to have recourse immediately to God after you have fallen, although you should repeat the fall a hundred times in the day. Having done this, do not be disturbed. If you remain discouraged and troubled because of the fault committed, you will scarcely speak to God; your confidence will grow less; your desire to love God will grow cold and you will make little or no advancement in the way of the Lord. On the other hand, by having immediate recourse to God, asking His pardon and promising amendment for the future, your very faults will help you to advance in Divine love. Between friends, who sincerely love one another, it sometimes happens that when one offends the other and then. humbles himself and asks pardon, their friendship becomes stronger than ever. Do you act in like manner with regard to God – let your faults and falls, only strengthen the bonds of love which unite you to Him.”
Quote/s of the Day – 13 November – St Stanislaus Kostka SJ (1550-1568) Jesuit Novice
“Think of the joy the soul will feel in its escape from the prison of this body. So long has it lived in perpetual exile, expelled from its own heavenly home. How much greater its uncontainable joy and complete satisfaction, when it arrives in its own Country to enjoy the Vision of God, with the Angels and the blessed.”
“I am so ashamed and confused because I see how many have been lost on account of a single mortal sin and, how many times, I have deserved eternal damnation.”
One Minute Reflection – 13 November – “The Month of the Holy Souls in Purgatory” – St Didacus de Alcalá de Henares) OFM (c 1400-1463) Confessor – 1 Corinthians 4:9-14; Luke 12:32-34 – Scripture search here: https://www.drbo.org/
“For where your treasure is, there will your heart be too.” – Luke 12:34
REFLECTION – “…If, therefore, you wash, by a good life, the filth which has been glued on your heart like plaster, the Divine Beauty will again shine forth in you. It is the same as happens in the case of iron. If freed from rust by a whetstone that which but a moment ago, was black will shine and glisten brightly in the sun. So it is too with the inner man which the Lord calls “the heart.” When he has scraped off the rustlike dirt which dank decay has caused to appear on his form, he will once more recover the likeness of the Archetype (Gn 1:27) and, be good. For what is like to the Good is certainly itself good.
Hence, if a man who is pure of heart sees himself, he sees in himself what he desires and thus, he becomes blessed because, when he looks at his own purity, he sees the Archetype in the image. To give an example. Although men, who see the sun in a mirror, do not gaze at the sky itself, yet they see the sun in the reflection of the mirror, no less than those who look at its very orb. So, He says, it is also with you. Even though you are too weak to perceive the Light itself, yet if you but return to the grace of the image with which you were informed from the beginning, you will have all you seek in yourselves.
…For the Godhead is purity, freedom from passion and separation from all evil. If, therefore, these things be in you, God is indeed in you. Hence, if your thought is without any alloy of evil, free from passion, arid alien from all stain, you are blessed because you are clear of sight.” – St Gregory of Nyssa (c335-395) Bishop, Father of the Church (Brother of St Basil the Great) (Sermons 6 sur les Béatitudes – on the Beatitudes 6).
PRAYER – Almighty, eternal God, Who in Thy wondrous providence, choose the weak things of the world to overcome the strong, mercifully grant unto us Thy humble servants that, by the loving prayers of blessed Didacus, Thy Confessor, we may be found worthy to be raised unto the everlasting glory of Heaven. 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).
Saint of the Day – 13 November – Saint Brice of Tours (c370-444) Bishop, disciple of St Martin of Tours, Penitent, Miracle-worker. Born in Gaul, modern France and died in Tours, France of natural causes. Patronages – against colic, against stomach diseases, of Tours, of Calimera and Samperone in Italy. Also known as – Briccius, Brictius, Britius, Brixius, Brizio, Brizo.
The Roman Martyrology reads today: “At Tours, St Brice, Bishop, disciple of the blessed Bishop Martin.”
St Martin, whose Feast we kept two days ago, was succeeded in the See of Tours, as he had predicted, by a Monk named Brice, a singularly unpromising candidate to succeed such a holy Bishop.
Martin had spent as much time as his Episcopal duties permitted among a monastic community at Marmoutier near Tours, into which he himself had taken the orphaned Brice. St Gregory of Tours describes Brice as “proud and vain” and St Martin’s Biographer, St Sulpicius Severus, tells the story in his Dialogues (3.15) of Brice being led by devils to “vomit up a thousand reproaches against Martin” even daring to assert that he, himself, was much holier for being raised from childhood in a Monastery, while Martin was raised in a military camp. Although Brice repented of this (as St Sulpicius believed, due to Martin’s prayers) and asked for the Saint’s forgiveness, he continued to be a very difficult character. Martin refused to remove him from the Priesthood, lest he would be judged to do so, as an act of vengeance but, expressed his tolerance in less than-complimentary terms: “If Christ could put up with Judas, why should I not put up with Brice?”
St Brice and St Martin
St Martin had predicted, not only that Brice would succeed him as the Bishop, but, that he would suffer much in the Episcopacy, words which Brice dismissed as “ravings.” Both predictions were fulfilled in the following manner. Although Brice was vain and proud, he was “chaste in body” and yet, he was accused of fathering a child. The revised Butler’s Lives of the Saints says, with characteristic reticence that he vindicated himself by “a very astonishing miracle” without saying what the miracle was. St Gregory of Tours tells us that Brice called together the faithful and before them ordered the month-old infant to say whether or not he was the father, at which the child did indeed say, “You are not my father!” The people ask Brice to make the infant say who its father was but Brice replied, “That is not my job. I have taken care of the part of this business which pertains to me; if you can, ask for yourselves.”
St Brice with the Infant, from the Church of St Médard in Boersch in Eastern France.
This miraculous event was attributed, perhaps understandably, to the use of magic, rather than holiness and so Brice attempted to vindicate himself by carrying hot coals in his cloak to the Tomb of St Martin; when he arrived his cloak was not burnt. But this sign was also not accepted and so he was driven from his See, “that the words of the Saint might be fulfilled, ‘Know that, in the Episcopate, you will suffer many adversities.’ …
Then Brice sought out the Pope of Rome, weeping and mourning and saying ‘Rightly do I suffer these things because I sinned against God’s Saint and often called him crazy and deluded and, seeing his virtues, I did not believe.’ ” After staying in Rome for seven years and purging his sins by the celebration of many Masses, he was restored to his See which he governed for a further seven years as a man “of magnificent sanctity,” according to St Gregory, very much changed for the better by the experience.
I believe, a Polish image of St Brice with the Infant
His popularity in the medieval period was very great and his Feast is found on most calendars, although not that of Rome. This is due in part to his association with St Martin but perhaps more, as an example of something which the medievals understood very well and loved to dwell upon – it is never too late for God’s grace to bring us away from sin to sanctity and even to Sainthood. And so we ask St Brice to assist us by his intercession, in our repentance and our growth in holiness. (Adapted from Gregory DiPippo’s articleon NLM).
Our Morning Offering – 13 November – “The Month of the Holy Souls in Purgatory”
Lord, Help Me to Live This Day By St Frances of Assisi (c1181-1226)
Lord, help me to live this day, quietly, easily. To lean upon Thy great strength, trustfully, restfully. To wait for the unfolding of Thy will, patiently, serenely. To meet others, peacefully, joyously. To face tomorrow, confidently, courageously. Amen
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