Posted in MARIAN TITLES, MARTYRS, SAINT of the DAY

Notre-Dame d’Iron / Our Lady of Iron, Dunois, France (1631) and Memorials of the Saints – 6 July

Notre-Dame d’Iron / Our Lady of Iron, Dunois, France (1631) – 6 July:

Saint-Sulpice-le-Dunois is a small Village located near the centre of France. Once home to Our Lady of Iron, it is situated near the larger Town of Blois, its population was only 517 citizens in the year 2007, which was a decrease from the 636 citizens who had lived there in 1999. It was in the Chapel of this tiny Village of Saint-Sulpice-le-Dunois, in the year 1631, that our story takes place involving Our Lady of Iron.

There was a young French couple living in the village at that time, who felt themselves singularly blessed. Were they not fortunate? They took pleasure in their youth and enjoyed good health, had happy employment,lived in a modest home and they had recently been blessed with a fine baby whom they felt was as sweet as the Babe of Bethlehem. Thus they mused on their way home together after early morning Mass one day.
As soon as they entered their home, Pierre hurried to the cradle to gaze lovingly at his infant son. The child must have been restless, he thought, as there was evidence that he had struggled with the bedclothes which were tossed about and tangled strangely about the infant. Pierre reached in and lifted his son to hold him in his arms, only to find that the tiny figure was rigid and cold. Stunned, he called for his wife disbelieving, for it seemed their baby was dead!
Pierre’s thoughts turned to Our Blessed Mother and then to the Statue of Our Lady of Iron at the Parish Church. They had spent many hours there in the past praying for her assistance and her help had never failed them. They determined to take their baby there instantly! Surely, Mary would not fail them in this time of dire need.
Together they entered the Church, and sadly laid the lifeless form at the feet of the Statue of Our Lady of Iron. As they began to pray for her intercession, they dedicated their baby to the Blessed Virgin Mary. In that very instant, the child who had been smothered by struggling in its cradle, cried out and came back to life. News of the miracle spread far and wide and the fame of Our Lady of Iron was assured.

St Maria Goretti (1890-1902) Martyr (Optional Memorial) Virgin and Martyr, known as “Saint Agnes of the 20th Century.” St Maria Goretti was Canonised on 24 June 1950 by Pope Pius XII.
About St Maria here:

https://anastpaul.wordpress.com/2017/07/06/saint-of-the-day-6-july-st-maria-goretti/

Bl Angela of Bohemia
Bl Augustin-Joseph Desgardin
Bl Christopher Solino
St Cyril of Thessaloniki
St Dominica of Campania (c 287-303) Virgin Martyr
St Gervais
St Giusto of Condat
St Goar of Aquitaine
St Godelieve

Blessed Maria Theresa Ledóchowska SSPC (1863-1922) Religious Sister and Co-Founder of the Missionary Sisters of St Peter Claver (commonly known as the Claverian Sisters), dedicated to service in Africa, Missionary – she is called the “Mother of the African Missions.”
Her Life:

https://anastpaul.com/2020/07/06/saint-of-the-day-6-july-blessed-maria-theresa-ledochowska-sspc-1863-1922/

St Monenna

St Nazaria Ignacia March y Mesa (1889-1943) – Religious and Founder of the Missionaries of the Crusade (later renamed Congregation of the Missionary Crusaders of the Church).
Her story:

https://anastpaul.com/2018/07/06/saint-of-the-day-6-july-blessed-sr-nazaria-of-saint-teresa-of-jesus-nazaria-ignacia-march-y-mesa-1889-1943/

St Noyala of Brittany
St Petrus Wang Zuolung

St Romulus of Fiesole (Died c 90) Martyr, Bishop, Disciple of Saint Peter.
Biography:

https://anastpaul.com/2019/07/06/saint-of-the-day-6-july-saint-romulus-of-fiesole-died-c-90-martyr/

St Saxburgh of Ely
St Sisoes the Great
Bl Suzanne Agathe de Loye
St Thomas Alfield
St Tranquillinus of Rome

Martyrs of Campania – 23 saints: A group of 23 Christians arrested, tortured and then beheaded together in the later 3rd century by order of governor Rictiovarus in the persecutions of Diocletian. The names that have come down to us are – Antoninus, Arnosus, Capicus, Cutonius, Diodorus, Dion, Isidore, Lucia, Lucian, Rexius, Satyrus and Severinus.

Martyrs of Fiesole – 5 saints: Five Christians martyred together in the persecutions of emperor Domitian – Carissimus, Crescentius, Dulcissimus, Marchisianus and Romulus. c 90 near Fiesole, Italy.

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Posted in MARTYRS, ONE Minute REFLECTION, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on FAITH, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 6 July – ‘Faith … transforms all things…’ Bl Charles Eugène de Foucauld

One Minute Reflection – 6 July – Monday of the Fourteenth week in Ordinary Time, Year A, Readings: Hosea 2:14-1619-20 (16-18, 21-22), Psalm 145:2-9Matthew 9:18-26 and the Memorial of St Maria Goretti (1890-1902) Martyr and Blessed Maria Theresa Ledóchowska SSPC (1863-1922)

“Take heart, daughter, your faith has made you well.”…Matthew 9:22

REFLECTION – “Faith is that which makes us believe from the depths of our souls… all the truths that our religion teaches us, all that the Gospel holds and all that the Church sets before us.   The just man lives truly by this faith (Rom 1:17), for it replaces for him, the greater part of his natural senses.   It so transforms all things, that the senses are of little use to the soul, which through them is only deceived, whilst faith shews it realities.
Where the eye sees but a poor man, faith sees Jesus (Mt 25:40).   Where the ear hears curses and persecution, faith sings:  “Rejoice and be glad” (cf Mt 5:12).   The touch feels only blows and stonings but faith says: “Be glad you are deemed worthy to suffer for the name of Christ” (cf. Acts 5:41)…  The smell perceives only incense, faith tells us that the true incense is “the prayers of the saints” (Rv 8,4).
The senses lead us astray to created beauty, faith thinks of the eternal beauty and despises all created things, for they are as nothing and as dust beside that beauty.   The senses hold pain in horror, faith blesses it as a marriage crown that unites it to its Beloved, like a walk with her Bridegroom hand in divine hand.   The senses rebel against injuries but faith blesses them:  “Bless those that curse you” (Lk 6:28)… she finds them sweet, for in them she shares the lot of Jesus.   The senses are full of curiosity, faith is content to know nothing, she thirsts to bury herself and longs to pass her life motionless before the Tabernacle.”… Blessed Charles Eugène de Foucauld OCSO (1858-1916) Hermit and Missionary in the Sahara (Retreat at Nazareth 1897) To be Canonised as soon as possible after the return to normal routines, hopefully still this year, 2020. matthew-9-22-take-heart-daughter-your-faith-has-faith-is-bl-charles-de-foucauld-8-july-2019 and 6 july 2020

PRAYER – Almighty Lord and God, protect and strengthen us by Your power throughout this day, even as You have enabled us to begin it.   By Your grace, may the our faith be our guide and let our every thought, word and deed aim at doing Your will and what is pleasing in Your sight.   Grant that by the prayers of St Maria Goretti and Blessed Maria Theresa Ledóchowska, we may ever turn our eyes and hearts to our Lord Jesus Christ.   Through Him, Your divine Son, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, God now and forever, amen.st maria goretti pray for us 6 july 2020

bl maria theresa ledochowska pray for us 6 july 2020

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 6 July – Blessed Maria Theresa Ledóchowska SSPC (1863-1922)

Saint of the Day – 6 July – Blessed Maria Theresa Ledóchowska SSPC (1863-1922) Religious Sister and Co-Founder of the Missionary Sisters of St Peter Claver (commonly known as the Claverian Sisters), dedicated to service in Africa, Missionary – she is called the “Mother of the African missions.”   Born on 29 April 1863 in Loosdorf, Melk, Austria and died on 6 July 1922 in Rome, Italy of natural causes. Patronage – the Missionary Sisters of St Peter Claver.bl maria teresa lg header 1

Maria Theresa (presumably named after the Austrian Empress Maria Theresa, who joined the first partition of Poland in 1773) was the first of seven children of Antoni Ledóchowski 1823–1885 and his second wife Józefina (“Sefina”) née Salis-Zizers and was born on 29 April 1863, in Loosdorf, Austria, about 80 kilometres West of Vienna.   This was “the most beautiful day of her mother’s life.”   The story of her family and in particular, her remarkable Swiss-Austrian mother Sefina “Mother of Saints,” is told in a separate article on her parents, who put a lot of effort into educating and instilling in their children a strong sense of duty to God, the Catholic Church and their father’s country, Poland.bl maria teresa's birth home Ledochowskahaus-subtitle

When she was just five years old, Maria Theresa could already read and write.   Her mother saw her one day writing something furiously in her exercise book and on further investigation discovered this was a play, with family members in key roles.   She was soon writing poetry. By eight, she could play the piano quite well and was writing notes on visits to art galleries and the World Fair in Vienna.bl Maria-Teresa-Ignacy-child

In 1873, when Maria Theresa was 10, her father lost a major investment in an Austrian bank which failed.   He sold Loosdorf and the family moved a little closer to Vienna, to St Pölten, where the eldest girls could go to a “school run by English Ladies” or the Marienfried convent.   These were the Loreto Sisters or the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary, dedicated to education, founded by an Englishwoman, Mary Ward, in 1609.   Their education was very good.   At the age of 12 Maria Theresa was editing the school magazine.   She was a thoughtful, serious girl and she flourished, to the great pride of her parents.   (Saint Maria Teresa of Calcutta was educated by the same order.)

In early 1876 Maria Theresa accompanied her family to Vienna to meet her uncle (son of Maria Rozalia, and her father’s first cousin) Cardinal Mieczysław Ledóchowski.   The Cardinal was being greeted everywhere as a great hero for his defence of both the Catholic Church and Polish culture, against Bismarck’s Kulturkampf.   For this, he had been imprisoned for two years, expelled from the German partition and promoted to Cardinal.   He was now on his way back to Rome.  The Cardinal made such an impression on the 12 year old girl that she got permission from her father to learn Polish, wrote to the Cardinal in Polish two years later and continued corresponding with him thereafter.Cardinal Mieczyslaw-1886

In 1879 the 16 year old Maria Theresa accompanied her father on a trip to Poland, which she recorded in a diary entitled Mein Polen (My Poland) and published under the pen name Alexander Halka.   The warmth of their relatives convinced Antoni that they should consider moving to Poland.   In Wilno, however, Maria Theresa was infected with typhus and barely recovered.   The disease was killing quite a few children in Europe at the time.   The same year her 12 year old sister Maria also caught it and died from it.

Maria Theresa and her siblings strongly supported the family’s move, partly financed by the Cardinal as described in the article on her parents, to Lipnica Murowana, in the Austrian partition of Poland, in 1883, when she was 20.   She made use of this to improve her Polish but did not stay there long.

In early 1885, when Maria Theresa was not quite 22, she contracted smallpox.   Shortly afterwards, her father Antoni, was infected too and he died during an asthma attack on 24 February 1885.   The severity of the smallpox and the tragic death of her beloved father, on top of the typhus she had endured and which had killed her younger sister a few years earlier, were debilitating for Maria Theresa and left her underweight and disfigured.   Fr Laurita says she looked at herself in the mirror and bravely accepted her fate with even some humour – and so began her decision to do something big for God.  bl Maria_Teresia_Ledóchowska_4As part of her convalescence she went to the Gmunden health resort in Austria.

The eldest three children were now leaving home – the third eldest, the highly intelligent Wladimir, went to Kraków University to study law, changed to theology and entered the Tarnów seminary in October 1885 and the second eldest, Julia (the future Ursula – the future Saint Ursula Ledóchowska (1865-1939) https://anastpaul.com/2017/05/29/saint-of-the-day-29-may-st-ursula-ledochowska-mother-maria-ursula-of-jesus/ ), had decided to become a nun and entered the Ursuline Convent at Starowiślna in Kraków in 1886.

At the Gmunden health resort the eldest, Maria Theresa, had met Princess Alice, Archduchess of Tuscany and she now moved to Salzburg where on 1 December 1885 she became Lady-in-Waiting to the Princess.  bl maria teesa at ruscan court young womanAt the Princess’ Court, Maria Theresa planned to develop her skills and love for music, painting and literature.   But several events then changed Maria Teresa’s life:-

● Two Franciscan Missionaries of Mary, an order founded in British India in 1877, visited the Court with stories of how they strive to alleviate hunger, poverty and disease.

● She heard about the visit of Cardinal Lavigerie to London, who urged the “Christian ladies of Europe” to use their talents to support the fight against slavery in Africa.

● She wrote a play, Zaida, about an African slave girl.

● Her uncle Cardinal Mieczysław Ledóchowski strongly encouraged her.

● She established contact with many missionaries in the poor world.

● She started writing articles entitled “Echo from Africa” in a German newspaper in which St Angela-Blatt, called for support for the Missionaries.

● In November 1889 she started publishing a separate monthly paper Echo from Africa dedicated to supporting the work of Missionaries and especially the fight against slavery.bl maria_teresa header

1894:   The Sodality of St Peter Claver
In 1891 Maria Theresa left the Court.   A violent physical attack increased her determination to pursue her mission.   At the age of 31, in 1894, with her uncle’s support, she secured the approval of PopeLeo XIII for the establishment of the St Petrus Claver-Sodalität, or Sodality of St Peter Claver for African Missions.   St Peter is known as the “Apostle to the Slaves.”   Tellingly, she named it after the Jesuit who tried to alleviate the suffering of African slaves transported to South America in the early seventeenth century, is estimated to have personally baptised around 300,000 people, and became the patron saint of slaves and seafarers.

Shortly after founding the Sodality, Maria Theresa was joined by her first recruit, Melania von Ernst, a subscriber to Echo from Africa.   In 1895 the two were joined by Maria Jandl.   More young women were inspired to join.   In 1896 they were established in a country house they called Maria Sorg in Austria, which included a Chapel commemorating the defeat of the Turks at Vienna in 1683.   Their publications included Echo from Africa, The Small African Library later called African Youth, Propaganda for the Missions later called Africa for Christ, the St Peter Claver Calendar and the Children’s Calendar, all raising funds and support for the missions.

On 8 September 1897 (the Feast of the Nativity of Mary, but also the anniversary of St Peter Claver’s death) she and her first companions professed their permanent religious vows as Missionary Sisters of St Peter Claver.   They adopted the Jesuit Constitutions for their own use, to combine the elements of contemplation with an active life of service.bl maria teresa ledochowska sml

The Sodality then grew to what it is today – the Claverian Sisters, or the Congregation of the Missionary Sisters of St Peter Claver, dedicated to Missionary work, serving the Church, the needy and disadvantaged. They have communities in 23 countries, including Austria, Poland, the UK, Africa and the Americas and are active in 78 countries.   Their website has a map of their global presence.

Maria Theresa and her sister Ursula together recorded their memories of their mother Józefina née Salis-Zizers and this was published by the Sodality in 1935, an extremely rare, if not unique, example of daughters publishing a book in honour of their mother.

She died of tuberculosis at the relatively young age of 59 on 6 July 1922.   She was buried in a cemetery near St Peter’s and was moved to the General Motherhouse of the Congregation of Claverian Sisters on Via dell’Olmata 16, Rome, in 1935.bl maria teresa's Grave-subtitle

Two events in Italy in the 1930s were recognised as miracles.   Guiditta De Rivo, from Velletri, was knocked over by a fast motorcycle and her three month old child died on the spot.   She could not move afterwards due to several wounds and a broken pelvis.   She dedicated herself to the care of Mother Maria Theresa Ledóchowska and shortly afterwards got up from her bed, asked for her clothes and left the hospital.

Vincenza Mazzeotti, from Flavetto di Rovito, suffered from severe inflammation of the left knee.   On 4 July 1936 the doctor decided an operation was necessary.    On 5th July she received a copy of Echo from Africa and started praying for the intervention of Maria Theresa. On 6 July, Maria Theresa’s day, when Vincenza was due to be operated on in hospital, she got up.   Her leg was already cured.

The cause for her Beatification was opened about 1930.   As part of the process, her remains were exhumed and transferred to the Chapel of the General Motherhouse in 1934.   Pope Paul VI Beatified her on 19 October 1975.   Her feast day is celebrated on 6 July.  Beatification-bl maria theresa

Posted in MARTYRS, SAINT of the DAY

Memorials of the Saints – 6 July

St Maria Goretti (1890-1902) Martyr (Optional Memorial)
About St Maria here:
https://anastpaul.wordpress.com/2017/07/06/saint-of-the-day-6-july-st-maria-goretti/

Bl Angela of Bohemia
Bl Augustin-Joseph Desgardin
Bl Christopher Solino
St Cyril of Thessaloniki
St Dominica of Campania
St Gervais
St Giusto of Condat
St Goar of Aquitaine
St Godelieve
Blessed Maria Theresa Ledóchowska SSPC (1863-1922)
St Monenna
St Nazaria Ignacia March y Mesa (1889-1943) –Canonised on 14 October 2018, together with Blessed Pope Paul VI and Blessed Oscar Romero and others on 14 October 2018.
Her story:
https://anastpaul.com/2018/07/06/saint-of-the-day-6-july-blessed-sr-nazaria-of-saint-teresa-of-jesus-nazaria-ignacia-march-y-mesa-1889-1943/

St Noyala of Brittany
St Petrus Wang Zuolung
St Romulus of Fiesole (Died c 90) Martyr
Biography:
https://anastpaul.com/2019/07/06/saint-of-the-day-6-july-saint-romulus-of-fiesole-died-c-90-martyr/
St Saxburgh of Ely
St Sisoes the Great
Bl Suzanne Agathe de Loye
St Thomas Alfield
St Tranquillinus of Rome

Martyrs of Campania – 23 saints: A group of 23 Christians arrested, tortured and then beheaded together in the later 3rd century by order of governor Rictiovarus in the persecutions of Diocletian. The names that have come down to us are – Antoninus, Arnosus, Capicus, Cutonius, Diodorus, Dion, Isidore, Lucia, Lucian, Rexius, Satyrus and Severinus.

Martyrs of Fiesole – 5 saints: Five Christians martyred together in the persecutions of emperor Domitian – Carissimus, Crescentius, Dulcissimus, Marchisianus and Romulus. c 90 near Fiesole, Italy.