Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, St PAUL!, St PETER!, The HEART

Quote of the Day – 30 June – ‘ … The heart of the world …’

Quote of the Day – 30 June – The Commemoration of St Paul, Apostle and Martyr

And now, who will grant me
to prostrate myself
at Paul’s sepulchre, to contemplate
the ashes of that body which, suffering for us,
filled up what was wanting
of the sufferings of Christ?
The dust of that mouth,
which spoke boldly before kings
and, showing what Paul was,
revealed the Lord of Paul?
The dust of that heart,
truly the heart of the world,
more lofty than the heavens,
more vast than the universe,
as much the heart of Christ, as of Paul
and wherein might be read,
the book of grace, graven by the Holy Spirit?
Oh! that I might see the remains of the hands,
which wrote those Epistles;
of the eyes, which were struck with blindness
and recovered their sight for our salvation;
of the feet which traversed the whole earth!
Yes. I would fain contemplate the tomb
where repose these instruments
of justice and of light,
these members of Christ,
this temple of the Holy Ghost.
O venerable body, which, together with that of Peter,
protects Rome more securely, than all ramparts!

St John Chrysostom (347-407)
Father and Doctor

(Chrys. in Epist ad Rom. Serrmon xxxii)

Posted in St PAUL!

Saint of the Day – 30 June – The Commemoration of St Paul. Apostle and Martyr.

Saint of the Day – 30 June – The Commemoration of St Paul. Apostle and Martyr.

The joint commemoration of the Apostles, Peter and Paul, is one of the most ancient customs of the Roman Church, attested already in the oldest surviving Roman Liturgical Calendar, the Depositio Martyrum, written in 336. A verse of the Hymn, Apostolorum Passio, an authentic work of St Ambrose († 397) and still used in the Ambrosian liturgy, says that “the thick crowds make their way through the circuit of so great a city; the feast of the sacred Martyrs is celebrated on three streets.” These “three streets” are the via Cornelia, the main street running up to and over the Vatican hill; the via Ostiensis, where the burial and Church of St Paul are and the via Appia, on which resides the Cemetery “in Catacumbas.

This last is the ancient Christian Cemetery now called the Catacomb of St Sebastian, The word “catacomb” was in fact originally the name of the site of this ‘Cemetery’ specifically and only later came to be used as a generic term for ancient subterranean Christian burial grounds. The Basilica over the Cemetery, now also entitled to St Sebastian, was originally known as the “Basilica Apostolorum” in memory of a tradition that the bones of Peter and Paul were kept there for a time, probably to save them from destruction in the era of persecutions. This is referred to in various ancient sources, including the Depositio Martyrum and confirmed by modern archeological research. The celebration of the feast “on three streets” would refer then to a procession to visit the site of St Peter’s burial at the Vatican that of St Paul, on the via Ostiensis and the Cemetery where their remains were once kept.

The building of which this wall is a part was constructed over the Catacomb of St Sebastian about 250 and is covered with dozens of devotional graffiti like the one seen here. “Paule ed (et) Petre, petite pro Victore – Paul and Peter, pray (lit. ‘ask’) for Victor.” 

The poet Prudentius, writing in the very early 5h Century, calls the day “bifestum – a double Feast” and attests that on that day, the Pope would say a Mass at the Basilica of St Peter and then hasten to say another at St Paul’s. …

It should not be surprising, then, that at a certain point, the double Feast was divided and kept in a more manageable way as two separate Feasts. In the Gelasian Sacramentary, we find three Masses of Sts Peter and Paul assigned to 29 June – the oldest copy of the Gelasianum dates to roughly 750 but much of the material is considerably older, some of it reaching even to the days of St Leo the Great 300 years earlier. In some manuscripts, however, one of the three, “the proper Mass of St Paul” has already been assigned to 30 June. In the Gregorian Sacramentary, written roughly a Century later, we find the Feast of St Peter on 29 June and that of St Paul on the 30th – each Mass containing references to the other Apostle but they are, nevertheless, clearly distinct. Thus, by the time of Charlemagne, the “bifestum” of Prudentius had already been separated into a two day Feast.

At the traditional Mass of 29 June, the majority of the texts refer either to St Peter alone (Introit, Epistle, Alleluia, Gospel, Communion) or to Apostles generically, as in the Gradual “Thou shalt make them princes over all the earth.” The sole reference to St Paul is in the Collect, “O God, who hast consecrated this day by the martyrdom of Thy Apostles Peter and Paul, grant Thy Church to follow in all things the teaching of those through whom she first received the faith.” The Office is likewise dedicated almost entirely to St Peter.

The following day, therefore, the whole of the Liturgy is dedicated to St Paul and is not called a day within the Octave of the Apostles but rather “the Commemoration of St Paul.” The variable texts of the Mass all refer to him but a commemoration of St Peter is added to the Feast, in accordance with the tradition that the two, are never entirely separated, in the veneration paid them, by the Church. (The same is done on the Feast of St Paul’s Conversion and commemorations of Paul, are added to the Feasts of St Peter’s Chairs and Chains.) The Office is likewise dedicated entirely to St Paul; both the Mass and Office, however, make use of St Paul’s own testimony in Galatians, to the mission of the two Apostles: “For He who worked in Peter for the apostleship of the circumcision, worked in me too, among the gentiles and they knew the grace of God that was given to me.

he Apostles Paul and Barnabas at Lystra (Acts 14, 5-18), by Jacob Jordaens, 1645

In the 1130s, a Canon of St Peter’s Basilica named Benedict, writes that it was still the custom in his time, for the Pope to keep the Feast of St Peter at the Vatican but then celebrate Vespers at the Tomb of St Paul in the great Basilica on the Ostian Way, “with all the choirs” of the City! Amen. (Liturgical Notes on the Commemoration of St Paul – GREGORY DIPIPPO).

The Preaching of St Paul at Ephesus – Eustache Le Sueur, 1649
Posted in MARIAN TITLES, SAINT of the DAY, St PAUL!

Commemoration of St Paul. Apostle and Martyr, Notre-Dame-de-Bon-Secours / Our Lady of Good Help, Canada (1672) and Memorials of the Saints – 30 June

Commemoration of St Paul, Apostle and Martyr

Notre-Dame-de-Bon-Secours / Our Lady of Good Help, Montréal, Québec, Canada (1672) – 30 June:
HERE:

https://anastpaul.com/2021/06/30/commemoration-of-st-paul-apostle-and-martyr-notre-dame-de-bon-secours-our-lady-of-good-help-montreal-quebec-canada-1672-and-memorials-of-the-saints-30-june/

First Holy Martyrs of the Church of Rome (Optional Memorial) Christians Martyred in the City of Rome during Nero’s persecution in 64.
About:

https://anastpaul.com/2017/06/30/saints-of-the-day-30-june-the-first-martyrs-of-the-church-of-rome/

St Adolphus of Osnabrück
St Alpinian of Limoges
St Alrick the Hermit
Bl Ambrose de Feis
Bl Anthony de Tremoulières
Bl Arnulf of Villers
St Austriclinian of Limoges
St Basilides of Alexandria
St Bertrand of Le Mans
St Clotsindis of Marchiennes

St Donatus of Münstereifel (c 140-c 180) Confessor, Roman Soldier and Martyr, Miracle-worker.
His Life and Death:

https://anastpaul.com/2021/06/30/saint-of-the-day-30-june-st-donatus-of-munstereifel-c-140-c-180-martyr/

Bl Elisabeth Heimburg
St Emiliana of Rome
St Erentrude
St Eurgain
St Gaius
Bl Jacob Clou
St Leo the Deacon
St Lucina of Rome
St Lucina of the Callistus Catacombs
St Marcian of Pampeluna
St Martial of Limoges
St Ostianus
St Otto of Bamberg
St Peter of Asti
St Petrus Li Quanhui

Blessed Philip Powell OSB (1594 – 1646) Priest and Martyr, Benedictine Monk.
His Life and Death:

https://anastpaul.com/2020/06/30/saint-of-the-day-30-june-blessed-philip-powell-osb-1594-1646-priest-martyr-benedictine-monk/

St Raimundus Li Quanzhen

Blessed Raymond Lull TOSF (c 1232 – c 1315) Martyr – known as “Doctor Illuminatus,” Raymond was a Philosopher, Logician, Writer, Poet, Pioneer in computation theory, Franciscan tertiary. Within the Franciscan Order he is honoured as a Martyr. He was Beatified on
25 February 1750 by Pope Benedict XIV (cultus confirmed) and reaffirmed in 1847 by Pope Pius IX.
His Life:

https://anastpaul.com/2018/06/30/saint-of-the-day-30-june-blessed-raymond-lull-t-o-s-f-c-1232-c1315-martyr/

St Vihn Son Ðo Yen

Martyrs of Africa – 7 Saints: Seven Christians Martyred together. No detail about them have surived but the names – Cursicus, Gelatus, Italica, Leo, Timotheus, Zoilus, and Zoticus. Date and precise location in Africa unknown.