SAINT OF THE DAY!

Discussion in 'The Saints' started by Prayslie, Jul 24, 2025.

  1. Prayslie

    Prayslie Archangels

    SAINT OF THE DAY
    SATURDAY, 9 MAY, 2026

    SAINT PACHOMIUS

    St. Pachomius can justifiably be called the founder of cenobitic monasticism (monks who live in community). Even though St. Antony the Great was the first to go into the desert to live a life of seclusion pursuing evangelical perfection, he lived an eremitic life, that is, a primarily solitary life.

    Pachomius first started out as a hermit in the desert like many of the other men and women in the third and fourth centuries who sought the most radical expression of Christian life and he developed a very strong bond of friendship with the hermit Palemon. One day he had a vision during prayer in which he was called to build a monastery, and was told in the vision that many people who are eager to live an ascetic life in the desert, but are not inclined to the solitude of the hermit, will come and join him. His hermit friend Palemon helped him to build the monastery and Pachomius insisted that his cenobites were to aspire to the austerity of the hermits.

    However, he knew that his idea was a radical one, in that most of the men who came to live in his monastery had only ever conceived of the eremitic lifestyle; his great accomplishment was to reconcile this desire for austere perfection with an openness to fulfilling the mundane requirements of community life as an expression of Christian love and service. He spent most of his first years as a cenobitic doing all the menial work on his own, knowing that his brother monks needed to be gently inducted into serving their brothers in the same manner. He therefore allowed them to devote all their time to spiritual exercises in those first years. At his death, there were eleven Pachomian monasteries, nine for men and two for women.

    The rule that Pachomius drew up was said to have been dictated to him by an angel, and it is this rule that both St. Benedict in the west and St. Basil in the east drew upon to develop their better known rules of cenobitic life.

    St. Pachomius: Pray for us!
     
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  2. padraig

    padraig Powers

    I was watching a video of a young Capuchin Friar and he said something that was so wise and humble that it drew my attention. He said that he was in religious community not because he was strong but because he was weak . That is what community is all about , leaning on each other. I envy religious communities this.
     
  3. peregrin

    peregrin Principalities

    A Blessed for today

    Blessed Carmen Elena Rendiles Martinez (11 August 1903 - 9 May 1977)
    May 9 is the feast day of Blessed Carmen Elena Rendiles Martinez, observed on the anniversary of her death in Caracas in 1977.
    Born in Caracas into a devout family, Carmen entered life without her left arm, a physical circumstance she never treated as an obstacle. She joined the French congregation of the Servants of Jesus of the Blessed Sacrament in 1927, and in 1961, with the support of the local hierarchy, founded the autonomous Congregation of the Servants of Jesus of Venezuela, devoted to parish service, education, and care for the poor. She served as its Superior General until her death. She is honoured as a patron of those who live with physical disability and of those who serve the marginalised poor.
    ◾The miracle for her beatification concerned Dr. Trinette Duran de Branger, a surgeon in Caracas. In May 2003, while performing an operation at the Hospital Miguel Perez Carreno, an unprotected electrical cable broke free from the surgical table and struck her arm, causing a severe electric shock that burned her glove and left three fingers of her hand paralysed and in constant pain. After consulting more than twenty specialists without result, she was recommended surgery. On 18 July 2003, the day scheduled for the operation, she went first to pray at the chapel of Colegio Belen where Mother Carmen's remains rest. She experienced an intense sensation of light passing through her arm and briefly lost consciousness; on recovering she found her arm entirely restored, discarded the splint at once, and did not undergo the surgery. The healing was confirmed complete and lasting by her treating physicians. The Consulta Medica found it scientifically inexplicable. Pope Francis approved the miracle on 19 December 2017 and Carmen Rendiles was beatified on 16 June 2018 at the University Stadium of Caracas, presided over by Cardinal Angelo Amato as papal legate.

    Blessed Carmen, who served God and the poor with one arm and a whole heart, pray for all who carry their limitations with courage and faith.
     
  4. peregrin

    peregrin Principalities

    ..... and now you have only us.
     
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  5. padraig

    padraig Powers

    :):)
     
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  6. Prayslie

    Prayslie Archangels

    SAINTS OF THE DAY
    SUNDAY, 10 MAY, 2026

    1) SAINT DAMIEN OF MOLOKAI
    2) SAINT JOHN OF AVILA

    1) SAINT DAMIEN OF MOLOKAI
    PRIEST
    (3 January 1840 - 15 April 1889)

    Joseph De Veuster, the future Father Damien, was born at Tremelo in Belgium. His was a large family and his father was a farmer-merchant. When his oldest brother entered the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts (called 'Picpus' after the street in Paris where its Generalate was located), his father planned that Joseph should take charge of the family business. Joseph, however, decided to become a religious. At the beginning of 1859 he entered the novitiate at Louvain, in the same house as his brother. There he took the name of Damien.

    In 1863, his brother who was to leave for the mission in the Hawaiian Islands, became ill. Since preparations for the voyage had already been made, Damien obtained permission from the Superior General to take his brother's place. He arrived in Honolulu on March 19th, 1864, where he was ordained to the priesthood the following May 21st. He immediately devoted himself, body and soul, to the difficult service of a "country missionary" on the island of Hawaii, the largest in the Hawaiian group.

    At that time, the Hawaiian Government decided on a very harsh measure aimed at stopping the spread of "leprosy," the deportation to the neighboring island of Molokai, of all those infected by what was thought to be an incurable disease. The entire mission was concerned about the abandoned "lepers" and the Bishop, Louis Maigret ss.cc., spoke to the priests about the problem. He did not want to send anyone "in the name of obedience," because he knew that such an order meant certain death. Four Brothers volunteered, they would take turns visiting and assisting the "lepers" in their distress. Damien was the first to leave on May 10th, 1873. At his own request and that of the lepers, he remained definitively on Molokai.

    He brought hope to this hell of despair. He became a source of consolation and encouragement for the lepers, their pastor, the doctor of their souls and of their bodies, without any distinction of race or religion. He gave a voice to the voiceless, he built a community where the joy of being together and openness to the love of God gave people new reasons for living.

    After Father Damien contracted the disease in 1885, he was able to identify completely with them: "We lepers." Father Damien was, above all, a witness of the love of God for His people. He got his strength from the Eucharist: "lt is at the foot of the altar that we find the strength we need in our isolation..." It is there that he found for himself and for others the support and the encouragement, the consolation and the hope, he could, with a deep faith, communicate to the lepers. All that made him "the happiest missionary in the world," a servant of God, and a servant of humanity.

    Having contracted "leprosy" himself, Fr. Damien died on April 15th, 1889, having served sixteen years among the lepers. His mortal remains were transferred in 1936 to Belgium where he was interred in the crypt of the church of the Congregation of Sacred Hearts at Louvain. His fame spread to the entire world. In 1938 the process for his beatification was introduced at Malines (Belgium): Pope Paul VI signed the Decree on the "heroicity of his virtues" on July 7th 1977. He was canonized on October 11th, 2009.

    In Father Damien, the Church proposes an example to all those who find sense for their life in the Gospel and who wish to bring the Good News to the poor of our time.

    PATRON: Lepers.

    PRAYER: Father of mercy, who gave us in Saint Damien a shining witness of love for the poorest and most abandoned, grant that, by his intercession, as faithful witnesses of the heart of your Son Jesus, we too may be servants of the most needy and rejected. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.


    2) SAINT JOHN OF AVILA
    PRIEST AND DOCTOR
    (c. 1499 – May 10, 1569)

    John of Avila was born on the feast of the Epiphany in 1499 in Extremadura in the ecclesiastical province of Toledo, the only child of his parents. He spent four years at the University of Salamanca studying law (1513-1517), and then returned to his parents' home where he lived in seclusion for several years. On the advice of a Franciscan priest, the young man left his solitude and matriculated at the University of Alcala, an important center for humanistic studies in Spain, where he studied from 1520-1526.

    After ordination to the priesthood in 1526, Fr. John went to Seville to prepare for departure as a missionary to the new world. While waiting to set sail, the newly ordained priest engaged in catechesis and preaching, so impressing the priest with whom he lived and worked, Fr. Fernando Contreras, that he urged the Archbishop of Seville to keep Fr. John in Spain, where an enormous mission field had opened up with the end of Muslim domination. Thus, Fr. John Avila began the missionary work in Southern Spain that would earn him the title, "Apostle of Andalusia."

    During this early period of his priestly ministry, Fr. John lived in a loosely structured fraternity with Fr. Contreras and some other priests engaged in preaching, evangelizing, and catechizing. As Fr. John continued to work in Seville and its surrounding areas, other priests, desiring a similar mode of ministry, became his disciples and lived a simple fraternal life under his direction. By the time sickness forced his retirement, there were about one hundred priests who regarded Master Fr. John as their director, many of who helped in founding and staffing the schools that Fr. John established.

    In 1531, Fr. John was denounced to the Inquisition and spent a year in prison (1532-33), a time during which he claimed to have learned more than in all his other studies. In prison, he began his major work, Audi, filia, a guide to the spiritual life, written for a young woman who was living a consecrated life under his direction. He also continued his study of the letters of St. Paul, becoming so immersed in them that later, a religious priest who heard him preaching said: "I have heard St. Paul interpreting St. Paul." In July of 1533, the Inquisition absolved Fr. John of all charges against his orthodoxy and he resumed his priestly ministry. He was incardinated in the diocese of Cordoba in 1535 and preached there and in Granada during the next several years, making many converts, including St. John of God and St. Francis Borgia. It is thought that in Granada, around 1538, Fr. John received the title of "Master in Sacred Theology." It became the custom to call him "the Master," a title with an academic connotation, but used in a more general sense for Fr. John, to capture the central aspect of his priestly vocation as a preacher, teacher, and director of souls.

    Fr. John's outstanding work during the middle years of his ministry was the establishment of schools at every level: schools of doctrine for children and adults; colleges-the equivalent of our high schools-and universities, the most notable of which was that of Baeza. His disciples played an important part in this enterprise since they taught in these schools. When the time came for Fr. John to give up this phase of his life's work, he desired that the Jesuits would take it over, especially the University of Baeza. His desire did not come to fruition as he wished, but about thirty of Fr. John's disciples did go, with the Master's encouragement, to the Society of Jesus.Beginning in 1551, Fr. John was increasingly burdened by ill health, and, within a few years, was forced to give up his missionary endeavors. For a brief period, there was discussion with the Jesuits, including St. Ignatius of Loyola, of his possible entry into the Society. However, Fr. John's failing health prevented this move, and he spent the last years of his life in semi-retirement in Montilla in the diocese of Cordoba. He continued to engage in ministry as his health permitted and wrote a vast number of letters to people in various states of life.

    He converted, or led to deeper conversion, St. John of God, founder of the Hospitaller Order, and St. Francis Borgia, a future Master General of the Jesuits. He was a friend of St. Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Jesuits, and advised Saint Teresa of Ávila, foundress of the Discalced Carmelites. He was called a “Master,” and was a spiritual guide for such saints as Peter of Alcantara and John of Ribera. The saints John of God and Francis Borgia owed their conversion to him and turned to him constantly for spiritual direction. St. Francis de Sales and the Curé of Ars, St. John Vianney, said they benefited from his writings. It is likely also that the 20th-century Spaniard, St. Josemaria Escrivá, drank from his spiritual fountain.

    Despite these, and many other, personal connections to famous religious orders and their founders, St. John always remained a diocesan priest, not a religious order priest, something unusual for a priest of his era with such wide influence.

    John of Avila died on May 10, 1569, and, in accord with his wishes, was buried in the Jesuit Church in Montilla. Beatified on September 15, 1894, he was declared patron of diocesan priests in Spain on July 2, 1946, and was canonized on May 31, 1970 by Pope Paul VI.

    PATRON: Diocesan priests, Andalusia Spain and Spanish clergy.

    PRAYER: Saint John of Ávila, your refined education, broad mind, and ardent love of God and Mary showed itself in all you did and said. May our lives likewise reflect our deepest Christian beliefs, inspiring our friends and families to live saintly perfection. Amen.
     
  7. padraig

    padraig Powers

    There is a really lovely film on the life of St Damian on utube. I would say he was the Mother Teresa of his day in that he caused the whole world to pause and stop with their mouths open. Goodness walking.

    At the time Belgium and Holland were amongst the greatest Catholic Missionaries in the World.

    Now the Faith in both countries has collapsed. It is good to ask the simple question: Why?

    https://fsspx.news/en/news/belgium-church-statistics-2022-are-concerning-40779


     
    Last edited: May 10, 2026 at 7:39 AM
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  8. Prayslie

    Prayslie Archangels

    SAINT OF THE DAY
    MONDAY, 11 MAY, 2026

    SAINT FRANCIS OF GIROLAMO (FRANCIS DE GERONIMO)
    (1642-1716 A.D.)

    Francis di Girolamo was born on the 17th of December, 1642. His parents, John Leonard di Girolamo and Gentilesca Gravina, were distinguished less by the honorable status which they occupied in society, than by their virtues and the excellent education they gave to their children—eleven in number, of whom Francis was the eldest.

    Showing early signs of intense piety and intellectual ability, he was received into a community of secular priests who initiated his education. He received the tonsure at sixteen and was ordained with special permission before the age of twenty-four.

    He taught at a Jesuit college for several years, and at twenty-eight was received into the Society of Jesus, having overcome his father's strong opposition to his decision by his own meekness and charity. His novitiate complete, Francis was sent to Leece to assist a renowned preacher, Father Agnello Bruno.

    For the next three years the two ardent priests traversed the length and breadth of the province of Otranto. At the close of the mission Francis completed his theological studies and was professed. The next field of his apostolic labors was to preach at the Church of Gesu Nuovo in Naples, and from the onset, attracted huge crowds.

    His preaching produced such excellent results that he was appointed to train other missionaries. Preaching was his dominant talent. Wherever he went, people were spellbound by his eloquence and crowded his confessional. He preached in one church after another, at times impromptu in the street, he visited hospitals, prisons and galleys. Once he brought to the Faith twenty Turkish prisoners in a Spanish galley.

    The holy Jesuit's preaching was enhanced by his reputation as a wonder-worker, though he continuously disclaimed any extraordinary powers, and rather attributed the numerous cures which accompanied his ministry to the intercession of St. Cyrus to whom he had a special devotion.

    After suffering from a painful illness, St. Francis of Girolamo died at age seventy-four. He was canonized in 1839.

    St. Francis of Girolamo: Pray for us!
     
  9. padraig

    padraig Powers

    It is astonishing the number of Jesuit saints there are. I wonder what they think , looking down from heaven, about the abominable state of their poor order today?

    https://www.jesuits.global/2025/11/04/jesuit-saints-for-today/


    Jesuit saints for today
    On November 5, the Society of Jesus celebrates the feast of all its saints, and on November 6, its deceased members. Other religious institutes do the same during these days, close to 1 and 2 November, when the Church commemorates them. It is usually within these dates (1 and 2 November) that we can group together all the saints recognized by the Church throughout the year.

    Currently, there are 53 saints (34 of them martyrs) and 158 blessed ones (149 of them martyrs) among the Jesuits. In addition, there are 15 venerable servants of God on the path to sainthood. The journey to “official” sainthood is usually slow, mostly because the Church wants to be sure of them.


    Even in modern times when their Order has sunk so low we see modern Jesuit saints still amongst us.

     
  10. peregrin

    peregrin Principalities

    ....... and his miracles
    Numerous miracles were attributed to his intercession both during his life and after his death, and these were juridically examined over the decades following his death through the classical canonical procedure. The cause accumulated the required evidence and Gregory XVI canonized him on 26 May 1839. Pius VII had beatified him in 1806. The canonization predates the Consulta Medica by more than a century; the miracles were authenticated through the pre-modern formal process, and their clinical particulars are held in the historical cause documents in Rome rather than in accessible public sources.
     

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