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24 December 2020

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் டிசம்பர் 25

 Christmas


Also known as

• Feast of the Nativity

• Nativity of the Lord


Derivation

Cristes Maesse, Christ's Mass (Old English)


About the Feast

Celebration of the anniversary of the birth of Our Lord. In the earliest days of the Church there was no such feast; the Saviour's birth was commemorated with the Epiphany by the Greek and other Eastern Churches. First mention of the feast, then kept on 20 May, was made by Clement of Alexandria c.200. The Latin Church began c.300 to observe it on 25 December, though there is no certainty that Our Lord was born on that day. Priests have the privilege of saying three Masses, at midnight, daybreak, and morning. This was originally reserved to the pope alone; beginning about the 4th century he celebrated a midnight Mass in the Lateran Basilica (in which according to tradition, the manger of Bethlehem is preserved), a second in the church of Saint Anastasia, whose feast comes on 25 December, and a third at the Vatican Basilica. Many peculiar customs of the day are the outcome of the pagan celebrations of the January calends. The Christmas tree, of which the first known mention was made in 1605 at Strasbourg, was introduced into France and England in 1840. The feast is a holy day of obligation, preceded by the preparatory season of Advent and by a special vigil; should it fall on a Friday it abrogates the law of abstinence.






Blessed Jacopone da Todi



Also known as

• Crazy Jim

• Iacopone da Todi

• Jacomo da Todi

• Jacopo Benedetti

• Jacopo Benedicti

• Jacopone Benedetti da Todi

• Jacopone of Todi

• James da Todi


Profile

Italian noble from the Benedetti family of Todi. Successful lawyer at Bologna, Italy. Married to Vanna di Guidone in 1267; she considered Jacomo too worldly, and did penance for him. In 1268, Jacomo insisted she attend a public tournament against her wishes; the stands in which she sat collapsed, and Vanna was killed. The shock of this event, and his discovery of her penance for him, caused a radical change in Jacomo. He gave his possessions to the poor, dressed in rags, and became a Franciscan tertiary. His former associates called him Jacopone - Crazy Jim; he embraced the name.


After ten years of this penance and abuse, Jacomo tried to join the Franciscans; his reputation as Crazy Jim preceeded him, and he was refused. To prove his sanity and intentions, he wrote a beautiful poem about the vanities of the world; it swayed the Franciscans, and he joined the Order in 1278. He refused to be ordained, and spent time writing popular hymns in the vernacular.


Jacopone suddenly found himself a leader in a disturbing religious movement among the Franciscans. The Spirituals, as they were called, wanted a return to the strict poverty of Francis. They had the support of two cardinals and Pope Celestine V. The two cardinals, however, opposed Celestine's successor, Boniface VIII, and due to the wrangling in the Vatican, Jacopone was excommunicated and imprisoned at age 68. Jacopone acknowledged his error, but was not released until Blessed Benedict XI became pope five years later. Jacopone accepted his imprisonment as penance. He spent his last three years giving himself to completely to spirituality, weeping "because Love is not loved," and writing, including the famous Latin hymn, Stabat Mater.


Born

c.1230 at Todi, Italy as Jacopo Benedetti


Died

• 25 December 1306 at Collazzone, Italy of natural causes as a priest intoned the Gloria from midnight Mass

• relics at San Fortunato Church, Montecristo, Italy


Representation

• Franciscan tertiary kneeling before a vision of the Virgin surrounded by angels

• barefoot Franciscan holding a book




Blessed Maria Therese von Wüllenweber



Also known as

• Maria of the Apostles

• Mary of the Apostles


Profile

Born to the German nobility, the eldest of five daughters of Baron Theodor von Wüllenweber. Always deeply religious, as a girl Maria-Therese felt drawn to religious life, and wanted to become a missionary. Educated by tutors and the Benedictines of Liege, Belgium. At age 24 she entered the convent of the Sacred Heart, Blumenthal, Germany. Held positions of authority in convents in Warendort, Germany and Orleans, France. Coming to understand that her vocation was not as a teacher, she left religious life in March 1863, and returned home to her family. She developed a devotion to the Sacred Heart, and was briefly involved with the Sisters of the Visitation, but it wasn't until 1868 that she became a member of the Congregation of Perpetual Adoration in Brussels, Belgium and began working with the poor. She began leading such work in Germany, but it was duing the anti-Catholic kulturkampf era, and in 1870 she returned to her family home. Co-founded the Sisters of the Divine Savior (Salvatorian Sisters) on 8 December 1888, and served as their first superior. The Sisters continue their good work today in 27 countries.


Born

19 February 1833 in Myllendonk Castle, Mönchengladbach, Düsseldorf, Germany


Died

• 25 December 1907 in Rome, Italy of natural causes

• relics enshrined in the General House of the Suore Salvatoriane, Via Mura Gianicolensi, Rome


Beatified

13 October 1968 by Pope Paul VI




Saint Peter Nolasco



Also known as

Pedro


Additional Memorial

6 May (Mercedarians)


Profile

Born to the French nobility. Grew up a pious youth. His father died when Peter was fifteen, and he inherited a substantial fortune. When he came of age, he gave away his possessions and moved to Barcelona, Spain to avoid the Albigensian heretics. He later took part in the Crusades against the Albigensians in southern France. Tutor to King James I of Aragon. Settled in Barcelona. Friend of Saint Raymond Penyafort. He used his large inheritance to ransom Christians held prisoner by the Moors. Founded the Order of Our Lady of Mercy (Mercedarians) beginning in 1218, an order devoted to ransoming Christians; the Order received papal approval in 1230. Peter twice served as a captive in Africa, winning the release of over 400 captives. In 1249, Peter retired from the Order to spend his remaining days in quiet prayer.


Born

1182 at Mas-des-Saintes-Puelles, near Castelnaudary, Languedoc, France


Died

25 December 1258 of natural causes


Canonized

30 September 1628 by Pope Urban VIII (cultus confirmation)



Blessed Peter the Venerable



Also known as

• Peter of Cluny

• Peter of Montboissier


Additional Memorials

• 29 April as one of the Abbots of Cluny

• 11 May (Benedictines)


Profile

Born to the French nobility. Benedictine monk at Cluny Abbey, and at several sister houses. Abbot of Cluny in 1122. Instituted a number of reforms to the educational and financial areas of the houses; his emphasis on the education of his monks put him into some conflict with Saint Bernard of Clairvaux who felt it detracted from the emphasis on prayer. Peter travelled to England, Spain and Rome, Italy in service to the Order, retiring between trips to live as a hermit. He recommended that the Koran be translated to Latin so missionaries would better understand what they were up against when they evangelized Muslims. Wrote poems, sermons, scriptural studies and treatises against heresy.


Born

1092 in Auvergne, France


Died

• 25 December 1156 of natural causes

• buried in the southern end of the cloister of the monastery church of Cluny Abbey

• grave desecrated by Huguenots in 1562

• grave and most relics destroyed in 1792 in the anti-Christian excesses of the French Revolution

• some relics re-discovered in 1931 where they had been hidden in a stable

Beatified

1862 by Pope Pius IX (cultus confirmation)



சிர்மியும் மறைசாட்சி அனஸ்தாஸியா Anastasia von Sirmium


பிறப்பு 
3 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டு, 
உரோம், இத்தாலி

இறப்பு 
304, 
சிர்மியும் Sirmium, குரோஷியா Kroatien

பாதுகாவல்: தலைவலி, மார்பு நோயிலிருந்து


இவர் ஓர் மதிப்புமிக்க கிறிஸ்தவ குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவர். இவர் இளம் வயதிலேயே திருமணம் செய்து விரைவில் தன் கணவரை இழந்தவர். கணவரின் இறப்பிற்கு பின் நரக வாழ்வை சந்தித்தார். பின்னர் இவர் மிகுந்த செல்வாக்குடையவராக இருந்ததால் பகைவர்கள் பெருகினர். இவர் அப்பகைவர்களால் சிறைபிடித்து செல்லப்பட்டார். சிறையிலும் மிகவும் கொடுமையாக நடத்தப்பட்டார். பலமுறை தீய ஆவியின் செயல்களுக்குட்படுத்தப்பட்டார். 

இவரை அரசன் தியோக்ளேசியன் Diokletians தன் பிடியில் வைத்து, கிறிஸ்துவை பின்பற்றக்கூடாது என்று கட்டளையிட்டான். அதனை எதிர்த்து கிறிஸ்துவை மட்டுமே தன் வாழ்வு என்று உரக்கக்கூறி, இடைவிடாமல் செபித்து வந்தார். இதனால் சினம் கொண்ட அரசன் இவரை உயிருடன் கொல்ல ஆணையிட்டான். இதனால் அனஸ்தாஸியாவை அரச படைவீரர்கள் வெடிமருந்தை வைத்து அவரை சுற்றி வெடிக்க வைத்து அவரையும் கொன்றனர். 


செபம்:

கருணையும் இரக்கமும் நிறைந்த எம் இறைவா! பணத்திற்காக கொடியவர்களால் சிறைபிடிக்கப்பட்டு, உம்மை பற்றிக்கொண்டதற்காக உயிருடன் கொல்லப்பட்ட அனஸ்தாசியாவை நினைவுகூறும் இந்நாளில் அவரின் நாமத்தை தாங்கி நாம விழாவைக் கொண்டாடும் உள்ளங்களை ஆசீர்வதியும். நல்ல உடல், உள்ள ஆன்ம நலன்களை தந்து அபரிவிதமாக உம் ஆசீரை பொழிந்து என்றும் உம் சிறகுகளின் நிழலில் வைத்துக் காத்திடுமாறு இறைவா உம்மை மன்றாடுகின்றோம். 

Saint Anastasia of Sirmium



Profile

Daughter of Saint Fausta of Sirmium. Matron of a noble Roman family. Married to a pagan. Spiritual student of Saint Chrysogonus. Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Her name is commemorated in the second Mass of Christmas and the first eucharistic prayer. Nothing is really known about her except her death, but there have been no end of attempts by story-tellers to fill in the blanks.

St. Anastasia, also known as Anastasia of Sirmium and Anastasia the Pharmakolytria or "Deliverer from Potions," is a Christian saint and martyr who suffered for Christ during the time of Diocletian's Christian persecutions.


She is one of the seven women commemorated by name in the Canon of the Mass.


The "passio," or suffering of, Anastasia tells that her father was a noble pagan named, Praetextatus and her mother was St. Fausta of Sirmium. Because her mother was a Christian, Anastasia was baptized as an infant and secretly raised with Christian values.


Following the death of her mother, Anastasia's father gave her in marriage to the pagan Publius, but she preserved her virginity.


During the persecutions of Diocletian, Anastasia visited the prisons and cared for the confessors of faith. She would feed, doctor and ransomed suffering captives. Anastasia's servant informed Publius; he locked her up and beat her.


Anastasia began secretly corresponding with her adviser, St. Chrysogonus, who had gone to Aquileia. He told her to be brave, be patient and accept the Lord's will.


After the death of her husband while he was on embassy to Persia, Anastasia distributed her property to those less fortunate and suffering.


She then set off to follow Chrysogonus to Aquileia. Chrysogonus was personally interrogated by Diocletian, but he never renounced his faith. Chrysogonus was ordered to be beheaded and thrown into the sea.


After his death, Chrysogonus appeared to Zoilus, a presbyter who found his relics and foretold the martyrdoms of Ss. Agape, Chione and Irene. He asked Zoilus to send Anastasia to the three sisters as encouragement.


Nine days later, Anastasia visited the sisters just before they were tortured. After they were martyred, Anastasia buried them.


Anastasia spent her time traveling from city to city caring for Christian prisoners. She healed their wounds and relieved their pain. She was given the title "Deliverer from Potions," because she would often heal many from the effects of poisons and potions.


Anastasia was arrested in Illyricum and taken to the prefect of the district for being Christian. He tried to persuade her to deny her faith and threatened her with torture. Anastasia could not be swayed, so she was given to the pagan priest Ulpian in Rome.


He presented her with the choice between riches or suffering, luxuries or torture devices. She chose torture.


He gave her three days to reconsider. Enamored by her beauty, Ulpian decided he would defile her purity. However, once he went to touch her he was struck blind and his head burst into extreme pain. On his way to his pagan temple, he fell and died.

Died

• burned to death c.304 at Sirmium, Dalmatia

• relics at Istanbul, Turkey (former Constantinople)


Patronage

• martyrs

• weavers

• widows


Representation

• woman with palm branch of martyrdom

• woman holding a small cross and vase

• woman with a flame in her hand

• woman holding a bowl with a flame in it




Blessed Bentivoglio de Bonis



Also known as

• Bentivolius Bonis

• Bentivoglio de Bonis of San Severino Marche


Profile

One of Saint Francis of Assisi's earliest disciples and one of first Franciscans. Priest. Noted preachers, miracle worker, healer and visionary.


Born

1188 at San Severino, Italy


Died

25 December 1232 at San Severino, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

30 December 1852 by Pope Blessed Pius IX (cultus confirmed)



Blessed Fulk of Toulouse



Also known as

• Folquet

• the Minstrel Bishop


Profile

Professional minstrel. Benedictine Cistercian monk at Thoronet, France. Abbot in 1200. Bishop of Toulouse, France in 1206. Helped Saint Dominic de Guzman found the Order of Preachers by providing him a base of operations, books, equipment, and one-sixth of the church tithes.


Born

c.1155 at Genoa, Italy


Died

1231 of natural causes




Saint Alburga of Wilton

Profile

Princess, the half-sister of King Egbert of Wessex. Wife of Earl Wulstan of Wiltshire who founded Wilton Abbey near Salisbury, England in 773. Widowed in 800. She converted Wilton Abbey into a convent for women, retired there with a dozen fellow Benedictine nuns, and is also considered a founder of the house.


Born

in Wessex, England


Died

810 at Wilton abbey, England of natural causes



Saint Eugenia of Rome



Profile

Young noble woman. Converted by and martyred with her servants, Saint Hyacinth and Saint Protus during the persecution Valerian. Her Acta read like a melodramatic adventure novel, but are worthless as biography.


Died

• c.258, probably by beheading

• buried in Apronianus cemetery on the Via Latina




Saint Adalsindis of Hamay

Also known as

Adalasenda, Adalsendis, Adalsind


Profile

Daughter of Saint Adalbald of Ostrevant and Saint Rictrudis of Marchiennes. Sister of Saint Eusebia of Hamay, Saint Clotsind and Saint Mauront. Benedictine nun at Hamay-les-Marchiennes near Arras, France and spiritual student of her sister.


Died

c.715 of natural causes




Blessed Michaël Nakashima Saburoemon


Profile

Jesuit. Martyred for hiding and assisting priests and missionaries.


Born

c.1583 in Machiai, Kumamoto, Japan


Died

scalded to death in the hot springs at Mount Ungen, Shimabara, Japan on 25 December 1628


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Pius IX




Blessed Matthew of Albano


Profile

Canon of Rheims, France. Benedictine Cluniac monk at Saint-Martin-des-Champs in 1108. Prior of his house in 1117. Created cardinal bishop of Albano in 1125. Papal legate in France and Germany in 1128. Staunch supported of the Cluniac ideal. Close friend of Blessed Peter the Venerable.


Died

1134 of natural causes





Blessed Diego de Aro



Profile

Mercedarian friar at the convent of Santa Maria Guardia in Prats, Spain (in modern Andorra). Helped ransom a total of 132 Christians enslaved by Moors in Granada, Spain.




Blessed Artale



Profile

Soldier. Knight. Lay member of the Mercedarians. Ransomed at least 150 Christian prisoners from slavery in Africa. Known for his personal piety.


Died

Oran, Algeria of natural causes




Saint Basilea of the Via Latina

Also known as

Basilée, Basiléo


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Valerian and Gallienus.


Died

c.258 on the Vita Latina, Rome, Italy




Saint Jovin of the Via Latina

Also known as

Giovino, Iovino


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Valerian and Gallienus.


Died

c.258 on the Vita Latina, Rome, Italy




Saint Romulus of Berry


Profile

Priest. Founded a monastery in Berry, France.


Died

c.700 of natural causes




Blessed Nera

Profile

Dominican tertiary. Cared for the sick in Siena, Italy.


Born

1230


Died

1287 of natural causes




Martyrs of Nicomedia


Profile

20,000 Christians martyred by order of Diocletian. They were reported to have all been in the single basilica to celebrate Christmas. While there unquestionably was an endless series of martyrs under Diocletian, it's likely the ancient sources exaggerated the numbers of this incident. And as the Christmas holy day was not celebrated in the East in 303, they were probably gathered for another feast.


Died

burned alive in 303 in the basilica of Nicomedia

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