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07 October 2020

St. Artaldus October 7

 St. Artaldus


Feastday: October 7

Birth: 1101

Death: 1206



Artaldus (also called Arthaud) was born in the castle of Sothonod in Savoy. At the age of eighteen, he went to the court of Duke Amadeus III, but a year or two after, he became a Carthusian at Portes. After many years, being a priest and an experienced and holy religious, he was sent by the prior of the Grande Chartreuse to found a charterhouse near his home, in a valley in the Valromey significantly called "the cemetery". Here Artaldus established himself with six of his brethren from Portes. The community was no sooner well settled down, than there buildings were destroyed by fire, and St. Artaldus had to begin all over again. He chose a fresh site on the Arvieres River, and his second foundation was soon built and occupied. But a Carthusian cell could not contain the ever-increasing reputation of Artaldus: like his master St. Bruno, he was consulted by the Pope, and when he was well over eighty, he was called from his monastery to be bishop of Belley, in spite of his vehement and reasonable protest. However, after less than two years of episcopate, his resignation was accepted, and he thankfully returned to Arvieres, where he lived in peace for the rest of his days. During his last years, he was visited by St. Hugh of Lincoln, who had come into France, and who, while he was prior of the charterhouse of Witham, had induced Henry II to become a benefactor of Arvieres. The Magna vita of St. Hugh records a gentle rebuke administered by Hugh when Artaldus asked him for political news in the presence of the community who had turned their backs upon the world to give themselves entirely to God. The cultus of St. Artaldus, called simply Blessed by the Carthusians, was confirmed for the diocese of Belley in 1834. He was 105 years old when he died and his feast day is October 7th.


Artaldus, also known as Arthaud, was a 13th-century Carthusian Bishop of Belley.



Early life

Born in the castle of Sothonod in Savoy, in 1101. Much of his childhood is not known but at the age of eighteen, Artaldus entered the court of Duke Amadeus III, but after a year or so he left to become a priest.


Early religious life

Artaldus entered the Carthusian house of Portes Charterhouse in modern-day Bénonces. There he was ordained a priest. He spent many years serving as a priest before being sent by the prior of the Grande Chartreuse to found a charterhouse near a valley in the Valromey, a place that was known as "the cemetery". Artaldus decided to take with him six fellow priests from the Portes Charterhouse to establish this new community. The community had to move when the newly built charterhouse buildings were ravaged by fire. Artaldus chose a fresh site on the Arvières River, and the Arvières Charterhouse was founded and dedicated to Our Lady, in 1132.


Appointment as Bishop of Belley

In the years spent at Arvière, Artaldus gained considerable fame and a great reputation, like that of St. Bruno, his master. Similar to St. Bruno, Artaldus was called from his monastery, to accept the role of serving as a bishop. This was at the See of Belley. Artaldus, who was over eighty when called to the post, less than two years later he resigned and returned to Arvières.


Later life and death

In his later years Artaldus was visited by Hugh of Lincoln, who had convinced King Henry II of England to become a benefactor of the charterhouse at Arvières. Artaldus who live the remainder of his days at Arvières, living until the age of 105, he died in 1206. His cultus was confirmed in 1834, by Pope Gregory XVI.

St. Adalgis October 7

 St. Adalgis


Feastday: October 7

Death: 850


Bishop and influential churchman. From 830 to circa 850, Adalgis served the diocese of Novara, Italy. He also served Emperor Lothair I of the Franks.

St. Augustus October 7

 St. Augustus


Feastday: October 7

Death: 6th century



Abbot of Bourges, in France, and a friend of St. Germanus of Paris. Also called Aout, Augustus discovered the remains of St. Ursinus.

St. Canog October 7

 St. Canog


Feastday: October 7

Death: 492



Martyr and eldest son of the local king of Brecknock in Wales. He was slain by barbarians at Merthyr-Cynog. In Brittany, France, he is called St Cenneur. Several churches in Wales honor him.

St. Dubtach October 7

 St. Dubtach


Feastday: October 7

Death: 513


The arch-bishop of Armagh, Ireland, from 497 until his death.

St. Helanus October 7

 St. Helanus


Feastday: October 7

Death: 6th century



Irish hermit who went to France with six brothers and three sisters. They settled in Reims, where Helanus became a priest.

St. Osyth October 7

 St. Osyth


Feastday: October 7

Death: 700






Martyred nun, also called Osith and Sytha. Known mainly through legends, she was supposedly the daughter of a chieftain of the Mercians in England and Wilburga, daughter of the powerful pagan king Penda of Mercia. Raised in a convent, Osyth desired to become a nun but was married against her will to King Sighere of Essex, by whom she had a son. Eventually, she won his permission to enter a convent, and she established a monastery on land at Chich, Essex, donated by Sighere, where she served as an abbess. She was reputedly slain by Danish raiders and is thus depicted in art as carrying her own head. There are historical difficulties associated with her existence, especially as no mention is made of her by Bede in his Ecclesiastical History.


Osgyth (or Osyth; died c. 700 AD) was an English saint. She is primarily commemorated in the village of Saint Osyth, Essex, near Colchester. Alternative spellings of her name include Sythe, Othith and Ositha. Born of a noble family, she founded a priory near Chich which was later named after her.



Life

Born in Quarrendon, Buckinghamshire (at that time part of Mercia), she was the daughter of Frithwald, a sub-king of Mercia in Surrey. Her mother was Wilburga, the daughter of the pagan King Penda of Mercia.[2] Her parents, with St. Erconwald, founded Chertsey Abbey in AD 675.


Raised in the care of her maternal aunts, St Edith of Aylesbury and Edburga of Bicester, her ambition was to become an abbess, but she was too important as a political pawn to be set aside.[3] She was forced by her father into a dynastic marriage with Sighere, King of Essex. While her husband ran off to hunt down a beautiful white stag, Osgyth persuaded two local bishops to accept her vows as a nun. Upon his return some days later, he reluctantly agreed to her decision and granted her some land at Chich near Colchester where she established a convent,[2] and ruled as first abbess. She was beheaded by some raiding pirates, perhaps because she may have resisted being carried off.[2]


Legends

One day, St. Edith sent Osgyth, to deliver a book to St. Modwenna of Northumbria at her nunnery. To get there, reach Osgyth had to cross a stream by a bridge. The stream swollen, the wind high, she fell into the water and drowned. Her absence was not noted for two days. Edith thought she was safe with Modwenna who was not expecting her visit. On the third day, Edith, wondering that her pupil had not returned, went to Modwenna. The abbesses were greatly concerned when they discovered Osgyth was apparently lost. They searched for her and found the child lying near the banks of the stream. The abbesses prayed for her restoration, and commanded her to arise from the water and come to them. This she did.[4] A similar tale is found in Irish hagiography.


Her later death was accounted a martyrdom by some, but Bede makes no mention of Saint Osgyth. The 13th-century chronicler Matthew Paris repeats some of the legend that had accrued around her name. The site of her martyrdom became transferred to the holy spring at Quarrendon. The holy spring at Quarrendon, mentioned in the time of Osgyth's aunts, now became associated with her legend, in which Osgyth stood up after her execution, picking up her head like Saint Denis in Paris, and other cephalophoric martyrs and walking with it in her hands, to the door of a local convent, before collapsing there. Some modern authors link the legends of cephalophores miraculously walking with their heads in their hands[5] to the Celtic cult of heads.



Gatehouse of the former St Osyth's Priory (later abbey), St Osyth, Essex

Veneration

On the site of a former nunnery at Chich, Richard de Belmeis of London, in the reign of Henry I founded a priory for canons of Saint Augustine, and dedicated it to Saint Osgyth;[3] his remains were buried in the chancel of the church in 1127: he bequeathed the church and tithes to the canons, who elected as their first abbot or prior William de Corbeil, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury (died in 1136).


His benefactions, and charters and privileges granted by Henry II, made the Canons wealthy: at the Dissolution of the monasteries in 1536, its revenues were valued at £758 5s. 8d. yearly. In 1397 the abbot of St Osgyth was granted the right to wear a mitre and give the solemn benediction, and, more singularly, the right to ordain priests, conferred by Pope Boniface IX.[6] The gatehouse (illustrated), the so-called 'Abbot's Tower' and some ranges of buildings remain.


Osgyth's burial site at St. Mary the Virgin, Aylesbury became a site of great, though unauthorized pilgrimage; following a papal decree in 1500, the bones were removed from the church and buried in secret. The Catholic Encyclopedia (1913) gives Saint Osgyth no mention. Undeterred, according to the curious 17th-century antiquary John Aubrey (author of the Brief Lives), "in those days, when they went to bed they did rake up the fire, and make a X on the ashes, and pray to God and Saint Sythe (Saint Osgyth) to deliver them from fire, and from water, and from all misadventure." A house in Aylesbury is still called St Osyth's in her honour.


Her feast day is 7 October. She is normally depicted carrying her own head.[citation needed]

St. Palladius October 7

 St. Palladius


October 7

Death: 590


 St. Benedict Home Blessing Door Hanger  BOGO 50% OFF

Bishop of Saintes from 570. His sainthood is questionable.

St. Sergius & Bacehus October 7

 St. Sergius & Bacehus


Feastday: October 7

Patron: of Syria, army, soldiers

Death: 303

This legend has Sergius an officer in the Roman army and Bacchus, an officer under him, and both were friends of Emperor Maximian. When they did not enter a temple of Jupiter with the Emperor, he ordered them to do so. When they further refused his order that they sacrifice to pagan gods, they were humiliated by being led through the streets of Arabissus in women's garb and then sent to Rosafa, Mesopotamia, where they were scourged so terribly that Bacchus died of the scourging; Sergius was then tortured further and beheaded.Their feast day is October 7th.





"Saint Sergius" redirects here. For other uses, see Saint Sergius (disambiguation).

Saints Sergius (or Serge) and Bacchus were fourth-century Roman Christian soldiers revered as martyrs and military saints by the Catholic, Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox Churches. Their feast day is 7 October.


According to their hagiography, Sergius and Bacchus were officers in Galerius' army, and were held high in his favor until they were exposed as secret Christians. They were then severely punished, with Bacchus dying during torture, and Sergius eventually beheaded. However, due to its historical anachronisms, the hagiography is considered ahistorical.


Sergius and Bacchus were very popular throughout Late Antiquity, and churches in their honor were built in several cities, including Constantinople and Rome. The close friendship between the two is strongly emphasized in their hagiographies and traditions, making them one of the most famous examples of paired saints. This closeness led the historian John Boswell to suggest that their relationship was a romantic one; though other historians have widely rejected this theory, it has led to popular veneration of Sergius and Bacchus in the gay Christian community.



Martyrs Saints Sergius and Bacchus

The saints' story is told in the Greek text known as The Passion of Sergius and Bacchus. The story is ostensibly set during the reign of Roman emperor Galerius (305 to 311), though it contains a number of contradictions and anachronisms that make dating difficult. The work itself may date to the mid-5th century.[2]


According to the text, Sergius and Bacchus were Roman citizens and high-ranking officers of the Roman army, but their covert Christianity was discovered when they attempted to avoid accompanying a Roman official into a pagan temple with the rest of his bodyguard. After they persisted in refusing to sacrifice to Jupiter in Galerius' company, they were publicly humiliated by being chained, dressed in female attire and paraded around town. Galerius then sent them to Barbalissos in Mesopotamia to be tried by Antiochus, the military commander there and an old friend of Sergius. Antiochus could not convince them to give up their faith, however, and Bacchus was beaten to death. The next day Bacchus' spirit appeared to Sergius and encouraged him to remain strong so they could be together forever. Over the next days, Sergius was also brutally tortured and finally executed at Resafa, where his death was marked by miraculous happenings.[2]


Historicity

The Passion, replete with supernatural occurrences and historical anachronisms, has been dismissed as an unreliable historical source. The work has been dated to mid-5th century, and there is no other evidence for the cult of Sergius and Bacchus before about 425, over a century after they are said to have died. As such, there is considerable doubt about their historicity.[2]


There is no firm evidence for Sergius and Bacchus' schola gentilium having been used by Galerius or any other emperor before Constantine I, and given that persecution of Christians had begun in the army considerably before the overall persecutions of the early 4th century, it is very unlikely that even secret Christians could have risen through the ranks of the imperial bodyguard. Finally, there is no evidence to support the existence of monks, such as the ones said in the Passion to have recovered Bacchus' body, living near the Euphrates during the 4th century.[2]


Instead, the Italian scholar Pio Franchi de Cavalieri has argued that The Passion of Sergius and Bacchus was based on an earlier lost passion of Juventinus and Maximinus, two saints martyred under Emperor Julian the Apostate in 363. He noted especially that the punishment of being paraded around in women's clothes reflected the treatment of Christian soldiers by Julian.[3] Historian David Woods further notes that Zosimus' Historia Nova includes a description of Julian punishing cavalry deserters in just such a manner, further strengthening the argument that the author of The Passion of Sergius and Bacchus took material from the stories of martyrs of Julian's time rather than that of Galerius.[2]


Woods argues that the tradition of the saints' martyrdom is a later development that became attached to otherwise obscure relics in the 5th century and that the Passion is a fiction composed after their cult had become popular. He concludes that "the martyrs Sergius and Bacchus did not exist as such".[2] Christopher Walter considers Sergius analogous to Saint George, "whose historicity is accepted, even if nothing genuine about his life is known." He suggests that Woods maybe "almost as inventive as the hagiographers themselves" in proposing lost sources for which there is no evidence. He accepts that at least some of the information in the Passion is accurate.[4]


Popularity and veneration


Basilica of Saint Sergius, Rasafa, Syria

Veneration of the two saints dates to the fifth century. A shrine to Sergius was built in Resafa (renamed Sergiopolis around 425), but there is no certain evidence for his or Bacchus' cult much older than that. Their cult grew rapidly during the early fifth century, in accordance with the growth of the cult of martyrs, especially military martyrs, during the period. The Resafa shrine was constructed of mudbrick, evidently at the behest of bishop Alexander of Hierapolis. The Passion has been dated to the mid-5th century on the grounds that it describes the construction of such a shrine as if it were a relatively recent occurrence. The original shrine was replaced with a sturdier stone structure in 518; this new site was patronized by important political figures including Roman emperor Justinian I, emperor Khosrow II of the Sassanid Empire, and al-Mundhir III ibn al-Harith, ruler of the Ghassanids.[2]


Traditionally, the feast day of Sergius and Bacchus has been celebrated on 7 October in the West.[5][6] In the Tridentine Calendar they shared the day with Pope Mark and the martyred pair Marcellus and Apuleius. In 1716, this day became the feast of Our Lady of the Rosary, and the commemoration of Sergius, Bacchus and the other saints was moved to 8 October. They were restored to 7 October in 1969.[7]



Little Hagia Sophia (Church of the Saints Sergius and Bacchus), Istanbul, Turkey

In the Byzantine Empire, they were venerated as protectors of the army. A large monastery church, the Little Hagia Sophia, was dedicated to them in Constantinople by Justinian I, probably in 527. According to legend, during the reign of Justin I, his nephew Justinian had been accused of plotting against the throne and was sentenced to death, which was reversed after Saints Sergius and Bacchus appeared before Justin and vouched for Justinian’s innocence. He was freed and restored to his title of Caesar, and in gratitude vowed that he would dedicate a church to the saints once he became emperor. The construction of this Church of Saints Sergius and Bacchus, between 527 and 536 AD (only a short time before the erection of the Hagia Sophia between 532 and 537), was one of the first acts of the reign of Justinian I.[8]



Church of Saints Sergius and Bacchus, Rome, Italy

Sergius was a very popular saint in Syria and Christian Arabia. The city of Resafa, which became a bishop's see, took the name Sergiopolis and preserved his relics in a fortified basilica. Resafa was improved by Emperor Justinian and became one of the greatest pilgrimage centers in the East. Many other churches were built dedicated in the name of Sergius, sometimes with Bacchus. A church dedicated to Santi Sergio e Bacco was built in Rome in the 9th century. Christian art represents the two saints as soldiers in military garb with branches of palm in their hands. Their feast is observed on 7 October, and a Mass is assigned to them in the "Sacramentarium" of Pope Gelasius. The nomads of the desert looked upon Sergius as their special patron saint.


In the Armenian Church traditions Sergius, or Sarkis, was venerated as a Christian general in the Roman army. He was martyred with his son, Martyros, for witnessing to their faith in Christ. The feast is preceded by three-day fasting.



Robert Lentz's 1994 icon of Saints Sergius and Bacchus

The close friendship between the two is strongly emphasized in their hagiographies and traditions, making them one of the most famous examples of paired saints; scholar John Boswell considers them to be the most influential set of such an archetype, more so than even Saints Peter and Paul.[9][10] In his Same-Sex Unions in Premodern Europe, Boswell further argues that Sergius and Bacchus's relationship can be understood as having a romantic dimension, noting that the oldest text of their martyrology describes them as erastai, which can be translated as "lovers".[11] He suggested that the two were even united in a rite known as adelphopoiesis or "brother-making", which he argued was a type of early Christian same-sex union or blessing, reinforcing his view of tolerant early Christian attitudes toward homosexuality.[11] Boswell's methodology and conclusions have been disputed by many historians.[2][12][13][14][15][16][17]


Regardless, in the wake of Boswell's work, Sergius and Bacchus have become popularly venerated in the gay Christian community.[18][19] A 1994 icon of Sergius and Bacchus by the gay Franciscan iconographer Robert Lentz, first displayed at Chicago's Gay Pride Parade, has become a popular gay symbol.[20]

Saint Bridget of SwedenPatron Saint of Sweden. October 7

Saint Bridget of Sweden

Patron Saint of Sweden

Saint Bridget of Sweden’s Story
 
St. Bridget was born of the Swedish royal family, in 1304. In obedience to her father, she was married to Prince Ulpho of Sweden, and became the mother of eight children, one of whom, Catherine, is honored as a Saint. After some years she and her husband separated by mutual consent. He entered the Cistercian Order, and Bridget founded the Order of St. Saviour, in the Abbey of Wastein, in Sweden. In 1344 she became a widow, and thenceforth received a series of the most sublime revelations, all of which she scrupulously submitted to the judgment of her confessor. By the command of Our Lord, Bridget went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and amidst the very scenes of the Passion was further instructed in the sacred mysteries. She died in 1373.

மறைசாட்சி எர்னஸ்ட் Ernst von Neresheim OSB. October 7

இன்றைய புனிதர்
2020-10-07
மறைசாட்சி எர்னஸ்ட் Ernst von Neresheim OSB
பிறப்பு
11 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டு,
ஜெர்மனி
இறப்பு
7 அக்டோபர் 1148,
மெக்கா, சவுதி அரேபியா

இவர் ஜெர்மனியிலுள்ள அவுக்ஸ்பூர்க்கில் (Augsburg) 1119 ஆம் ஆண்டு பெனடிக்டின் துறவற மடத்தில் சேர்ந்தார். இவர் நேரஸ்ஹைம் என்ற ஊரில் பெனடிக்டின் துறவற இல்லம் ஒன்றையும் துவங்கினார். நாளடைவில் இத்துறவற இல்லத்தின் தலைவராகவும் தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார். பின்னர் இவர் புனித நாட்டிற்கு பயணம் மேற்கொண்டார். அவ்வேளையில் இவர் சிறைபிடித்து செல்லப்பட்டார். பின்னர் மெக்காவில் வைத்து சித்ரவதைக்குள்ளாக்கப்பட்டார். அச்சமயத்தில் பல துன்பங்களின் மத்தியில் கொலை செய்யப்பட்டார்.


செபம்:
இரக்கமே உருவான இறைவா! புனித பெனடிக்டின் சபையில் உழைத்து மரித்த ஒவ்வொரு துறவிகளையும், உமது வான் வீட்டில் சேர்த்தருளும். இவர்களின் இறைவேண்டலால் அச்சபையை தொடர்ந்து வழிநடத்தியருள வேண்டுமென்று இறைவா உம்மை மன்றாடுகின்றோம்.




இந்நாளில் நினைவுகூறப்படும் பிற புனிதர்கள்

• கொலோன் நகர் ஜெரால்டு Gerold von Köln
பிறப்பு: 1201, கொலோன் Köln, ஜெர்மனி
இறப்பு: 7 அக்டோபர் 1241, கிரேமொனா Cremona, இத்தாலி


• பதுவை நகர் மறைசாட்சி ஜஸ்டீனா Justina von Padua
பிறப்பு: 3 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டு, பதுவை, இத்தாலி
இறப்பு: 300, பதுவை


• திருத்தந்தை மார்குஸ் Marcus
பிறப்பு: 3 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டு, உரோம், இத்தாலி
இறப்பு: 7 அக்டோபர் 336, உரோம், இத்தாலி

✠ பதுவை நகர புனிதர் ஜஸ்டினா ✠(St. Justina of Padua). அக்டோபர் 7

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †
(அக்டோபர் 7)

✠ பதுவை நகர புனிதர் ஜஸ்டினா ✠
(St. Justina of Padua)
மறைசாட்சி:
(Martyr)

பிறப்பு: ---

இறப்பு: கி.பி. 304

ஏற்கும் சமயம்: 
ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை
(Roman Catholic Church)

முக்கிய திருத்தலம்: 
புனிதர் அந்தோனியார் ஆலயம், லிஸ்பன் நகர்
(Church of Saint Anthony of Lisbon)

பாதுகாவல்: 
பதுவை, பல்மநோவா
(Padua; Palmanova)

நினைவுத் திருவிழா: அக்டோபர் 7

புனிதர் ஜஸ்டினா, பதுவை நகரின் பாதுகாவலரும், கத்தோலிக்க புனிதரும் ஆவார். இவர், பதுவை நகரின் அரச பரம்பரையில் பிறந்தவரும் கன்னியரும் ஆவார். அவர் இளவரசியாக முடி சூடப்பட்டவர் என்றும், மார்பிலே கூரிய வாள் ஒன்றினை அணிந்திருந்தவர் என்றும் கிறிஸ்தவ கலைகள் கூறுகின்றன.

ஆறாம் நூற்றாண்டில், பதுவை நகரின் பொதுநிலையினர், புனித ஜஸ்டினாவுக்காக ஒரு பேராலயத்தினை அர்ப்பணித்தனர். 'எப்ரேஷியன் பேராலயத்தின்' (Euphrasian Basilica) 'பிரிஸ்பிட்டரி வளைவின்' (Presbytery arch) இடது பக்கத்திலுள்ள மறைசாட்சிகளாய் மறைந்த அருட்கன்னியரின் சித்திரங்களில் இவரது சித்திரமும் உள்ளது. 'சாண்ட அப்போலினரிஸ் (Sant'Apollinare Nuovo) பேராலயத்தில் நடைபெறும் அருட்கன்னியரின் ஊர்வலத்தில் இவரும் இடம்பெற்றுள்ளார்.

ஜஸ்டினா, அப்போஸ்தலர் புனித பேதுருவின் சீடர் என்று இடைக்கால சரித்திர வரலாறுகள் கூறுகின்றன. பதுவை மறை மாவட்டத்தின் முதலாம் ஆயரான 'புனித ப்ராஸ்டாசிமஸ்' (Saint Prosdocimus) ஜஸ்டினாவின் ஞானத்தந்தை என்றும் கூறுகின்றன. 'புனித ப்ராஸ்டாசிமஸின்' வரலாறு, அவர் அப்போஸ்தலர் புனித பேதுருவால் அந்தியோக்கியாவிலிருந்து அனுப்பப்பட்டவர் என கூறுகிறது. 

எப்படியாகினும், மேற்கூறப்பட்ட கூற்றுக்கள் நடைமுறையில் சாத்தியமற்றவை. காரணம், கி.பி. 304ம் ஆண்டு வாழ்ந்த இளம்பெண்ணான ஜஸ்டினாவுக்கு கி.பி. 100ம் ஆண்டு மரித்த புனிதர் ப்ராஸ்டாசிமசை சந்தித்திருக்க வாய்ப்பே இல்லை.

பதுவையின் பாதுகாவலரான ஜஸ்டினா, புனித மாற்குவின் பிறகு, வெனிஸ் நகரினதும் இரண்டாம் பாதுகாவலராவார்.

† Saint of the Day †
(October 7)

✠ St. Justina of Padua✠

Martyr:

Born: ----

Died: 304 AD

Venerated in: Roman Catholic Church

Major shrine: Church of Saint Anthony of Lisbon

Feast: October 7

Patronage: Padua and Palmanova

Saint Justina of Padua is a Christian saint, known for converting Cyprian, a pagan magician of Antioch. She is said to have been martyred in the year 304 AD. Justina was said to have been a young woman who took private vows of chastity and was killed during the persecutions of the Roman emperor Diocletian. She is a patron saint of Padua. Her feast day is October 7.

She suffered at Padua in the persecution of Dioclesian, about the year 304, or, according to some, in that of Nero. Fortunatus ranks her among the most illustrious holy virgins, whose sanctity and triumph have adorned and edified the church, saying that her name makes Padua illustrious, as Euphemia Chalcedon, and Eulalia the city Emerita. And in his poem on the life of St. Martin, he bids those who visit Padua, there to kiss the sacred sepulchre of the blessed Justina, on the walls of which they will see the actions of St. Martin represented in figures or paintings. A church was built at Padua, in her honour, about the middle of the fifth age, by Opilio, prefect of the prætorium, who was consul in 453.

Her precious remains, concealed in the irruption of Attila, who destroyed Aquileia and Padua in the middle of the fifth century, were found in 1177, and are kept with great veneration in the famous church which bears her name. It was most elegantly and sumptuously rebuilt in 1501, and, with the adjoining Benedictine monastery, (to which it belongs,) is one of the most finished models of the building of that nature in the world. A reformation of the Benedictine Order was settled in this house in 1417, which was propagated in many parts of Italy under the name of the Congregation of St. Justina of Padua.

The great monastery of Mount Cassino, head of the whole Order of St. Bennet, having acceded to this reformed Congregation, it was made the chief house thereof by Pope Julius II., and the jurisdiction of the president or general, was transferred by him from St. Justina’s to the abbot of Mount Cassino; from which time this is called the Congregation of Mount Cassino, and is divided into seven provinces. The great monastery of St. Justina may be said to be the second in rank. St. Justina is, after St. Mark, the second patroness of the commonwealth of Venice, and her image is stamped on the coin.

Near the tomb of St. Justina, in the cemetery, were found the relics of several other martyrs, who are said in her acts and those of St. Prosdecimus, first bishop of Padua, and other such monuments, to have suffered with her. The relics of St. Justina were placed in a shrine or chest under the high altar of the new church, in 1502. When the new choir was built these were translated with the utmost solemnity into a sumptuous vault under the new high altar, in 1627. Another famous church of St. Justina stands in the city of Venice, formerly collegiate, now in the hands of nuns. The senate makes to it the most solemn procession on the 7th of October, in thanksgiving for the victory of Lepante, gained over the Turks on that day, which is her festival.

✠ புனிதர் மாற்கு ✠(St. Mark)34ம் திருத்தந்தை:(34th Pope)அக்டோபர் 7

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †
(அக்டோபர் 7)

✠ புனிதர் மாற்கு ✠
(St. Mark)

34ம் திருத்தந்தை:
(34th Pope)
பிறப்பு: --- 
ரோம் (Rome)

இறப்பு: அக்டோபர் 7, 336 
ரோம் (Rome)

நினைவுத் திருவிழா: அக்டோபர் 7

திருத்தந்தை புனிதர் மாற்கு (Pope Saint Mark) ரோம் நகர ஆயராகவும், கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையில் திருத்தந்தையாகவும் கி.பி. 336ம் ஆண்டு, ஜனவரி மாதம், 18ம் தேதி முதல், கி.பி. 336ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம், 7ம் தேதி வரை, மிகக் குறுகிய காலமே (எட்டு மாதங்களும் இருபது நாட்களும்) ஆட்சி செய்தார். இவருக்கு முன் ஆட்சி செய்த திருத்தந்தை, “புனிதர் சில்வெஸ்டர்” (St. Sylvester) ஆவார்.

திருத்தந்தையர்களின் வரலாறு (Liber Pontificalis) என்னும் பண்டைய நூல், இவர் ரோம் நகரில் “பிரிஸ்கஸ்” (Priscus) என்பவருக்கு மகனாகப் பிறந்தார் என்று கூறுகிறது.

இவரது ஆட்சிக்கால நிகழ்வுகள் :
ஆயர்களின் பட்டியல் மற்றும் மறை சாட்சிகளின் பட்டியல் என்னும் தொகுப்புகள் இவர் காலத்தில்தான் தொடங்கப்பட்டன என்பது மரபுச் செய்தி. புதிதாகத் திருத்தந்தையாகத் தெரிந்தெடுக்கப்படுபவருக்கு அருட்பொழிவு வழங்கும் உரிமைகொண்ட மூன்று ஆயர்களுள் 'ஓஸ்தியா' (Ostia) நகர ஆயருக்கு முதன்மைப் பொறுப்பு உண்டு என்று இவர் உறுதிப்படுத்தினார். இன்றைய திருச்சபை வழக்கப்படி, கர்தினால் குழுவின் தலைவர் ஓஸ்தியா நகர ஆயர் என்னும் மரியாதைப் பொறுப்பு கொண்டுள்ளார். 

இயேசு கிறிஸ்து இறைத்தன்மை கொண்டவர், கடவுளின் மகன் என்று நிசேயா சங்கம் 325ல் அறிவித்திருந்தது. ஆனால் 'ஆரியுஸ்' (Arius) என்பவர் இக்கொள்கையை ஏற்க மறுத்து, இயேசு கடவுளின் படைப்புகளில் மிகச் சிறந்தவரே தவிர கடவுள்தன்மை கொண்டவரல்ல என்று போதித்தார். இந்தத் தவறான போதனையால் திருச்சபைக்குள் குழப்பம் ஏற்பட்டது. இது திருத்தந்தை மாற்குவின் காலத்தில் நிகழ்ந்தது.

இவர் கட்டிய ஆலயங்கள் :
ரோமில் உள்ள புனித மாற்கு பேராலயத்தைக் (Basilica of San Marco) கட்ட இவரே அடித்தளம் இட்டார் என்று கருதப்படுகிறது. ரோம் நகரின் வெளியே, பேரரசர் “கான்ஸ்டன்டைன்” (Emperor Constantine) அவர்களிடமிருந்து நன்கொடையாகப் பெற்ற நிலத்தில், “பால்பீனாவின் கல்லறை” (Catacomb of Balbina) என்றழைக்கப்படும் பாதாள கல்லறைத் தோட்டத்தின் மேலே, கல்லறை ஆலயத்தைக் கட்டியவரும் இவரே என்று தெரிகிறது.

இறப்பும் திருவிழாவும் :
திருத்தந்தை மாற்கு இயற்கைக் காரணங்களால் இறந்தார். அவரது உடல் புனித பால்பீனா ஆலயத்தின் அடியில் உள்ள கல்லறையில் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டது. திருத்தந்தை மாற்குவின் நினைவுத் திருவிழா அக்டோபர் 7ம் நாள் கொண்டாடப்படுகிறது.


† Saint of the Day †
(October 7)

✠ St. Mark ✠

34th Pope:

Birth Name: Marcus

Born: ----
Rome

Died: October 7, 336
Rome

Feast: October 7

Pope Saint Mark or Marcus was pope from January 18, 336 to October 7, 336. The successor of Sylvester I, who had reigned 21 years, Mark's time as the bishop of Rome lasted less than a year.

Before coming to the papacy, Mark was apparently an important leader of the Roman church dating back to the time of Pope Miltiades. He thus lived through the period of Christianity's transition from being a persecuted sect to its status as the favored religion of the Roman empire. He also seems to have had a role in the early stages of the Donatist controversy and certainly witnessed Emperor Constantine I's generosity to the Roman church, as well as the emperor's calling of the Council of Nicaea, his later vacillation on the Arian controversy, and his moving of the capital of the Roman Empire to Byzantium.

Some evidence suggests that the early lists of bishops and martyrs known as the Depositio episcoporum and Depositio martyrum were begun during Mark's pontificate. Mark also is said to have issued a constitution confirming the power of the bishop of Ostia to consecrate newly elected popes and is credited with the foundation of the basilica of San Marco in Rome and the Juxta Pallacinis basilica just outside the city.

Mark died of natural causes and was buried in the Catacomb of Balbina. His feast day is on October 7.

The Liber Pontificalis says that Mark was a Roman and that his father's name was Priscus. Little is known of his younger days, but it seems that Mark had been an important figure in the Roman church for several decades before becoming pope. Constantine the Great's letter to the Roman church's leaders, which summoned a conference of the bishop for the investigation of the Donatist dispute, is directed to Pope Miltiades, but also to a certain "Mark" (Eusebius, Church History X.5). This Mark was evidently a key member of the Roman clergy, either a well-known presbyter or first deacon, and is likely identical with the later pope.

At Rome, Mark must have taken an active role in the remarkable transition of the church from a persecuted sect to the emperor's favored religion. He may have witnessed the triumphal entry of Constantine I as a new convert into Rome in 312 and must have rejoiced with his fellow Christians at the Edict of Milan in 313, officially establishing the toleration of Christianity and restoring the properties confiscated in recent persecutions. If he was a chief deacon, he may even have administered the process in Rome. It is likely that he was present at the time of Constantine's giving the Lateran Palace to Pope Miltiades as the papal residence, where Mark himself would later live.

We do not know what role if any, he had in the Council of Arles at which the Donatists were first condemned, but since Constantine's letter seems to have been directed to him, Mark may have had some role in organizing or participating in it. The Donatists took the view that the ordination of clergy by bishops who had cooperated with the pagan emperors should be considered invalid. This policy was condemned in Miltiades' day as heretical, leading to a major schism that would last well into the next century. 

In 321, Mark must have heard of the decree of Constantine declaring Sunday to be a state "day of rest," at the same time further distancing the Christian church from the "detestable" Jews. Controversy continued to challenge the church, meanwhile, with regard to the treatment of those who had committed apostasy during the previous persecutions. The Novatianists, who were noted for their commitment to die rather than compromise with the pagan emperors and who refused communion to former apostates, continued to be a respected presence both in Rome and elsewhere in the empire.

The Arian controversy also broke out during this period. Although no documents exist specifying Mark's position on this issue, it is likely that he supported the view of his fellow Roman churchmen that Christ not only pre-existed his Incarnation but that he existed eternally with God the Father, with whom he shared the "same substance." The Arians, on the other hand, took the view that Christ was of a "like substance" with the Father and that, although he pre-existed with the Father as the Logos, he had come into being at a certain point in time, rather than being "eternally begotten" by the Father.

No doubt Mark heard the news of the Council of Nicaea in 325, and in 326 it is likely that he stood by as Sylvester I consecrated the Basilica of Saint Peter which had been built by Constantine over the tomb of the Apostle. Perhaps he had the opportunity of reading the Easter letter of bishop Athanasius of Alexandria in which Athanasius specified the 27 Christian books and letters which later became the authoritative list of the New Testament canon.

We can imagine the mixed emotions he may have felt when the emperor moved the capital of the Roman Empire to Byzantium, renaming it "New Rome." Finally, Mark must have felt deep concern to hear in 335 that a synod of church leaders in Jerusalem had reversed Nicaea's condemnation of Arius and that Constantine, under the influence of the new patriarch of Constantinople, Eusebius of Nicomedia, had agreed to the banishment of the erstwhile anti-Arian leader Athanasius.

Papacy:
The date of Mark's election, (January 18, 336) is given in the Liberian Catalogue of popes and is considered historically certain. So is the day of his death (October 7 of the same year) that is specified in the Depositio episcoporum, which is nearly contemporaneous with him.

Two decrees are attributed to Mark by the author of the Liber Pontificalis. According to the one, he invested the bishop of Ostia with the pallium as the symbol of papal authority and ordained that this bishop was to consecrate the future bishops of Rome. It is certain that, towards the end of the fourth century, the bishop of Ostia indeed bestowed the Episcopal. consecration upon the newly-elected pope. Saint Augustine expressly bears witness to this. Thus, it is possible that Mark had confirmed this privilege by an official decree. However, it is also known that the bishop of Ostia usually consecrated the new pope even before this time. Since the Liber Pontificalis is notorious for its anachronisms regarding papal institutions, however, the report must be treated cautiously. As for the bestowal of the pallium, this account cannot be established from sources of the fourth century, since the oldest memorials which show this badge, in the form of a white stole which the pope himself also wore, belong to the fifth and sixth centuries. The oldest written mention outside the Liber Pontificalis of a pope bestowing the pallium dates from the sixth century.

The "Liber Pontificalis" remarks further of Pope Mark that "he made regulation(s) for the whole church." However, we do not know to which constitutions this refers. During the time in question, churches elsewhere indeed looked to Rome for leadership in resolving controversies, but the papacy had not yet emerged as an institution with the authority to dictate policy to the "whole church."

Mark is also said to have been responsible for the construction of two buildings. One of these was built within the city and is identified with the present church of San Marco, being named after the pope's namesake Mark the Evangelist. It is mentioned in the fifth century as a Roman titular church. The other was outside the city and was a cemetery church, which the pope caused to be constructed over the Catacomb of Balbina, between the Via Appia and the Via Ardeatina. Pope Mark obtained gifts of land and liturgical furniture for both basilicas from Constantine I. Thus it does not appear that either Constantine's moving his capital to Byzantium or his change of heart toward the Arians affected his willingness to show generosity toward the Roman church.

Legacy:
Mark was buried in the Catacomb of Balbina, where he had built the cemetery church. His grave is expressly mentioned as being located there in the itineraries of pilgrims of the seventh century. The feast of the deceased pope was given on October 7 in the old Roman calendar of feasts, which was also inserted in the "Martyrologium Hieronymianum". It is still kept on the same date. A laudatory poem to a certain Saint Mark of this period was composed by the order of Pope Damasus I and is preserved in an ancient manuscript, although scholars are divided as to whether it refers to Pope Mark. A purported letter to him by Athanasius is now considered to be a forgery.

தூய ஜெபமாலை அன்னை. October 07

(07-10-2020)

தூய ஜெபமாலை அன்னை
1571 ஆம் ஆண்டு கிறிஸ்தவர்களுக்கும் இஸ்லாமியருக்கும் இடையே லாபந்தோ என்னும் இடத்தில் கடுமையாகப் போர் நடந்தது. இந்தப் போரில் கிறிஸ்தவர்களே வெற்றி பெற்றார்கள். இதற்கு அடிப்படைக் காரணம் உரோமை நகரில் இருக்கக்கூடிய தூய பேதுரு சதுக்கத்தில் கிறிஸ்தவர்கள் தங்களுடைய கைகளில் ஜெபமாலை ஏந்தி அன்னை மரியாவிடம் ஜெபித்ததே ஆகும். அன்னை மரியாவே எதிரிகளிடமிருந்து கிறிஸ்தவர்களுக்கு வெற்றியைத் தேடித்தந்ததால் அப்போது திருத்தந்தையாய் இருந்த ஐந்தாம் பவுல் இதனை அன்னை மரியின் வெற்றியின் விழா என்று கொண்டாடப் பணித்தார்.
ஜெபமாலை சொல்லும் வழக்கம் பதிமூன்றாம் நூற்றாண்டிலிருந்தே இருந்திருக்கிறது என்று வரலாற்று ஆசிரியர்கள் சொல்வார்கள். பதிமூன்றாம் நூற்றாண்டின் தொடக்கத்தில் இயேசுவின் இறைத்தன்மையை மறுக்கும் அல்பிஜீயன்ஸ் என்ற தப்பறைக் கொள்கை திருச்சபைக்கு அதிகமாக ஊறுவிளைவித்து வந்தது. இதை எதிர்த்து டொமினிக் எனப்படும் சாமிநாதர் அதிகமாகப் போராடி வந்தார். ஆனாலும் அவரால் வெற்றிகொள்ள முடியவில்லை. எனவே அவர் காட்டிற்குச் சென்று கடுமையான தவ முயற்சிகளை மேற்கொண்டார். அவர் தவ முயற்சிகளை மேற்கொண்ட மூன்றாம் நாளில் மரியா அவருக்குக் காட்சி கொடுத்து, “இந்த ஜெபமாலையை வைத்து நம்பிக்கையோடு ஜெபி, நிச்சயம் வெற்றி கிடைக்கும்” என்று சொல்லிவிட்டு மறைந்தார். மரியா சொன்னதற்கு ஏற்ப சாமிநாதர் தன்னுடைய இடத்திற்குச் சென்று ஜெபமாலை சொல்லி ஜெபித்தார். இதனால் அல்பிஜீனியன்ஸ் என்ற தப்பறைக் கொள்கையை பின்பற்றி வந்த மக்கள் மனம்மாறி இயேசுவை இறைமகனாக ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார்கள். அதன்பிறகு ஜெபமாலை சொல்லும் வழக்கம் மக்களிடத்தில் அதிகமாகப் பரவி வந்தது.

ஆலன் ரோச் என்ற புனிதர் ஜெபமாலை சொல்லும் வழக்கத்தை மக்களிடத்தில் அதிகமாகக் கொண்டு போய் சேர்த்தார். ஜெபமாலை சொல்வதனால் கிடைக்கும் நன்மைகள் என்ன என்பதைப் பற்றியும் தெளிவாக மக்களிடத்தில் எடுத்துச் சொன்னார். 1571 ஆம் ஆண்டு கிறிஸ்தவர்கள் இஸ்லாமியப் படையை செபமாலையின் துணைகொண்டு வெற்றிகொண்டதால் செபமாலையின் மீது மக்கள் இன்னும் அதிகமாக நம்பிக்கை கொள்ளத் தொடங்கினார்கள். 1715 ஆம் ஆண்டு இவ்விழா உரோமைத் திருச்சபையின் விழா அட்டவணையில் சேர்க்கப்பட்டது.

இதற்கிடையில் ஜெபமாலை சொல்வது பற்றி நிறைய விமர்சனங்கள் வந்தன. ஜெபமாலை சிறியவர்களும் வயதானவர்களும் சொல்லவேண்டியது அது எல்லாருக்கும் உரித்தானது அல்ல என்பது போன்ற விமர்சனங்களும் வந்தன.  இந்த நேரத்தில்தான்  1858 ஆம் ஆண்டு பிப்ரவரி மாதம் 18 தேதி முதல் ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம் 16 தேதி வரை லூர்து நகரில் மரியா பெர்னதெத் என்ற சிறுமிக்குக் காட்சி கொடுத்ததில் ஜெபமாலை சொல்லி ஜெபித்தார். இதனால் ஜெபமாலை என்பது ஒரு குறிப்பிட்ட சாரார் மட்டும் சொல்லவேண்டியது அல்ல, அது எல்லாரும் சொல்லவேண்டியது என்ற வழக்கம் உருவாகியது. 1917 ஆம் ஆண்டு பாத்திமா நகரில் அன்னை மரியா ஜெசிந்தா, லூசியா, பிரான்சிஸ்கா என்ற மூன்று சிறுமிகளுக்குக் காட்சிகொடுத்தபோது தன்னை ஜெபமாலை அன்னை என்றே வெளிப்படுத்தினார். அப்போது அவர் அவர்களிடம் ஜெபமாலை சொல்வதனால் கிடைக்கும் பயன்கள் என்ன என்பது பற்றியும் எடுத்துச் சொன்னார். இவ்வாறு ஜெபமாலை பக்தி திருச்சபையில் படிப்படியாக வளர்ந்தது. 1969 ஆம் ஆண்டு திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பவுல் இவ்விழாவை திருச்செபமாலையின் அன்னை விழா என அறிவித்து, அதனை உலகம் முழுவதும் கொண்டாடப் பணித்தார்.

ஜெபமாலை சொல்வது என்பது, ஏதோ சொன்ன ஜெபத்தை திரும்பத் திரும்பச் சொல்வது கிடையாது.  நாம் ஜெபமாலை சொல்கிறது இயேசுவின் பிறப்பு, வளர்ப்பு, இறப்பு, அவருடைய உயிர்ப்பு ஆகியவற்றை மரியாவின் வாழ்வோடு இணைத்து தியானிக்கின்றோம். அது மட்டுமல்லாமல் ஜெபமாலையை நாம் சொல்லி ஜெபிக்கின்றபோது நம்முடைய ஐம்புலன்களும் ஒன்றாகச் சேர்ந்து இயங்குகின்றன. அதலால் இதனை ஒரு மிகச் சிறந்த பக்தி முயற்சி என நாம் உணர்ந்துகொள்ளலாம்.

தூய லூயிஸ் தே மான்போர்ட் என்பவர் செபமாலையைக் குறித்து இவ்வாறு கூறுவார், “ஜெபமாலை சொல்கிறபோது நமக்கு வரும் தீவினைகள் முற்றிலுமாக நீங்கும். இறையருள் நமக்கு மேலும் மேலும் பெருகும்” என்று. திருத்தந்தை பனிரெண்டாம் பத்திநாதரோ, “ஜெபமாலை என்பது சாதாரண விஷயம் கிடையாது. அதனைச் சொல்லி ஜெபிக்கின்றபோது மீட்பின் வரலாற்றை நினைவுகூறுகின்றோம்; ஆண்டவர் இயேசு நமக்குச் சொல்லிக் கொடுத்த ஜெபத்தினை நினைவுகூறுகின்றோம்; வானதூதர் கபிரியேல் மரியாவிற்குச் சொன்ன மங்கள வார்த்தையை நினைவுகூறுகின்றோம்” என்பார்.

ஆகவே, நாம் அனுதினமும் சொல்லக்கூடிய செபமாலையின் உட்பொருளையும் வல்லமையையும் உணர்ந்தவர்களாய் நம்பிக்கையோடு ஜெபமாலை சொல்லி ஜெபிப்போம்.

---JDH---தெய்வீக குணமளிக்கும் இயேசு /திண்டுக்கல்.

Feast : (07-10-2020)

Our Lady of the Rosary

This feast is celebrated on every October-7 from the year 1571. There was a war between Turkish army and Christian army in October 1571 at a place called Lepanto. The Christian army fought under the leadership of Dan Juan, an Austrian Military General. The situation then was that if the Turkish army won, there was every possibility that the entire Europe would come under Muslim control. Therefore Pope Pius-V requested all catholic Christians to recite rosary and pray to Mother Mary for the victory of the Christian army. People also recited rosary and prayed Mother Mary for the victory of the Christian army, in obedience to the request of the pope. In that war Christian army won on October 7, 1571. The news of the victory was conveyed to the Pope on October 7, 1571itself, when the Pope was talking with cardinals. He immediately directed the Church to celebrate the feast of Our Lady of the Rosary every year on October 7. All our prayers by reciting rosary will be heard and fulfilled. Family that recites rosary together will always remain united together.

---JDH---Jesus the Divine Healer---