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27 January 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஜனவரி 27

 St. Avitus


Feastday: January 27

Death: unknown



Martyr of Africa, possibly the St. Avitus venerated in the Canary Islands as an apostle and first bishop.



St. Datius


Feastday: January 27

Death: unknown


African martyr with Reatrus and company, also a second Datius, with Julian, Vincent, and twenty-seven companions. They were slain by Arian Vandals.




St. Gamelbert of Michaelsbuch


Feastday: January 27

Death: 800



The Blessed Gamelbert was a Christian priest, who worked in the 8th century in the area of the present Deggendorf in Bavaria in Germany.



Life

Gamelbert is said to have been of noble descent and a lord of Michaelsbuch. In the mid-8th century he acquired from Duke Tassilo III a piece of woodland on the opposite bank of the Danube between Mariaposching and Deggendorf, for which he had to pay a tax known as the Medema. From this was derived the name of Metten both for the place itself and for the monastery, Metten Abbey, that was founded there.


The first abbot was Gamelbert's godson Utto, who directed the construction of the monastery from his hermitage (the present Uttobrunn). In 766 twelve monks arrived from Reichenau Abbey as the first official occupants, although the place was well settled by then


Other

In art, Gamelbert is represented as a priest or as a pilgrim surrounded by birds. His feast is celebrated on 17 January.


Grave finds from Uttenkofen near Michaelsbuch have been dated to the late 7th or early 8th century and have been associated with the founding family of Metten Abbey.




St. Gamo


Feastday: January 27

Death: 8th century


Benedictine abbot of Bretigny, near Noyon, France. He aided the monastic expansion of the era and was a staunch patron of the arts.



St. Henry de Osso y Cervello


Feastday: January 27

Birth: 1840

Death: 1896

Beatified: Pope John Paul II

Canonized: Pope John Paul II



Henry was born at Vinebre, Catalonia, Spain, on the 16th October 1840 and was ordained priest on 21st September 1867. He was an apostle to young people in teaching them about their faith and inspired various movements for the teaching of the Gospel. As a spiritual director he was fascinated by St. Teresa of Jesus, the great teacher in the ways of prayer and Daughter of the Church who is better known in the English-speaking world as St. Teresa of Avila. In the light of her teaching, he founded the Company of St. Teresa (1876) dedicated to educating women in the school of the Gospel and following the example of St. Teresa. He gave himself to preaching and the apostolate through the printing press. He underwent many severe trials and sufferings. He died at Gilet, Valencia, Spain, on the 27th January, 1896. He was canonized on 16th July, 1993, in Madrid, by Pope John Paul II



St. Maurus


Feastday: January 27

Death: 555


Abbot founder of Bodon Abbey, near Sisteron, France. He is sometimes called Marius or May. Maurus was cured of a serious illness at the tomb of St. Denis in Paris. He was a revered prophet.




St. Sabas of Serbia


Feastday: January 27

Patron: of Serbian schools

Birth: 1174

Death: 1236



The son of a Serbian king who was also a saint, St. Sabas was born Rastko c. 1173/ 76; at 17, to avoid marriage, he fled to Mt. Athos, where he became a monk and founded the Hilander Monastery. In 1196, King Stephen I of Serbia abdicated, and taking the name Symeon, joined his son on Mt. Athos. Symeon died three years later, and Sabas, Archbishop of Serbia, translated his father's relics to their native land in 1208. Sabas wrote a history of his father's reign and a service to his father, the earliest known Serbian hynmography in Church Slavonic. Sabas copied books of law and compiled the Nomocanon, a book of canon laws. He was responsible for having liturgical documents translated from Greek into Serbian and for compiling two Serbian Typica. Because of his experience with Roman bishops and leaders on Athos after the Venetian sack of Constantinople in 1204, Sabas opposed the pro-Roman policies of his brother, Stephen II, the only Serbian king crowned by a pope. From 1217- 1219/ 20, Sabas was in exile, during which he persuaded the patriarch of Constantinople to grant the Serbian and Bulgarian churches autocephaly. When he returned to Serbia, he recrowned his brother. Sabas resigned as archbishop in 1230 /33 and travelled to the Holy Land, where he visited monasteries at Sketis, the Thebiad, and Mt. Sinai. He died in Bulgaria on his trip back from the Holy Land c. 1235/ 1237 King Ladislas of Serbia translated the relics of St. Sabas to Milesevo, a monastery the saint had founded shortly before his death. The Turks burned the relics in 1594.


Saint Sava (Serbian: Свети Сава / Sveti Sava, pronounced [sʋɛ̂ːtiː sǎːʋa], 1174 – 14 January 1236), known as the Enlightener, was a Serbian prince and Orthodox monk, the first Archbishop of the autocephalous Serbian Church, the founder of Serbian law, and a diplomat. Sava, born as Rastko (Serbian Cyrillic: Растко), was the youngest son of Serbian Grand Prince Stefan Nemanja (founder of the Nemanjić dynasty), and ruled the appanage of Hum briefly in 1190–92. He then left for Mount Athos, where he became a monk with the name Sava (Sabbas). At Athos he established the monastery of Hilandar, which became one of the most important cultural and religious centres of the Serbian people. In 1219 the Patriarchate exiled in Nicea recognized him as the first Serbian Archbishop, and in the same year he authored the oldest known constitution of Serbia, the Zakonopravilo nomocanon, thus securing full independence; both religious and political. Sava is regarded as the founder of Serbian medieval literature.[6][7][8]


He is widely considered as one of the most important figures of Serbian history. Saint Sava is venerated by the Serbian Orthodox Church as its founder on January 27 [O.S. January 14]. Many artistic works from the Middle Ages to modern times have interpreted his career. He is the patron saint of Serbia, Serbs, and Serbian education. The Church of Saint Sava in Belgrade is dedicated to him, built where the Ottomans burnt his remains in 1594 during an uprising in which the Serbs used icons of Sava as their war flags; the church is one of the largest church buildings in the world.





St. Marius


Feastday: January 27

Birth: 555



St. Marius Abbot January 27 A.D. 555     Dynamius, patrician of the Gauls who is mentioned by St. Gregory of Tours, (l. 6, c. 11,) and who was for some time steward of the patrimony of the Roman church in Gaul, in the time of St. Gregory the Great, as appears by a letter of that pope to him, (in which he mentions that he sent him in a reliquary some of the filings of the chains of St. Peter, and of the gridiron of St. Laurence,) was the author of the lives of St. Marius and of St. Maximus of Ries. From the fragments of the former in Bollandus, we learn that he was born at Orleans, became a monk, and after some time was chosen abbot at La-Val-Benois, in the diocese of Sisteron, in the reign of Gondebald, king of Burgundy, who died in 509. St. Marius made a pilgrimage to St. Martin's, at Tours, and another to the tomb of St. Dionysius, near Paris, where, falling sick, he dreamed that he was restored to health by an apparition of St. Dionysius, and awaking, found himself perfectly recovered. St. Marius, according to a custom received in many monasteries before the rule of St. Bennet, in imitation of the retreat of our divine Redeemer, made it a rule to live a recluse in a forest during the forty days of Lent. In one of these retreats, he foresaw, in a vision, the desolation which barbarians would soon after spread in Italy, and the destruction of his own monastery, which he foretold before his death, in 555. The abbey of La-Val-Benois *being demolished, the body of the saint was translated to Forcalquier, where it is kept with honor in a famous collegiate church which bears his name, and takes the title of Concathedral with Sisteron. St. Marius is called in French St. May, or St. Mary, in Spain, St. Mere, and St. Maire, and in some places, by mistake, St. Maurus. See fragments of his life compiled by Dynamius, extant in Bollandus, with ten preliminary observations.




St. Angela Merici

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஜனவரி 27)


✠ புனிதர் ஏஞ்செலா மெரிசி ✠

(St. Angela Merici)


கன்னி/ சபை நிறுவனர்:

(Virgin and Foundress)


பிறப்பு: மார்ச் 21, 1474

டிசெஸானோ டெல் கார்டா, ப்ரெஸ்ஸியா பிராந்தியம், வெனிஸ் குடியரசு

(Desenzano del Garda, Province of Brescia, Republic of Venice)


இறப்பு: ஜனவரி 27, 1540 (வயது 65)

ப்ரெஸ்ஸியா, வெனிஸ் குடியரசு

(Brescia, Republic of Venice)


அருளாளர் பட்டம்: ஏப்ரல் 30, 1768 

திருத்தந்தை பதின்மூன்றாம் கிளமன்ட்

(Pope Clement XIII)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: மே 24, 1807 

திருத்தந்தை ஏழாம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius VII)


முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்: 

புனித ஆஞ்சலா மெரிசி சரணாலயம், ப்ரெஸ்ஸியா, இத்தாலி

(Sanctuary of St. Angela Merici, Brescia, Italy)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஜனவரி 27


பாதுகாவல்: 

நோய் (Sickness), 

பெற்றோரை இழந்தோர் (Loss of Parents), 

மாற்றுத் திறனாளிகள் (Handicapped People)


ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையால் புனிதராக அருட்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்ட ஏஞ்செலா மெரிசி, ஒரு இத்தாலி நாட்டின் ஆன்மீக கல்வியாளர் ஆவார். இவர் கி.பி. 1535ம் ஆண்டு, "ப்ரெஸ்ஸியா" (Brescia) என்ற இடத்தில் "புனிதர் ஊர்சுலாவின் துணைவர்கள்" (Company of St. Ursula) என்ற கல்வி நிறுவனத்தினை நிறுவினார். இக்கல்வி நிறுவனத்தின் பெண்கள், சிறுமிகளின் கல்விக்காக தமது வாழ்க்கையினை திருச்சபைக்கு அர்ப்பணித்தவர்கள் ஆவர். சிறிது காலத்திலேயே இக்கல்வி நிறுவனம் சட்டென்று "ஊர்சுலின் துறவற சபையாக" (Monastic Order of Ursulines) மாறி உயர்ந்தது. இத்துறவு சபையின் அருட்கன்னியர்கள் செபம் மற்றும் கற்றலுக்கான இடங்களை முதலில் ஐரோப்பா எங்கும், குறிப்பாக வட அமெரிக்காவிலும், பின்னர் உலகமெங்கும் அமைத்தார்கள்.


வாழ்க்கை:

கி.பி. 1474ல் பிறந்த மெரிசியும் இவரது மூத்த சகோதரியான "கியானா மரியாவும்" (Giana Maria) இவரது பதினைந்தாம் வயதிலேயே அநாதைகளானார்கள். தமது தாய்மாமன் வீட்டில் வாழ்வதற்காக பக்கத்து நகருக்கு சென்றனர். சிறிது காலத்திலேயே இவரது மூத்த சகோதரி "கியானா மரியா" அகால மரணமடைந்தார். மரணத்தின் முன்பும் அதன் பின்னரும் நடக்க வேண்டிய எந்தவொரு இறுதிச்சடங்குக்களும்கூட அவருக்கு நடக்கவில்லை. இதனால் மிகவும் மன உளைச்சலுக்கு ஆளானார் மெரிசி. இந்நிலையில், மெரிசி "புனித ஃபிரான்சிஸின் மூன்றாம் நிலை சபையில்" (Third Order of St. Francis) இணைந்தார். தம்மை கடவுளுக்கு அர்ப்பணித்திருந்த மெரிசியின் அழகும் கவர்ச்சியான பொன்னிற கூந்தலும் பிறரைக் கவர்ந்தன. உலகினரின் கவனத்தை ஈர்க்க விரும்பாத மெரிசி, தமது கூந்தலை புகைக்கரியினால் கோரப்படுத்திக்கொண்டார்.


மெரிசியின் இருபதாம் வயதில் இவரது தாய்மாமன் இறந்து போனார். ஆகவே, தமது சகோதரர்களுடன் வாழ்வதற்காக சொந்த ஊர் திரும்பினார். இவருக்கு சேர வேண்டிய சொத்துக்கள் இவருக்கு தரப்பட்டன. பின்னர் இவருக்கு ஒரு திருக்காட்சி காணக் கிடைத்தது. அதில், இளம் பெண்களுக்கு சமய கல்வியூட்டுவதற்கு தமது வாழ்வினை அர்ப்பணித்த அருட்கன்னியர் கொண்ட சமூகம் ஒன்றினை நிறுவும்படி அறிவுறுத்தப்பட்டார். இங்ஙனம் இவர் ஆரம்பித்த இந்த அருட்கன்னியர் சமூகம் வெற்றி பெற்றது. பிறகு பக்கத்து நகரான "ப்ரெஸ்ஸியாவில்" (Brescia) மற்றுமொரு பள்ளி தொடங்க இவர் அழைக்கப்பட்டார்.


எண்ணிலங்கா சமூகப் பணிகளை செய்த இவர், என்ணிடலங்கா ஏழை மக்களின் வாழ்வை உயர்த்தினார். கி.பி. 1524ம் ஆண்டு தனது 50ம் வயதில் பாலஸ்தீனத்திற்கு புனிதப் பயணம் ஒன்றை மேற்கொண்டார். வழியில், "க்ரேட்டா" எனும் தீவில், திடீர் என்று அவரது கண்களின் பார்வை மறைந்தது. இருப்பினும் அவர் தமது புனித பயணத்தைத் தொடர்ந்தார். பாலஸ்தீன புனித பயணத்திலிருந்து திரும்புகையில், அவரது பார்வை பறிபோன அதே "க்ரேட்டா" தீவில், அவர் சிலுவையை செபிக்கையில், அவருக்கு அதிசயமாக மீண்டும் பார்வை திரும்பியது.


கி.பி. 1535ம் ஆண்டும், நவம்பர் மாதம், 25ம் நாளன்று, தம்முடன் இருந்த பன்னிரெண்டு இளம்பெண்களுடன் இணைந்து "ப்ரெஸ்ஸியா" (Brescia) என்ற இடத்தில் "புனித ஊர்சுலாவின் துணைவர்கள்" (Company of St. Ursula) என்ற கல்வி நிறுவனத்தினை நிறுவினார். அவர்களுடைய நோக்கம், எதிர்கால மனைவி, தாய் (தற்போதைய இளம்பெண்கள்) ஆகியோரின் குடும்ப வாழ்க்கை நிலையை கிறிஸ்தவ கல்வி மூலம் உயர்த்துவது ஆகும். நான்கு வருடங்களில் இக்கல்வி நிறுவனம் இருபத்தெட்டாக உயர்ந்தது. மெரிசி தம்முடனிருந்தவர்களை இறைவனுக்கு ஒப்புக்கொடுத்து, அயலாரின் சேவையில் தம்மை அர்ப்பணிக்க கற்பித்தார். அதன் உறுப்பினர்கள் ஏதும் சிறப்பு பழக்க வழக்கங்களோ அல்லது சமய பிரமாணங்களோ எடுத்துக்கொண்டவர்கள் அல்ல. மெரிசி இக்கல்வி நிறுவனத்தின் உறுப்பினர்களுக்கான வாழ்க்கை நியதி அல்லது விதிகளை தாமே எழுதினர். அதில் பிரம்மச்சரியம், வறுமை, தாழ்ச்சி, கீழ்படிதல் ஆகியவற்றுக்கு முக்கியத்துவம் அளித்தார். "ஊர்சுலின்ஸ்" (The Ursulines) என்றழைக்கப்படும் இவர்களுடைய நிறுவனம், மென்மேலும் பள்ளிகளையும் அநாதை இல்லங்களையும் தொடங்கியது. கி.பி. 1537ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 18ம் நாளன்று, மெரிசி இந்நிறுவனங்களின் தலைமைப் பொறுப்பையேற்றார். மெரிசி இந்நிறுவன உறுப்பினர்களுக்காக எழுதிய விதிகள் மற்றும் நியதிகளை கி.பி. 1544ம் ஆண்டு திருத்தந்தை “மூன்றாம் பவுல்” (Pope Paul III) ஒப்புதல் அளித்து அங்கீகரித்தார்.


கி.பி. 1540ம் ஆண்டு, ஜனவரி மாதம், 27ம் நாள், மெரிசி மரிக்கும்போது, 24 கல்வி நிறுவனங்கள் பிராந்தியம் முழுது கல்விச் சேவையில் இருந்தன. மெரிசியின் விருப்பப்படியே அவரது உடல் மூன்றாம் நிலை ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் வழக்கப்படி ஆடை அணிவிக்கப்பட்டு "அஃப்ரா தேவாலயத்தில்" (Church of St. Afra) அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டது. கி.பி. 1945ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 2ம் தேதி "அஃப்ரா தேவாலயமும்" அதன் சுற்றுப்புற கட்டிடங்களும் தேவாலயத்தின் பங்குத்தந்தை மற்றும் இன்னபிற பங்கு மக்களுடேன் சேர்ந்து இரண்டாம் உலகப்போரின்போது நிகழ்ந்த குண்டு வீச்சில் முழுதும் அழிக்கப்பட்டன. பின்னர், இரண்டாம் உலகப்போரின் முடிவில் தேவாலயமும் அதன் சுற்றுப்புற கட்டிடங்களும் மீண்டும் கட்டப்பட்டு கி.பி. 1954ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 10ம் நாளன்று, திறக்கப்பட்டன. கி.பி. 1956ம் ஆண்டு, ஜனவரி மாதம், 27ம் நாளன்று, புதிதாக புனிதர் ஏஞ்செலா மெரிசிக்கு தேவாலயம் அர்ப்பணிக்கப்பட்டது.

Feastday: January 27

Patron: of the sick, disabled and physically challenged people and those grieving the loss of parents

Birth: March 21, 1474

Death: January 27, 1540

Beatified: April 30, 1768 by Pope Clement XIII

Canonized: May 24, 1807 by Pope Pius VII




St. Angela Merici was an Italian religious educator and founder of the Ursulines whose deep prayer life and relationship with the Lord bore the fruit of mystical encounters with God. She was born on March 21, 1474 in Desenzano, a small town on the shore of Lake Garda in Lombardy.


At just 10-years-old, Angela and her older sister became orphans and went to live with their uncle in Salo. There they led a quiet and devout Catholic Christian life. After the untimely death of her sister, Angela was saddened by the fact the that she had not had the opportunity to receive her last Sacraments and was concerned for her sister's eternal salvation.


Angela was inspired by the Holy Spirit to dedicate herself to the Lord and to give her life in service to the Church to help everyone grow closer to the Lord. Still filled with grief, she prayed for God to reveal the condition of her deceased sister's soul. In a vision, she learned her sister was in Heaven with the company of saints. She became increasingly more devout and joined the Third Order of St. Francis where she also pledged to remain a consecrated virgin, forsaking marriage to one man to be married to the Lord and His Church.


When Angela was 20-years-old, her uncle died and she returned to Desenzano. She found that around her hometown there were many young girls who had no education and no hope. Her heart was moved. She also became distressed by their ignorance and upset at the parents who had not educated them.


Inspired by the Holy Spirit, Angela became convinced there was great need for a better way of teaching these young girls. So, she opened her own home to them and began to teach them herself. She devotedly taught them the Catholic Christian faith. By her example and instruction, she taught them to how to pray and participate in the sacramental life of the Church. She evangelized and catechized these young girls, opening them up to the life of grace.


Another vision from the Lord revealed to Angela that she was to found an institution with other consecrated virgins to further devote their lives toward the religious training of young girls. These women had little money and no power, but were bound together by their dedication to education and commitment to Jesus Christ and service to His Church.


Living in their own homes, the girls met for prayer and classes where Angela reminded them, "Reflect that in reality you have a greater need to serve [the poor] than they have of your service."


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Angela's charming nature and natural leadership qualities made this a successful endeavor. She was so successful she accepted an invitation from the neighboring town, Brescia, to establish a similar school there.


In 1524, she eagerly took on the opportunity to travel to the Holy Land. During the journey, she was suddenly struck with blindness while on the island of Crete. This didn't stop her though; she continued the journey with as much enthusiasm as she would have if she had her vision. She made the entire pilgrimage and visited the sacred shrines. On the journey back home, her sight was miraculously restored while she was praying before a crucifix in the same place where she had become blind. The Lord showed Angela through this experience that she must never shut her eyes to the needs she saw around her ? to not shut her heart to God's call.


During the Jubilee year in 1525, Angela traveled to Rome to gain the special grace of the plenary indulgence offered to all Christian pilgrims. Pope Clement VII had heard of Angela and her great holiness. He noted her wonderful success as a religious teacher for young girls and invited her to stay in Rome. Angela was humble, disliked publicity and kindly declined the generous offer.


Though she turned him down, perhaps the pope's request gave her the inspiration or the push to make her little group more formal. Although it was never recognized formally as a religious order in her lifetime, Angela's Company of Saint Ursula, or the Ursulines, was the first group of women religious to work outside of the cloister and became the first teaching order of women in the Catholic Church.


On November 25, 1535, Angela gathered together 12 young virgins and laid down the foundation for the Order of the Ursulines at a small house near the Church of St. Afra in Bresica with Angela's Company of Saint Ursula, under the patronage of St. Ursula.


Angela's goal was to elevate family life through Christian education for women ? the future wives and mothers. The community she founded was different than many of the religious orders of women which existed in her day. She believed it was important to teach the girls in their own homes with their own families. One of her favorite sayings was, "Disorder in society is the result of disorder in the family."


Though the women in the community wore no special religious habit and took no formal vows, Angela wrote a Rule of Life for those who lived and served in the community of women. They did pledge to live a life of consecrated celibacy, poverty and obedience. They lived this Rule of Life within their own homes.



This was the first group of consecrated women to work outside of a formal cloister or convent in her day and became the first teaching order of women in the Catholic Church. The community existed as what is called a "secular institute" until years after Angela's death.


The Ursulines opened both schools and orphanages and in 1537, Angela was elected "Mother and Mistress" of the group. Her Rule was officially approved by Pope Paul III in 1544 and the Ursulines became a recognized religious community of women with a teaching ministry.


Before her death, Angela reassured her Sisters who were afraid to lose her in death: "I shall continue to be more alive than I was in this life, and I shall see you better and shall love more the good deeds which I shall see you doing continually, and I shall be able to help you more."


St. Angela Merici died on January 27, 1540. Clothed in the habit of a Franciscan tertiary, Angela was buried in the Church of St. Afra in Brescia.


St. Angela Merici was beatified on April 30, 1768 by Pope Clement XIII and canonized May 24, 1807 by Pope Pius VII.


Angela is often attributed with a cloak and ladder.


She is the patron saint of sickness, disabled and physically challenged people, and those grieving the loss of parents. Her feast day is celebrated on January 27.


In Her Footsteps:

Take a look around you. Instead of just driving or walking without paying attention today, open your eyes to the needs you see along the way. What people do you notice who need help but who are not being helped? What are their true needs? Make a commitment to help them in some way.


Prayer:

Saint Angela, you were not afraid of change. You did not let stereotypes keep you from serving. Help us to overcome our fear of change in order to follow God's call and allow others to follow theirs. Amen


Angela Merici or Angela de Merici (/məˈriːtʃi/ mə-REE-chee, Italian: [ˈandʒela (de) meˈriːtʃi]; 21 March 1474 – 27 January 1540) was an Italian religious educator, who is honored as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church. She founded the Company of St. Ursula in 1535 in Brescia, in which women dedicated their lives to the service of the Church through the education of girls. From this organisation later sprang the monastic Order of Ursulines, whose nuns established places of prayer and learning throughout Europe and, later, worldwide, most notably in North America.



Birth to death

Merici was born in 1474 on a farm near Desenzano del Garda, a small town on the southwestern shore of Lake Garda in Lombardy, Italy. She and her older sister, Giana Maria, were left orphans when she was ten years old.[1] They went to live with their uncle in the town of Salò. Young Angela was very distressed when her sister suddenly died without receiving the Last Rites of the Church and prayed that her sister's soul rest in peace. It is said that in a vision she received a response that her sister was in heaven in the company of the saints.[2] She joined the Third Order of St. Francis around that time. People began to notice Angela's beauty and particularly to admire her hair. As she had promised herself to God, and wanted to avoid the worldly attention, she dyed her hair in soot.


Merici's uncle died when she was twenty years old and she returned to her home in Desenzano, and lived with her brothers,[3] on her own property, given to her in lieu of the dowry that would otherwise have been hers had she married. She later had another vision that revealed to her that she was to found an association of virgins who were to devote their lives to the religious training of young girls. This association was a success and she was invited to start another school in the neighboring city, Brescia.[2][4]



St. Angela Merici (17th century)

According to legend, in 1524, while traveling to the Holy Land, Merici became suddenly blind when she was on the island of Crete. Despite this, she continued her journey to the Holy Land and was ostensibly cured of her blindness on her return, while praying before a crucifix, at the same place where she was struck with blindness a few weeks before.[2] In 1525 she journeyed to Rome in order to gain the indulgences of the Jubilee Year then being celebrated. Pope Clement VII, who had heard of her virtue and success with her school, invited her to remain in Rome. Merici disliked notoriety, however, and soon returned to Brescia.


On 25 November 1535, Merici gathered with 12 young women who had joined in her work in a small house in Brescia near the Church of St Afra, where together they committed themselves in the founding of the Company of St Ursula, placed under the protection of the patroness of medieval universities. Her goal was to elevate family life through the Christian education of future wives and mothers. They were the first teaching order of women religious.[5]


Four years later the group had grown to 28.[6] Merici taught her companions to serve God, but to remain in the world, teaching the girls of their own neighborhood, and to practice a religious form of life in their own homes.[a] The members wore no special habit and took no formal religious vows. Merici wrote a Rule of Life for the group, which specified the practice of celibacy, poverty and obedience in their own homes. The Ursulines opened orphanages and schools. On 18 March 1537, she was elected "Mother and Mistress" of the group. The Rule she had written was approved in 1544 by Pope Paul III.[7]


When Merici died in Brescia on 27 January 1540, there were 24 communities of the Company of St. Ursula serving the Church through the region.[8] Her body was clothed in the habit of a Franciscan tertiary and was interred in the Church of Sant'Afra.


The traditional view is that Merici believed that better Christian education was needed for girls and young women, to which end she dedicated her life. Querciolo Mazzonis argues that the Company of St. Ursula was not originally intended as a charitable group specifically focused on the education of poor girls, but that this direction developed after her death in 1540, sometime after it received formal recognition in 1546.[9]


Veneration


The incorrupt body of Saint Angela Merici in Brescia, Italy.

During her life, Merici had often prayed at the tombs of the Brescian martyrs at the Church of St. Afra in Brescia. She lived in small rooms attached to a priory of the Canons Regular of the Lateran. According to her wishes, after her death, she was interred in the Church of St Afra to be near the martyrs' remains. There her body remained until the complete destruction of this church and its surrounding area by Allied bombing during the Second World War, on 2 March 1945, in which the parish priest and many townspeople died. The church and corresponding buildings were afterwards rebuilt, and reopened on 10 April 1954. The church was consecrated on January 27, 1956, with a new dedication to St. Angela Merici, while the Parish of St. Afra was transferred to the neighboring Church of St. Eufemia.[10]


Merici was beatified in Rome on 30 April 1768, by Pope Clement XIII. She was later canonized on 24 May 1807 by Pope Pius VII.


Feast Day

Merici was not included in the 1570 Tridentine Calendar of Pope Pius V, because she was not canonized until 1807. In 1861 her feast day was included in the Roman Calendar – not on the day of her death, 27 January, since this date was occupied by the feast day of St. John Chrysostom, but instead on 31 May. In 1955 Pope Pius XII assigned this date to the new feast of the Queenship of Mary, and moved Merici's feast to 1 June. The celebration was ranked as a Double until 1960, when Pope John XXIII gave it the equivalent rank of Third-Class Feast. Lastly, in the major 1969 reform of the liturgy, Pope Paul VI moved the celebration, ranked as a Memorial, to the saint's day of death, 27 January.




Blessed Jurgis Matulaitis-Matulewicz


Also known as

• George Matulaitis

• Jerzy Matulevicz

• Jorge Matulaitis

• Jurgis Matulewicz

• Jurgis Matulaitis-Matulevicius



Profile

Born to a poor farm family, the youngest of eight children at a time when Lithuania was under the control of Tsarist Russia. Orphaned at age ten. Developed tuberculosis of the bone in his leg, in his early teens; he suffered with it the rest of his life. Entered the seminary in Poland in 1891, studied in the major seminary in Warsaw, studied theology in Saint Petersburg, Russia, earned his doctorate of theology at the University of Fribourg, Switzerland. Spiritual student of Blessed Honorat Kozminski. Ordained on 20 November 1898 in the Congregation of Marian Fathers. Taught Latin and canon law in the seminary in the diocese of Kielce, Poland. Worked for the betterment of the working poor. Head of the Sociology section of Saint Petersburg Academy in 1907. Taught dogmatic theology. Vice-rector of the Academy. Noted teacher, preacher, spiritual director, and confessor. Reformed the Marians of the Immaculate Conception in 1910, changing their constitution, habit, vows, and way of life, resigning his position at the Academy to work for the Marians revitalization; superior general of the Congregation on 14 July 1911. Founded the Congregation of Sisters of the Immaculate Conception in 1918. Founded the Sisters Servants of the Jesus in the Eucharist in Belarus. Reluctant bishop of Vilnius, Lithuania on 23 October 1918. The city was divided into warring camps loyal to the various forces of the First World War, and George fought constantly to defend the right of the Church and the freedom of the citizens. Founded the Handmaids of Jesus in the Eucharist in 1919. He retired from his see on 14 July 1925; on 1 September 1925 he was made titular archbishop and Apostolic Visitator to Lithuania. Dispatched by the Vatican to complete a concordant with the Lithuanian government to restore diplomatic relations; he succeded just before his death.


Born

13 April 1871 at Lugine, Lithuania


Died

27 January 1927 of appendicitis at Kaunas, Lithuania


Beatified

28 June 1987 by Pope John Paul II





Saint Enric de Osso y Cervello



Also known as

Enrique, Henry


Profile

The youngest of three children born to Jaime and Micaela de Osso y Cervello. Enric felt an early call to the priesthood, which his mother supported but his father opposed. At age 12 Enric was sent to Quinto de Ebro to learn the textile business from his uncle. There Henry became seriously ill, and upon his recovery, had to return home; he stopped first at Our Lady of the Pillar to give thanks for his health.


His mother died in the cholera epidemic of 1854, and the boy was sent to Reus to apprentice in the textile business there. Enric sought refuge and a new home in the Montserrat monastery. His brother James took him home, and his father finally began to understand the boy's desire to follow his vocation. He relented, and Enric studied at Barcelona, Spain where he was a sub-deacon, and at Tortosa, Spain. Classmate with Blessed Emmanuel Domingo y Sol. Ordained on 21 September 1867, celebrating his first Mass at Montserrat, Spain.


He taught mathmatics at the Tortosa seminary. Had a great devotion to Saint Teresa of Avila, and sought to bring her reforming zeal to his preaching and parish missions. Founded the Association of Young Catholic Daughters of Mary and Saint Teresa of Jesus in 1873, the Institute of Josephine Brothers (Josephine Sisterhood) in 1876, and the Congregation of Saint Teresa (the Teresian Missionaries). This group received papal approval in 1877, and the sisters serve today in Europe, Africa and Mexico.


Founded and wrote extensively for the publications El Hombre (The Man), El Amigo del Pueble (The Friend of the People), and Revista Teresiana (The Teresian Review). He aimed much of his writings and teachings to women. He published works aimed at a female audience on prayer and living the spiritual life. Was working with Blessed Emmanuel Domingo y Sol to develop a Josephite order for men when he died.


Born

16 October 1840 at Vinebre, Tarragona, Spain


Died

• 27 January 1896 at Gilet, Valencia, Spain of a stroke

• relics re-interred at the chapel at the Teresian Missionaries at Tortona in July 1908


Canonized

16 June 1993 by Pope John Paul II at Madrid, Spain





Blessed Carolina Santocanale



Also known as

• Sister Maria of Jesus

• Sister Maria di Gesù Santocanale

• Carolina Concetta Angela Santocanale



Profile

Born to the nobility, part of the family of the barons of Celsa Reale near Palermo, Italy. Baptized at the age of three days, made her first Communion at age eight, and received a good education. In her late teens she became the target for offers of marriage, but began to feel a call to religious life. Spiritual student of Father Mauro Venuti. Leader of the Daughters of Mary in the parish of San Antonio Abate in Palermo at age 21. The call to religious life became stronger, but she was torn between the contemplative cloister and working with the sick, poor, disabled and abandoned on Palermo. Hoping to combine the two, she became a Franciscan tertiary, taking the name Sister Maria di Gesù. Her family strongly objected to her choice, especially when she and some like-minded tertiaries began going door to door in poor neighborhoods, wearing a backpack of supplies, helping the sick, feeding the poor. Founded the Capuchin Sisters of the Immaculate of Lourdes on 24 January 1923 to continue her work; it continues to do so today.


Born

2 October 1852 in Palermo, Italy as Carolina Concetta Angela Santocanale


Died

27 January 1923 in Cinisi, Palermo, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

• 12 June 2016 by Pope Francis

• beatification celebrated in the Cathedral of Santa Maria Nuova, Monreale, Italy presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato




Blessed João Schiavo



Also known as

Giovanni Schiavo


Profile

Eldest of nine children born to Luiz, a shoemaker, and Rosa Schiavo. At one point in his youth, João suffered through four years of meningitis, which nearly killed him. He joined the Josephites of Murialdo (Murialdines) in 1917 where he came to know Venerable Eugenio Ruffo. Ordained a priest on 10 July 1927 in Vincenza, Italy, and served as a parish priest in Modena and Oderzo. Missionary to Brazil, arriving in Jaguarão on 5 September 1931. On 25 November 1931, he moved to Ana Rech and started working at Colégio Murialdo. In 1935, he moved to Galópolis, Brazil where he ran a school and a parish. In 1937, he assumed the direction of Colégio Murialdo and the coordination of the Josephine priests in Ana Rech. In 1956 he moved to the Josefino Seminary of Fazenda Souza and worked for the formation of the Murialdine Sisters of Saint Joseph.


Born

8 July 1903 in Sant'Urbano de Montecchio Maggiore, Vicenza, Italy


Died

at 9:30am on 27 January 1967 in Caxias do Sul, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil of liver damage from hepatitis and liver cancer


Beatified

• 28 October 2017 by Pope Francis

• beatification celebrated in the Pavilhões da Festa da Uva, Caxias do Sul, Brazil, presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato

• his beatification miracle involved the cure from acute peritonitis of Juvelino Cara on 9 September 1997




Blessed Manfredo Settala



Additional Memorials

• 26 January (blessed bread is distributed to families in the Riva San Vitaly, Italy on the eve of his memorial)

• Sunday following 27 January (procession of his relics)



Profile

Born to an esteemed Milanese family. Priest of the parishes of Cuasso, Cuasso al Piano, Cuasso al Monte, Brusimpiano and Porto Ceresio Besano in the diocese of Milan. Hermit on Monte San Giorgio, Italy. His reputation for piety spread, which led to a series of people asking for his advice, and his intercession in a plague in 1207; he recommended pilgrimages to the tombs of saints and to ask for their intercession, which worked. Miracle worker.


Born

latter 12th century Milan, Italy


Died

• 27 January 1217 in Riva San Vitaly, Lombardy, Italy of natural causes

• the bells throught the region miraculously rang at the hour of his death

• buried in Riva San Vitaly at the foot of Monte San Giogio

• relics enshrined in a marble sacrophagus in 1387

• relics re-enshrined in an urn at the high altar in 1633

• relics re-enshrined in the Como, Italy in 1888




Blessed Alruna of Cham


Also known as

Alrun, Mother of the Poor


Profile

Born to the nobility, a member of the house of Cham, she was married to the Mazalin, Count of Portis, and the mother of one son. Widowed, she converted her castle into a hospital for the poor, and lived as a prayerful recluse at the Benedictine abbey of Saint Maritius in Niederaltaich, Bavaria, Germany. She became known for spiritual insights and wisdom, and was a much-sought advisor.


Born

c.990 in Vohburg castle on the Danube River in Bavaria, Germany


Died

• 27 January 1045 in Niederaltaich, Bavaria, Germany of a fever

• buried in the crypt under the altar of Saint Oswald in the Benedictine abbey of Saint Maritius in Niederaltaich

• relics enshrined at the altar of Saints Heinrich and Kunigunde in the abbey church on 16 September 1731

• following a damaging fire, her relics were enshrined in a glass reliquary in the monastery church in 1800


Patronage

• against fever

• pregnant women




Pope Saint Vitalian


Also known as

Vitalianus



Profile

Son of Anastasius; nothing else is known of Vitalian before his election to the papacy. Chosen 76th pope in 657. His pontificate was marked by constant conflict with the eastern patriarchs and leaders over their support of Monothelite heresy. Helped settle the conflict between English and Irish bishops over the date of Easter. Sent Saint Adrian of Canterbury and Saint Theodore of Tarsus to England, which strengthened the ties between the bishops there with Rome. Came into conflict with archbishop Maurus of Ravenna who declared his see independent from Vatican control; he and the pope excommunicated each other, and emperor Constans II intervened on the side of the archbishop, and it wasn't until 682 that the controversy ended.


Born

at Segni, Campania, Italy


Papal Ascension

• elected on 2 June 657

• enthroned on 30 July 657


Died

• 27 January 672

• interred in Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome, Italy



Saint Devota

#புனித_டிவோட்டா (-303)


ஜனவரி 27


இவர் (#StDevota) பிரான்ஸ் நாட்டிற்கு அருகில் உள்ள தீவுகளில் ஒன்றான கோர்சிகா என்ற இடத்தில் பிறந்தவர். இவர் வளர்ந்து பெரியவராகி, உரோமை அரச அதிகாரியான யூடிசியுஸ் என்பவரிடம் பணிசெய்து வந்தார்.


இந்நிலையில் உரோமையை ஆண்ட  தியோகிளசியன், மாக்சிமியான் ஆகியோரிடம் ஆளுநராக இருந்த பார்பாருஸ் என்பவன் யூடிசியுசைச் சந்திக்க வந்தான். அவன் யூடிசியுசிடம் டிவோட்டோ என்ற பெண்மணி பணிசெய்து வருவதையும், அவர் ஒரு கிறிஸ்தவர் என்பதையும் அறிந்து, அவரை உரோமைக் கடவுளுக்குப் பலி செலுத்துச் சொன்னான். 


இதற்கு டிவோட்டா மறுப்புத் தெரிவிக்கவே ஆளுநர் இவரைப் பலவாறாகச் செய்து கொல்ல ஆணையிட்டான். மேலும் கொல்லப்பட்ட டிவோட்டாவின் உடல் கிறிஸ்தவர்களுக்குக் கிடைத்துவிட்டால், அதை வைத்து அவர்கள் வழிபடத் தொடங்கி விடுவார்கள் என்று அஞ்சி அதைத் தீயிட்டுக் கொளுத்தச் சொன்னான்.


அதற்குள் கிறிஸ்தவர்கள் டிவோட்டாவின் உடலை மீட்டு, கப்பல் வழியாக மொனாகோ என்ற இடத்திற்குக் கொண்டு சென்றார்கள். அங்கு அவரது உடல் நல்லடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டு, அதன் மேல் ஒரு கோயிலானது எழுப்பப்பட்டது.

Also known as

Dévote



Profile

Member of the household of the imperial Roman senator Eutychiu, Devota wanted to devote herself to a life of God, but was imprisoned, tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian by order of the prefect Barbarus. Tradition says that flowers bloom out of season on her feast day.


Born

Mariana, Corsica, France


Died

• tortured to death on the rack c.303

• prefect Barbarus ordered her body burned to prevent veneration, but it was stolen by Christians and put on a boat to Africa to receive Christian burial there; when a storm threatened the boat, a dove flew from Devote's mouth, the storm abated and the bird guided the boat to Les Gaumetes (in modern Monaca)

• she was buried near a shrine of Saint George

• a chapel was soon built at her grave, which survives today

• relics at Riviera de Porenta, Monaco


Patronage

• Corsica

• Monaco






Saint Julian of Sora


Also known as

Giuliano di Sora


Profile

Arrested, tortured, and executed in the persecutions of Antoninus Pius. While he was in custody, a pagan temple collapsed, destroying the statue in it; Julian was immediately accused of magic and of having caused the destruction, and was immediately executed.



Born

Dalmatia


Died

• beheaded c.150 at in a collapsed pagan temple in Sora, Campania, Italy

• relics enshrined in a church built on the site of his execution

• relics re-discovered on 2 October 1612, and transferred to the church of the Holy Spirit in Costanza Sforza Boncompagni, Italy on 6 April 1614

• relics re-enshrined c.1800 in the cathedral in Sora


Patronage

Accettura, Italy



Saint Julian of Le Mans


Profile

Born to the Roman nobility. First bishop of Le Mans, France. Evangelized around Le Mans, an area under the influence of the old Roman pantheon and the Druids. When he felt he was growing too old to effectively discharge his office, he retired to live as a hermit at Sarthe. Many extravagant miracles were attributed to him by writers long after his death. Due to the Norman invasions, his name was carried to several parishes in England.



Died

• 3rd century at Sarthe, Gaul (modern Sant-Marceaux, France) of natural causes

• relics translated to the cathedral of Notre-Dame-du-Pré at Le Mans, France in 1254




Blessed Antonio Mascaró Colomina




Profile

Professed cleric in the Sons of the Holy Family. In 1935-1936 he was in the military, serving during the week and studying in seminary on when off duty. At the beginning of the Spanish Civil War, the seminary closed and he was mustered out of the army; he moved to Barcelona, Spain and worked in a soap factory. Arrested and executed for his faith.


Born

12 March 1913 in Albelda, Huesca, Spain


Died

• 27 January 1937 in Montcada, Barcelona, Spain

• body has not been located


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis




Blessed Gonzalo Diaz di Amarante



Profile

A sailor who, in Lima, Peru in 1603, joined the Mercedarians at the Convent of Mercy. Served as doorman and porter for his house. Chaplain of the Mercedarian house of Callao, Peru. Noted for his deep prayer life, his charity to the indigenous people and the poor, his miraculous ability to heal by prayer, and by visions of the Blessed Virgin Mary.



Born

1540 in Amarante, Portugal


Died

• 27 January 1618 in Callao, Peru of natural causes

• interred in the Mercedarian church in Lima




Saint John Maria Muzeyi


Also known as

• Jean-Marie Muzeeyi

• Jean-Marie the Elder



Additional Memorial

3 June as one of the Martyrs of Uganda


Profile

Mbogo clan. Member of the Ugandan royal court. Convert. One of the Martyrs of Uganda who died in the Mwangan persecutions, the last one to die in that persecution.


Born

at Buganda, Uganda


Died

beheaded on 27 January 1887 at Mengo, Uganda


Canonized

18 October 1964 by Pope Paul VI at Rome, Italy



Blessed Rosalie du Verdier de la Sorinière



Also known as

Soeur Saint Celeste


Additional Memorial

2 January as one of the Martyrs of Anjou


Profile

Our Lady of Calvary Benedictine nun of the diocese of Angers, France. Martyred in the persecutions of the French Revolution.


Born

12 August 1745 in Saint-Pierre de Chemillé, Maine-et-Loire, France


Died

beheaded on 27 January 1794 in Angers, Maine-et-Loire, France


Beatified

19 February 1984 by Pope John Paul II at Rome, Italy




Blessed Benvenuta of Perugia


Profile

One of the first of the Poor Clare nun, joining the Order in 1213 at the San Damiano convent in Assisi, Italy, and accepted into the Order by Saint Clare of Assisi herself. She became a friend, companion and spiritual student of Saint Clare, and testified in the canonization process of Saint Clare. She was considered a model of the virtues sought by Poor Clares.


Died

• c.1257 in Assisi, Italy of natural causes

• buried at the convent of San Damiano in Assisi

• re-interred at the convent of San Giogio in Assisi in 1260




Blessed John of Warneton


Also known as

• John of Saint Omer

• John of Thérouanne


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Ivo of Chartres. Canon regular at Mont-Saint-Eloi. Archdeacon of Arles. Bishop of Thérouanne, which he accepted only under papal order. Founded several monasteries. While he had a reputation for strictness to discipline for himself, he was seen to be very gentle with people as individuals, even refusing to prosecute some would-be assassins.


Born

Warneton, French Flanders


Died

27 January 1130 of natural causes



Blessed Paul Josef Nardini


Profile

Priest in the diocese of Speyer, Germany. Founder of the Congregation of Franciscan Sisters of the Holy Family.



Born

25 July 1821 in Germersheim, Rhineland Palatinate (modern Germany)


Died

27 January 1862 in Pirmasens, Rhineland Palatinate (modern Germany) of natural causes


Beatified

• 22 October 2006 by Pope Benedict XVI

• recognition celebrated at the cathedral at Speyer, Germany




Saint Gilduin of Dol


Also known as

Gilduino



Profile

Devout young canon at Dol, Brittany (in modern France). Elected bishop of Dol, he felt unworthy of the post, and travelled to Rome, Italy to plead his case to Pope Gregory VII, who released him from the charge. Gilduin died on the road home from Rome. Miracles reported at his tomb.


Born

1052


Died

1077 near Chartres, France natural causes




Saint Domitian of Melitene


Also known as

Domitian of Palestine


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Euthymius the Great. Desert hermit. Evangelizing preacher in the Caphar Baricha region. Founded the monastery of the Sahel. Ordained as a deacon in 429 by Bishop Juvenal of Jerusalem. When Saint Euthymius died, Domitian lived as a hermit near his tomb.


Died

27 January 473 of natural causes




Saint Theodoric of Orleans



Also known as

Theodoric II



Profile

Benedictine monk at Saint-Pierre-le-Vif monastery, Sens, France. Royal counselor. Bishop of Orleans, France. Died while on pilgrimage the them tombs of the Apostles in Rome, Italy.


Died

1022 in Tonnerre, Burgundy, France of natural causes



Blessed Michael Pini


Profile

Favored courtier to Lorenzo de' Medici. Camaldolese hermit in 1502. After his ordination, Michael was walled up in his hermitage where he spent his remaining twenty years. Had the gift of prophecy.



Born

c.1445 at Florence, Italy


Died

1522 of natural causes




Saint Natalis of Ulster


Also known as

Naal of Ulster


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Columba. One of the great founders of monasticism in northern Ireland. Abbot of monasteries of Naile, Daunhinis, and Cill. A well in the region honors his memory.


Born

6th century Irish




Saint Emerius of Bañoles


Also known as

Emerus, Memerius


Profile

Son of Saint Candida of Bañoles. Benedictine monk. Founded Saint Stephen of Bañoles Abbey, Catalonia, Spain. His mother lived in a hermitage near the abbey.


Born

France


Died

8th century of natural causes




Saint Candida of Bañoles


Profile

Mother of Saint Emerius of Bañoles. Lived as a anchoress near Saint Stephen of Bañoles Abbey, Garona, Spain.


Born

in Spain


Died

c.798 of natural causes



Saint Lupus of Châlons


Profile

Bishop of Châlons-sur-Saone, France. Friend and correspondent with Pope Saint Gregory the Great. Noted for his charity to the sick and poor in his diocese.


Died

610 of natural causes



Saint Felix of Messina


Also known as

Felice


Profile

Sixth-century spiritual student of Saint Placidus of Messina. Bishop of Messina, Sicily, Italy.




Saint Donatus of Africa


Profile

Martyr. No other reliable information has survived.


Died

in Africa




Saint Avitus


Profile

Martyr.


Died

in Africa




Martyrs of North Africa


Profile

A group of 30 Christians martyred together by Arian Vandals. The only details to have survived are four of their names - Datius, Julian, Reatrus and Vincent.


Died

c.500 in North Africa

26 January 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஜனவரி 26

 St. Robert of Newmister


Feastday: January 26

Birth: 1100

Death: 1159


Cistercian abbot. Born in Yorkshire, England, he entered the Benedictines at Whitby and soon joined the monks at Fountains Abbey who were adopting the harder rule which was gaining prominence at the time. This community embraced the Cistercian rule, and the monastery became one of the spearhead communities for the Cistercians in England. In 1137, Robert helped to found Newminster Abbey, in Northumberland, serving as its first abbot.


Robert of Newminster ( c. 1100–1159) was a priest, abbot, and a saint of the Catholic Church. He was born in Gargrave in Yorkshire, England. He was one of the monks who founded Fountains Abbey and is named from the abbey he founded in Morpeth, Northumberland.



Early life

Robert was born in what is now the district of Craven, near Skipton in North Yorkshire, probably in the village of Gargrave. He studied at the University of Paris, where he is said to have composed a commentary - since lost - on the Psalms. He became a parish priest, returning to serve Gargrave where he was made rector. He became a Benedictine joining the monks of Saint Mary's Abbey in York. A group of monks, including Robert were expelled from York and established a monastery in a valley near Skeldale, on land given them by Archbishop Thurstan in winter 1132. The first two years were difficult and the monks struggled in extreme poverty. Initially they lived in a makeshift structure on the banks of the River Skell. Despite the hardships, the monks were known for their holiness, austerity and dedication to the strict Benedictine way of life. Their fame brought a new novice, Hugh, Dean of York, who relinquished all his wealth to the community who built more suitable facilities. Because of the many natural springs in the area, the monastery was called Fountains Abbey.[1] Fountains became affiliated with the Cistercian reform which had been introduced by Bernard of Clairvaux.[2]


Cistercian and abbot

Robert was described as a devout, prayerful, and gentle man. He is known for being merciful in his judgment of others and a warm and considerate companion. He was zealous regarding his own vows of poverty.[2] About 1138 he headed a group of monks sent out from Fountains to establish Newminster Abbey near the castle of Ralph de Merlay and his wife, Juliana, daughter of Gospatric II, Earl of Lothian, west of Morpeth in Northumberland. Abbot Robert was said to be was favoured with the gift of prophecy and miracles. During his abbacy three colonies of monks were sent to found new monasteries at Pipewell in Northamptonshire (1143), Roche in South Yorkshire (1147), and Sawley in Lancashire (1148).


Capgrave's life tells that an accusation of misconduct was brought against him by his own monks. Robert was said to have had an interest towards a woman in the village. He went to defend himself before Bernard of Clairvaux in 1147–1148. Bernard did not doubt Robert's innocence as he had received a heavenly sign of his virtuous conduct. Doubt has been cast upon the truth of the story, which may have arisen from a desire to associate him personally with the greatest of the Cistercians.[3]


Robert ruled and directed the monks at Newminster for 21 years.[2] The small monastery of only 17 monks was one of the first to be dissolved in 1535 by Henry VIII, and the site has been privately owned since.


Miracles

In one instance, a monk is said to have fallen unhurt from a ladder while working on one of the buildings. His tomb has become a centre for pilgrimage. Robert was a close spiritual friend of the hermit Godric of Finchale. On the night Robert died, Godric is said to have seen a vision of Robert's soul, like a ball of fire, being lifted by angels on a pathway of light toward the gates of heaven. As they approached, Godric heard a voice saying, "Enter now my friends."


Robert is often depicted in church art as an abbot holding a church.


Veneration

Robert's tomb in the church of Newminster became an object of pilgrimage. His feast day is celebrated on 7 June, the day of his death




Saint Robert of Molesme


Also known as

Robert of Cîteaux



Additional Memorial

26 January (Founders of the Cistercians)


Profile

Born to the French nobility. Benedictine monk in 1044. Prior of Moutiers-la-Celle Abbey. Abbot of Saint-Michel-de-Tonnerre, but considered it to have lax standards. Prior of Saint-Ayeul Abbey. In 1075, in an attempt to return to a simpler form of Benedictine life requested by a group of hermits from the forests around Colan, France, he helped found the monastery at Molesme, Burgundy. The group, especially Robert, gained a reputation for piety, which led to bequests of cash, which led to an increase in size of the monastery, which led to internal difficulties, and suddenly there were many brothers that objected to the severe life practised by the founders. Robert twice left to live on his own, but was ordered back to his position by the pope. In early 1098 Robert, Saint Stephen Harding, Saint Alberic of Citeaux and 18 other monks left Molesme, and on 21 March they founded the monastery of Cîteaux near Dijon, France, with the goal of living strictly by the Benedictine Rule, strict vows of poverty, and frequent retreats; Robert served as the first abbot. However, with conditions deteriorating at the Molesme house he was re-assigned as abbot there in 1100 with a mandate to reform; he lived and worked there the rest of his life. Traditionally considered one of the founders of the Cistercians, the reform that developed at Citeaux.


Born

1027 near Troyes, Champagne (in modern France)


Died

21 March 1110 of natural causes


Canonized

1222 by Pope Honorius III




Saint Timothy

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஜனவரி 26)


✠ புனிதர் திமொத்தேயு ✠

(St. Timothy)


ஆயர், மறைசாட்சி:

(Bishop, Martyr)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. சுமார் 17

லிஸ்ட்ரா (Lystra)


இறப்பு: கி.பி. சுமார் 97 (வயது 79/80)

மசெடொனியா (Macedonia)


ஏற்கும் சபை/ சமயம்: 

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கீழை மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)

ஓரியண்ட்டல் மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Oriental Orthodoxy)

ஆங்கிலிக்கன் சமூகம்

(Anglican Communion)

லூத்தரன் திருச்சபை

(Lutheran Church)


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: ஜனவரி 26


புனிதர் திமொத்தேயு, கிறிஸ்தவ சமயத்தின் முதல் நூற்றாண்டில் வாழ்ந்து, கி.பி. 97 அளவில் இறந்த ஒரு புனிதரும், பண்டைய கிரேக்க நகரமான “யூஃபேசஸ்” (Ephesus) எனுமிடத்தின் முதல் ஆயரும் ஆவார். "திமொத்தேயு" என்னும் பெயருக்கு "கடவுளைப் போற்றுபவர்" என்றும், "கடவுளால் போற்றப்பெறுபவர்" என்றும் பொருள் உண்டு.


விவிலியத்தின் புதிய ஏற்பாட்டின்படி திமொத்தேயு புனித பவுலோடு பயணம் செய்து கிறிஸ்தவ மறையைப் போதித்தார்; புனித பவுலின் சீடராக விளங்கினர். புனித பவுல் எழுதிய கடிதங்களுள் இரண்டு திமொத்தேயுவுக்கு எழுதப்பட்டவை ஆகும். 

(காண்க: 1 திமொத்தேயு, 2 திமொத்தேயு).


வாழ்க்கை வரலாறு:

திமொத்தேயு, “ஆசியா மைனர்” (Asia Minor) என்று அறியப்படும் “அனடோலியன் தீபகற்பத்தின்” (Anatolian peninsula) மத்திய பிராந்தியமான “லிஸ்ட்ராவின்” (Lystra) “லிக்கவோனியன்” (Lycaonian) நகரில் பிறந்தவர் ஆவார். இவரது தாயார் “யூனிஸ்” (Eunice), கிறிஸ்தவ விசுவாசத்திற்கு மனம் மாறிய ஒரு முன்னாள் யூதப் பெண்மணியாவார். இவரது தந்தையார் கிரேக்கத்தைச் சேர்ந்தவர் ஆவார்.


புனிதர் பவுலும், “அந்தியோக்கியா மற்றும் சைபிரஸ்” (Apostle to Antioch and Cyprus) ஆகிய நாடுகளின் அப்போஸ்தலருமான புனிதர் “பர்னபாஸ்” (Saint Barnabas) ஆகிய இருவரும் முதன்முதலாக “லிஸ்ட்ரா” (Lystra) நகர் வந்தபோது, பிறப்பிலிருந்து ஒரு ஊனமுற்ற ஒருவரை பவுல் குணப்படுத்தினார். பலர் அவரது போதனைகளை ஏற்றுக்கொள்வதற்கு வழிநடத்தினார். 


இவர் பற்றின சில குறிப்புகள் திருத்தூதர் பணிகள் நூலில் உள்ளன. புனித பவுல் தமது இரண்டாம் மறையறிவிப்புப் பயணத்தை மேற்கொண்ட போது அனத்தோலியா (Anatolia) பகுதியில் "லிஸ்ட்ராவுக்குச்" (Lystra) சென்றார்.


ஓரிடத்தில் பவுல், திமொத்தேயுவை "என் அன்பார்ந்த பிள்ளை" என்று அழைத்து, "ஆண்டவருடன் இணைந்து வாழும் அவர் நம்பிக்கைக்குரியவர்" என்று கூறுகின்றார். 

(1 கொரிந்தியர் 4:17).


மேலும் பவுல், திமொத்தேயுவைக் குறித்து "விசுவாச அடிப்படையில் என் உண்மையான பிள்ளை" என்கிறார் 

(1 திமொத்தேயு 1:1).


இன்னோர் இடத்திலும் பவுல், திமொத்தேயுவை "என் அன்பார்ந்த பிள்ளை" என்று அழைக்கிறார். 

(2 திமொத்தேயு 1:1).


திமொத்தேயு பவுலோடு சேர்ந்து பல மறையறிவிப்புப் பயணங்களை மேற்கொண்டார். யூத மக்கள் அவரை ஏற்றுக்கொள்ள வேண்டும் என்றால் அவர் விருத்தசேதனம் செய்துகொள்ள வேண்டும் என்று உணர்ந்த பவுல் திமொத்தேயு யூத முறைப்படி விருத்தசேதனம் செய்ய ஏற்பாடு செய்தார். 

(காண்க: திருத்தூதர் பணிகள் 16:3).


திமொத்தேயு திருப்பணியில் அமர்த்தப்பட்டார். "இறைவாக்கு உரைத்து, மூப்பர்கள் உன்மீது கைகளை வைத்துத் திருப்பணியில் அமர்த்தியபோது உனக்கு அளிக்கப்பட்ட அருள்கொடையைக் குறித்து அக்கறையற்றவனாய் இராதே" என்று பவுல் திமொத்தேயுவுக்கு எழுதுகிறார். 

(காண்க: 1 திமொத்தேயு 4:14).


திமொத்தேயுவின் தாய் “யூனிஸ்” (Eunice) மற்றும் பாட்டி “லோயிஸ்” (Lois) இருவரும் கடவுள் நம்பிக்கையில் உறுதியாய் இருந்ததை பவுல் எடுத்துக்காட்டுகிறார். 

(காண்க: 2 திமொத்தேயு 1:5). அவர்கள் கிறிஸ்தவர்களாக இருந்திருக்கலாம்.


மற்றோர் இடத்தில் பவுல், திமொத்தேயு சிறந்த விவிலிய அறிவு கொண்டிருந்தார் என்பதைக் குறிப்பிடுகிறார்: "நீ குழந்தைப் பருவம் முதல் திருமறைநூலைக் கற்று அறிந்திருக்கிறாய். அது இயேசு கிறித்துவின் மீதுள்ள நம்பிக்கையால் உன்னை மீட்புக்கு வழி நடத்தும் ஞானத்தை அளிக்க வல்லது." 

(காண்க: 2 திமொத்தேயு 3:15).


திமொத்தேயு ஒருமுறையாவது சிறையில் அடைக்கப்பட்டிருந்தார் என்பது எபிரேயர் திருமுகத்திலிருந்து தெரிகிறது: "நம் சகோதரர் திமொத்தேயு விடுதலை பெற்று விட்டார்." 

(காண்க: எபிரேயர் 13:23).


திமொத்தேயுக்கு ஒருவித வயிற்று நோய் இருந்தது என்பதும் பவுலின் கூற்றிலிருந்து தெரிகிறது: "தண்ணீர் மட்டும் குடிப்பதை நிறுத்திவிட்டு, உன் வயிற்றின் நலனுக்காகவும், உனக்கு அடிக்கடி ஏற்படும் உடல்நலக் குறைவின்பொருட்டும் சிறிதளவு திராட்சை மதுவும் பயன்படுத்து."

(காண்க: 1 திமொத்தேயு 5:23).


எபேசு நகரில் தவறான கொள்கைகள் பரவும் ஆபத்து இருந்ததால் பவுல் திமொத்தேயுவிடம் அங்கேயே தங்கி இருக்கும்படி கூறுகிறார்: "நான் மாசிதோனியாவுக்குப் போகும்போது உன்னை எபேசில் இருக்கும்படி கேட்டுக்கொண்டேன். அங்கே சிலர் மாற்றுக் கொள்கைகளைக் கற்பிக்கின்றனர். அப்படிச் செய்யாதபடி அவர்களுக்குக் கட்டளையிடு." 

(காண்க: 1 திமொத்தேயு 1:3).


எபேசு சபையில் தகுதிவாய்ந்த சபைக் கண்காணிப்பாளர்களையும் திருத்தொண்டர்களையும் தேர்ந்தெடுத்து நியமிப்பது குறித்து பவுல் திமொத்தேயுக்கு விரிவான வழிகாட்டல் தருகிறார். 

(காண்க: 1 திமொத்தேயு 3:1-13). 

இந்த வழிமுறைகள் இன்றுவரை கடைப்பிடிக்கப்படுகின்றன.


பிற்கால மரபுச் செய்திகள்:

பிற்கால மரபுப்படி, பவுல் திமொத்தேயுவை கி.பி. 65ம் ஆண்டளவில் எபேசு சபையின் ஆயராகத் திருநிலைப்படுத்தினார். அங்கே திமொத்தேயு 15 ஆண்டுகள் பணிபுரிந்தார். கி.பி. 97ல், திமொத்தேயுவுக்கு 80 வயது ஆனபோது, அவர் பேகனிய சமயக் கொண்டாட்டங்களைத் தடுக்க முயன்றபோது அவர்கள் அவரைத் தெருவில் இழுத்துக் கொண்டுபோய் கல்லால் எறிந்து கொன்று போட்டனர்.


கி.பி. 4ம் நூற்றாண்டில் திமொத்தேயுவின் மீபொருள்கள் காண்ஸ்டாண்டிநோபுளில் தூய திருத்தூதர்கள் பேராலயத்திற்கு கொண்டு செல்லப்பட்டன.


வணக்கம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்பையில் திமோத்தேயுக்கு பவுலின் மற்றொரு சீடரான தீத்து என்பவரோடு இணைத்து விழாக் கொண்டாடப்படுகிறது. அத்திருவிழா ஜனவரி 26ம் நாள் ஆகும்.


கீழை மரபுச் சபையில் திமொத்தேயு ஒரு திருத்தூதராகவும், புனிதராகவும், மறைசாட்சியாகவும் கருதப்படுகிறார். அவருடைய திருவிழா ஜனவரி 22ம் நாள் கொண்டாடப்படுகிறது.

Also known as

Timotheus


Additional Memorial

9 May (translation of relics)


Profile

His father was a Greek gentile, his mother Eunice was Jewish. Converted to Christianity by Saint Paul the Apostle around the year 47, he became a partner, assistant and close friend of Paul. Missionary. Head of the Church in Ephesus. Recipient of two canonical letters from Saint Paul. Martyred for opposing the worship of Dionysius.


Died

stoned to death in 97


Patronage

• against intestinal disorders

• against stomach diseases

• Termoli, Italy




Blessed José Gabriel del Rosario Brochero


Also known as

The Gaucho Priest



Profile

Fourth of ten brothers. Priest in the diocese of Córdoba, Argentina, ordained at age 26. Known to travel long distances in Argentina on the back of a mule, dressed in sombrero and poncho, to serve the needs of Christiansm throughout his huge parish. Cared for the sick during the cholera epidemic of 1867 He was contracted leprosy during his travels, and was blind toward the end.


Born

16 March 1840 in Santa Rosa de Río Primero, Córdoba, Argentina


Died

26 January 1914 in Villa del Tránsito, Córdoba, Argentina of leprosy


Beatified

his beatification miracle involved the healing of 13 year old Nicolas Flores who was in a vegetative state following a severe car crash


Canonized

on 21 January 2016, Pope Francis promulgated a decree of a miracle received through the intercession of Blessed José



Martyred Family of Constantinople



Profile

Saint Mary and Saint Xenophon were married and the parents of Saint John and Saint Arcadius. Theirs was a wealthy family of Senatorial rank in 5th century imperial Constantinople, but were known as a Christians who lived simple lives. To give their sons a good education, Xenophon and Mary sent them to university in Beirut, Phoenicia. However, their ship wrecked, there was no communication from them, and the couple assumed, naturally, that the young men had died at sea. In reality, John and Arcadius had survived and decided that instead of continuing to Beirut, they were going to follow a calling to religious life and became monks, eventually living in a monastery in Jerusalem. Years later, Mary and Xenophon made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem - where they encountered their sons. Grateful to have their family re-united, and taking it as a sign, Xenophon and Mary gave up their positions in society in Constantinople, and lived the rest of their lives as a monk and anchoress. in Jerusalem. A few years later, the entire family was martyred together.


Died

5th century Jerusalem



Saint Alberic of Citeaux


Also known as

Alberic of Aubrey



Profile

Hermit at Collan, Chatillon-sur-Seine, France. He, Saint Robert of Molesme, and several fellow hermits formed a monastery at Molesmes in 1075 with Alberic as prior. The group's reputation grew, and they attracted disciples, though some were not interested in living by the monastic rule. One of the house's co-founders, Robert, left, and when Alberic tried to enforce discipline, he was briefly imprisoned by his brothers; he finally gave up and left, as well.


In 1098, Alberic and Robert joined with Saint Stephen Harding and about twenty of their disappointed brothers from Molesmes to found a new house at Citeaux, France. This house became the foundation of the Cistercian Order, one of the greatest and most respected houses in the Church.


Alberic served first as prior, and then abbot, requiring strict adherence to the Benedictine Rule. Established the lay-brother element of the monastery. Introduced the Romanesque art form that is characteristic of early Cistercian houses.


Died

26 January 1109



Blessed Eystein Erlandsön


Also known as

• Augustine Erlandsön

• Augustinus Nidrosiensis

• Øystein Erlendsson



Profile

Born to the nobility, he studied in France. Priest. Court chaplain in the reign of King Inge Korkrygg. First archbishop of Nidaros (modern Trondheim), Norway in 1157; his suffragan dioceses included all of Iceland and Greenland. His reign was a constant fight to keep the Church separate from political influence, which required reform of the clergy in the region. Crowned the young king Magnus V. Political struggles forced him into three years of exile in England. Wrote a biography of Saint Olaf II. Expanded Christ Church cathedral, and established the administrative functions of the archdiocese.


Born

12th century Norway


Died

1188 in Nidaros, (modern Trondheim), Norway of natural causes




Saint Paula of Rome

சபை நிறுவுனர் உரோம் நகர் பவுலா Paula von Rom


பிறப்பு 

347. 

உரோம், இத்தாலி

இறப்பு 

26 ஜனவரி, 

பெத்லேஹெம்


இவர் ஓர் உயர்ந்த குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவர். இவர் ஓர் திருமணமான பெண். ஐந்து குழந்தைகளின் தாய். இவர் தனது கணவர் இறந்தபிறகு விதவையானார். தன் கணவர் இறந்த சில நாட்களிலேயே தான் ஓர் சிறந்த கிறிஸ்தவ பெண்ணாக வாழ வேண்டுமென்று விரும்பினார். சமூகப் பணிகள் பலவற்றில் ஈடுபட்டார். தேவையிலிருப்போரை இனங்கண்டு முன்வந்து உதவினார். இவர் சிறப்பாக எரோனிமுஸ் Hieronymus என்பவர் கற்றுக்கொடுத்த மாணவர்கள் பலருக்கு பல விதங்களில் உதவினார். 


இவர் 385 ஆம் ஆண்டு தனது மகளுடன் பாலஸ்தீன நாட்டிற்கு சென்றார். எரோனிமுஸ் காட்டிய வழியில் மறைவல்லுநர்கள் பலர் எழுதிய கடிதங்கலை தொகுத்து பாதுகாத்தார். பின்னர் 386ல் பாலஸ்தீனா நாட்டின் தாழ்வான பகுதியில் ஏராளமான திருயாத்திரை தலங்களையும், துறவற மடங்களையும் நிறுவினார். அத்துடன் சில பெண் துறவிகளுக்கு வழிகாட்டி அவர்களையும் தொடர்ந்து வழிநடத்தினார். சில ஆண்டுகள் கழித்து எரோனிமுஸும் அவரின் நண்பர்களும் இவரின் துறவற இல்லத்தில் வாழ்ந்து தங்களின் இறுதி நாட்களை கழித்தனர். அதன்பிறகு இவர் கிறிஸ்துவைப் பற்றி பரப்பவும் அவரை முழுமையாக அறியவும் பெத்லேகேம் சென்றார். அச்சமயத்தில்தான் இறந்தார்.

Also known as

• Paula the Widow

• Paulina, Pauline



Profile

Member of the Imperial Roman nobility, married to senator Toxotius. Mother of five children including Saint Eustochium and Saint Blaesilla. Widowed at age 32 in 379, she devoted her fortune and the rest of her life to spiritual development and care for the poor. Friend of Saint Marcella, Saint Epiphanius, and Saint Paulinus of Antioch. Friend, spiritual student and supporter of Saint Jerome whom she met in 382; he later wrote her biography. Pilgrim to the Holy Lands in 385. She settled in Bethlehem in 396 where she built churches, a hospice, monastery and convent where she served as the first abbess.


Born

5 May 347 at Rome, Italy


Died

• 404 at Bethlehem of natural causes

• buried under the Church of the Nativity at Nazareth


Patronage

widows




Saint Titus

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஜனவரி 26)


✠ புனிதர் தீத்துஸ் ✠

(St. Titus)


ஆயர்/ மறைச்சாட்சி:

(Bishop and Martyr)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. முதல் நூற்றாண்டு


இறப்பு: கி.பி. 96 அல்லது 107

கோர்ட்டின், கிரேட்

(Gortyn, Crete)


ஏற்கும் சபை/ சமயம்: 

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபைகள்

(Eastern Catholic Churches)

லூத்தரன் திருச்சபை

(Lutheranism)

ஆங்கிலிக்கன் சமூகம்

(Anglican Communion)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: வழிமுறைகளுக்கு முற்பட்ட காலம்


முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்: 

ஹெராக்ளியோன் (Heraklion)

கிரேட் (Crete) 


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: ஜனவரி 26


பாதுகாவல்: கிரேட் (Crete) 


புனிதர் தீத்துஸ் (St. Titus), பண்டைய கிறிஸ்தவ சமய மறைப்பணியாளரும், திருச்சபையின் ஒரு தலைவரும், அப்போஸ்தலரான புனிதர் பவுலின் துணையாளரும், சீடரும் ஆவார். இவரைப்பற்றிய குறிப்புகள் பவுலின் பல திருமுகங்களில் காணக்கிடைக்கின்றன.


வாழ்க்கைக் குறிப்புகள்:

தீத்துஸ், பவுலோடும் பர்னபாவோடும் அந்தியோக்கியாவில் (Antioch) இருந்தார். பின்னர் அவர்களோடு எருசலேம் சங்கத்தில் கலந்துகொள்ளச் சென்றார். "பதினான்கு ஆண்டுகளுக்குப் பின் தீத்துசையும் கூட்டிகொண்டு பர்னபாவுடன் நான் மீண்டும் எருசலேமுக்குப் போனேன்" (கலாத்தியர் 2:1) என்று பவுல் எழுதுகிறார். ஆயினும் தீத்துஸின் பெயர் திருத்தூதர் பணிகள் நூலில் காணப்படவில்லை.


தீத்துஸ் யூத இனத்தைச் சாராத புற இனத்தவர் (Gentile) என்று தெரிகிறது. அவர் விருத்தசேதனம் செய்ய வேண்டிய தேவையில்லை என்று பவுல் மிகக் கண்டிப்பாகக் கூறியதிலிருந்து இது தெளிவாகிறது: "என்னுடன் இருந்த தீத்துஸ் கிரேக்கராய் இருந்தும் விருத்தசேதனம் செய்து கொள்ளுமாறு அவரை யாரும் கட்டாயப்படுத்தவில்லை" (கலாத்தியர் 2:3). கிறிஸ்தவ நம்பிக்கையை ஏற்று வாழ்வதற்கு விருத்தசேதனம் தேவையில்லை என்றுதான் பவுல் வாதாடினார்.


தீத்துஸ் ஆற்றிய அறப்பணி:

பவுல் எபேசு நகரில் கிறிஸ்தவத்தை அறிவித்தபோது, திமொத்தேயு மற்றும் தீத்துஸ் ஆகியோர் அவரோடு பணியாற்றினர். அங்கிருந்து பவுல் தீத்துசை கொரிந்து நகருக்கு அனுப்பினார். அந்நகரிலிருந்து காணிக்கை பிரித்து, எருசலேம் சபையினருக்கு உதவி செய்யும் நோக்கத்தோடு தீத்துஸ் அனுப்பப்பட்டார். "எனவே இந்த அறப்பணியைத் தொடங்கிய தீத்துசே அப்பணியை முடிக்க வேண்டும் என நாங்கள் அவரை வேண்டிக்கொண்டோம்" என்று பவுல் எழுதுகிறார் (2 கொரிந்தியர் 8:6).


பவுல் மாசிதோனியாவில் பணிபுரிந்த போது, தீத்துஸ் அவரிடம் சென்றார். கொரிந்து நகரில் திருச்சபை வளர்ந்து வந்ததை தீத்துஸ் பவுலிடம் எடுத்துக் கூறினார். அது பற்றி பவுல் இவ்வாறு கூறுகிறார்: "மாசிதோனியாவிற்கு வந்து சேர்ந்த போது எங்களிடம் மன அமைதியே இல்லை. வெளியே போராட்டம், உள்ளே அச்சம்; இவ்வாறு எல்லா வகையிலும் துன்புற்றோம். தாழ்ந்தோருக்கு ஆறுதல் அளிக்கும் கடவுள் தீத்துஸின் வரவால் எங்களுக்கும் ஆறுதல் அளித்தார். அவரது வருகையால் மட்டும் அல்ல; நீங்கள் தீத்துஸுக்கு அளித்த ஆறுதலாலும் நாங்கள் ஆறுதல் அடைந்தோம். நாங்கள் மிகுதியான மகிழ்ச்சி அடைந்தோம்" (2 கொரிந்தியர் 7:5-8).


தீத்துஸ் “கிரேட்” (Crete) சபைக்குப் பொறுப்பேற்றல் :

இந்த நிகழ்ச்சிக்குப் பிறகு தீத்துஸின் பெயர், பவுல் சிறைப்பட்டதை ஒட்டியும், தீத்து கிரேட் (Crete) சபைக்குப் பொறுப்பேற்றது பற்றியும் வரும் குறிப்பில் மீண்டும் காணப்படுகிறது. "நான் உனக்குப் பணித்தபடியே கிரேட் தீவில் நீ மேலும் செய்ய வேண்டியவற்றை ஒழுங்குசெய்து, நகர்தோறும் மூப்பர்களை ஏற்படுத்த உன்னை அங்கே விட்டு வந்தேன்" (தீத்து 1:5) என்று பவுல் தீத்துஸுக்கு எழுதுகிறார்.


பவுல் உரோமையில் இருந்தபோது தீத்துஸ் தல்மாத்தியாவுக்குச் சென்றார் என்பதே தீத்துஸ் பற்றிய இறுதிக் குறிப்பு. "தேமா இன்றைய உலகப்போக்கை விரும்பி என்னை விட்டு அகன்று, தெசலோனிக்கா சென்றுவிட்டார். கிரேஸ்கு கலாத்தியாவுக்கும் தீத்துஸ் தல்மாத்தியாவுக்கும் சென்று விட்டனர்" (2 திமொத்தேயு 4:10) என்று பவுல் குறிப்பிடுகின்றார்.


இறப்பு:

தீத்துஸின் இறப்புப் பற்றிய குறிப்பு புதிய ஏற்பாட்டில் காணப்படவில்லை.


மரபுப்படி, பவுல் தீத்துசை ஆயராகத் திருநிலைப்படுத்தி, கிரேட் தீவின் 'கோர்ட்டின்' நகர ஆயராக அவரை நியமித்தார். தீத்துஸ் கி.பி. 107ல் தமது தொண்ணூற்று ஐந்தாம் வயதில் இறந்தார்.


புனித தீத்துஸின் மீபொருட்கள்:

துருக்கியர் ஆட்சிக்காலத்தில் வெனிசு நகருக்குக் கொண்டுபோகப்பட்டிருந்த புனித தீத்துஸின் மீபொருள்கள் அவர் பணிசெய்து உயிர்துறந்த கிரேட் தீவுக்கு 1969ம் ஆண்டு திருப்பி அனுப்பப்பட்டன. தற்போது அப்பொருட்கள் “கிரேட்” தீவில் அமைந்துள்ள ஹெராக்ளியோன்” ஆலயத்தில் வணக்கத்துக்கு வைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.


புனித தீத்துஸ் விருது:

ஐக்கிய அமெரிக்க நாடுகளின் படைத் திருப்பணியாளர்களில், சிறப்பான சேவை செய்வோருக்கு "புனித தீத்துஸ் விருது" என்ற பெயரில் விருது வழங்கப்படுகிறது.

Also known as

Titus of Crete


Additional Memorials

• 4 January (Corinth)

• 27 January (Norway; Trappists; Cistercians)

• 23 January (Australia)

• 25 August (Orthodox; Syrian)

• 1 August (Armenian)

• 24 August (Coptic)


Profile

Disciple of Saint Paul the Apostle. Recipient of a canonical letter from Saint Paul. First bishop of the Church in Crete.


Died

c.96 at Goryna, Crete


PatronageCrete

Video

YouTube PlayList




Blessed Michaël Kozal


Profile

Born to a peasant family. Ordained in 1918. Appointed auxiliary bishop of Wloclawek, Poland and titular bishop of Lappa by Pope Pius XII on 10 June 1939. Arrested by the Gestapo on 7 November 1939 as part of the Nazi persecution of the Catholic Church. Imprisoned and tortured at Wloclawek, Lad, Szczeglin, Berlin and Dachau. Spent 21 months in Dachau, ministering to other prisoners and being abused by the guards. Martyr.



Born

27 September 1893 at Ligota, Wielkopolskie, Poland


Died

martyred on 26 January 1943 in the Dachau concentration camp, Oberbayern, Germany


Beatified

14 June 1987 by Pope John Paul II in Poland




Blessed Marie de la Dive veuve du Verdier de la Sorinière


Additional Memorial

2 January as one of the Martyrs of Anjou


Profile

Married lay woman of the diocese of Angers, France. Martyred in the persecutions of the French Revolution.


Born

18 May 1723 in Saint-Crespin-sur-Moine, Maine-et-Loire, France


Died

18 January 1794 in Avrillé, Maine-et-Loire, France


Beatified

19 February 1984 by Pope John Paul II at Rome, Italy




Saint Ausilius of Fréjus


Also known as

Antiolo, Ausile, Ausilio, Auxile


Profile

Fifth bishop of Fréjus, France. Ausilius was noted for his austerity, seeming more like a hermit than the bishops of the day. Martyred in the persecutions of the Arian king Henry of the Visigoths.


Died

• 26 January 480

• buried on a hill in Callas-sur-Var, France where a church was built over his grave

• relics later enshrined at Callas-sur-Var



Blessed Arnaldo de Prades



Profile

Arnaldo worked as a barber, but felt a call to religious life. Mercedarian friar, joining during the early years of the Order. Noted preacher and evangelist. Ransomed many Christians from slavery in Muslim-held lands. Present at the death of Saint Peter Nolasco.




Saint Theogenes of Hippo


Also known as

• Theogenes of Bona

• Teógene of...


Profile

Third century bishop of Hippo in North Africa. Attended the Council of Carthage called by Saint Cyprian c.250. Martyred with 36 of his flock in the persecutions of Emperor Valerian. Saint Augustine of Hippo wrote about him.


Died

c.258




Saint Conan of Iona


Also known as

Mochonna of Iona


Profile

Monk at Iona. Tutor to the sons of King Eugene IV of Scotland. Spiritual teacher of Saint Fiacre. Missionary to the Isle of Man. Bishop of the Southern Hebrides and the Isle of Man.


Born

Ireland


Died

c.648 on the Isle of Man of natural causes




Saint Ansurius of Orense


Also known as

Aduri, Adurius, Isauri


Profile

Benedictine monk. Bishop of Orense, Galacia, Spain in 915. Founded the abbey of Ribas de Sil. In 922 he retired from his see, and spent his remaining years in prayer as a monk at Ribas de Sil.


Died

925 of natural causes



Blessed Claudio of San Romano



Profile

Mercedarian friar. Sent to Morocco in 1320, he ransomed many Christians held in slavery by Muslims.




Saint Tortgith of Barking


Also known as

Theoregitha, Thordgith, Thorgyth


Profile

Benedictine nun at the abbey of Barking, England. Novice-mistress during the time when Saint Ethelburga was her abbess.


Died

c.700




Saint Theofrid of Corbie


Also known as

Theofroy of Corbie


Profile

Benedictine monk at Luxeuil Abbey. Abbot of Corbie Abbey. Bishop.


Died

c.690 of natural causes




Saint Alphonsus of Astorga


Profile

Ninth century bishop of Astorga, Spain. He eventually retired to live as monk at the monastery of Saint Stephen de Ribas de Sil, Galicia, Spain.




Saint Athanasius of Sorrento


Profile

Bishop of Sorrento, Italy.


Patronage

Sorrento, Italy


25 January 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஜனவரி 25

 St. Maurus


Feastday: January 25

Death: 6th century


With Placid, Benedictines, disciples of St. Benedict. Maurus was the son of a Roman noble. At the age of twelve he became St. Benedict's assistant and possibly succeeded him as abbot of Subiaco Abbey in 525 . Pope St. Gregory I the Great wrote of Maurus and Placid in his Dialogues. In liturgical art, Maurus is depicted saving Placid from drowning. Their cult is now restricted to local calendars.



St. Peter Thomas


Feastday: January 25

Birth: 1305

Death: 1366



Carmelite Latinpatriarch and papal legate. Peter was born in Gascony, France and joined the Carmelites while still a young man. In 1342 he was appointed procurator of the order and, from Avignon, he oversaw the organization and government of the Carmelites. As Avignon was then the seat of the popes, he entered into their service, attracting papal attention because of his skills as a preacher and his elo­quence. Named to the papal diplomatic service, he held the post of papal legate to Genoa, Milan, and Venice, and was appointed bishop of Patti and Lipari in 1354, bishop of Coron in 1359, archbishop of Candia in 1363, and titular Patriarch of Constantinople in 1364. At the behest of Pope Urban V, he journeyed to Serbia, Hungary, and Constantinople in an effort to organize a crusade against the Turks. He took part in a military operation against Alexandria, Egypt, in 1365 during which he was severely wounded. He died from his injuries at Cyprus a few months later. While never formally canonized, his feast was permitted to the Carmelites in 1608.


Saint Peter Thomas (1305-1366) {Petrus de Thomas) was a Carmelite friar and is recognized as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church.



Life

Peter Thomas was born around the year 1305 to a very poor family in Périgord. His father was a serf. When still a teenager, he left his parents and his younger sister to ease the burdens on his family. He went to the nearby small town of Monpazier, where he attended school for about three years, living on alms and teaching younger pupils. He led the same type of life at Agen until the age of twenty, when he returned to Monpazier.[1]


Carmelite friar

The prior of the Carmelite convent of Lectoure employed Thomas as a teacher for a year in that school. He entered the Carmelite Order at the age of twenty-one and made his profession of religious vows at Bergerac where he taught for two years. He studied philosophy at Agen, where he was ordained a priest three years later. For the next few years, he continued his studies, while also teaching in Bordeaux, Albi, and again in Agen. This was followed by three years of study in Paris.[1] He was preaching in Cahors, during a procession held to in hopes of an end to a serious drought, when rain began to fall. This was viewed by many as miraculous.


He was the Order's Procurator General and an official preacher at the Papal Court of Pope Clement VI at Avignon. In 1354 he was made bishop of Patti and Lipari. In 1363 he was appointed Archbishop of Crete, and in 1364 he became the Latin Patriarch of Constantinople. He died in 1366 at Famagusta in Cyprus.


Saint Peter Thomas is depicted in an altarpiece painted by Francisco de Zurbaran for the College of San Alberto, Seville, which is currently held by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.[2]


Sources

There are two biographies written about Peter Thomas: one by Philippe de Mézières (d. 1405),[3] chancellor of King Peter I of Cyprus and the other by the Franciscan John Carmesson, minister of the province of the Holy Land, who had delivered the funeral eulogy.




Conversion of Saint Paul


இன்றைய புனிதர் :

(25-01-2021) 


பவுலின் மனமாற்ற விழா 


அக்காலத்தில் சவுல் சீறியெழுந்து எழுந்து ஆண்டவருடைய சீடர்களை கொன்றுவிடுவதாக அச்சுறுத்தி வந்தார். ஆண் பெண்களை கொன்றுவிட அனுமதிபெற்று தமஸ்கு நோக்கி வரும்வழியில், தீடீரென வானத்தில் ஓர் ஒளி அவரை ஆட்கொண்டது. அவர் தரையில் விழ "சவுலே, சவுலே ஏன் என்னை துன்புறுத்துகின்றாய்?" என்று ஒர் குரல் தொடர்ந்து கேட்டது. அதற்கு அவர் "ஆண்டவரே நீர் யார்?" எனக் கேட்டார். இயேசு மறுமொழியாக "நீ துன்புறுத்தும் இயேசு, நானே!, உடனே நீ நகருக்குள் செல்! நீ என்ன செய்ய வேண்டும் என்று உனக்கு அறிவிக்கப்படும்" என்று கூறினார். அக்குரலை உடனிருந்தவர்களும் கேட்டனர். ஆனால் வியப்பில் ஆழ்ந்தனர். சவுல் எழுந்தபோது கண்கள் திறந்திருந்தும் எதனையும் காணும் திறனை இழந்திருந்தார். உடனிருந்தவர்கள் அவரது கைகளை பிடித்து தமஸ்கு நகருக்கு அழைத்து சென்றார்கள். அங்கே மூன்று நாள் பார்வையற்று இருந்தார். எதுவும் உண்ணவும் குடிக்கவுமில்லை.


அந்நகரில் அனனியா என்ற சீடர் இருந்தார். ஆண்டவர் அவரிடம், “நீ எழுந்து நேர்த்தெரு என்னும் சந்துக்குப் போய் அங்கே தர்சு நகர சவுல் தேடு. அவர் ஒரு காட்சியை கண்டுள்ளார். அக்காட்சியில் அனனியா என்பவர் வந்து சவுல் பார்வையடைய வேண்டுமென்று தமது கைகளை அவர் மீது வைப்பதாக காட்சி கண்டுள்ளார்” என்று கூறினார். அதற்கு அனனியா “அவன் கிறிஸ்துவர்களை அழிக்க கங்கனம் கட்டித்திரிபவன் ஆயிற்றே” என்று கூற, ஆண்டவர் “நீ அங்கு செல், என் மீட்பு பணியை உலகெங்கும் பறைசாற்றிட தேர்ந்து கொண்டவரே அவர்! எனது கருவியாக செயல்படுவார். பிற இனத்தாருக்கும் அரசர்களுக்கும், இஸ்ரயேல் மக்களுக்கும் இயேசுவின் பெயரை எடுத்துரைக்கும் கருவியே! என்றார். என் பொருட்டு அவர் எத்துன்பம் அடைய வேண்டும் என்பதும் அவருக்கு காட்டுவேன்” என்றார்.

உடனே அனனியா நகருக்குச் சென்று தூய ஆவியால் ஆட்கொள்ளப்பட்டு, ஆண்டவர் பெயரால் அவர் மீது கைகளை வைக்க தூய ஆவியின் ஒளி கீற்றுக்கள் அவரது விழிகளை திறக்கச் செய்து அதிலிருந்து செதில்கள் விழுந்தன. மீண்டும் சவுல் பார்வை பெற்றவராய் ஆண்டவரின் ஒளியை பெற்று கிறிஸ்துவின் கருவியாக மாறினார்.


வாழ்க்கை வரலாறு


இன்று நாம் பவுலடியாரின் மனமாற்றப் பெருவிழாவைக் கொண்டாடுகிறோம். அதனால் தூய பவுலைப் பற்றி ஒருசில உண்மைகளை அறிந்துகொள்வோம்.


தூய பவுல் கி.பி. 9 ஆம் ஆண்டளவில் யூதாவின் பன்னிரு குலங்களில் ஒன்றான பெஞ்சமின் குலத்தில் பிறந்தார். இவரது யூதப் பெயர் சவுல். இன்றைய துருக்கி நாட்டின் பகுதியான சிலிசியா மாநிலத்தின் உரோமைக் குடியிருப்பான தர்சு நகரத்தில் இவரது குடும்பம் வாழ்ந்து வந்தது. செல்வமும் செல்வாக்கும் பெற்றிருந்த இவரது குடும்பத்திற்கு உரோமைக் குடியுரிமையும் இருந்தது. இவர் இளமையிலிருந்தே யூதச் சட்டங்களையும் நெறிமுறைகளையும் கற்றறிந்தார். உலகப் பொதுமொழியாயிருந்த கிரேக்கத்தையும் கற்றுத் தெளிந்தார். பின்னர் எருசலேம் சென்று, புகழ்பெற்ற கமாலியேல் என்னும் யூத ரபியிடம் கல்வி பயின்றார். யூதக் கோட்பாடுகளைக் கில்லேல் என்பவரது விளக்கங்களைத் தழுவிக் கடைப்பிடிக்கும் பரிசேயர் சமயப் பிரிவின் ஆர்வமிக்க உறுப்பினராக இருந்தார். இயேசு வாழ்ந்த காலத்தில் இவர் பாலஸ்த்தீனாவில் இருந்திருக்கலாம் எனக் கூற இடம் உண்டு.


இப்படிப்பட்டவர் யூத மதத்தின்மீது இருந்த பற்றினால் கிறிஸ்தவர்களை அதிகமாகத் துன்புறுத்தத் தொடங்கினார். ஸ்தேவானைக் கல்லெறிந்து கொல்வதற்கு இவர் உடன்பட்டிருந்தார் என்று திருத்தூதர் பணிகள் நூலிலே நாம் வாசிக்கின்றோம் (திப8:1). ஒருமுறை கிறிஸ்தவர்களைத் துன்புறுத்துவதற்காகத் தமஸ்கு நகருக்குச் செல்லும் வழியில்தான் ஆண்டவராகிய இயேசு அவரைத் தடுத்து ஆட்கொள்கிறார். அவரை புறவினத்தாருக்கு நற்செய்தி அறிவுக்கும் கருவியாக ஏற்படுத்துகிறார்.


தூய பவுல் ஆண்டவர் இயேசுவின் நற்செய்தியை அறிவிக்க மூன்று திருத்தூதுப் பயணங்களை மேற்கொண்டார் என்று சொல்லப்படுகின்றது. முதல் நற்செய்திப் பயணத்தைக் கி.பி. 46-48 ஆண்டுகளில் மேற்கொண்டு, சைப்பிரசுக்கும் சின்ன ஆசியா நாட்டுப் பகுதிகளுக்கும் சென்று திருச்சபையை நிறுவினார் (திப 13,14; 2 திமொ 3:11). கி.பி. 49 ஆம் ஆண்டில் எருசலேம் பொதுச்சங்கத்தில் கலந்துகொண்டு பிற இனத்தாரிடையே தூய ஆவி செயல்படுதலைப் பற்றி எடுத்துரைத்துத் தமது பணிக்குச் சங்கத்தின் ஒப்புதலைப் பெற்றுக் கொண்டார் (திப15; கலா 2:3-9). கி.பி. 50-52க்கு உட்பட்ட காலத்தில் பவுல் தமது இரண்டாவது நற்செய்திப் பயணத்தை மேற்கொண்டு, தாம் ஏற்கனவே நிறுவிய சபைகளை வலுப்படுத்தினார். பின்னர் மாசிதொனியா, அக்காயா பகுதிகளுக்குச் சென்று நற்செய்தியை அறிவித்து, அங்கும் திருச்சபைகளை நிறுவினார் (திப 15-18). கி.பி. 53-57 வரை மூன்றாம் நற்செய்திப் பயணத்தின்போது கலாத்தியா, பிரிகியா, கொரிந்து, மாசிதோனியா, இல்லிரிக்கம் ஆகிய இடங்களுக்குச் சென்று திருப்பணி ஆற்றினார்.


அதன்பிறகு எபேசு நகரை மையமான பணித்தளமாகக் கொண்டு பவுல் செயல்பட்டார். அங்குச் சிறைப்பட்டார். அக்காலத்தில் அவர் சில சிறைக்கூட மடல்களை எழுதியிருக்கலாம். பின் கி.பி. 58 ஆண்டு எருசலேமில் கைதானார். கி.பி. 60 வரை செசரியாவில் சிறைப்பட்டிருந்தார். உரோமைப் பேரரசர் சீசரே தமக்குத் தீர்ப்பளிக்க வேண்டும் என்று பவுல் கேட்டுக்கொண்டதால் உரோமைக்கு அனுப்பப் பெற்றார். அங்கு போகும் வழியில் கப்பல் அழிவுற நேரிட்டதால் மால்தா தீவினருக்கு நற்செய்தி அறிவிக்கும் வாய்ப்பைப் பெற்றார். பின்பு பவுல் உரோமை வந்தடைந்து இரு ஆண்டுகள் வீட்டுக் கைதியாகவே இருந்துகொண்டு நற்செய்தி அறிவித்து வந்தார். பின்பு பவுல் விடுதலை பெற்று ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டுக்குச் சென்றிருப்பார் என நம்ப இடமிருக்கிறது. மீண்டும் கி.பி. 60 ஆம் ஆண்டு கைதுசெய்யப்பட்டு நீரோ மன்னன் காலத்தில் பவுல் மரண தண்டனை பெற்றார் என மரபு கூறுகிறது.





Article

The great Apostle Paul, named Saul at his circumcision, was born at Tarsus, the capital of Cilicia, and was by privilege a Roman citizen, to which quality a great distinction and several exemptions were granted by the laws of the empire. He was early instructed in the strict observance of the Mosaic law, and lived up to it in the most scrupulous manner. In his zeal for the Jewish law, which he thought the cause of God, he became a violent persecutor of the Christians. He was one of those who combined to murder Saint Stephen, and in the violent persecution of the faithful, which followed the martyrdom of the holy deacon, Saul signalized himself above others. By virtue of the power he had received from the high priest, he dragged the Christians out of their houses, loaded them with chains and thrust them into prison. In the fury of his zeal he applied for a commission to take up all Jews at Damascus who confessed Jesus Christ, and bring them bound to Jerusalem, that they might serve as examples for the others. But God was pleased to show forth in him His patience and mercy. While on his way to Damascus, he and his party were surrounded by a light from heaven, brighter than the sun, and suddenly struck to the ground. And then a voice was heard saying, "Saul, Saul, why dost thou persecute me?" And Saul answered, "Who art thou, Lord?" and the voice replied, "I am Jesus whom thou dost persecute." This mild expostulation of our Redeemer, accompanied with a powerful interior grace, cured Saul's pride, assuaged his rage, and wrought at once a total change in him. Wherefore, trembling and astonished, he cried out, "Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?" Our Lord ordered him to arise and to proceed on his way to the city, where he should be informed of what was expected from him. Saul, arising from the ground, found that though his eyes were open, he saw nothing. He was led by hand into Damascus, where he was lodged in the house of a Jew named Judas. To this house came by divine appointment a holy man named Ananias, who, laying his hands on Saul, said, "Brother Saul, the Lord Jesus who appeared to thee on thy journey, hath sent me that thou mayest receive thy sight, and be filled with the Holy Ghost." Immediately something like scales fell from Saul's eyes, and he recovered his eyesight. Then he arose, and was baptized; he stayed some few days with the disciples at Damascus, and began immediately to preach in the synagogues that Jesus was the Son of God. Thus a blasphemer and a persecutor was made an apostle, and chosen as one of God's principal instruments in the conversion of the world.


Reflection - Listen to the words of the "Imitation of Christ," and let them sink into your heart: "He who would keep the grace of God, let him be grateful for grace when it is given, and patient when it is taken away. Let him pray that it may be given back to him, and be careful and humble, lest he lose it."




Blessed Henry Suso


Also known as

• Heinrich Seuse

• Heinrich von Berg

• Henrik Seuse

• Amandus

• Servant of the Eternal Wisdom



Additional Memorial

15 February (Dominicans)


Profile

Born to the German nobility. Joined the Dominicans at age 13. Known as a mystic. Served as prior at several houses. Theological student of Meister Eckhart in Cologne, Germany from 1322 to 1325. Taught in Constance, Switzerland. Spent years imprisoned in a dungeon due to slander and his association with Meister Eckhart, a controversial figure in his day. Great spiritual writer, using the pen name Amandus. Noted preacher in Switzerland and the area of the Upper Rhine. Spiritual advisor to Dominicans and the spiritual community called Gottesfreunde


Given to great austeries, Henry owned a half-length, tight-fitting, coarse undergarment equipped with 150 sharp brass nails, the points facing inward; he used it as his night shirt. After 16 years of this, an angel appeared to him on Pentecost Sunday and whispered that God wanted him to discontinue this practice; he threw his shirt into the Rhine.


Born

21 March 1295 at Uberlingen, Germany as Heinrich von Berg


Died

25 January 1366 at Ulm, Germany of natural cause


Beatified

1831 by Pope Gregory XVI


Prayers

God of wisdom, you called Blessed Henry to follow your Son and gave him the grace to mortify his body. May we follow the crucified Christ and so obtain his eternal consolation. We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. - General Calendar of the Order of Preachers






Blessed Antonio Migliorati



Additional Memorial

29 January (Augustinians)



Profile

Son of Simpliciano Migliorati, a farmer whose family had little wealth but great faith. Inspired by the life and work of Saint Nicholas of Tolentino, Antonio joined the Augustinians. Priest. Sacristan of the Augustinian church in Tolentino, Italy, the church that housed the tomb of Saint Nicholas, for twelve years beginning c.1385; he lived in a nearby monastery. Pilgrim to the shrine of Saint Nicholas of Myra. Travelling preacher throughout southern Italy beginning c.1397. Noted for his zeal for the faith, his devotion to the poor, and as a miracle worker. In 1400 he returned to his hometown of Amandola, Ascoli Piceno, Italy where he worked to build an Augustinian monastery and church; originally named for Saint Augustine of Hippo, it was later renamed in honor of Blessed Antonio himself who led it for many of his remaining 50 years there.


Born

17 January 1355 in Amandola, Ascoli Piceno, Italy of natural causes


Died

• 25 January 1450 in the Saint Augustine monastery Amandola, Ascoli Piceno, Italy of natural causes

• buried in the monastery graveyard with his brother Augustinians

• enshrined in a wooden ark in the monastery church in 1453

• re-enshrined in a wooden sarcophagus in 1641

• shrine damaged and body desecrated in 1798 by anti–Christian forces in the French Revolution

• re-enshrined in a marble sacrophagus in 1897

• a gold crown was placed on his head in 1899

• his incorrupt body is still on display in the same church


Beatified

• by 1460, his memorial was a civic holiday in Amandola, Italy

• 11 July 1759 by Pope Clement XIII (cultus confirmation)

• Pope Leo XIII granted a plenary indulgence to visitors to the shrine on 20 April 1890



Saint Dwynwen



Also known as

Dwyn, Donwen, Donwenna, Dunwen



Profile

Beautiful, pious and virtuous daughter of the 5th century Welsh king, Brychan of Brecknock. A certain Maelon fell in love with her, and wished to marry her. Though Dwynwen returned his love, her heart was set on becoming a nun, and she rejected him. She dreamt she was given a sweet drink which saved her from his attentions, but which turned the poor young man to ice. Realising that Maelon couldn't help his love for her, she prayed that he be restored to life, that all lovers should find happiness, and that she never have the desire for marriage. Dwynwen became a nun and lived on Llanddwyn Island on the western coast of Ynys Mon (Anglesey), an area accessible only at low tide.


Her well, a fresh-water spring called Ffynnon Dwynwen, became a wishing well and place of pilgrimage, particularly for lovers because of the story above. The tradition grew that the eel in the well could foretell the future for lovers - ask questions and watch which way they turn. Women would scatter breadcrumbs on the surface, then lay her handkerchief on water's surface; if the eel disturbed it, her lover would be faithful. All this led to her connection with animals, which eventually led to the tradition that her intercession could heal injured animals.


There are churches dedicated to her in Wales and Cornwall. In recent years, her feast day has become increasingly popular among the Welsh with cards being sent just as on Valentine's Day, and her well continues to be a place of pilgrimage; there's a tradition that if the fish in the well are active when a couple visits, it's the sign of a faithful husband.


Died

c.460 of natural causes


Patronage

• lovers (especially Welsh)

• sick animals




Blessed Teresa Grillo Michel


Also known as

• Maddalena Parvopassau

• Maria Antonia



Profile

Youngest of five children born to Giuseppe and Maria Antonietta Parvopassau. Her father was the head physician at the Civil Hospital of Alessandria, Italy, but died when the girl was still very small. Maddalena attended school in Turin, Italy, and then in a boarding school in Lodi, Italy run by the Ladies of Lorreto. At 18 she returned to Alessandria where she married Captain Giovanni Michel on 2 August 1877. In the next few years they lived in the Italian cities of Caserta, Acireale, Catania, Portici and Naples.


Captain Giovanni died of sunstroke during a parade in Naples in 1891, and Teresa sank into a deep depression. However, with the spiritual guidance of her cousin, Monsignor Prelli, she made a recovery and decided to devote herself to helping the poor. She first used her own home to shelter them, but the numbers soon out-stripped the house, and in 1893, with much opposition of her family, she sold it to buy an large old building which she rebult and renamed Little Shelter of Divine Providence. Other local women were attracted to her work, and on 8 January 1899 she and eight of her co-workers officially founded the Congregation of the Little Sisters of Divine Providence. She spent the rest of her life, 45 years, working to spread the Congregation and its mission to the poor. Today they have houses throughout Italy, Brazil and Argentina, running nurseries, orphanages, schools, hospitals, and homes for the elderly.


Born

25 September 1855 in Spinetta Marengo, Alessandria, Italy as Maddalena Parvopassau


Died

25 January 1944 in Alessandria, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

24 May 1998 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Ananias of Damascus


Profile

A Christian in Damascus, Syria, Ananias received a vision of Jesus in which he was ordered to find Saul (aka Paul the Apostle). Ananias found Saul, blind and staggering into the city after his encounter with Christ on the road. He cured Saul of the blindness, baptized him into the faith, supported him while he prepared, and helped him begin his missionary work. Ananias evangelized in Damascus, then went on his own mission to Eleutheropolis. Martyr.



Died

1st century in Eleutheropolis, a now-ruined village in Palestine


Readings

There was a disciple in Damascus named Ananias, and the Lord said to him in a vision, "Ananias."


He answered, "Here I am, Lord."


The Lord said to him, "Get up and go to the street called Straight and ask at the house of Judas for a man from Tarsus named Saul. He is there praying, and (in a vision) he has seen a man named Ananias come in and lay (his) hands on him, that he may regain his sight."


But Ananias replied, "Lord, I have heard from many sources about this man, what evil things he has done to your holy ones in Jerusalem. And here he has authority from the chief priests to imprison all who call upon your name."


But the Lord said to him, "Go, for this man is a chosen instrument of mine to carry my name before Gentiles, kings, and Israelites, and I will show him what he will have to suffer for my name."


So Ananias went and entered the house; laying his hands on him, he said, "Saul, my brother, the Lord has sent me, Jesus who appeared to you on the way by which you came, that you may regain your sight and be filled with the Holy Spirit." Immediately things like scales fell from his eyes and he regained his sight. - Acts 9:10-18a




Saint Poppo

ஸ்டாப்லோ நகர் துறவி போப்போ Poppo von Stablo OSB


பிறப்பு 

978, 

டெய்ன்சே Deynze, பெல்ஜியம்

இறப்பு 

25 ஜனவரி 1048, 

மார்கீனெஸ் Marchiennes, பெல்ஜியம்


இவர் நீதிபதிக்கான படிப்பை கற்றார். இவர் 1000 ஆம் ஆண்டு புனித நாட்டிற்கு புனிதப் பயனம் ஒன்றை மேற்கொண்டார். அங்கிருந்து மீண்டும் உரோம் சென்றடைந்தார். அப்போது புனித பேதுரு மற்றும் புனித பவுலின் கல்லறையை சந்தித்தார். அதன்பிறகு அங்கிருந்து ரைம்ஸிற்கு Reims திரும்பி 1005 ஆம் ஆண்டு செயிண்ட் தீயரி St.Thierry என்றழைக்கப்பட்ட துறவற மடத்தில் சேர்ந்தார். அம்மடத்தில் சேர்ந்து 3 ஆண்டுகள் கழித்து அங்கிருந்து செயிண்ட் வான்னே St.Vanne என்ற இடத்திலிருந்த இல்லத்திற்கு மாற்றப்பட்டார். அப்போது புகழ்வாய்ந்த துறவி ரிச்சர்ட் அவர்களிடமிருந்து துறவற வாழ்விற்கு தேவையான சில பயிற்சிகளைப் பெற்றார். 


அச்சமயத்தில் ரிச்சர்ட் ஏறக்குறைய 20 துறவற இல்லங்களை கட்டினார். அவ்வில்லங்கலை கண்காணிக்கும் பொறுப்பை ரிச்சர்ட், போப்போவிற்கு வழங்கினார். போப்போ தன்னிடம் வழங்கிய பணிகளை மிக நேர்மையாக திறம்பட ஆற்றினார். இதன் பயனாக இன்னும் 17 துறவற இல்லங்களை கவனிக்கும் பொறுப்பும் வழங்கப்பட்டது. இவர் தன்னிடம் ஒப்படைக்கப்பட்ட அனைத்துப் பணிக்கும் ஒழுங்குகளை அமைத்து தானும் அதைக்கடைபிடித்து வாழ்ந்தார். உண்மையுள்ள ஊழியனாக எளிமையான வாழ்வை வாழ்ந்தார்.

Also known as

Popon, Poppone



Profile

Born to the Belgian nobility, the son of Tizekinus and Adalwif. His was a pious family; when Poppo was grown, his mother became a nun. Career soldier. Pilgrim to the Holy Lands in 1000, and then to Rome, Italy. While on the road late one night, a flame suddenly lit over his head, and his lance radiated a brilliant light. Poppo took this as a sign of the Holy Spirit, and started considering a religious vocation. Monk at the Saint Theirry monastery at Rheims, France in 1005.


Beginning in 1008 he worked with Abbot Richard of Saint-Vanne to restore order and religious observance to several houses. Prior of the monastery of Saint Vaast in Arras, France in 1013. Prior at Vasloges, France in 1016. Abbot-general for a large group of houses in Lotharingia (in modern France, Germany and Switzerland) in 1020. Abbot of Stavelot-Malmédy in Belgium in 1021.


The monastic revival he led spread to other houses, including Hautmont, Marchiennes, Saint Maximinus of Trier in Germany, and Saint Vaast in Arras in France. He practiced severe personal asceticism, cared nothing for literature, and lacked organization, but managed to bring order and devotion to his houses, earning the love of his brothers and the laity. Unofficial counselor to emperor Saint Henry II on matters of faith, politics, and diplomacy.


Born

978 at Flanders, Belgium


Died

25 January 1048 at Marchiennes, France of natural causes



Blessed Francesco Zirano


Also known as

• Francesco Cirano

• Francesco Cyrano



Profile

Member of the Friars Minor Conventuals, making his profession in 1580. Priest, ordained in 1586. In 1599 he received authorization from Pope Clement VIII to collect funds to ransom Christians who were enslaved and held for ransom by Muslims in North Africa. On 20 August 1602 he arrived in Algiers, Algeria where anti-Christian sentiment was building due to an impending war between Algiers and the kingdom of Cuco; Cuco had the backing of Catholic Spain. On 1 January 1603, following a battle won by the king of Cuco, Father Francesco was dispatched to the Spanish court to take back news; he was betrayed to local Algerian soldiers who captured him and sent him to Algiers in chains. On the morning of 25 January 1603 he received notice that he was condemned to death for being a Christian, but could receive a pardon if he converted to Islam; he declined. Martyr.


Born

c.1564 in Sassari, Italy


Died

flayed alive on 25 January 1603 in Algiers, Algeria


Beatification

• 12 October 2014 by Pope Francis

• beatification recognition celebrated at Sassari, Sardinia, Cardinal Angelo Amato presiding




Blessed Manuel Domingo y Sol


† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஜனவரி 25)


✠ அருளாளர் மேனுவல் டொமிங்கோ ✠

(Blessed Manuel Domingo y Sol)


குரு/ நிறுவனர்:

(Priest/ Founder)


பிறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 1, 1836

டோர்டோஸா, டர்ரகோனா, ஸ்பெயின் அரசு

(Tortosa, Tarragona, Kingdom of Spain)


இறப்பு: ஜனவரி 25, 1909 (வயது 72)

டோர்டோஸா, டர்ரகோனா, ஸ்பெயின் அரசு

(Tortosa, Tarragona, Kingdom of Spain)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: மார்ச் 29, 1987

திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பால்

(Pope John Paul II)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஜனவரி 25


பாதுகாவல்:

திருத்தந்தை ஸ்பேனிஷ் கல்லூரி (Pontifical Spanish College), 

இயேசுவின் மாசற்ற இருதயத்தின் மறைமாவட்ட பணியாளர் குருக்கள் (Diocesan Labour Priests of the Sacred Heart of Jesus)


அருளாளர் மேனுவல் டொமிங்கோ, ஒரு ஸ்பேனிஷ் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க குரு ஆவார். இவர், ரோம் நகரிலுள்ள “திருத்தந்தையர் ஸ்பேனிஷ் கல்லூரி” (Pontifical Spanish College), மற்றும் “இயேசுவின் மாசற்ற இருதயத்தின் மறைமாவட்ட பணியாளர் குருக்கள்” (Religious Order of the Diocesan Labour Priests of the Sacred Heart of Jesus) சபை ஆகியவற்றின் நிறுவனரும் ஆவார். இவர் ஒரு இளம் குருவாகையால், இளம்பருவத்தினரின் ஈடுபாட்டிற்காக ஒரு விளையாட்டு அரங்கினையும் நாடக அரங்கினையும் கட்டினார்.


வாழ்க்கை:

கி.பி. 1836ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், முதல் தேதி, ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டின் "டோர்டோஸா" (Tortosa) என்னுமிடத்தில், தமது பெற்றோரின் பன்னிரண்டு குழந்தைகளில் கடைசி குழந்தையாகப் பிறந்த அருளாளர் மேனுவல் டொமிங்கோ, அதே மாதத்திலேயே திருமுழுக்கும் பெற்றார்.


கி.பி. 1851ம் ஆண்டு, தமது ஊரிலேயே குருத்துவ கல்வியை ஆரம்பித்த இவர், கி.பி. 1860ம் ஆண்டு, ஜூன் மாதம், இரண்டாம் தேதி, குருத்துவம் பெற்றார். பின்னர், "வலன்ஸியா கல்லூரிக்கு" (Valencia college) உயர் கல்விக்காக சென்ற இவர், கி.பி. 1865ம் ஆண்டு, "இறையியல் தகுதிச்சான்று" (Licentiate in Theology) பெற்றார். 1865ம் ஆண்டு, தமது பழைய கல்லூரியிலேயே பேராசிரியராக கற்பித்தார்.


கி.பி. 1873ம் ஆண்டு, குளிர்கால ஃபெப்ரவரி மாதத்தின் ஒருநாள் மேனுவல், இறையியல் மாணவரான "ரமோன் வலேரோ" (Ramón Valero) என்பவரைச் சந்தித்தார். " கி.பி. 1868ம் ஆண்டு புரட்சியின்போது" (1868 revolution) அவர் கற்ற "டோர்டோஸா கல்லூரி" (Tortosa seminary) இடிக்கப்பட்டதை அறிந்து வருந்தினார். இச்சம்பவம் இவரது மனதை தொட்டது. இதன்காரணமாக மேனுவல், கி.பி. 1873ம் ஆண்டு, செப்டம்பர் மாதத்தில் இறையியல் மாணவர்களுக்காக "புனித ஜோசப் இல்லம்" ("Saint Joseph's House") தொடங்கி வைத்தார். கி.பி. 1879ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 11ம் தேதி, "தேவாலயப் பணிகளுக்கான புனித ஜோசப் கல்லூரி" ("College of Saint Joseph for Ecclesiastical Vocations") என்ற கல்லூரியை நிறுவி தொடங்கினார். கி.பி. 1892ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், முதல் தேதி, "திருத்தந்தையரின் ஸ்பேனிஷ் கல்லூரியை" (Pontifical Spanish College) ரோம் நகரில் நிறுவி தொடங்கி வைத்தார்.


மேனுவலின் முயற்சிகளைப் வரவேற்கவும் பாராட்டவும் செய்த திருத்தந்தை பதின்மூன்றாம் லியோ, (Pope Leo XIII) அவருக்கும் அவரது பிற இறையியல் மாணவர்களுக்கும் தங்குவதற்கான வசதிகளை அளிக்க உத்தரவிட்டார். இவரது கல்லூரிக்கு, "திருத்தந்தையருக்கான" (Pontifical) என்ற கௌரவம், திருத்தந்தை பத்தாம் பயஸ் (Pope Pius X) அவர்கள் காலத்திலேயே வழங்கப்பட்டது.


மேனுவல், இயேசுவின் மாசற்ற திரு இருதய குருக்களின் பணிகள் சபை" (The Diocesan Labour Priests of the Sacred Heart of Jesus) என்றொரு சபையையும் கி.பி. 1883ம் ஆண்டு, ஜனவரி மாதம், 29ம் நாள், நிறுவினார். இச்சபைக்கான மறைமாவட்ட ஒப்புதல் கி.பி. 1886ம் ஆண்டு, ஜனவரி மாதம், முதல் தேதியன்று, அளிக்கப்பட்டது. கி.பி. 1898ம் ஆண்டு, ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம் முதல் தேதியன்று, திருத்தந்தை பதின்மூன்றாம் லியோ (Pope Leo XIII) அவர்கள், "திருத்தந்தையர் பாராட்டுப் பத்திரம்" (Papal Decree of Praise) அளித்தார்.


அருளாளர் மேனுவல் டொமிங்கோ கி.பி. 1909ம் ஆண்டு, ஜனவரி மாதம், 25ம் நாளன்று மரித்தார். அவரது மரணத்தின் பிறகு, கி.பி. 1927ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 19ம் நாளன்று, அவர் நிறுவிய "இயேசுவின் மாசற்ற திருஇருதய குருக்களின் பணிகள் சபைக்கு" திருத்தந்தை “பதினொன்றாம் பயஸ்” (Pope Pius XI) அவர்கள் ஒப்புதல் வழங்கினார். இச்சபை, தற்போது “போர்ச்சுகல்” (Portugal) மற்றும் “ஜனநாயக காங்கோ குடியரசு” (The Democratic Republic of Congo) ஆகிய நாடுகளில் இயங்குகிறது.

Profile

One of twelve children in his family, Manuel entered the diocesan seminary in Tortosa, Spain at age 15. Ordained a priest in the diocese of Tortosa on 9 July 1860. He served at different times as parish priest, catechist, seminary teacher, spiritual director, preacher, mission director, and confessor to three cloistered convents. He dedicated himself to working with labourers, especially the young, and later with seminarians who were struggling just to live while studying. He studied theology at the University of Valencia from 1862 to 1865. He founded the House of Joseph to help foster and support priestly vocations and seminarians; within a few years it was helping hundreds of young men, and its success led to the formation of the Diocesan Laborer Priests of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (Fraternity of Worker Priests) in 1881. Founded the Spanish College of Saint Joseph in Rome, Italy in 1892 which has trained thousands of priests.



Born

1 April 1836 in Tortosa, Tarragona, Spain


Died

25 January 1909 in Tortosa, Spain of natural causes


Beatified

29 March 1987 by Pope John Paul II




Blessed Archangela Girlani


Also known as

Eleanor Girlani



Profile

Drawn to religious life from an early age, Eleanor planned to become a Benedictine nun. However, when she left for the convent her horse refused to move. She took this as a sign, and joined the Carmelites at Parma, Italy in 1478, taking the name Archangela. Prioress at Parma and at Mantua. Had a special devotion to the Holy Trinity, and the gifts of ecstasy, levitation, and miracles.


Born

1460 at Trino, Italy as Eleanor Girlani


Died

25 January 1495 at Mantua, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

1 October 1864 by Pope Pius IX (cultus confirmed)




Saint Praejectus of Clermont


Also known as

Preietto, Preils, Prejectus, Prest, Prie, Priest, Prix, Proietto, Projectus, Pry


Profile

Born to the nobility. Studied under Saint Genesius of Clermont. Priest. Bishop of Clermont, France from 666 to 676. Founded monasteries, hospitals, and churches. Worked with Saint Reol of Rheims, Saint Agilbert of Paris, Saint Amarinus of Clermont, and Saint Ouen of Rouen. Killed by a man named Agritius who held Praejectus responsible for the arrest and execution of Hector, lord of Marseilles (in modern France). Considered a martyr immediately after his death, but his murder does not seem to have been related to his faith.



Born

625 in Auvergne, France


Died

• stabbed to death on 25 January 676 at Volvic, France

• most relics enshrined in Flavigny Abbey, Flavigny-sur-Ozerain, France in 760

• some relics translated to Saint-Prix, France in 1278


Patronage

Randazzo, Sicily




Blessed Guardato di Belforte Piceno


Profile

Born to the nobility, a member of the Reguardati family. He was early drawn to life as a religious hermit.



Born

• c.1360 in Visso, Italy

• relics enshrined under the altar of the Madonna in the church of San Eustachius


Died

25 January 1425 in Belforte del Chienti, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

on 8 January 1514 Pope Leo X granted an indulgence to those who visit the chapel with the relics of Blessed Guardato




Blessed Antoni Swiadek


Additional Memorial

12 June as one of the 108 Polish Martyrs of World War II



Profile

Priest in the archdiocese of Gniezno, Poland. Youth chaplain in Bydgoszcz, Poland. Arrested in July 1942 as part of the Nazi persecution of Christianity. Martyr.


Born

27 March 1909 in Pobiedziska, Wielkopolskie, Poland


Died

tortured to death on 25 January 1945 at the Dachau concentration camp, Oberbayern, Germany


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II at Warsaw, Poland




Saint Auxentius of Epirus


Profile

A furrier in Constantinople by trade. He joined the Turkish navy, but was forced to jump ship and return to Constantinople when he was accused of having been a Muslim who had renounced that faith. There he worked on a small fishing boat until the day he was spotted by some of the sailors from his old ship. He was arrested, and when he insisted that he was a Christian and would remain one, he was executed. Martyr.


Born

1690 at Epirus, Greece


Died

beheaded in 1720 in Constantinople (modern Istanbul, Turkey)



Saint Palaemon of Thebaid


Also known as

Palamon, Palemon


Profile

During the persecutions of Diocletian, he sought refuge in the deserts of Upper Egypt, and became one of the earliest Egyptian desert hermits. Friend and spiritual director of Saint Pachomius of Tabenna. Worked to develop the spiritual lives of other desert hermits by bringing them together; this was part of the foundation of Christian monasticism.


Died

325 at Tabennisi, Egypt




Saint Publius of Zeugma


Profile

Son of a fourth-century senator in Zeugma on the River Euphrates (in modern Turkey). When he came of age, Publius sold his estate and possessions, gave the proceeds to help the poor, and went to live as a hermit. He eventually attracted a number of would-be students and formed then into a community of monks. The diet and living conditions for he and his brother were extremely poor and harsh by choice, but they hated laziness and worked endlessly at their devotions and at charity to others.




Saint Apollo of Heliopolis


Also known as

• Apollo of Hermopol

• Apollo of Thebais


Profile

Hermit for 40 years in the desert around Thebes during which time his reputation for holiness attracted many disciples. At age 80 he founded a community of monks in Hermopol, Egypt, a house that eventually grew to 500, and he served as its first abbot. Noted miracle worker.


Born

early 4th century Egypt


Died

395 of natural causes




Blessed Emilia Fernéndez Rodríguez de Cortés


Profile

Married lay woman in the diocese of Almería, Spain. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

13 April 1914 in Tíjola, Almería Spain


Died

25 January 1939 at the Gachas-Colorés prison, Almería Spain


Beatified

25 March 2017 by Pope Francis




Saint Bretannion of Tomi


Profile

Bishop of Tomi, Scythia (modern Constanta, Romania). He opposed Arianism for which he was exiled by Emperor Valens; the people of Tomi forced the emperor to restore him to his see.



Died

380 of natural causes




Saint Maximinus of Antioch


Profile

Member of the imperial guard of Julian the Apostate. When Julian issued orders prohibiting the veneration of the relics of saints, Maximinus and Saint Juventius protested; they were arrested, scourged, and martyred. Saint John Chrysostom wrote their eulogy.


Died

beheaded in 363 at Antioch, Syria




Saint Juventius of Antioch


Profile

Member of the imperial guard of Julian the Apostate. When Julian issued orders prohibiting the veneration of the relics of saints, Juventius and Saint Maximus protested; they were arrested, scourged, and martyred. Saint John Chrysostom wrote their eulogy.


Died

beheaded in 363 at Antioch, Syria




Saint Amarinus of Clermont


Also known as

Marinus


Profile

Benedictine monk. Friend of Saint Praejectus of Clermont. Abbot of a monastery in the archdiocese of Clermont, France. The valley of Saint Amarian in Alsace, France, is named in his honor. Martyr.


Died

676




Saint Agileus of Carthage


Also known as

Agleus, Agilaeus


Profile

Martyr. Saint Augustine preached a sermon in his honour.


Born

African


Died

• c.300 in Carthage in North Africa

• relics later translated to Rome, Italy




Saint Joel of Pulsano


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint John of Matera. Benedictine monk. Helped found and eventual master-general of the Benedictine house of Saint Mary, Pulsano, Italy.


Died

1185 of natural causes



Blessed Michael de Plagis


Profile

Mercedarian monk at the monastery of Messina, Italy.



Died

1619




Saint Artemas of Pozzuoli


Profile

Teenaged martyr.


Died

• martyred at Pozzuoli, Italy

• tradition says he was stabbed to death by his pagan school classmates using their iron pens




Saint Eochod of Galloway


Also known as

Apostle of the Picts of Galloway, Scotland


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Columba, and of the twelve chosen by him to evangelize northern Britain.




Saint Racho of Autun


Also known as

Ragnobert of Autun


Profile

First bishop of Autun, France.


Died

660 of natural causes



Saint Donatus the Martyr


Profile

Martyr.




Saint Sabinus the Martyr


Profile

Martyr.




Saint Agape the Martyr


Profile

Martyr.