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22 May 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மே 23

 St. Michael the Confessor


Feastday: May 23

Death: 826





Image of St. Michael the ConfessorIn an eleventh-century Byzantine book of saints known as the Menology of Basil, Michael is described as a "pious and God-fearing" monk. He was educated by the patriarch of Constantinople, Saint Tarasius, who at his accession to the episcopate had brought the Byzantine Church back to communion with the See of Rome after a six-decade schism. Tarasius sent Michael as the courier of a synodal letter to Pope Saint Leo III. In 787 Michael was consecrated bishop of Synnada (Turkey). Michael's defense of the veneration of religious images, in opposition to the Iconoclast heresy that condemned this traditional Christian practice, led to his suffering exile under the Iconoclast Byzantine emperor Leo V ("the Armenian"). Michael told the emperor, "I venerate the immaculate and divine image of our Savior and Lord, Jesus Christ, and of his most holy Mother." Michael spent the remainder of his life in exile at Eudokiadu (Turkey), dying there in 826.

Michael of Synnada or Michael the Confessor (Greek: Μιχαὴλ ὁ ὁμολογητής; died 23 May 826) was a metropolitan bishop of Synnada from 784/7 to 815. He represented Byzantium in diplomatic missions to Harun al-Rashid and Charlemagne. He was exiled by Emperor Leo V the Armenian because of his opposition to iconoclasm, and died on 23 May 826. He is honoured as a saint by the Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches, his feast day is May 23.



Life

Nothing is known about Michael's early life. He was much influenced by Tarasios (Patriarch of Constantinople in 784–806), who tonsured him. Tarasios sent Michael, along with Theophylact of Nicomedia, to him to a monastery that Tarasios himself had founded on the shores of the Bosporus.[1] By 787, when he attended the Second Council of Nicaea, Michael was already metropolitan bishop of Synnada, having been named to the position by Tarasios.[1] Michael is recorded in all sessions of the council.[1]


He is commonly identified with the Michahel episcopus who was one of the leaders (along with Petrus abbas, identified with Peter of Goulaion) of an embassy sent by Emperor Nikephoros I to Charlemagne in 802/3, to ratify the peace treaty between the two.[2] Nikephoros used Michael and Peter, along with Gregory, the steward of Amastris, again as peace envoys in 806, when the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid launched a large-scale invasion of Asia Minor by the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid.[2][3]


In 811/2 he led another embassy to Charlemagne, along with the protospatharioi Arsaphios and Theognostos, on behalf of Michael I Rangabe, in order to renew the peace treaty and negotiate a possible marriage of Michael's son Theophylact and one of Charlemagne's daughters. Despite a warm reception at Aachen and the ratification of a peace treaty between the two realms, Charlemagne, perhaps wary after the repeated failures of successive efforts to that effect over the previous decades, hesitated to agree to such a match.[1][4] On their way to Charlemagne's court, the embassy passed through Rome, where Michael handed over the synodika (enthronement letter) of Tarasios' successor, Patriarch Nikephoros I, to Pope Leo III.[1]


He clashed with the Emperor Leo V the Armenian over Leo's re-adoption of iconoclasm in 815. He was arrested and exiled to Eudokias.[1] He died there on 23 May 826.[1]


Veneration

He is praised in the Synodikon of Orthodoxy of 843, and is venerated as a saint by the Orthod

ox and Catholic Churches on 23 May.[1][5][6] He is invoked for protection of crops from pests




St. Mercurialis of Forli


Feastday: may 23

Death: 406



First bishop of Forli, Italy, and an ardent foe of the Arian heresy which troubled the Church throughout much of the fourth century. Many remarkable adventures were woven onto legends about his life.




 


For the Italian philologist and physician, see Geronimo Mercuriali.

Mercurialis (Italian: Mercuriale) was the Christian bishop of Forlì, in Romagna. The historical figure known as Mercurialis attended the Council of Rimini in 359 and died around 406. He was a zealous opponent of paganism and Arianism.


He has come to be venerated as Saint Mercurialis, around which fanciful legends have sprung. The legend states that he was the first bishop of Forlì, during the Apostolic Age, and saved the city by killing a dragon. He has often been depicted in this act, imagery that resembles that associated with St. George. His feast day is May 23.[1][2]


The cathedral of Forlì is named after him.



St. Didier


Feastday: May 23


Desiderius was born at Autun, Gaul, and also known as Didier. He became bishop of Vienne. His enforcement of strict clerical discipline, his attachs on simony, and his denunciation of the immorality of Queen Brunhildis' court made him many enemies. He was denounced by the queen for paganism to Pope Gregory the Great who completely exonerated him, but was banished by a synod controlled by Brunhildis. Desiderius returned four years later but was murdered by three followers of King Theodoric, whom he had publicly censured. His feast day is May 23.





St. Julia

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 23)


✠ கோர்ஸிகாவின் புனிதர் ஜூலியா ✠

(St. Julia of Corsica)


கன்னியர்/ மறைசாட்சி:

(Virgin, Martyr)


பிறப்பு: ஜூலை 25

கர்தாஜ், மேற்கத்திய ரோமப் பேரரசு

(Carthage, Western Roman Empire)


இறப்பு: கி.பி. 5ம் நூற்றாண்டு (439)

கோர்ஸிகா, மேற்கத்திய ரோமப் பேரரசு

(Corsica, Western Roman Empire)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை 

(Roman Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: ஃபெப்ரவரி 14


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: மே 23


பாதுகாவல்:

கோர்ஸிகா (Corsica), லிவோர்னோ (Livorno), 

சித்திரவதையால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டவர்கள் (Torture victims)

கைகள் மற்றும் கால்களின் நோய்க்குறிகள் (Pathologies of the hands and the feet)


புனிதர் “கோர்சிகாவின் ஜூலியா” (Saint Julia of Corsica) என்றும், புனிதர் “கார்தாஜ்’ன் ஜூலியா” (Saint Julia of Carthage) என்றும், புனிதர் நோன்ஸா’வின் ஜூலியா (Saint Julia of Nonza) என்றும் அறியப்படும் புனிதர் ஜூலியா, கன்னியரும், மறைசாட்சியும் ஆவார். இவரும் புனிதர் “டெவோட்டா’வும் (Saint Devota) கோர்ஸிகா’வின் (Corsica) பாதுகாவலர்களாக திருச்சபையினால் அறிவிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளனர்.


ரோமானிய ஆட்சியின் கீழே “கோர்சிகா” கிறிஸ்தவ மறையை தழுவியதன் முன்னர் (Pre-Christian Corsica under Roman rule) நடந்த கிறிஸ்தவர்களின் துன்புருத்தல்களின்போது இவர்கள் மறைசாட்சிகளாக கொல்லப்பட்டதாக சரித்திரம் இயம்புகின்றது.


“விக்டர் விட்டேன்சிஸ்” (Victor Vitensis) எனும் ஒரு ஆபிரிக்க ஆயர் (Bishop of Africa), ரோம சாம்ராஜ்ஜியத்தின் ஆபிரிக்க பிராந்திய நாடான “வண்டல்ஸ்” (Vandals) நாட்டின் அரசர்கள் “ஜீஸெரிக்” (Geiserici) மற்றும் “ஹனுரிக்” (Hunirici) ஆகியோரின் காலத்தில் நடைபெற்ற கிறிஸ்தவ துன்புறுத்தல்கள் பற்றிய சரித்திர பதிவுகளை எழுதினார்.


கி,பி, 429ம் ஆண்டு, அரசன் “ஜீஸெரிக்” (Geiseric) சுமார் 80,000 பழங்குடியினருடன் ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டிலிருந்து ஆபிரிக்கா நோக்கி படையெடுத்தான். கி.பி. சுமார் 439ம் ஆண்டு, “கார்தாஜ்” (Carthage) நாட்டை கைப்பற்றினான். அதன் பின்னர் அவன் அங்குள்ள கிறிஸ்தவ மக்களை “ஆரியனிஸ” (Arianism) மதத்திற்கு மாற்ற எடுத்துக்கொண்ட கொடுங்கோல் துன்புறுத்தல் நடவடிக்கைகள் அப்போதிருந்த கிறிஸ்தவ ஆயர்கள் எவராலும் மறக்கவோ, பொறுத்துக்கொள்ளவோ இயலாததாகும்.


ஜூலியா, ஒரு “கார்தாஜ்” (Carthaginian girl) பெண்ணாவார். அவர் “யூசேபியஸ்” (Eusebius) என்பவனால் அவரது நகரிலிருந்து பிடித்து கொண்டுவரப்பட்டார். பின்னர் அவரை அடிமையாக விற்றான். இதுபோலவே கீழ்படியாத கிறிஸ்தவர்கள் பலரை அவர்கள் அகற்றினார்கள். “யூசேபியஸ்” (Eusebius) ஒரு பாலஸ்தீனிய நாட்டின் சிரிய (Citizen of Syria in Palestine) பிரஜை ஆவான். “கேப் கோர்ஸ்” (Cap Corse) துறைமுகத்தில் நங்கூரமிட்டிருந்த சரக்குக் கப்பலில் போதையின் கொண்டாட்டத்தின் உச்சத்தில் இருந்தனர். அவர்களின் பாவச் செயல்களுக்காக ஜூலியா மிகவும் மன வருத்தத்தில் இருந்தார். கப்பலிலுள்ள ஒரு பெண், பாகனிய கடவுளர்களை பூஜிக்க மறுப்பதாகவும், ஏளனம் செய்வதாகவும் “ஃபெலிக்ஸ் சாக்சோ” (Felix Saxo) என்பவனிடம் கூறினர். ஃபெலிக்ஸ், அப்பெண்ணை நமது வழிக்கு கொண்டுவாருங்கள்; அல்லது அவளை என்னிடம் கொண்டுவாருங்கள் என்று யூசேபியஸிடம் சொன்னான். யூசேபியஸோ, நான் “எவ்வளவோ முயற்சித்தும் எனக்கு வெற்றி கிடைக்கவில்லை. உங்களால் முடிந்தால் முயற்சி செய்யுங்கள்” என்றான்.


“ஃபெலிக்ஸ் சாக்சோ” (Felix Saxo) நயமாகவும் பயமுறுத்தியும் முயன்று பார்த்தான். ஆனால், ஜூலியா கிறிஸ்துவின் விசுவாசத்தை கைவிட மறுத்துவிட்டார். ஆகவே, சிறிதும் இரக்கமற்ற முறையில் துன்புறுத்தப்பட்டு ஜூலியா மறைசாட்சியாக கொல்லப்பட்டார்.

Feastday: May 23

Patron: Corsica, Livorno, torture victims, and pathologies of the hand and the feet


St. Julia of Corsica, also known as St. Julia of Carthage or St. Julia of Nonza, was born to noble, aristocratic parents in Carthage. Overtime, Carthage was subject to many barbaric attacks, weakening the city's defenses.


During an attack by Gaiseric, King of the Vandals, Julia was taken from her family and sold into slavery. She was purchased by a pagan merchant of Syria, named Eusebius.



Even during the most daunting chores, Julia never complained or felt sorry for herself. By being patient and cheerful, Julia was able to find comfort in her place in the world. Julia passionately loved God. When she was not working under her master's commands, Julia devoted her time toward praying and reading books of piety.


Eusebius, charmed by Julia's commitment and devotion, felt it was right to bring her along with him during his journey to Gual, where France now stands. Upon reaching the northern part of an island then called Corisca, he anchored his ship to join a pagan idolatrous festival.


Julia was left on her own some distance away from the festival, because she refused to be defiled by the "superstitious ceremonies" she openly hated.


The governor of the island, Felix, was a narrow-minded pagan who needed to have things his way. He noticed Julia outside of the festival and felt she was "insulting the gods." Eusebius informed Felix that Julia was a Christian and that despite his authority over her, she would not renounce her religion. Eusebius explained he could not bare parting with Julia because she was so diligent and faithful in her work for him.



Felix would not accept this. He offered Eusebius four of his best female slaves in exchange for Julia. Eusebius replied, "No; all you are worth will not purchase her; for I would freely lose the most valuable thing I have in the world rather than be deprived of her."


Not content, Felix prepared a banquet and waited until Eusebius became intoxicated and fell into a deep sleep to make his next move.


Felix found Julia alone and unprotected. He tried to get her to sacrifice to his gods. He told her he would grant her freedom if she would obey. Julia refused to deny Christ.


"My freedom is to serve Christ," she said, "whom I love every day in all the purity of my soul."


Enraged by her response, Felix had Julia struck in the face and her hair torn from her head. Still, during her torture, Julia continued to confess her faith. Finally, he had her hanged on a cross until she died.


Her body was carried off by monks of the isle of Gorgon, but in 763, the King of Lombardy, Desiderius, had her relics moved to Brescia, a city in the northern Italian region of Lombardy where the memory of St. Julia is celebrated with great devotion.


St. Julia is often depicted with the palm of martyrdom and the crucifix. She is the patron saint of Corsica, Livorno, torture victims, and pathologies of the hand and the feet. Her feast day is celebrated on May 23.


This article is about the Carthaginian Christian martyred on Corsica. For other saints named Julia, see Saint Julia (disambiguation).

Saint Julia of Corsica (Italian: Santa Giulia da Corsica; French: Sainte Julie; Corsican: Santa Ghjulia; Latin: Sancta Iulia), also known as Saint Julia of Carthage, and more rarely Saint Julia of Nonza, was a virgin martyr who is venerated as a Christian saint. The date of her death is most probably on or after AD 439. She and Saint Devota are the patron saints of Corsica in the Catholic Church. Saint Julia was declared a patroness of Corsica by the Church on August 5, 1809; Saint Devota, on March 14, 1820. Both were martyred in pre-Christian Corsica under Roman rule. Julia's feast day is May 23 in the Western liturgical calendar and July 16 in the East.[1][2]


Saint Julia is included in most summary lives of the saints. The details of those lives vary, but a few basic accounts emerge, portraying biographical data and events that are not reconcilable. Various theories accounting for the differences have been proposed. The quintessential icon of Saint Julia derives from the testimony of Victor Vitensis, contemporaneous Bishop of Africa. It is supported by physical evidence: the relics, a small collection of human bone fragments, are where historical events subsequent to the story say they ought to be, at the former Church of Santa Giulia in Brescia, Italy, now part of the city museum.


Saint Julia has been a popular representational theme. No physical description of her has survived. She has more recently been put forward as a "black saint" merely because her native city, according to Vitensis, was Carthage (now Tunis), but that view is unsupported. North Africa under the Romans was multi-racial and still is to a large degree. Most representations, created by Europeans, depict a European.




St. Crispin of Viterbo



Feastday: May 23

Birth: 1668

Death: 1750



Franciscan lay brother, noted for miracles, prophecies, and holiness. Born Peter Fioretti, in Viterbo, Italy, on November 13, 1668, he studied at the Jesuit College, and became a shoemaker. At twenty-five he entered the Franciscan Capuchins and took the name Crispin. He served as a gardener and as a cook. He called himself "the little beast of burden of the Capuchins." During an epidemic, Crispin effected many miraculous cures. He was also venerated for his prophecies and spiritual wisdom. Crispin died I Rome on May 19. He was beautified in 1806 and canonized in 1982.


Crispino da Viterbo (13 November 1668 – 19 May 1750) - born Pietro Fioretti - was an Italian Roman Catholic professed religious from Order of Friars Minor Capuchin.[1] Fioretti was an ardent devotee of the Mother of God and was consecrated to her protection in 1674 and he even made a small altar dedicated to her when he served in the kitchens at the house in Orvieto.[2][3] He served in various roles for the order in various cities around Rome where he became a well-known figure with various nobles and prelates - even Pope Clement XI visiting him and seeking him out for advice and support. Fioretti likewise was known as a sort of wonderworker who worked miracles during his lifetime. He was also known for his warm sense of humor and his simple method for living.[4][5]


The calls for him to be named as a saint began as soon as he had died and the formal cause to investigate his holiness opened on 16 September 1761 under Pope Clement XIII while he was named as Venerable in 1796 under Pope Pius VII. Pope Pius VII beatified him in 1806 while Pope John Paul II canonized him as a saint on 20 June 1982 - the first canonization in the latter's pontificate.[4][1]



Life

Pietro Fioretti was born on 13 November 1668 in Bottarone in Viterbo to Ubaldo Fioretti (a craftsman) and Marzia Antoni; his baptism was celebrated on 15 November in the church of San Giovanni Battista. His mother had been widowed with a daughter before she married Ubaldo.[4][3] His father died sometime before Fioretti turned five.[1]


In 1674 his mother took him to a Marian shrine that was not too far from their home where his mother consecrated him to the Mother of God to place him under her spiritual protection. It was from that point that he referred to the Blessed Mother as his "other mother". His mother had told him to "honor her as a good son would do".[5] He was known for his piousness and for his great knowledge of the saints; the townsfolk often referred to him as "il santarello" ("the little saint"). Fioretti was educated under the Jesuits (mastering Latin) before being apprenticed to his shoemaker uncle who provided for his education.[1][5]


In 1693 he applied for admission as a religious into the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin at their house in Viterbo; he assumed the religious name of "Crispino da Viterbo" upon his admittance and the commencement of his novitiate on 22 July. But Fioretti had desired to join the religious life after the sight of a Franciscan procession awoke within him the desire to serve God as a religious and the order was enthusiastic about receiving him into their ranks.[3][1] He served for some time as a gardener and a cook in his hometown at the house and was later sent to Tolfa to serve as the infirmarian where he remained from 1694 to 1697. During an epidemic he is said to have effected a number of cures after turning to God for divine intervention. From Tolfa he was sent to Rome for several months and later to Albano and Bracciano until 1703.[4]


Fioretti was later transferred in 1703 to Monterotondo where he remained until 1709 when he was transferred to Oviedo though did not arrive there until January 1710. In the kitchen there he made a small altar dedicated to the Mother of God.[2] He knew Cardinal Filippo Antonio Gualtieri who was one such prelate who liked to meet and speak with Fioretti on a number of occasions.[4] Fioretti liked to read about the life of Clare of Assisi and also liked reading about the lives of Fidelis of Sigmaringen and Joseph of Leonessa.[3]


He lived an austere life devoid of the luxuries of the times. In Orvieto he lived on the first floor in a small room and he rose in the morning to meditate before he attended a number of Masses. For lunch he ate little vegetable soup or a mouthful of bread dipped in water. He would often beg for alms or go out to visit either convicts in the local prison or the sick in the hospitals and infirmaries. In the summer he slept on the roof.[3] There was once a nun that did not treat him well and he said of it: "praise God that there is one woman in Orvieto who knows me and treats me as I deserve".


Illustrious individuals visited the simple friar including bishops and cardinals and even Pope Clement XI himself who took great delight in conversing with the humble Franciscan (the two would also meet sometimes at Castel Gandolfo).[5] Clement XI even once visited him in his kitchen to meet with him and in homage to the pious friar.[2] It was his constant endeavor to imitate the virtues of his patron

 Felice di Cantalice whom he had chosen as his model of perfection at the beginning of his religious life. In Orvieto he served as the questor where he solicited alms for the poor. The housewives became so fond of him that the superior had to re-appoint him as the questor since the townsfolk would accept no one else. He - much like his patron - used to call himself the ass or the beast of burden to his order and having on one occasion been asked the reason he went bare-headed he answered that "an ass does not wear a hat". In winter 1747 he became quite ill to the point it was believed he would die so his superiors sent him to Rome but he recovered and returned to his duties.[3]


His superiors sent him from Albano to Rome on 13 May 1750 when his health began to deteriorate knowing that he would die there; he himself predicted he would die in Rome before it was made public his superiors would be sending him there.[3] Fioretti died on 19 May (he wished to die after the feast of Saint Felix of Cantalice) due to pneumonia at the Immaculate Conception convent on the Via Veneto in Rome.[1][4] His remains - at present in a state of remarkable preservation - rests under one of the side altars in the famed Santa Maria della Concezione dei Cappuccini church in Rome.[2] His remains were exhumed in 1959 and found to be incorrupt.[1]


Sainthood

The canonization process opened under Pope Clement XIII on 16 September 1761 and the investigation into his holiness was held in Rome; the confirmation of his life of heroic virtue in a papal decree allowed for Pope Pius VI to name Fioretti as Venerable on 7 July 1796. Pope Pius VII later beatified him in Rome on 7 September 1806 after recognizing two miracles attributed to his intercession.


The miracle that led to his canonization was investigated in the diocese it originated in from 1958 to 1960 before the Congregation for the Causes of Saints validated that process on 18 March 1977. Medical experts confirmed that the healing in question was a miracle on 22 February 1978 while the C.C.S. officials and their consultants concurred in that assessment on 9 January 1979. The C.C.S. alone met and approved the case on 21 March 1979 before presenting it to Pope John Paul II who recognized the healing of Rinaldo Crescia on 21 May 1950 was a miracle from Fioretti's intercession. John Paul II canonized Fioretti on 20 June 1982 and his canonization served as the first canonization in John Paul II's pontificate.




St. John Baptist de Rossi

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 24)


✠ புனிதர் மரிய மகதலின் டி பஸ்ஸி ✠

(St. Mary Magdalene de Pazzi)


கன்னியர்:

(Virgin)


பிறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 2, 1566

ஃப்ளாரன்ஸ், இத்தாலி

(Florence, Duchy of Florence)


இறப்பு: மே 25, 1607 (வயது 41)

ஃப்ளாரன்ஸ், இத்தாலி

(Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்: 

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்கம்

(Roman Catholic Church)


அருளாளர் பட்டம்: கி.பி. 1626

திருத்தந்தை எட்டாம் அர்பன்

(Pope Urban VIII)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: ஏப்ரல் 28, 1669 

திருத்தந்தை பத்தாம் கிளமெண்ட்

(Pope Clement X)


முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

புனிதர் மரிய மகதலின் டி பஸ்ஸி துறவு மடம், கரேக்கி, ஃப்ளாரன்ஸ், இத்தாலி

(Monastery of Santa Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi, Careggi, Florence, Italy)


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: மே 24


பாதுகாவல்: 

நேப்பிள்ஸ் (துணை பாதுகாவலர்) (Naples (co-patron), நோய்களுக்கெதிராக (Against bodily ills), பாலின தூண்டுதளுக்கே எதிராக (Against sexual temptation), நோயாளிகள் (Sick people)


புனிதர் மரிய மகதலின் டி பஸ்ஸி, ஒரு இத்தாலிய ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க புனிதரும், கார்மேல் சபை துறவியும், கிறிஸ்தவ சித்தரும் ஆவார்.


“கதெரீனா” (Caterina) எனும் இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட புனிதர் மரிய மகதலின் டி பஸ்ஸி, கி.பி. 1566ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 2ம் நாளன்று, ஃப்ளாரென்ஸ் நகரில் பிறந்தார். இவரது தந்தை நகரின் புகழ்பெற்ற செல்வந்தர் ஆவார். அவரது பெயர், “கமிலோ டி கெரி டே பஸ்ஸி” (Camillo di Geri de' Pazzi) ஆகும். இவரது தாயாரின் பெயர், “மரிய பௌன்டெல்மொன்டி” (Maria Buondelmonti) ஆகும். பஸ்ஸி சிறுமியாக இருக்கையிலேயே ஆன்மீக மற்றும் பக்தி மார்க்கத்தின்பால் ஈர்க்கப்பட்டிருந்தார். ஒன்பது வயதிலேயே பஸ்ஸி இறைவனின் திருப்பாடுகளை தியானிக்கக் கற்றுக்கொண்டார். தமது பத்து வயதிலேயே புது நன்மை பெற்றுக்கொண்ட அவர், தமது கன்னிமைக்காக பிரமாணம் செய்துகொண்டார்.


அவரது பன்னிரண்டு வயதில் தமது தாயாரின் முன்னிலையிலேயே இறைவனின் திருக்காட்சியைக் காணும் பேறு பெற்றார். அதுமுதலே பலவித அற்புத திருக்காட்சிகளைக் கண்டார்.


கி.பி. 1580ம் ஆண்டு, பஸ்ஸி “மால்டா சபையினர்” (Order of Malta) நடத்தும் பெண் துறவியரின் மடத்தில் கல்வி கற்க அவரது தந்தையால் அனுப்பப்பட்டார். ஆனால் விரைவிலேயே திரும்ப அழைத்துக்கொள்ளப்பட்ட பஸ்ஸி, ஒரு பிரபுக் குடும்ப இளைஞனை திருமணம் செய்துகொள்ள அறிவுறுத்தப்பட்டார். ஆனால், தாம் தமது கன்னிமைக்காக இறைவனிடம் பிரமாணம் எடுத்துக்கொண்டதை தந்தையிடம் எடுத்துக்கூறினார். இறுதியில், தமது சம்மதத்தை தெரிவித்த தந்தையார், பஸ்ஸியின் துறவு வாழ்க்கைக்கு சம்மதம் தெரிவித்தார். பஸ்ஸி, “தூய மரியாளின் கார்மேல் துறவு மடத்தை” (Carmelite Monastery of St. Mary) தேர்ந்துகொண்டார். கி.பி. 1583ம் ஆண்டு, புகுமுக (Novice) துறவறம் பெற்ற பஸ்ஸி, “அருட்சகோதரி மேரி மகதலின்” (Sister Mary Magdalene) என்ற துறவற பெயரை ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார்.


புகுமுக (Novice) துறவறத்தில் ஒருவருட காலம் இருந்த பஸ்ஸி, ஒருமுறை மிகவும் மோசமாக நோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டார். வேதனைகளை வெளிக்காட்டாத பஸ்ஸியின் இருதயம் கிறிஸ்துவின் அன்பில் நிறைந்திருந்தது. இதனைக் கண்ட மடத்தின் அருட்சகோதரி ஒருவர் பஸ்ஸியிடம், “சிறு முணுமுணுத்தல் கூட இல்லாமல் எப்படி உங்களால் வேதனைகளை பொறுத்துக்கொள்ள முடிகிறது” என்று கேட்டார். அதற்கு பதிலளித்த பஸ்ஸி, இறைவனின் பாடுபட்ட சொரூபத்தைச் சுட்டிக்காட்டியபடி, “கிறிஸ்துவின் பாடுகளை அனுபவிக்க அழைக்கப்பட்ட எவருக்குமே வலிகளும் வேதனைகளும் இனிமையாகவும் மகிழ்ச்சியாகவும் இருக்கும்” என்றார்.


இதுபோன்ற இவரது எண்ணங்களும் கிறிஸ்துவுக்குள்ளான இவரது அன்பும் இவருக்கு தொடர்ந்த இறைவனின் திருப்பாடுகளின் திருக்காட்சிகளை காண கிட்டியது. இறைவனின் பெயரால் இவர் நிகழ்த்திய அற்புதங்கள் எண்ணிலடங்காதவை ஆகும். பிறரின் எண்ணங்களைக் கூட அறிந்து கூறும் வல்லமை பெற்றவராக இவர் திகழ்ந்தார் என்பர். அதுபோலவே, எதிர்காலத்தை கணித்து கூறும் சக்தியும் இவர் பெற்றிருந்தார். உதாரணத்துக்கு, “கர்தினால் அலெஸ்ஸான்ட்ரோ டே மெடிசி” (Cardinal Alessandro de' Medici) அடுத்த திருத்தந்தை ஆவார் என்றார். அதுபோலவே அவர் திருத்தந்தையாக தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்டு, “பதினோராம் லியோ” (Pope Leo XI) ஆனார்.


அவரது வாழ்நாளில், தூர தொலைவு நாடுகளிலிருந்த பலருக்கு நேரில் காட்சியளித்து அவர்களது நோய்களை குணமாக்கியதாக கூறப்படுகிறது.


கி.பி. 1607ம் ஆண்டு, தமது 41 வயதில் மரித்த இப்புனிதரின் உடல், கெட்டுப்போகாத நிலையிலேயே இருப்பதாக கூறப்படுகிறது.


புனிதர் பட்டமளிப்பு:

இவரின் இறப்புக்குப் பின், பல புதுமைகள் நிகழ்ந்ததால், இவருக்கு முக்திபேறு பட்டம் அளிப்பதற்கான முயற்சிகள் திருத்தந்தை ஐந்தாம் பவுலின் (Pope Paul V) ஆட்சியில் தொடங்கி திருத்தந்தை எட்டாம் அர்பனின் (Pope Urbun VIII) ஆட்சியில் கி.பி. 1626ம் ஆண்டு, வழங்கப்பட்டது. எனினும் 62 ஆண்டுகளுக்குப் பின்னரே திருத்தந்தை பத்தாம் கிளமெண்டால் (Pope Clement VIII), கி.பி. 1669ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 28ம் நாளன்று, புனிதர் பட்டம் அளிக்கப்பட்டது. 


நினைவுத் திருவிழா நாள்:

இவரின் புனிதர் பட்டமளிப்பின் போது, இவரது விழா நாள், இவரின் இறந்த நாள் ஆகிய, மே மாதம், 25ம் நாள் எனக் குறிக்கப்பட்டது. ஆனால் கி.பி. 1725ம் ஆண்டு, அந்நாள் புனித திருத்தந்தை ஏழாம் கிரகோரிக்கு (Pope Gregory VII) ஒதுக்கப்பட்டதால், மே மாதம், 29ம் தேதிக்கு நகர்த்தப்பட்டது. கி.பி. 1969ம் ஆண்டு நடந்த மாற்றத்தில் மீண்டும் மே மாதம், 24ம் தேதிக்கு நகர்த்தப்பட்டது.

Also known as

•Saint Giovanni Battista Rossi

• John Baptist Rossi

• John Baptist de Rubeis

Feastday: May 23

Patron: of Voltaggio

Birth: February 22, 1698

Death: May 23, 1764

Beatified: May 13, 1860 by Pope Pius IX

Canonized: December 8, 1881 by Pope Leo XIII


St. John Baptist de de Rossi, also known as Giovanni Battista de' Rossi, was born on February 22, 1698 in Voltaggio, Italy. He was the fourth child of Charles de Rossi and Frances Anfossi, known to be a holy and faith filled couple.



Though John's family was not financially wealthy, they were rich in faith. Through their guidance and a wonderful education, John learned to excel in his living faith, piety and gentleness.


A pair of priests, Scipio Gaetano and Giuseppe Repetto, saw great potential within John and took his early education and faith formation as a part of their apostolate, taking him under their spiritual care.


When he was 10-years-old, John met with a wealthy, noble couple from Genoa after Mass. They, too, noted his gifts and potential. So, they took him in as a page, after receiving his father's approval. John was taken to Genoa to attend school until 1711.


In 1710, John's father suddenly passed away. His mother pleaded for him to return home, but John was convinced that the Lord wanted him to finish his education in Genoa.


In 1711, John was called to Rome by his cousin, the canon of St. Mary in Cosmedin, Lorenzo de Rossi. Lorenzo suggested John complete his studies there at the Collegium Romanum under the guidance of the Jesuits.


John continued to thrive in his studies. His natural talents, spiritual gifts, Christian virtue and willingness to apply himself to his studies made him the model student.


He studied philosophy and theology under the Dominicans at the Dominican College of Saint Thomas.


During this time, John joined the Sodality of the Blessed Virgin and the Ristretto of the Twelve Apostles. Both groups were comprised of lay Christian faithful especially dedicated to Christian prayer and service. He led the members of the groups in meetings, group prayer and outreach to the poor, including visits to the hospitals.


John's desire to grow in holiness sometimes led him to going overboard in his practices of voluntary mortification and his austerity nearly ruined his health. He also began to have fits of epilepsy. He struggled with these for the rest of his life.


John wanted dearly to become a priest. Under normal circumstances, his epileptic fits would have excluded him from the priesthood. However, he was granted a special dispensation. After ordination as a deacon, he was ordained to the priesthood on March 8, 1721. John believed he had reached his goal and was deeply grateful to the Lord for the vocation of priesthood. So, as an expression of gratitude, he vowed to not accept any ecclesiastical benefits unless commanded to do so out of obedience to his religious superiors.


He devoted himself to serving Rome's sick, homeless and prostitutes. He would visit the sick and poor in the hospitals by day, and by night he ministered to the street people. He reached out to assist homeless women and helped to found a hospice for them near Saint Galla. He also aided prisoners and workers.


John spoke to the dying about Jesus Christ, leading them to salvation. He desperately wanted to relieve them of their suffering. None of the sick repulsed him, no matter how bad their illness or symptoms because he saw Jesus in them.


In one instance, a young man who was ill and dying from syphilis turned away from John's attention, out of shame. However, as John showed his selfless heart and helped him with his bedpan, the man finally took the time to listen to John's words and was able to make a good confession before his death.


Other priests were in awe of John's holiness and manner of life. They saw that with only a few kind words he could turn people's lives around.


During one of his sermons, John stated to his fellow priests:


"Ignorance is the leprosy of the soul. How many such lepers exist in the church here in Rome, where many people don't even know what's necessary for their salvation? It must be our business to try to cure this disease. The souls of our neighbors are in our hands, and yet how many are lost through our fault? The sick die without being properly prepared because we have not given time or care enough to each particular case. Yet with a little more patience, a little more perseverance, a little more love, we could have led these poor souls to heaven."



"The poor come to church tired and distracted by their daily troubles. If you preach a long sermon they can't follow you. Give them one idea that they can take home, not half a dozen, or one will drive out the other, and they will remember none."


In 1735, John became titular canon at St. Mary in Cosmedin. Following the death of his cousin in 1737, obedience forced John to accept the canonry. However, John refused the house belonging with the title, and used funds from selling the home toward his cause with the poor.



John's illness continued to impact his life, as he was afraid of entering the confessional because the possibility of having a seizure during the session. He became accustom to sending the sinners he found to other priests.


In 1738, John became dangerously ill and was sent to Civita Castellana to regain his health. While there, the bishop residing in that location pushed him to hear confessions. After reviewing his moral theology, John received the special faculty of hearing confessions in any of Rome's churches.


From then on, John spent countless hours hearing confessions from the poor and illiterate whom he sought from hospitals and their homes.


John became the "apostle of the abandoned," and became known as a second Philip Neri, a hunter of souls. He preached five to six times a day in all kinds of places, including churches, hospitals and prisons. He was also known for his strong devotion to St. Aloysius Gonzaga.


In August 1762, the state of his health became worse. John became worn out and his strength began to deteriorate. His companions begged him to go to Lake Nemi to recover. While there, he started having worse epileptic fits.


Two months later, he returned to Rome. John rarely left his room, but in September 1763, he celebrated Mass at Santa Maria in Cosmedin, telling those present that he would be dying soon.


In December, he was found in his room unconscious, after suffering a violent seizure. He remained unconscious for a day. He was given Viaticum, the special prayers and reception of the Holy Eucharist given to the gravely ill and dying. He was also given the Anointing of the Sick, also called Last Rites when it is administered before death.


However, John recovered from his illness and went on to celebrate several more Masses. Soon later, his health once again declined and he was confined to his bed.



John Baptist de Rossi passed to the Lord whom he loved with such true devotion on May 23, 1764 in his bedroom in Trinita de Pellegrini.


His body was buried in that church under a marble slab at the altar of the Blessed Virgin. His remains were relocated in 1965 to a new church named in his honor.


Pope Pius VI began the cause of canonization for John Baptist de Rossi in 1781, but both the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars created setbacks. Years later in 1859, Pope Pius IX resumed his cause and attributed two miracles to John's intercession.


St. John Baptist de Rossi was beatified on May 13, 1860 by Pope Pius IX and canonized on December 8, 1881 by Pope Leo XIII.


He is the patron saint of Voltaggio and his feast day is celebrated on May 23.


Giovanni Battista de' Rossi (22 February 1698 – 23 May 1764) was an Italian Roman Catholic priest.[1][2] He served as the canon of Santa Maria in Cosmedin after his cousin, who was a priest serving there, died. He was a popular confessor despite his initial fears that his epileptic seizures could manifest in the Confessional. Rossi opened a hospice for homeless women not long after his ordination, and he became known for his work with prisoners and ill people, to whom he dedicated his entire ecclesial mission.[3][4]


Rossi's canonization was celebrated on 8 December 1881. It had begun decades before but was suspended due to tensions in Europe that meant work could not be pursued regarding the cause; it was later revitalized and he was beatified in 1860.




St. Quintian


Feastday: May 23

Death: 430


Leader of a group of martyrs in Africa, including Julian and Lucius. The nineteen martyrs were put to death for being orthodox Christians by Arian ruler King Hunneric of the Vandals.


Quintian (Quinctianus), Lucius and Julian (Julianus) are venerated as saints and martyrs by the Roman Catholic Church. According to the Roman Martyrology, they were inhabitants of North Africa who were killed during the persecutions of the Vandal king Huneric (476–484 AD), who was an Arian.[3] However, the date of their martyrdom may be conjectural.[3] They are the only ones named in a group of sixteen martyrs, which included several women.[3]


According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, Quinctianus was a bishop and was probably the same person as a bishop named Urcitanus.[2]


The Martyrologium Hieronymianum mentions other African martyrs of this same name on other feast days; however, no other information is included for the martyrs placed under the different feast days.[2]


The Great Synaxaristes of the Orthodox Church mentions that saints Quintianus, Lucius and Julianus were martyred together with nineteen other Christians.






Saint William of Rochester

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 23)


✠ ரோச்செஸ்டர் நகர் புனிதர் வில்லியம் ✠

(St. William of Rochester)


மறைசாட்சி:

(Martyr)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி 12ம் நூற்றாண்டு

பெர்த், ஸ்காட்லாந்து

(Perth, Scotland)


இறப்பு: கி.பி 1201

ரோச்செஸ்டர், இங்கிலாந்து

(Rochester, England)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: கி.பி 1256

திருத்தந்தை நான்காம் அலெக்சாண்டர்

(Pope Alexander IV)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மே 23


பாதுகாவல்: தத்தெடுக்கப்பட்ட குழந்தைகள்


ரோச்செஸ்டர் நகர் வில்லியம் (Saint William of Rochester) என்றும் அழைக்கப்படும் பெர்த் நகர் புனிதர் வில்லியம் (Saint William of Perth), இங்கிலாந்தில் மறைசாட்சியாக மறைந்த ஒரு ஸ்காட்டிஷ் துறவி ஆவார். அவர் தத்தெடுக்கப்பட்ட குழந்தைகளின் பாதுகாவலர் ஆவார்.


அக்காலத்தில், ஸ்காட்லாந்து (Scotland) நாட்டின் முக்கிய நகரங்களில் ஒன்றான பெர்த் (Perth) நகரில் பிறந்த இவர், இளமையில், ஓரளவு முரட்டுத்தனமாக இருந்தார். ஆனால், வளர வளர, அவர் கடவுளின் சேவைக்காக தன்னை முழுமையாக அர்ப்பணித்தார். வர்த்தக ரீதியாக ஒரு ரொட்டி தயாரிக்கும் (Baker) தொழில் செய்து வந்த இவர், (சில ஆதாரங்கள் அவர் ஒரு மீனவர் என்று கூறுகிறார்கள்), தாம் உற்பத்தி செய்யும் ஒவ்வொரு பத்தாவது ரொட்டியையும் ஏழைகளுக்காக ஒதுக்குவது அவருக்குப் பழக்கமாக இருந்தது.


வில்லியம் தினம்தோறும் காலை திருப்பலி காண ஆலயம் செல்லும் வழக்கம் கொண்டிருந்தார். ஒரு நாள், வெளிச்சம் கூட சரியாக விடிகாலை வேளை, தேவாலயத்தின் வாசலில் ஒரு கைவிடப்பட்ட குழந்தையைக் கண்டு, அதனை தத்தெடுத்தார்.  குழந்தைக்கு டேவிட் எனும் பெயர் சூட்டிய அவர், தமது தொழிலான ரொட்டி தயாரிக்கும் பணியையும், வர்த்தகத்தை கற்பித்தார். சில காலத்தின் பின்னர், அவர் புனித திருத்தலங்களைப் பார்வையிட திட்டமிட்டார். மேலும், புனிதப்படுத்தப்பட்ட பணப்பையையும் (உண்டியல் பணம்), தமது வளர்ப்புப் பிள்ளையான டேவிட்டையும், ஊழியர்களையும்  அழைத்துக்கொண்டு, திருயாத்திரை புறப்பட்டார்.


அவர்கள் ரோச்செஸ்டர் (Rochester) நகரில் மூன்று நாட்கள் தங்கியிருந்தனர். அடுத்த நாள் கேன்டர்பரி (Canterbury) நகருக்கு எண்ணினர். அங்கிருந்து ஜெருசலேம் (Jerusalem) நகருக்கு செல்ல திட்டமிட்டிருந்தனர். ஆனால் அதற்கு பதிலாக, டேவிட் வேண்டுமென்றே தனது வரர்ப்புத் தந்தையை வேண்டுமென்றே ஒரு குறுக்கு வழியில் தவறாக வழிநடத்தினான். வழியில், அவர்கள் வழிச்செலவுக்கும், காணிக்கைகளுக்குமாக சேமித்து வைத்திருந்த உண்டியல் பணம் முழுதையும் கொள்ளையடித்தான். தமது வளர்ப்புத் தந்தையான வில்லியமை தலையில் அடித்து கீழே தரையில் வீழ்த்திய அவன், அவரது தொண்டையை அறுத்து அவரை கொலை செய்தான்.


அவரது உடல், மனநோயாளி பெண்மணி ஒருத்தியால் கண்டெடுக்கப்பட்டது. அப்பெண்மணி, "ஹனிசக்கிள்" (Honeysuckle) என்றழைக்கப்படும் மலர்களாலான ஒரு மலர்மாலை பின்னி, அதனை வில்லியமின் உடலின் தலையருகே வைத்தாள். (இந்த "ஹனிசக்கிள்" வகை மலர்கள், வட அமெரிக்கா (North America) மற்றும் யூரேசியா  (Eurasia) நாடுகளில் காணப்படுகிறது.) ஒரு மலர்மாலையை தனது தலையிலும் சூடிக்கொண்டாள். அக்கணமே, அவளை பிடித்திருந்த மனநோய் அவளை விட்டகன்றது.


நடந்த சம்பவங்களை கேட்டறிந்த ரோச்செஸ்டர் நகர (Monks of Rochester) துறவிகள், வில்லியமின் உடலை ஆலயத்திற்கு கொண்டு சென்று அங்கேயே அடக்கம் செய்தனர். அவர் புனித ஸ்தலங்களுக்கு யாத்திரை சென்ற காலத்தில் மரித்ததாலும், மனநோயாளி பெண்மணி குணமான காரணத்தினாலும், அவர் மறைசாட்சியாக கௌரவிக்கப்பட்டார். மனநோயாளி பெண்மணி குணமான அதிசயத்தின் விளைவாகவும், அவரது மரணத்திற்குப் பிறகு அவரது பரிந்துரையில் செய்யப்பட்ட மற்ற அற்புதங்களின் விளைவாகவும், அவர் மக்களால் ஒரு புனிதர் என்று வணங்கப்பட்டார்.


ரோச்செஸ்டர் (Rochester) நகரில் இவரது பெயரில் அர்ப்பணிக்கப்பட்ட ஆலயமும் (The shrine of St William of Perth), இவரது பெயரால் நிறுவப்பட்ட தொடக்கப்பள்ளியும் (St William of Perth Primary School) உள்ளன.

Also known as

William of Perth



Profile

William led a wild and misspent youth, but as an adult he had a complete conversion, devoting himself to God, caring especially for poor and neglected children. He worked as a baker, and gave every tenth loaf to the poor. He attended Mass daily, and one morning on his way to church he found an infant abandoned on the threshold. He named the baby David, and adopted him, and taught him his trade.


Years later he and David set out on a pilgrimage to the Holy Lands. During a stop-over in Rochester, England the boy David turned on William, clubbed him, cut his throat, robbed the body, and fled. Because he was on a holy journey, and because of the miraculous cures later reported at his tomb, he is considered a martyr.


A local insane woman found William's body, and plaited a garland of honeysuckle flowers for it; she placed the garland on William, and then on herself whereupon her madness was cured. Local monks, seeing this as a sign from God, interred William in the local cathedral and began work on his shrine. His tomb and a chapel at his murder scene, called Palmersdene, soon became sites of pilgimage and donation, even by the crown. Remains of the chapel can be seen near the present Saint William's Hospital.


Born

12th century at Perth, Scotland


Died

• throat cut in 1201 at Rochester, England

• interred in the cathedral at Rochester


Canonized

1256 by Pope Innocent IV


Patronage

adopted children



Saint Euphrosyne of Polotsk


Also known as

• Yefrasinnya Polatskaya

• Efrasinnia, Efrosin, Euphrasinne, Evfrosinia, Pradslava



Profile

Daughter of Prince Svyatoslav of Polotsk. Granddaughter of Prince Polacak Usiaslau. Entered the Convent of Holy Wisdom at Polotsk, a house founded by her aunt, at age 12; she was later joined by her sister, two nieces, and a cousin. Hermit in a cell in the Cathedral of Holy Wisdom. Book copyist; proceeds from the sale of the books were given to the poor. Founded a convent at Seltse. Pilgrim to Constantinople; received by emperor Manuel I and Patriarch Michael III. Pilgrim to the Holy Lands where she was received by the Crusader King Amaury I. Especially venerated by Belarussians, Ruthenians, Lithuanians, and Russians.


Born

1110 at Polotsk, Belarus as Pradslava


Died

• 1173 at the monastery of Mar Saba near Jerusalem of natural causes

• re-interred in the Monastery of the Caves at Kiev in 1187

• relics translated to Polotsk in 1910 at the Saviour-Efrosinia Convent


Canonized

1984 by Pope John Paul II in Belarus


Patronage

Belarus



Saint Michael of Synnada


Also known as

Michael the Confessor



Profile

Moved to Constantinople as a young man where he became a student of Saint Tarasius of Constantinople. Friend of Saint Theophylact of Nicomedia. Monk in a monastery on the Bosporus. Recalled to Constantinople by student of Saint Tarasius who ordained him. Bishop of Synnada, Phrygia (in modern Turkey) in 787. Part of the Second Council of Nicaea in 787. Imperial diplomat to caliph Harun al-Rashid in 806, to Pope Saint Leo III in 811, and Blessed Charlemagne in 812. Exiled in 814 and imprisoned in 815 by emperor Leo V for defending the use of icons.


Died

826 in Eudokiadu, Turkey of natural causes



Saint Guibertus of Gorze


Also known as

• Guibertus of Gembloux

• Guibert of...



Profile

Born to the French nobility. Soldier who fought in several campaigns. Hermit on his estates at Gembloux, Brabant (in modern Belgium. Founded a monastery in Gembloux. Benedictine monk at Gorze Abbey near Metz, France. Though he wanted to retire from the world, he was forced to return to Gembloux several times to defend the rights of the foundation he established to support the monastery.


Born 

in the Lorraine region of France


Died

962 at Gorze Abbey in France of natural causes



Saint Desiderius of Langres


Also known as

• Desiderius of Genoa

• Desiderio, Dizier, Didier, Désiré



Additional Memorial

11 February (Hieronymian Martyrology)


Profile

Bishop of Langres, France. Supported the Acts of the Council of Serdica in 343. Killed by Vandal invaders while trying to negotiate with them for the people in his diocese. Martyr with many of his flock.


Born

407 in Genoa, Italy


Died

• beheaded near Langres, France

• buried in Langres



Blessed Wincenty Matuszewski


Additional Memorial

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


Profile

Priest in the diocese of Wloclawek, Poland. Murdered by occupying Nazi forces for the crime of being a Catholic priest. Martyr.


Born

3 March 1869 in Chruscienska Wola, Lódzkie, Poland


Died

23 May 1940 in Witowo, Kujawsko-Pomorskie, Poland


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Józef Kurzawa


Additional Memorial

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


Profile

Priest in the diocese of Wloclawek, Poland. Murdered by occupying Nazi forces for the crime of being a Catholic priest. Martyr.


Born

6 January 1910 in Swierczyni, Wielkopolskie, Poland


Died

23 May 1940 in Witowo, Kujawsko-Pomorskie, Poland


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Eutychius of Valcastoria


Also known as

• Eutychius of Norvia

• Eutizio of...


Profile

Sixth-century hermit and monk whose piety led many to God. Miracle worker. Abbot of a monastery in Valcastoria, Italy. Pope Gregory the Great wrote about him.



Saint Florentius of Valcastoria


Also known as

Florentius of Norcia


Profile

Sixth-century hermit and monk whose piety led many to God. Miracle worker. Abbot of a monastery in Valcastoria, Italy. Pope Gregory the Great wrote about him.



Blessed Leontius of Rostov


Profile

Missionary to Russia. Monk at the Caves of Kiev. Bishop of Rostov in 1051 where he served for over 25 years.


Born

Greek


Died

1077 of natural causes



Saint Epitacius of Tuy


Also known as

Epictetus, Epictritus



Profile

First bishop of Tuy, Galatia (in modern Spain).



Saint Syagrius of Nice


Also known as

Siacre, Siagrio


Profile

Monk at Lerins, France. Founded Saint Pons Monastery at Cimiez, France. Bishop of Nice, France in 777.


Died

c.787



Saint Onorato of Subiaco


Also known as

Honoratus, Honore


Profile

Benedictine monk in the early 6th century. Abbot at Subiaco, Italy, leading a community formed by Saint Benedict.



Saint Spes of Campi


Profile

Monk. Abbot in Campi, Italy. Totally blind for 40 years, his eyesight was suddenly restored for the last 15 days of his life.


Died

c.515



Saint Euphebius of Naples


Also known as

Efébo


Profile

4th century bishop of Naples, Italy.



Saint Goban Gobhnena


Profile

Sixth-seventh century abbot at Old-Leighlin, County Limerick, Ireland.



Saint Basileus of Braga


Profile

First bishop of Braga, Portugal.



Martyrs of Béziers


Profile

20 Mercedarian friars murdered by Huguenots for being Catholic. Martyrs.



Died

1562 at the Mercedarian convent at Béziers, France



Martyrs of Cappadocia


Profile

A group of Christians tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian and Galerius. Their names and the details of their lives have not come down to us.


Died

having their bones crushed, c.303 in Cappadocia (in modern Turkey)



Martyrs of Carthage


Profile

When a civil revolt erupted in Carthage in 259 during a period of persecution by Valerian, the procurator Solon blamed it on the Christians, and began a persecution of them. We know the names and a few details about 8 of these martyrs - Donatian, Flavian, Julian, Lucius, Montanus, Primolus, Rhenus and Victorius.


Born

African


Died

beheaded in 259 at Carthage (modern Tunis, Tunisia)



Martyrs of Mesopotamia


Profile

A group of Christians martyred in Mesopotamia in persecutions by imperial Roman authorities. Their names and the details of their lives have not come down to us.


Died

suffocated over a slow fire in Mesopotamia



Martyrs of North Africa


Profile

A group of 19 Christians martyred together in the persecutions of the Arian Vandal King Hunneric for refusing to deny the Trinity. We know little more than a few of their names - Dionysius, Julian, Lucius, Paul and Quintian.


Died

c.430


இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மே 22

 Bl. John of Cetina


Feastday: May 22

Death: 1397


Franciscan martyr of Granada, Spain. A missionary to the Muslims, he and Blessed Peter de Duefias were executed in Granada, one of the capitals of the Moorish kingdoms in Spain.




St. Michael Ho-Dinh-Hy


Feastday: May 22

Death: 1857

Canonized: Pope John Paul II



Martyr of Vietnam. A native of Vietnam, he was born to Christian parents and was by profession a wealthy silk trader and superintendent of the royal silk mills. He did not practice the faith until late in life, becoming then protector of the Christian community. He was arrested for his Christian activities, suffering beheading. Pope John Paul II canonized him in 1988.





Saint Rita of Cascia




✠ கேஸியா நகர புனிதர் ரீட்டா ✠

(St. Rita of Cascia)


தாய், விதவை, அருள் வடுவுற்றவர், அர்ப்பணிக்கப்பட்ட மறைப் பணியாளர்:

(Mother, Widow, Stigmatist, Consecrated Religious)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 1381

ரொக்கபொரேனா, பெருஜியா, உம்ப்ரியா, இத்தாலி

(Roccaporena, Perugia, Umbria, Italy)


இறப்பு: மே 22, 1457

கேஸியா, பெருஜியா, உம்பிரியா, இத்தாலி

(Cascia, Perugia, Umbria, Italy)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்: 

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

அக்லிபாயன் திருச்சபை (1902ல் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையிலிருந்து பிரிந்தது)

(The Aglipayan Church - Separated from the Roman Catholic Church in 1902)


அருளாளர் பட்டம்: கி.பி. 1626

திருத்தந்தை எட்டாம் அர்பன் 

(Pope Urban VIII)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: மே 24, 1900

திருத்தந்தை பதின்மூன்றாம் லியோ

(Pope Leo XIII)


முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்: 

கேஸியா, இத்தாலி

(Cascia, Italy)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மே 22


சித்தரிக்கப்படும் வகை: 

நெற்றியில் காயம், ரோஜா, தேனீக்கள், 

திராட்சைக் கொடி


பாதுகாவல்: 

தொலைந்த மற்றும் இயலாத காரணங்கள், நோய்கள், காயங்கள், திருமணம் சார்ந்த பிரச்சினைகள், அதிகாரம் மற்றும் உரிமை, முதலியவற்றைத் தவறாகப் பயன்படுத்துதல், தாய்மார்கள்


புனிதர் ரீட்டா, இத்தாலிய நாட்டின் விதவைப் பெண்ணும், அகஸ்தீனிய சபையின் (Augustinian nun) பெண் துறவியும், ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் புனிதரும் ஆவார். திருமணமான இவர், இவரது 18 ஆண்டுகால திருமண வாழ்க்கையில், தமது கணவனை தவறான பாதையிலிருந்து மீட்க முயற்சி செய்ததிலேயே முடிவடைந்தது. 


வாழ்க்கைக் குறிப்பு:

“மார்கரிட்டா லோட்டி” (Margherita Lotti) எனும் இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட ரீட்டா, இத்தாலி நாட்டிலுள்ள கேஸியா (Cascia) நகருக்கு அருகிலுள்ள ரொக்கபொரேனா (Roccaporena) கிராமத்தில் கி.பி. 1381ம் ஆண்டு, பிறந்தார். அவரது பெற்றோர் "ஆண்டனியோ", (Antonio) மற்றும் "அமடா ஃபெர்ரி லோட்டி" (Amata Ferri Lotti) ஆவர்.


இவர், கால்நடைகளை வைத்து வாழ்க்கை நடத்தியவர்களின் ஒரே மகள். இவர்கள் மத்திய இத்தாலி நாட்டில், ஊம்ப்ரியா (Umbria) என்ற பிராந்தியத்தில் வாழ்ந்து வந்தார்கள். பல காலமாக இவரின் பெற்றோர்கள் குழந்தைபேறு இல்லாமல் வாழ்ந்தார்கள். 


ரீட்டாவின் பிறப்பிற்கு பின் இவ்வேதனை இவர்களைவிட்டு நீங்கியது. ரீட்டா தன் தாயின் வளர்ப்பால், இறை இயேசுவை முழுமையாக அன்பு செய்வதில் ஊறிக் கிடந்தார். ஏழை எளியவர்களின்மேல் அன்பு கொண்டு, வாரி வழங்கினார். ரீட்டா துறவு வாழ்வை தேர்ந்து கொள்ள விரும்பினார். ஆனால் இவரின் பெற்றோர் தங்களின் வயதான காலத்தில், தங்களை பராமரித்து கவனிக்க வேண்டுமென்று விரும்பி, மகளை துறவறத்திற்கு அனுப்பாமல் திருமணத்திற்கு சம்மதம் தர மீண்டும் மீண்டும் வற்புறுத்தினர். இதற்கு சம்மதம் தெரிவித்து தன் பெற்றோரின் ஆசையை நிறைவேற்றினார் ரீட்டா.


தன் பெற்றோரின் விருப்பப்படி "பவோலோ மன்சினி" (Paolo Mancini) என்பவரை தமது 12 வயதிலேயே மணந்தார். செல்வம் படைத்த இவரது கணவர் எளிதில் சினமடையக் கூடிய, ஒழுக்கக்கேடான மனிதராக இருந்தார். இவருக்கு கேஸியா பிராந்தியத்தில் அநேக விரோதிகள் இருந்தனர்.


கணவர் மிக கோபம் கொண்டவர். கொடூர குணங்களை தன் மனைவியிடம் காட்டிவந்தார். ரீட்டா தளரா நெஞ்சத்துடன் அனைத்து துன்பங்களையும் ஏற்றுக் கொண்டார். கணவர் மனம் மாற தன் துன்பங்களை ஒப்புக்கொடுத்தார். பல ஆண்டுகளாக ரீட்டா சொல்லொனா அவமானங்களையும், உடல் ரீதியான வன்கொடுமைகளையும் மற்றும் துரோகங்களையும் சகித்தபடியே வாழ்ந்தார்.


பன்னிரண்டு வயதில் தமது முதல் குழந்தையை ஈன்றார். இவருக்கு ஜான், பவுல் என்ற 2 மகன்கள் பிறந்தனர். இவர்களும் தந்தையைப்போலவே மூர்க்கர்களாக நடந்தனர். ரீட்டா எதையும் தாங்கும் இதயம் கொண்டு வாழ்ந்தார். இதன் மத்தியில் நோயுற்றோரையும், ஏழைகளையும் சிறப்பாக வழிதவறி சென்றோரையும் சந்தித்து, அவர்கள் அருட்சாதனங்களை பெற வழிகாட்டியாக வந்தார். 


இறைவன் ரீட்டாவின் மன்றாட்டுக்கு நல்ல பலன் அளித்தார். பவுலோ முற்றிலும் மனம் மாறினார். இதனால் பவுலோவின் நண்பர்கள் அவர்மேல் கோபம் கொண்டு அவரின் பகைவர்கள் ஆனார்கள். பிறகு அவரை குத்திக் கொன்றார்கள். இதனால் ரீட்டாவின் மகன்கள் கோபம் கொண்டு, தந்தையைக் கொன்றவர்களை பழிவாங்க சபதம் செய்தனர். இதனால் ரீட்டா தன் மகன்களின் மனமாற்றத்திற்காக கடுமையாக ஜெபித்துவந்தார். இவர்கள் மனம் மாறவில்லை என்றால் இறைவன் அவர்களை அழைத்துக் கொள்ள மன்றாடினார். ஓராண்டிற்குள் இறைவன் அவரின் மன்றாட்டை கேட்டு இருவரையும் அவரிடம் அழைத்துக்கொண்டார்.


ரீட்டா இவர்களின் இறப்பிற்குப் பின் தனிமையில் விடப்பட்டார். இந்நிலையில் ஜெப, தவ, அற முயற்சிகளில் ஈடுபட்டு, துறவறத்தை நாடினார். எனவே, புனித அகுஸ்தினாரின் சபையைத் தேர்ந்துகொண்டார். அதிகமாக புனித அருளப்பர், புனித அகஸ்டீன், புனித நிக்கோலாஸ் இவர்களின் பரிந்துரையை நாடி ஜெபித்து வந்தார்.


ஒருநாள் இரவு தூங்கும்போது யாரோ தனது பெயர் சொல்லி அழைப்பது அவரின் காதில் விழுந்தது. அதைக்கேட்ட ரீட்டா உடனே எழுந்தார். அப்போது இம்மூன்று புனிதர்களும் ரீட்டாவை, மடத்தின் கதவு பூடப்பட்டிருந்த நிலையில், மடத்திற்குள் இருந்த சிற்றாலயத்திற்குள் கொண்டுபோய் விட்டனர். அங்கு ரீட்டா மறுநாள் காலைவரை மெய்மறந்து தியானத்தில் மூழ்கி, ஜெபித்துக்கொண்டிருந்ததை கன்னியர்கள் கண்டார்கள். அப்போது எப்படி ஆலயத்திற்குள் வந்தாய் என்று ரீட்டாவிடம் கேட்டதற்கு, மூன்று புனிதர்களும் தன்னை இங்கு அழைத்து வந்ததாகக் கூறினார். இவர் கூறுவது உண்மை என்றுணர்ந்த கன்னியர்கள், அவரை தங்களின் துறவு மடத்தில் ஓர் உறுப்பினராக ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார்கள். 


அவர் அவ்வப்போது சிலுவையில் அறையுண்ட இயேசுவை காட்சி தியானத்தில் கண்டார். அக்காட்சியை அவர் இங்கும் கண்டு, அதிலேயே தன் நேரத்தை செலவிட்டார். ரீட்டா அவரின் தலையில் முள்முடி வைத்து கொண்டு ஜெபித்தார். இதனால் ஏற்பட்ட காயம் ஆறாமல் வலித்துக்கொண்டே இருந்தது. அக்காயத்தில் சகிக்க முடியாத துர்நாற்றம் வீசியது. அப்புண்ணில் புழுக்கள் நெளிந்து கொண்டிருந்தது. இச்சிலுவையின் நிமித்தம் அவர் தம் அறையைவிட்டு வெளியேறாமல் இருந்தார். 


ஆனால் இவரிடமிருந்து அருள் பொழியப்படுவதைப் பார்வையாளர் யாவரும் உணரமுடிந்தது. பல அருஞ்செயல்கள் இவரது இறப்பிற்குப் பின் நிகழ்ந்த வண்ணமாய் இருந்தது. 76ம் வயதில் தனது தூய ஆன்மாவை எல்லாம் வல்லவரிடம் ஒப்படைத்த இவர் வாழும் போதும், இறந்துவிட்ட பிறகும் நன்மைகளை இவ்வுலக மக்களுக்கு செய்து கொண்டே இருந்தார். இயலாதவைகளை பெற்றுத்தரும் ஆற்றல் வாய்ந்தவராக இப்புனிதர் திகழ்ந்தார்.


ரீட்டா பிறந்த சமயத்தில் ஒரு விநோத நிகழ்ச்சி நடந்தேறியது. பெரிய பெரிய தேனீக்களின் கூட்டம் ஒருவித சத்தத்துடன் ரீட்டா பிறந்த வீட்டிற்குள் புகுந்தது. அவரிடமிருந்த அறைக்குள்ளும் புகுந்தது. ஆனால் யாரையும் ஒரு தேனீயும் கொட்டியதில்லை. இந்நிகழ்ச்சி இன்றுவரை ஆண்டுதோறும் புனித வாரம் முழுவதும், ரீட்டாவின் திருநாளன்று நடைபெறுகிறது. இது உண்மைதானா என்று சோதித்துப் பார்க்கப்பட்டு, உண்மைதான் என்று கண்டறியப்பட்டது. 


இந்நிகழ்வானது, இவருக்கு புனிதர் பட்டம் கொடுப்பதற்கான தயாரிப்புத் தணிக்கையில் இடம் பெற்றுள்ளது.


இப்புனிதர், கி.பி. 1457ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், 22ம் நாள், மரித்தார்.

• Margarita of Cascia

• Rita La Abogada de Imposibles

• Saint of the Impossible



Profile

Daughter of Antonio and Amata Lotti, a couple known as the Peacemakers of Jesus; they had Rita late in life. From her early youth, Rita visited the Augustinian nuns at Cascia, Italy, and showed interest in a religious life. However, when she was twelve, her parents betrothed her to Paolo Mancini, an ill-tempered, abusive individual who worked as town watchman, and who was dragged into the political disputes of the Guelphs and Ghibellines. Disappointed but obedient, Rita married him when she was 18, and was the mother of twin sons. She put up with Paolo's abuses for eighteen years before he was ambushed and stabbed to death. Her sons swore vengeance on the killers of their father, but through the prayers and interventions of Rita, they forgave the offenders.


Upon the deaths of her sons, Rita again felt the call to religious life. However, some of the sisters at the Augustinian monastery were relatives of her husband's murderers, and she was denied entry for fear of causing dissension. Asking for the intervention of Saint John the Baptist, Saint Augustine of Hippo, and Saint Nicholas of Tolentino, she managed to bring the warring factions together, not completely, but sufficiently that there was peace, and she was admitted to the monastery of Saint Mary Magdalen at age 36.


Rita lived 40 years in the convent, spending her time in prayer and charity, and working for peace in the region. She was devoted to the Passion, and in response to a prayer to suffer as Christ, she received a chronic head wound that appeared to have been caused by a crown of thorns, and which bled for 15 years.


Confined to her bed the last four years of her life, eating little more than the Eucharist, teaching and directing the younger sisters. Near the end she had a visitor from her home town who asked if she'd like anything; Rita's only request was a rose from her family's estate. The visitor went to the home, but it being January, knew there was no hope of finding a flower; there, sprouted on an otherwise bare bush, was a single rose blossom.


Among the other areas, Rita is well-known as a patron of desperate, seemingly impossible causes and situations. This is because she has been involved in so many stages of life - wife, mother, widow, and nun, she buried her family, helped bring peace to her city, saw her dreams denied and fulfilled - and never lost her faith in God, or her desire to be with Him.


Born

1386 at Roccaparena, Umbria, Italy


Died

22 May 1457 at the Augustinian convent at Cascia, Italy of tuberculosis


Canonized

24 May 1900 by Pope Leo XIII


Patronage

• abuse victims; spouse abuse victims

• against infertility or sterility; infertile people

• against loneliness

• against sickness or bodily ills; sick people

• against wounds; wounded people

• desperate, forgotten, lost or impossible causes

• difficult marriages

• parenthood

• widows

• Cascia, Italy

• Dalayap, Philippines

• Igbaras, Iloilo, Philippines




Blessed John Forest


Also known as

John Forrest


Additional Memorial

1 December as one of the Martyrs of Oxford University



Profile

Joined the Friars Minor of the Regular Observance at Greenwich, England while in his late teens. Studied theology at the Franciscan College at Oxford, England; he was known thereafter as "Doctor", though records of his degree have not survived. Priest and royal chaplain. Provincial of the Franciscans by 1525 when he threatened excommunication to those brothers who opposed Cardinal Thomas Wosley's legatine powers. Confessor to Queen Catherine of Aragon, wife of King Henry VIII.


Father John thought he had convinced King Henry in 1529 not to suppress his Order in response to their opposition to his divorce, but when Henry did not get his way, he suppressed the Order and arrested John. Records show him preaching in November 1532 against the state pulling down churches, and of the authorities keeping a close watch on him. Arrested in 1534, he established a correspondence from Newgate prison to Queen Catherine and Blessed Thomas Abel. Wrote a treatise against King Henry's usurpation of power over things spiritual.


Sentenced to death on 8 April 1538 for refusing the oath acknowledging Henry's primacy in spiritual matters. Martyr.


Born

1471 at Oxford, England


Died

• hanged and burned to death on 22 May 1538 at Smithfield, England

• a wooden statue of Saint Derfel, taken from a local church, was used in the fire, supposedly fulfilling a local prophecy that the statue's burning would destroy a forest

• John's relics may still be in hiding in Smithfield


Beatified

29 December 1886 by Pope Leo XIII



Saint Julia of Corsica


Also known as

Julia of Carthage



Profile

Born to the Carthaginian Christian nobility. Captured by invading Vandals in 616, and sold into slavery to a pagan Syrian merchant named Eusebius. When the slave ship landed at Cape Corso, Corsica, a pagan festival was in progress, and Julia was ordered to join in; some versions indicate that participation would have won her freedom. When she refused, her hair was torn out of her head, and she was martyred.


Born

6th to 7th century Carthaginian


Died

• beaten and crucified c.616-620 at Cape Corso, Corsica

• relics at the Benedictine abbey at Brescia, Italy in 763, which became a middle ages pilgrimage site

• some relics later taken to Leghorn (modern Livorno, Italy


Patronage

• torture victims

• Corsica, France

• Brescia, Italy

• Leghorn, Italy

• Livorno, Italy




Saint Humility


Also known as

Rosanna, Humilitas, Umiltà



Profile

Born to a wealthy family. Married at age 15 to a nobleman named Ugoletto. Mother of two, both of whom died in infancy. In 1250 Ugoletto was nearly killed, an event made both of them examine their lives and enter the double monastery of Saint Perpetua near Faenza, Italy, Ugoletto as a lay-brother, Rosanna as a nun, taking the name Sister Humility. Spiritual student of Saint Crispin. Lived as a hermitess in a cell for twelve years near the church of Saint Apollinaris. Founded the convent of Santa Maria Novella on Malta, the first Vallombrosan convent for nuns, and served as its abbess. Founded a second convent at Florence, Italy, and lived her remaining years there.


Born

1226 at Faenza, Italy as Rosanna


Died

22 May 1310 at Florence, Italy of natural causes


Canonized

27 January 1720 by Pope Clement XI



Saint Basiliscus of Pontus


Also known as

• Basiliscus of Comana

• Basilicus, Basilisco



Profile

Bishop of Comana in Pontus, Asia Minor (in modern Turkey). One of a large group of Christians who were tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Emperor Galerius for refusing to sacrifice to idols. Legend says that when Basiliscus announced his refusal, lightning struck the temple and toppled the statues. His spirit is reported to have met Saint John Chrysostom at his death bed to escort him to the afterlife in 407.


Died

• beheaded c.310 in Comana, Pontus (in modern Turkey)

• body thrown into the river Iris

• body covertly recovered by local Christians and given proper burial in a freshly plowed field

• a chapel was later built over his grave



Saint Fulgencio of Otricoli


Profile

Mid-6th-century bishop of Otricoli, Italy. Pope Saint Gregory the Great wrote about him in Dialogues.


When his city was being approached by the Ostrogoth army of King Totila, Fulgencio went out to meet him, first to plead for his city, then to bribe him into passing by. The Ostrogoths seized him and while Totila considered his next move, they drew a circle in the dirt, put the bishop in it and told the guards to kill him if he left it. Fulgencio began to suffer from being left in the sun, and prayed for relief; the sky clouded up and it rained heavily – except in the circle where Fulgencio was imprisoned.


Died

6th century in Otricoli, Terni, Italy of natural causes



Blessed Maria Rita Lópes Pontes de Souza Brito


Also known as

Sister Dulce



Profile

Nun in the Congregation of the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Conception.


Born

26 May 1914 in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil


Died

13 March 1992 in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil of natural causes


Beatified

22 May 2011 by Pope Benedict XVI


Canonized

on 13 May 2019 Pope Francis promulgated a decree of a miracle received through the intercession of Blessed Josephine



Saint Bobo of Provence


Also known as

• Bobo of Voghera

• Beuvon, Bovo



Profile

Soldier who fought invading Saracens. Tired of a life of violence, he retired to live as a penitent hermit.


Born

Provence, France


Died

• 22 May 986 near Voghera, Pavia, Italy of a fever while on a pilgrimage to Rome, Italy

• buried in Voghera, his grave became a site of miracles

• relics enshrined in Voghera in 1469


Patronage

Voghera, Italy



Blessed John Baptist Machado de Tavora


Also known as

João Baptista Machado de Távora


Additional Memorial

10 September as one of the 205 Martyrs of Japan


Profile

Jesuit at Coimbra, Portugal. Missionary to Japan in 1609. One of the Franciscan Martyrs of Japan.


Born

1580 at Terceira, Portuguese Azores


Died

beheaded on 22 May 1617 at Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Blessed Pius IX


Patronage

diocese of Creek, Portugal



Saint Aigulf of Bourges


Also known as

Aigulphus, Ayoul, Aieul, Aout, Hou


Profile

Well educated, Aigulf became a hermit upon the death of his parents, and soon developed a reputation for great personal sanctity. Reluctant bishop of Bourges, France in 811. Attended the Council of Toulouse in 829. Sat in judgement of Archbishop Ebbo of Rheims who had joined a revolt against King Louis the Debonair.


Born

at Bourges, France


Died

836 of natural causes



Blessed Fulk of Castrofurli


Also known as

Folco


Profile

Pilgrim to Rome, Italy with Saint Arduin of Gallinaro. Died working with plague victims in the Castrofuli and Santopadre in Italy.


Died

c.600 in the area of Castrofuli, Italy of plague


Beatified

1572 (cultus confirmation)


Patronage

• Castrofuli, Italy

• Santopadre, Italy



Saint Emilius the Martyr


Also known as

Aemilius, Emilio



Profile

Tortured in the persecutions of Decius, he renounced his Christianity. He later repented, returned to the Church, and when arrested a second time he stood by his faith. Martyr.


Died

burned to death c.250 in North Africa



Saint Romanus of Subiaco


Profile

Monk and then abbot near Subiaco, Italy. Friend of Saint Benedict of Nursia, and supported him during his time as a cave hermit. Built a monastery in the vicinity of modern Auxerre, France.



Died

c.560 of natural causes



Saint Atto of Pistoia


Also known as

Atho, Attho, Attone



Profile

Monk. Abbot of Vallombrosa. Bishop of Pistoia, Italy for 20 years. Wrote a work on the relics of and miracles that occurred at Saint James of Compostella.


Died

1153 of natural causes



Saint Boethian of Pierrepont


Profile

Seventh century spiritual student of Saint Fursey of Perrone. Built the Pierrepont Monastery near Laon, France. Murdered by some locals for preaching against their vices. Martyr.


Born

Ireland


Died

near Laon, France


Patronage

sick children



Saint Aureliano of Pavia


Profile

Martyr. Since there were no surviving records about him, writers in later centuries invented lurid tales detailing his death and the divine vengeance that fell on his tormentors.


Died

• early 3rd century Rome, Italy

• relics transferred to Pavia, Italy



Blessed Dionisio Senmartin


Profile

Mercedarian friar known for devotion to praying for souls in Purgatory. Ransomed 216 Christians from slavery in Muslim Tunis, Tunisia in 1279, and preacher the faith throughout the region as they travelled.


Died

c.1350 of natural causes



Blessed Pedro of the Assumption


Profile

Franciscan Friars Minor (Alcantarines) priest. Martyr.


Born

c.1570 in Cuevas, Toledo, Spain


Died

22 May 1617 in Kori, Omura, Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Blessed Pius IX



Saint Margaret of Hulme


Also known as

• Margaret of Hoveton

• Margarita, Margherita, Marguerite


Profile

Martyr.


Born

12th century England


Died

• 1170

• buried in the abbey church at Hoveton Saint John, Norfolk, England



Blessed Giusto Samper

Profile

Mercedarian friar known for devotion to praying for souls in Purgatory. Ransomed 216 Christians from slavery in Muslim Tunis, Tunisia in 1279, and preacher the faith throughout the region as they travelled.


Died

c.1350 of natural causes



Saint Castus the Martyr

Profile

Tortured in the persecutions of Decius, he renounced his Christianity. He later repented, returned to the Church, and when arrested a second time he stood by his Christianity. Martyr.


Died

burned to death c.250 in North Africa



Saint Helen of Auxerre

Also known as

Helena


Profile

Maiden described in the Acts of Saint Amator of Auxerre as being with him, and of being a holy woman. No details about her were given, and


Died

c.415 at Auxerre, France



Saint Lupicinus of Verona

Also known as

Lupicino


Profile

Bishop of Verona, Italy in the early 5th century.


Died

relics enshrined in the crypt of the basilica of San Zeno Maggiore, Verona, Italy



Saint Quiteria


Also known as

Kitheriammal, Quiteira, Quitterie



Profile

Nun. Martyr. Greatly venerated in the Navarre region on the border of France and Spain.



Saint John of Parma

Profile

Priest. Made six pilgimages to Jerusalem. Abbot of Saint John's Abbey in Parma, Italy from 973 until his death.


Born

in Parma, Italy


Died

c.982 in Parma, Italy of natural causes



Saint Baoithin of Ennisboyne

Also known as

Baithin mac Findech


Profile

No information available.


Born

Irish


Patronage

Ennisboyne, Ireland



Saint Conall of Inniscoel

Also known as

Coel, Conald


Profile

Monk. Seventh-century abbot of Inniscoel Abbey in Donegal, Ireland where there is a holy well dedicated to him.



Blessed Diego de Baja

Profile

Mercedarian friar known for his dedication to Bible study. Ransomed 289 Christians enslaved by Muslims in Algiers, and preached Christianity while travelling through.



Blessed Giacomo Soler

Profile

Mercedarian friar known for his dedication to Bible study. Ransomed 289 Christians enslaved by Muslims in Algiers, and preached Christianity while travelling through.



Saint Faustinus the Martyr

Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Julian the Apostate.


Died

c.362 in Rome, Italy



Saint Ausonius of Angoulême

Profile

Third century spiritual student of Saint Martial of Limoges. First Bishop of Angoulême, France.



Saint Lupo of Limoges

Profile

Priest. Bishop of Limoges, France. Helped found the monastery of Solesme.


Died

637 of natural causes



Saint Venustus the Martyr

Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Julian the Apostate.


Died

c.362 in Rome, Italy



Saint Marcian of Ravenna

Also known as

Mariano


Profile

Bishop of Ravenna, Italy in 112.


Died

c.127



Saint Timothy the Martyr

Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Julian the Apostate.


Died

c.362 in Rome, Italy



Martyred in the Spanish Civil War

Thousands of people were murdered in the anti-Catholic persecutions of the Spanish Civil War from 1934 to 1939. I have pages on each of them, but in most cases I have only found very minimal information. They are available on the CatholicSaints.Info site through these links:


• Blessed Francisco Salinas Sánchez/a>

• Blessed José Quintas Durán

21 May 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மே 21

 St. Constantine the Great


முதலாம் கான்ஸ்டன்டைன் என்று பொதுவாக அழைக்கப்படும் பிளேவியஸ் வலேரியஸ் ஒரேலியஸ் கான்ஸ்டன்டினஸ் [1] (27 பிப்ரவரி 272 – 22 மே 337)[2] ரோமப் பேரரசர் ஆவார். இவர் கிழக்கத்திய மரபுவாதிகள், ஓரியண்டல் மரபுவாதிகள், பைசண்டைன் கத்தோலிக்கர் ஆகியோர் மத்தியில் புனிதர் கான்ஸ்டன்டைன் எனவும் அறியப்படுபவர்.[3] இவர் கி.பி 324 ஆம் ஆண்டு முதல் இறக்கும்வரை ஆட்சியில் இருந்தார். முதல் கிறிஸ்தவ ரோமப் பேரரசரான இவர், தனக்கு முன்னிருந்த அரசனான டியோகிளீசியனால் கிறிஸ்தவர்களுக்கு விதிக்கப்பட்ட துன்புறுத்தல்களை இல்லாமல் செய்ததுடன், அவரது இணைப் பேரரசரான லிசினியசுடன் சேர்ந்து 313 ஆம் ஆண்டில் மிலான் ஆணை எனப்படும் சமய நல்லிணக்க ஆணையை வெளியிட்டார்.


கிழக்கத்திய மரபுவாதத் திருச்சபையினரால் பயன்படுத்தப்படும் பைசண்டியப் பொது வழிபாட்டு நாட்காட்டிப்படியும், கிழக்கத்திய கத்தோலிக்கத் திருச்சபை வழக்கப்படியும் கான்ஸ்டண்டைனும், அவரது தாயாரான ஹெலெனாவும் புனிதர்களாகக் குறிப்பிடப்படுகின்றனர். ஆனால், இலத்தீன் திருச்சபை இவரைப் புனிதராகக் காட்டவில்லை. எனினும், கிறிஸ்தவ மதத்துக்கு அவர் செய்த பணிகளுக்காக அவர் ஒரு பெரியவராக அவர்களால் மதிக்கப்படுகிறார்.


கிறித்துவம் வரலாற்றில் கான்ஸ்டன்டைன் - முதல் கிரிஸ்துவ பேரரசர் ஆவர். இயேசுவின் கல்லறைஉள்ளதாக நம்பப்படும் ஜெருசலேத்தில் அவரது உத்தரவின் பேரில் புனித செபுல்ச்ரே திருச்சபை கட்டப்பட்டது. போப்கள் கான்ஸ்டன்டைன் மூலம் பெரிய அளவில் அதிகாரத்தை பெற்றனர்.


பிப்ரவரி 313 இல் , கான்ஸ்டன்டைன் அவர்கள் மிலனின் லிசினயுஸ் மன்னரை சந்தித்து மிலன் என்ற அரசாணை உருவாக்கினார்.இந்த அரசாணை கிரிஸ்துவர் மெது எந்த அடக்குமுறையும் இல்லாமல் அவர்களை சுதந்திரமாக அவர்களின் மதத்தை பின்பற்ற அனுமதிக்க வேண்டும் என்று கூறினார். அதுவரை துன்புறுத்தப்பட்டு வந்த பல கிரிஸ்துவர்கல் விடுதலை செய்யப்பட்டனர் மேலும் அபராதமாக பறிமுதல் செய்யப்பட்ட சொத்துக்கள் திரும்பி தரப்பட்டன.இந்த அரசாணை யாரையும் அவர்கள் விரும்பும் எந்த தெய்வத்தையும் வழிபாட அனுமதித்தது. கான்ஸ்டன்டைன் மற்றும் அவரது தாயார் செயின்ட் ஹெலினா படிப்படியாக கிறிஸ்தவ மதத்தை ஏற்றுகொண்டார். அவர் இறுதியாக தன்னை அறிவித்தார்.கிறிஸ்தவ எழுத்தாளர்களின் படி , கான்ஸ்டன்டைன் தனது 40வது வயதில் தன்னை ஒரு கிறிஸ்தவராக அறிவித்தார்.தனது ஆட்சியல் பல தேவாலயங்களை கட்டினார்.அவற்றுள் மிக பிரபல கட்டிடங்கள் புனித செபுல்ச்ரே திருச்சபை, மற்றும் பழைய புனித பீட்டர் பசிலிக்கா போன்றவையாகும்.


கடைசி காலம்

கான்ஸ்டன்டைன் அவரது மரணத்தருவாயில் புனித அப்போஸ்தலர் சர்ச் அருகே ரகசியமாக கல்லறை கட்டி தயாராக வைக்கப்பட்ட சொன்னார்.[20] அவர் மரணம் அவர் எதிர்பார்த்ததை விட விரைவிலேயே வந்தது.[21] 337 அன்று ஈஸ்டர் விருந்திற்கு பின்னர் கான்ஸ்டன்டைன் தீவிரமாக நோய்வாய்ப்பட்டார்.அவர் பின்னர் கான்ஸ்டான்டினோபிள் திரும்ப முயற்சித்தார். அவர் தனக்கு ஞானஸ்நானம் செய்யப்பட வேண்டும் என கேட்தார் அதற்கான ஏற்பாடுகளும் செய்யப்பட்டாலும் [22] அவர் ஏரியஸ் பாதிரியார் நிகோமீடிய ஈசுபியசுவை தன்னை கிடத்துமிடத்தில் அவருக்கு ஞானஸ்தானம் செய்பவராகத் தேர்வு செய்தார். சிறுவயதிலேயே ஞானஸ்தானத்தை தள்ளிப் போட்ட சமயத்திலிருந்தே ஒரு பழக்கத்தைத் தொடர்ந்தார்.[23] கான்ஸ்டன்டைன் தனது பாவங்களை எவ்வளவு முடிந்தவரை முழுமையாக்கிக் கொள்ளும் வரை, ஞானஸ்தானம் எடுப்பதைத் தள்ளிப் போட்டதாகக் கருதப்பட்டது.[24] அதற்கு முன்பே அச்சிரோனில் 337 ஆம் ஆண்டு மே 22, பஸ்கா பண்டிகையை தொடர்ந்து பெண்டேகோஸ்ட் ஐம்பது நாள் திருவிழாவின் கடைசி நாளில் கான்ஸ்டன்டைன் இறந்தார்

Feastday: May 21

Birth: 272

Death: 337

 


Junior Emperor and emperor called the "Thirteenth Apostle" in the East. The son of Constantius I Chlorus, junior emperor and St. Helena, Constantine was raised on the court of co-Emperor Diocletian. When his father died in 306, Constantine was declared junior emperor of York, England, by the local legions and earned a place as a ruler of the Empire by defeating of his main rivals at the battle of the Milvian Bridge in 312. According to legend, he adopted the insignia of Christ, the chi-rho, and placed it upon his labarum - the military standards that held the banners his armies carried into battle to vanquish their pagan enemies. His purple banners were inscribed with the Latin for "In this sign conquer." Constantine then shared rule of the Empire with Licinius Licinianus, exerting his considerable influence upon his colleague to secure the declaration of Christianity to be a free religion. When, however, Licinius and Constantine launched a persecution of the Christians, Constantine marched to the East and routed his opponent at the battle of Adrianople. Constantine was the most dominating figure of his lifetime, towering over his contemporaries, including Pope Sylvester I. He presided over the Council of Nicaea, gave extensive grants of land and property to the Church, founded the Christian city of Constantinople to serve as his new capital, and undertook a long-sighted program of Christianization for the whole of the Roman Empire. While he was baptized a Christian only on his deathbed, Constantine nevertheless was a genuinely important figure in Christian history and was revered as a saint, especially in the Eastern Church.




Constantine I (Latin: Flavius Valerius Constantinus; Greek: Κωνσταντῖνος, translit. Kōnstantînos; 27 February c. 272 – 22 May 337), also known as Constantine the Great, was Roman emperor from 306 to 337. Born in Naissus, Dacia Mediterranea (now Niš, Serbia), he was the son of Flavius Constantius, a Roman army officer born in Dardania who became one of the four emperors of the Tetrarchy. His mother, Helena, was Greek and of low birth. Constantine served with distinction under emperors Diocletian and Galerius campaigning in the eastern provinces against barbarians and the Persians, before being recalled west in 305 to fight under his father in Britain. After his father's death in 306, Constantine was acclaimed as emperor by the army at Eboracum (York). He emerged victorious in the civil wars against emperors Maxentius and Licinius to become sole ruler of the Roman Empire by 324.


As emperor, Constantine enacted administrative, financial, social and military reforms to strengthen the empire. He restructured the government, separating civil and military authorities. To combat inflation he introduced the solidus, a new gold coin that became the standard for Byzantine and European currencies for more than a thousand years. The Roman army was reorganised to consist of mobile units (comitatenses), and garrison troops (limitanei) capable of countering internal threats and barbarian invasions. Constantine pursued successful campaigns against the tribes on the Roman frontiers—the Franks, the Alamanni, the Goths and the Sarmatians—even resettling territories abandoned by his predecessors during the Crisis of the Third Century.


Constantine was the first Roman emperor to convert to Christianity.[notes 2] Although he lived much of his life as a pagan, and later as a catechumen, he began to favor Christianity beginning in 312, finally becoming a Christian and being baptised by either Eusebius of Nicomedia, an Arian bishop, or Pope Sylvester I, which is maintained by the Catholic Church and the Coptic Orthodox Church. He played an influential role in the proclamation of the Edict of Milan in 313, which declared tolerance for Christianity in the Roman Empire. He convoked the First Council of Nicaea in 325, which produced the statement of Christian belief known as the Nicene Creed.[7] The Church of the Holy Sepulchre was built on his orders at the purported site of Jesus' tomb in Jerusalem and became the holiest place in Christendom. The papal claim to temporal power in the High Middle Ages was based on the fabricated Donation of Constantine. He has historically been referred to as the "First Christian Emperor" and he did favour the Christian Church. While some modern scholars debate his beliefs and even his comprehension of Christianity,[notes 3] he is venerated as a saint in Eastern Christianity.



The age of Constantine marked a distinct epoch in the history of the Roman Empire.[10] He built a new imperial residence at Byzantium and renamed the city Constantinople (now Istanbul) after himself (the laudatory epithet of "New Rome" emerged in his time, and was never an official title). It subsequently became the capital of the Empire for more than a thousand years, the later Eastern Roman Empire being referred to as the Byzantine Empire by modern historians. His more immediate political legacy was that he replaced Diocletian's Tetrarchy with the de facto principle of dynastic succession, by leaving the empire to his sons and other members of the Constantinian dynasty. His reputation flourished during the lifetime of his children and for centuries after his reign. The medieval church held him up as a paragon of virtue, while secular rulers invoked him as a prototype, a point of reference and the symbol of imperial legitimacy and identity.[11] Beginning with the Renaissance, there were more critical appraisals of his reign, due to the rediscovery of anti-Constantinian sources. Trends in modern and recent scholarship have attempted to balance the extremes of previous scholarship.





Constantine was a ruler of major importance, and he has always been a controversial figure.[12] The fluctuations in his reputation reflect the nature of the ancient sources for his reign. These are abundant and detailed,[13] but they have been strongly influenced by the official propaganda of the period[14] and are often one-sided;[15] no contemporaneous histories or biographies dealing with his life and rule have survived.[16] The nearest replacement is Eusebius's Vita Constantini—a mixture of eulogy and hagiography[17] written between AD 335 and circa AD 339[18]—that extols Constantine's moral and religious virtues.[19] The Vita creates a contentiously positive image of Constantine,[20] and modern historians have frequently challenged its reliability.[21] The fullest secular life of Constantine is the anonymous Origo Constantini,[22] a work of uncertain date,[23] which focuses on military and political events to the neglect of cultural and religious matters.[24]


Lactantius' De Mortibus Persecutorum, a political Christian pamphlet on the reigns of Diocletian and the Tetrarchy, provides valuable but tendentious detail on Constantine's predecessors and early life.[25] The ecclesiastical histories of Socrates, Sozomen, and Theodoret describe the ecclesiastic disputes of Constantine's later reign.[26] Written during the reign of Theodosius II (AD 408–450), a century after Constantine's reign, these ecclesiastical historians obscure the events and theologies of the Constantinian period through misdirection, misrepresentation, and deliberate obscurity.[27] The contemporary writings of the orthodox Christian Athanasius, and the ecclesiastical history of the Arian Philostorgius also survive, though their biases are no less firm.[28]


The epitomes of Aurelius Victor (De Caesaribus), Eutropius (Breviarium), Festus (Breviarium), and the anonymous author of the Epitome de Caesaribus offer compressed secular political and military histories of the period. Although not Christian, the epitomes paint a favourable image of Constantine but omit reference to Constantine's religious policies.[29] The Panegyrici Latini, a collection of panegyrics from the late third and early fourth centuries, provide valuable information on the politics and ideology of the tetrarchic period and the early life of Constantine.[30] Contemporary architecture, such as the Arch of Constantine in Rome and palaces in Gamzigrad and Córdoba,[31] epigraphic remains, and the coinage of the era complement the literary sources.[32]



Pope Sylvester I and Emperor Constantine

Constantine was the first emperor to stop the persecution of Christians and to legalize Christianity, along with all other religions/cults in the Roman Empire. In February 313, he met with Licinius in Milan and developed the Edict of Milan, which stated that Christians should be allowed to follow their faith without oppression.[224][page needed] This removed penalties for professing Christianity, under which many had been martyred previously, and it returned confiscated Church property. The edict protected all religions from persecution, not only Christianity, allowing anyone to worship any deity that they chose. A similar edict had been issued in 311 by Galerius, senior emperor of the Tetrarchy, which granted Christians the right to practise their religion but did not restore any property to them.[225] The Edict of Milan included several clauses which stated that all confiscated churches would be returned, as well as other provisions for previously persecuted Christians. Scholars debate whether Constantine adopted his mother Helena's Christianity in his youth, or whether he adopted it gradually over the course of his life.[226]


Constantine possibly retained the title of pontifex maximus which emperors bore as heads of the ancient Roman religion until Gratian renounced the title.[227][228] According to Christian writers, Constantine was over 40 when he finally declared himself a Christian, making it clear that he owed his successes to the protection of the Christian High God alone.[229] Despite these declarations of being a Christian, he waited to be baptized on his deathbed, believing that the baptism would release him of any sins he committed in the course of carrying out his policies while emperor.[230] He supported the Church financially, built basilicas, granted privileges to clergy (such as exemption from certain taxes), promoted Christians to high office, and returned property confiscated during the long period of persecution.[231] His most famous building projects include the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and Old Saint Peter's Basilica. In constructing the Old Saint Peter's Basilica, Constantine went to great lengths to erect the basilica on top of St. Peter's resting place, so much so that it even affected the design of the basilica, including the challenge of erecting it on the hill where St. Peter rested, making its complete construction time over 30 years from the date Constantine ordered it to be built.


Constantine might not have patronized Christianity alone. He built a triumphal arch in 315 to celebrate his victory in the Battle of the Milvian Bridge (312) which was decorated with images of the goddess Victoria, and sacrifices were made to pagan gods at its dedication, including Apollo, Diana, and Hercules. Absent from the Arch are any depictions of Christian symbolism. However, the Arch was commissioned by the Senate, so the absence of Christian symbols may reflect the role of the Curia at the time as a pagan redoubt.[232]


In 321, he legislated that the venerable Sunday should be a day of rest for all citizens.[233] In 323, he issued a decree banning Christians from participating in state sacrifices.[234] After the pagan gods had disappeared from his coinage, Christian symbols appeared as Constantine's attributes, the chi rho between his hands or on his labarum,[235] as well on the coin itself.[236]


The reign of Constantine established a precedent for the emperor to have great influence and authority in the early Christian councils, most notably the dispute over Arianism. Constantine disliked the risks to societal stability that religious disputes and controversies brought with them, preferring to establish an orthodoxy.[237] His influence over the Church councils was to enforce doctrine, root out heresy, and uphold ecclesiastical unity; the Church's role was to determine proper worship, doctrines, and dogma.[238]


North African bishops struggled with Christian bishops who had been ordained by Donatus in opposition to Caecilian from 313 to 316. The African bishops could not come to terms, and the Donatists asked Constantine to act as a judge in the dispute. Three regional Church councils and another trial before Constantine all ruled against Donatus and the Donatism movement in North Africa. In 317, Constantine issued an edict to confiscate Donatist church property and to send Donatist clergy into exile.[239] More significantly, in 325 he summoned the First Council of Nicaea, most known for its dealing with Arianism and for instituting the Nicene Creed. He enforced the council's prohibition against celebrating the Lord's Supper on the day before the Jewish Passover, which marked a definite break of Christianity from the Judaic tradition. From then on, the solar Julian Calendar was given precedence over the lunisolar Hebrew calendar among the Christian churches of the Roman Empire.[240]


Constantine made some new laws regarding the Jews; some of them were unfavorable towards Jews, although they were not harsher than those of his predecessors.[241] It was made illegal for Jews to seek converts or to attack other Jews who had converted to Christianity.[241] They were forbidden to own Christian slaves or to circumcise their slaves.[242][243] On the other hand, Jewish clergy were given the same exemptions as Christian clergy.[241][244]



St. Jose Maria Robles Hurtado


Feastday: May 21

Birth: 1888

Death: 1927

Beatified: November 22, 1992 by Pope John Paul II

Canonized: May 21, 2000 by Pope John Paul II




Saint José María Robles Hurtado (May 3, 1888-June 26, 1927) was a Mexican priest and one of the several priests martyred during the Cristero War.


José María Robles Hurtado (May 3, 1888 – June 26, 1927) was a Mexican priest and one of several priests martyred during the Cristero War.



Early life

He was born to the devoutly-Catholic family of Antonio Robles and Petronilla Hurtado in Mascota, Jalisco. At 12, he entered the seminary at Guadalajara.[2] He was ordained to the priesthood at Guadalajara in 1913, at 25. A few years later, he founded the Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. He wrote a number of works to propagate the Catholic faith and also catechized others in ways contrary to the laws of the country. While serving as the pastor at a parish in Tecolotlán, he began to promote greater devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus through his preaching, his personal example, and his great devotion to the Eucharist. His fervency was so pronounced that he became known as the "Madman of the Sacred Heart." He was known to work tirelessly for the care of the sick in his parish, and he often spent several hours hearing confessions of his parishioners. He also worked for greater reverence to Our Lady of Guadalupe.[1] He was a Knight of Columbus council 1979.[1]


Persecution

The Constitution of 1917 prohibited any public processions or other devotional practices. Hurtado proposed the creation of a huge cross to be placed in the geographic center of Mexico, which he said would be symbolic of how Mexico recognized Christ as its king, and he organized a public ceremony for the laying of the cornerstone of the cross in direct violation of the existing constitution.[1]


In anticipation of the laying of the cornerstone, signs were placed throughout Mexico proclaiming Christ the "King of Mexico" and declaring the nation’s devotion to the Sacred Heart. In 1923, an estimated 40,000 Roman Catholics made their way to the site of the cross to take part in the groundbreaking ceremonies at the hill, which was at the time called "La Loma" and is now called the mountain of Christ the King. After the open display of defiance, the government decided to intensify its persecution of Catholics in Mexico and to ensure that Robles, in particular, would not engage in such acts again.[1]


Despite the increasing persecution of Catholics in general and the explicit invitations to him to leave Mexico personally, Robles remained and continued to minister to his congregation and tiy offer what solace he could to the survivors and families of Catholics who had been persecuted and killed by the government. Eventually, he even went further, and promoted the idea of armed defense of Catholics who were suffering from the persecution.[1]


Death

Robles Hurtado recognized the likelihood of being killed for his actions, and he wrote a poem in which he stated, "I want to love you until martyrdom."[1] He was arrested on June 25, 1927 for saying a prayer in the home of the Agraz family, which was hiding him. He was found guilty and sentenced to be hanged from an oak tree. The next day before dawn, he was led to the tree. In a final display of compassion for his executioners, he offered them a small votive candle that he had in his pocket to help light the path to the tree on which he was to be hanged. Upon arriving there, he forgave the men for what they were about to do. He took the noose into his own hands and said "Don't dirty your hands" to the man who brought it, kissed it, and placed it around his own neck.[1]


Veneration

He was beatified by Pope John Paul II on November 22, 1992[2] and canonized on May 21, 2000 by Pope John Paul II, together with others involved in the Cristero War, including Cristobal Magallanes Jara, his 24 companions in martyrdom, and María de Jesús Sacramentado Venegas.[3]


Relics

On February 27, 2012, the bishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Guadalajara granted to Bishop James S. Wall of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gallup, a first class relic for the altar in Bishop Wall's chapel.[4] This relic was received on April 12, 2012, and is especially dear to the Diocese of Gallup because their patron is the Sacred Heart.




Bl. Jenaro Sanchez Delgadillo


Feastday: May 21

Birth: 1886

Death: 1927

Beatified: May 21, 2000 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Jenaro Sánchez Delgadillo (September 19, 1886-January 17, 1927) was a Mexican martyr who died in the Cristero War.


Jenaro Sánchez y Delgadillo was a Mexican Catholic priest who was executed by the Mexican military during the Cristero War in that country, born on September 19, 1886 and died on January 17, 1927. He is now honored as a martyr and saint by the Catholic Church.


Life

Sánchez Delgadillo was born in the town of Agualele, in the municipality of Zapopan, Jalisco, the son of Cristóbal Sánchez and Julia Delgadillo, on September 19, 1886.[1] With a scholarship, he entered the seminary of the Archdiocese of Guadalajara and was later ordained a priest of the Archdiocese by Archbishop José de Jesús Ortíz y Rodríguez on August 20, 1911.


Sánchez then served as a curate in various parishes of the Archdiocese, becoming known for his humility and his obedience to the pastors under whom he served. The care of the sick was a major focus of his ministry, as well as teaching the catechism to the children of the parish.[2] When he was stationed in Cocula, Jalisco, he taught classes at a minor seminary established within the parish.


As a result of the increasing tension between the Catholic Church and the government of Mexico, in 1917 the Archbishop of Guadalajara, Francisco Orozco y Jiménez, issued a pastoral letter on behalf of the bishops of Mexico—most of whom were then in exile in the United States—in which he detailed the sufferings he was enduring for defending the rights of the Church against government interference. For reading this letter publicly at the Sunday service in his church, Sánchez was jailed by the local police.


In 1923 Sánchez was appointed as the vicar of the village of Tamazulita,[2] within the parish of Tecolotlan. Due to the prohibition of public worship by the Republic of Mexico, Sánchez conducted secret Masses in private homes. He and his parents were given shelter by the Castillo family at their home at Rancho La Cañada. On January 17, 1927, he was out hunting with Herculano, Crescenciano and Cresencio Castillo, Lucio Camacho and Ricardo Brambila. Soldiers were waiting for him. Though everyone said he should escape, he decided to stay and face the consequences. The soldiers took them prisoner and tied everyone back to back. The others were released but the soldiers hanged Sánchez from a nearby tree.[1]


Before dawn, the soldiers returned shot Sánchez in the left shoulder and then lowered the body to the ground. One of the soldiers then pierced his chest with a bayonet.[2]


Sánchez' body was then taken to a private home from which it was buried in the cemetery of Tecolotlan.


In 1934, with the approval of the Curia of Guadalajara, the remains were transferred to the parish church in Tecolotlan Cocula, Jalisco. He was beatified on November 22, 1992 by John Paul II and canonized by that same pope at the Jubilee of 2000, on May 21 of that year.



St. Gollen


Feastday: May 21

Death: 7th century


Welsh saint also listed as Collen or Colan. He gave his name to Llangollen, in Clwyd, Wales, and he is associated in legend with Glastonbury, England, and Rome.





St. Cristobal Magallanes Jara

Feastday: May 21

Birth: 1869

Death: 1927

Beatified: November 22, 1992 by Pope John Paul II

Canonized: May 21, 2000 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Cristóbal Magallanes Jara, also known as Christopher Magallanes is a martyr and saint venerated in the Catholic Church who was killed without trial on the way to say Mass during the Cristero War after the trumped up charge of inciting rebellion.


Cristóbal Magallanes Jara, also known as Christopher Magallanes (July 30, 1869 – May 25, 1927), is a priest and martyr of the Catholic Church who was killed without trial on the way to say Mass during the Cristero War after the trumped-up charge of inciting rebellion.



Early life


The Baptism of Cristobal Magallanes Jara; he was baptized on August 7th, 1869.

Cristóbal Magallanes Jara was born in Totatiche, Jalisco, Mexico on July 30, 1869. He was son of Rafael Magallanes Romero and Clara Jara Sanchez, who were farmers. He worked as a shepherd in his youth and enrolled in the Conciliar Seminary of San José in Guadalajara at the age of 19.[1]


Ordination and priestly life

Cristóbal was ordained at the age of 30 at Santa Teresa in Guadalajara in 1899 and served as chaplain of the School of Arts and Works of the Holy Spirit in Guadalajara. He was then designated as the parish priest for his home town of Totatiche, where he helped found schools and carpentry shops and assisted in planning for hydrological works, including the dam of La Candelaria. He took special interest in the evangelization of the local indigenous Huichol people[1] and was instrumental in the foundation of the mission in the indigenous town of Azqueltán.



A statue of Cristóbal Magallanes Jara on the exterior of Catedral de la Asunción de María Santísima in Guadalajara.

When government decrees closed the seminary in Guadalajara in 1914, Magallanes offered to open a clandestine seminary in his parish. In July 1915, he opened the Auxiliary Seminary of Totatiche,[2] which achieved a student body of 17 students by the following year[1] and was recognized by the Archbishop of Guadalajara, José Francisco Orozco y Jiménez, who appointed a precept and two professors to the seminary.


Death

Magallanes wrote and preached against armed rebellion, but was falsely accused of promoting the Cristero Rebellion in the area. Arrested on May 21, 1927, while en route to celebrate Mass at a farm, he gave away his few remaining possessions to his executioners, gave them absolution, and without a trial, he was killed four days later with Agustín Caloca in Colotlán, Jalisco. His last words to his executioners were "I die innocent, and ask God that my blood may serve to unite my Mexican brethren." He was succeeded as parish priest of Totatiche by José Pilar Quezada Valdés, who went on to become the first bishop of the Archdiocese of Acapulco.


Legacy

Magallanes was canonized by Pope John Paul II on May 21, 2000. He is celebrated in the Catholic Church with an optional memorial on 21 May.


The concluding sequence of the movie For Greater Glory (2012) says that the fictional character "Father Christopher" portrayed by actor Peter O'Toole was based on Cristobal Magallanes Jara.


Agustín Caloca Cortés

Agustín Caloca Cortés (May 5, 1898 – May 25, 1927) was one of the martyrs of Mexico during the Cristero War.[3]


Life

Agustin Caloca Cortés was born in San Juan Bautista del Teúl, Zacatecas, on the ranch of La Presa. His parents, Eduwiges and María Plutarca Cortés Caloca, were simple peasants. He began his clerical studies at the Guadalajara Seminary, but in 1914 this campus was closed due to the anticlericalism of the Carrancista leaders.[4] He then went to the Auxiliary Seminary of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Totatiche established by Cristóbal Magallanes Jara. In 1919 he re-entered the Guadalajara Seminary to study Theology. He was ordained on August 5, 1923, in the Cathedral Church of Guadalajara.[5]


At the request of Jara, Cortés was assigned as a parish priest and as prefect of the auxiliary seminary.[6] In December 1926 he had to flee with eleven fifth year students to Cocoatzco, where he remained until April 1927. In May 1927, he arrived at the seminary to announce that Mexican government soldiers were approaching Totatiche. He ordered the students to abandon the seminary and disperse among the town's population. After helping the students escape, he was taken prisoner and transferred to a jail in Colotlán where he was reunited with Magallanes Jara. He was purportedly offered his freedom by a military officer on account of his young age, but Caloca Cortes refused unless freedom was also granted to Magallanes Jara.[6]


His last words before execution by firing squad were, "We live for God and for Him we die."[6]


He was originally buried in Colotlán but his remains were later exhumed and transferred to the parish of San Juan Bautista in El Teúl.



St. Atilano Cruz Alvarado



Feastday: May 21

Birth: 1901

Death: 1928


Image of St. Atilano Cruz AlvaradoAs a boy, Atilano Cruz Alvarado, of Ahuetita de Abajo, Mexico, tended cattle. At the age of seventeen, he began studying for the priesthood. He was ordained in July of 1927. Father Cruz thus began his priestly ministry at a time when the Mexican government's persecution of the Catholic Church was in its most violent phase. Only a few months after his ordination, he was assigned to replace another parish priest shot to death by soldiers (Saint Toribio Romo Gonzalez). On June 29, 1928, Father Cruz went to join his pastor, (Saint) Justino Orona Madrigal (see July 2), at a nearby ranch, where they prayed and discussed the situation in their parish. As government troops raided the ranch at dawn on July 1, Father Cruz heard the soldiers gunning down Father Orona. Thereupon Father Cruz knelt in prayer to await the troops. Upon finding him, the soldiers executed him.

On May 21, 2000, Pope John Paul II canonized a group of 25 saints and martyrs who had died in the Mexican Cristero War. The vast majority are Catholic priests who were executed for carrying out their ministry despite the suppression under the anti-clerical laws of Plutarco Elías Calles after the revolution in the 1920s.[1][2] Priests who took up arms, however, were excluded from the process. The group of saints share the feast day of May 21.



St. Agustin Caloca Cortes


Feastday: May 21

Birth: May 5, 1898

Death: May 25, 1927

Beatified: Pope John Paul II

Canonized: May 21, 2000 by Pope John Paul II



Agustín Caloca Cortés was one of the martyrs of Mexico during the Cristero War.



Saint Eugene de Mazenod

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 21)


✠ புனிதர் யூஜின் டி மஸெனோட் ✠

(St. Eugene de Mazenod)


மர்சேல் ஆயர்/ துறவற உறுதிமொழிகள் ஏற்காத அமலமரியாள் சபை நிறுவனர்:

(Bishop of Marseille/ Founder of Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate)


பிறப்பு: ஆகஸ்ட் 1, 1782

ஈக்ஸ்-என்-பிராந்தியம், ஃபிரான்ஸ்

(Aix-en-Provence, France)


இறப்பு: மே 21, 1861 (அகவை 78) 

மார்செயில், ஃபிரான்ஸ்

(Marseille. France)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்:

நொட்ரே-டேம் டி லா கார்டே, மார்செயில், ஃபிரான்ஸ்

(Shrine of Notre Dame de la Garde, Marseille, France)


அருளாளர் பட்டம்: அக்டோபர் 19, 1975 

திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பவுல்

(Pope Paul VI)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: டிசம்பர் 3, 1995, 

திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பவுல்

(Pope John Paul II)


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: மே 21


பாதுகாவல்: சிதைந்த குடும்பங்கள்


புனிதர் யூஜின் டி மஸெனோட், ஒரு ஃபிரெஞ்ச் கத்தோலிக்க குரு ஆவார். இவருக்கு 1975ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம், 19ம் நாளன்று, திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பவுல் அவர்களால் அருளாளர் பட்டமும், 1995ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், 3ம் தேதியன்று, திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பவுல் அவர்களால் புனிதர் பட்டமும் வழங்கப்பட்டது.


யூஜின் டி மஸெனோட் ஃபிரான்சில் பிரபுக் குடும்பம் ஒன்றில் பிறந்தார். இவரது தந்தை பெயர் "சார்ள்ஸ்" (Charles Antoine de Mazenod) ஆகும். இவரது தாயார், "மேரி ரோஸ்" (Marie Rose Joannis) ஆவார். கி.பி. 1790ம் ஆண்டு ஏற்பட்ட ஃபிரான்ஸ் புரட்சியை அடுத்து, புரட்சியாளர்களின் வற்புறுத்தலால் தமது குடும்பத்தினருடன் இத்தாலி நாட்டுக்கு புலம்பெயர்ந்து சென்றார். கையிருப்பிருந்த பணம் கரைந்ததாலும், நிதிச் சுமையாலும் யூஜினின் பெற்றோர் பிரிந்தனர். அவரது தாயாரும் சகோதரியும் ஃபிரான்ஸ் திரும்பினர். அக்காலத்திய புரட்சியாளரின் சட்டப்படி, அவர்கள் விவாகரத்து பெற்றால் அபகரிக்கப்பட்ட அவர்களது சொத்துக்கள் திரும்ப அவர்களிடமே தரப்படும் என்பதால் யூஜினின் தாயார் விவாகரத்துக்கு விண்ணப்பித்து அதனை பெற்றார். இத்தாலியிலும் நிரந்தரமாக வாழ வழியற்ற யூஜின், வெனிஸ், நேப்பிள்ஸ், இறுதியில் சிசிலியிளுள்ள பலெர்மோ (Venice, Naples, Palermo in Sicily) ஆகிய இடங்களில் வசித்தபின்னர் தமது இருபது வயதில் ஃபிரான்ஸ் திரும்பினார். 1808ம் ஆண்டு குரு மடத்தில் இணைந்து இறையியல், மெய்யியல் கல்விகளைக் கற்று கி.பி. 1811ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், 21ம் நாளன்று, குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு செய்விக்கப்பட்டார்.


அமலமரியாளின் தியாகிகள் (Oblates of Mary Immaculate) சபை உருவாக்கல்:

ஏழைகள் வாழும் சேரிப்புறம், வைத்தியசாலை, சிறைச்சாலை போன்ற இடங்களில் சென்று பணியாற்றினார். தனது பணியின் தேவையை உணர்ந்த இவர் ஒரு புதிய சபையை உருவாக்கினார். கி.பி. 1816ம் ஆண்டில் "மிகவும் கைவிடப்பட்டவர்களுக்கான குழு" (Group for most abandoned of Provence) என்ற பெயருடன் புதிய குழுவாக மறை மாவட்டத்தால் அதிகாரபூர்வமாக ஏற்றுக் கொள்ளப்பட்டது. இதில் 5 குருக்கள் மாத்திரமே இருந்தார்கள்.


கி.பி. 1826ம் ஆண்டு ஃபெப்ரவரி 17ம் நாள் இக்குழுவின் பெயர் "அமலமரியின் மறைபரப்புத் தியாகிகள்" (Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate) என மாற்றப்பட்டது. கி.பி. 1832ம் ஆண்டு இவர் மார்செயில் ஆயராக பதவி உயர்வு பெற்றார்.


இலங்கையில் அமலமரியாளின் தியாகிகள்:

கி.பி. 1847ம் ஆண்டு காலப்பகுதியில் இலங்கை கத்தோலிக்கத் திருச்சபை பெரும் சவால்களை எதிர்நோக்கியது. அவர்களின் பணியின் தேவை அதிகமாக காணப்பட்டது. இதனால் அங்கு குருக்களின் தேவையும் அதிகரித்தது. அப்பொழுது இருந்த ஆயர் ஒராசியோ பெற்றக்கினி குருக்களைத் தேடி ஐரோப்பா சென்றார். ஃபிரான்ஸில் அவர் ஆயர் யூஜினை சந்தித்து, அவரை இலங்கையில் பணியாற்ற சில குருக்களை அனுப்புமாறு கேட்டுக் கொண்டார். 


இதனை ஏற்றுக் கொண்ட யூஜின் டி மஸெனோட் மூன்று அமலமரியாளின் தியாகிகளை இலங்கைக்கு அனுப்ப முன்வந்தார். முதன் முதலில் கி.பி. 1847ம் ஆண்டு, நவம்பர் மாதம், 28ம் தேதி, அருட்தந்தை செமேரியாவின் தலைமையில் மூன்று அமலமரியாளின் தியாகிகள் தென்னிலங்கையின் காலி துறைமுகத்தை வந்தடைந்தார்கள். இவர்கள் அங்கிருந்து கி.பி. 1848ம் ஆண்டு, ஃபெப்ரவரி மாதம், 4ம் தேதியன்று, வடக்கே மன்னார் வந்தடைந்தார்கள். பின் ஊர்காவற்றுறை சென்றார்கள். அமலமரியாளின் தியாகிகளின் பணி யாழ்ப்பாணத்தில் ஆரம்பமாகி விரிந்தது. அமலமரியாளின் தியாகிகளே 1862ம் ஆண்டு, திருக்குடும்ப கன்னியர் சபையினரை இலங்கைக்கு அழைத்து வந்தார்கள்.


கி.பி. 1837 – 1861ம் ஆண்டு காலத்தில், தென் கிழக்கு ஃபிரான்ஸ் (South-Eastern France) நாட்டின் “புரொவென்ஸ்” (Provence) பிராந்தியத்திலுள்ள “மார்செய்ல்” (Marseille) மறைமாவட்டத்தின் ஆயராக பணியாற்றிய யூஜின், தமது பதவி காலத்தில் “நோட்ரே-டேம்-டி-லா கர்ட்” (Basilica of  Notre-Dame de la Garde) பேராலயத்தைக் கட்டினார். இவர், 1852ம் ஆண்டு, உள்ளூர் கத்தோலிக்க குருவான “ஜோசஃப்-மரி டிமோன்-டேவிட்” (Joseph-Marie Timon-David) என்பவரை மார்செய்ல் (Marseille) நகரில், இயேசுவின் திருஇருதய சபை (Congregation of the Sacred Heart of Jesus) நிறுவிட ஊக்குவித்தார்.

Also known as

Charles Joseph Eugene de Mazenod



Profile

Eldest son of Charles-Antoine De Mazenod and Marie-Rose Joannis. His mother was of the French middle class, convent educated, and wealthy; his father was an aristocrat, classically educated, and poor. Their marriage, and Eugene's home life, were plagued by constant family in-fighting, and interference from his maternal grandmother and a neurotic maternal aunt. The women never let his father forget that they brought the money to the family.


On 13 December 1790, at age eight, Eugene fled with his family to exile in Italy to escape the French Revolution. He spent eleven years in Italy, living in Nice, Turin, Venice, Naples, and Palermo. While he learned Italian and German from dealing with people day to day, the bulk of his education came in Venice from Father Bartolo Zinelli, a local priest. In Palermo he was exposed to a wild and worldly life among rich young Italian nobles.


After the Revolution, his mother returned to France, but his father stayed in Italy, ostensibly for political reasons. Upon his own return to France in 1802 in an attempt to reclaim the family lands, Eugene tried to reunite his parents, but failed, and they were divorced, an unusual event in the early 19th century. His often unsupervised youth, the constant fighting at home, and the eventual break up of his family led to his patronage of dysfunctional families and those in them.


For years, Eugene struggled in himself, drawn on the one hand to the wordly life he knew from Palermo, and the beauty of the religious life he had seen in Venice with Don Bartolo. In an effort to work it out, Eugene began teaching catechism and working with prisoners in 1805. God won at last, assisted by a mystical experience at the foot of a cross on Good Friday 1807 when Eugene was momentarily touched by the full force of the love of God. He entered the seminary of Saint Sulpice, Paris in 1808. Ordained on 21 December 1811 at age 29 at Amiens, France.


Because of his noble birth, he was immediately offered the position of Vicar General to the bishop of Amiens. Eugene renounced his family's wealth, and preferred to become a parish priest in Aix-en-Provence, working among the poor, preaching missions and bringing them the church in their native Provencal dialect, not the French used by the upper classes. He worked among the sick, prisoners, the poor, and the overlooked young. Eugune contracted, and nearly died from, typhus while working in prisons.


Eugene gathered other workers around him, both clergy and laymen. They worked from a former Carmelite convent, and the priests among them formed the Missionaries of Provence who conducted parish missions throughout the region. They were successful, and their reputation spread, bringing requests for them outside the region. Eugene realized the need for formal organization, and on 17 February 1826 he received approval from Pope Leo XII to found a new congregation, the Oblates of Mary Immaculate founded on his core of missionaries.


Though he would have preferred to remain a missionary, Eugene knew that position with the Church hierarchy would allow him to insure the success of his little congregation. He was appointed Vicar-General of Marseille in 1823. Titular bishop of Icosia on 14 October 1832. Co-adjutor in 1834. Bishop of Marseilles, France on 24 December 1837, ordained by Pope Gregory XVI.


He founded 23 parishes, built or retored 50 churches, cared for aged and persecuted priests, restored ecclesiastical discipline, and developed catechetics for young people. Started work on the cathedral and shrine of Notre-Dame de la Garde in Marseille. Welcomed 33 congregations of religious brothers and sisters into the diocese. More than doubled the number of priests in his diocese, and celebrated all ordinations himself.


Eugene realigned parishes and maneuvered behind the scenes to weaken the government monopoly on education. He was an outspoken supporter of the papacy, and fought government intervention into Church matters. Publicly endorsed the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, and worked for its promulgation. His printed writings run to 25 volumes. Made a peer of the French Empire. Archbishop of Marseille in 1851 by Pope Blessed Pius IX. Helped Saint Emily de Vialar re-build the Sisters of Saint Joseph of the Apparition after their move to Marseille. Named senator and member of the Legion of Honour by Napoleon III in 1856. Proposed as cardinal in 1859.


On 2 December 1841, Bishop de Mazenod's first overseas missionaries arrived in Canada. By the time of his death in 1861, there were six Oblate bishops and over 400 missionaries working in ten countries. The Oblates continue their good work to this day with some 5,000 missionaries in 68 countries.


Born

1 August 1782 at Aix-en-Provence, southern France as Charles Joseph Eugene de Mazenod


Died

• 21 May 1861 at Marseille, France of cancer

• on 12 December 1936, his body was exhumed and found to be intact

• part of his heart is venerated at Blessed Sacrament Chapel at the Oblate-owned Lourdes Grotto of the Southwest in San Antonio, Texas, USA


Canonized

3 December 1995 by Pope John Paul II at Saint Peter's Square, Rome, Italy


Patronage

dysfunctional families




Blessed Franz Jägerstätter


Also known as

Franz Jaegerstaetter



Profile

Born to Rosalia Huber and Franz Bachmeier, servants too poor to get married. His father died in World War I when the boy was less than ten years old; his mother then married local famer Heinrich Jägerstätter who adopted Franz. Franz had little formal education, but his adoptive father was serious about the boy being able to read so that he could educate himself. At age 20 he began three years of work in the iron ore industry. He led a rather wild and dissolute life in his early 20's, but by his late 20's had settled down to life as a peasant farmer, became serious about his faith, married, and became the father of three daughters. He worked as sacristan for his parish, arranging funeral and prayer services, attended Mass daily, and developed a special ministry to the bereaved.


He became known as a vocal critic of the Nazis; he was the only one in his village to vote against Austrian unification with Germany in 1938, when greeted with "Heil Hitler" would respond "Pfui Hitler", and basically had no social life in the town because of his beliefs. When drafted into the army of the Third Reich, Franz could not reconcile such service with his faith; after a brief period served behind the lines, he refused to report for further service, was arrested, imprisoned in Linz, Austria, and Berlin, Germay, given a military trial, and finally executed. He spent time in prison praying, supporting other prisoners, and writing a series of letters and essays.


Born

20 May 1907 in Sankt Radegund, Oberösterreich, Austria


Died

beheaded on 9 August 1943 in Brandenburg an der Havel, Brandenburg, Germany


Beatified

26 October 2007 by Pope Benedict XVI




Martyrs of the Mexican Revolution


Profile

The 1917 Mexican constitution was pointedly anti-clerical and anti-Church, and its adoption instituted years of violent religious persecution including expulsion of foreign priests, closing of parochial schools, and the murders of several priests and lay leaders who work to minister to the faithful and support religious freedom. 25 of them who died at different times and places but all as a result of this persecution were celebrated together. They each have separate memorials, but are also remembered as a group.



• Saint Agustin Caloca Cortes

• Saint Atilano Cruz Alvarado

• Saint Cristobal Magallanes Jara

• Saint David Galván-Bermúdez

• Saint David Roldán-Lara

• Saint David Uribe-Velasco

• Saint Jenaro Sánchez DelGadillo

• Saint Jesús Méndez-Montoya

• Saint Jose Isabel Flores Varela

• Saint José María Robles Hurtado

• Saint Julio álvarez Mendoza

• Saint Justino Orona Madrigal

• Saint Luis Batiz Sainz

• Saint Manuel Moralez

• Saint Margarito Flores-García

• Saint Mateo Correa-Magallanes

• Saint Miguel de la Mora

• Saint Pedro de Jesús Maldonado-Lucero

• Saint Pedro Esqueda Ramírez

• Saint Rodrigo Aguilar Alemán

• Saint Roman Adame Rosales

• Saint Sabas Reyes Salazar

• Saint Salvador Lara Puente

• Saint Toribio Romo González

• Saint Tranquilino Ubiarco Robles


Canonized

21 May 2000 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Godric of Finchale


Also known as

Godrick



Profile

Oldest of three children born to a freedman Anglo-Saxon farmer. An adventurous seafaring man, Godric spent his youth in travel, both on land and sea, as a peddler and merchant mariner first along the coast of the British Isles, then throughout Europe. Sometime sailor, sometime ship's captain, he lived a seafarer's life of the day, and it was hardly a religious one. He was known to drink, fight, chase women, con customers, and in a contemporary manuscript, was referred to as a "pirate". Converted upon visiting Lindisfarne during a voyage, and being touched by the life of Saint Cuthbert of Lindisfarne.


Pilgrim to Jerusalem and the holy lands, Saintiago de Compostela, the shrine of Saint Gaul in Provence, and to Rome, Italy. As a self-imposed austerity, and a way to always remember Christ's lowering himself to become human, Godric never wore shoes, regardless of the season. He lived as a hermit in the holy lands, and worked in a hospital near Jerusalem. Hermit for nearly sixty years at Finchale, County Durham, England, first in a cave, then later in a more formal hermitage; he was led to its site by a vision of Saint Cuthbert. It was a rough life, living barefoot in a mud and wattle hut, wearing a hair shirt under a metal breastplate, standing in icy waters to control his lust, living for a while off berries and roots, and being badly beaten by Scottish raiders who strangely thought he had a hidden treasure.


Noted for his close familiarity with wild animals, his supernatural visions, his gift of prophecy, and ability to know of events occurring hundreds or thousands of miles away. Counseled Saint Aelred, Saint Robert of Newminster, Saint Thomas Beckett, and Pope Alexander III. Wrote poetry in Medieval English. The brief song Sainte nicholaes by Godric is one of the oldest in the English language, and is believed to be the earliest surviving example of lyric poetry. He was said to have received his songs, lyrics and music, complete during his miraculous visions.


Born

1069 at Walpole, Norfolk, England


Died

1170 at Finchale, County Durham, England of natural causes




Blessed Hyacinth-Marie Cormier


Also known as

• Louis-Stanislas-Henri Cormier

• Henri Cormier Bracquemond



Memorials

• 21 May (chosen in rememberance of the date of his election to Master of the Dominicans)

• 17 December (Martyrologium Romanum)


Profile

Born to a family of wealthy merchants, the son of François-Bernard Cormier and Marguerite-Felicité Bracquemond, he was baptized at the age of one day with the name Louis-Stanislas-Henri Cormier, but his family always called him Henri. His father died when Louis was a small boy, his brother soon after, and his uncle, a parish priest, helped raise him. Studied at home, then with the Christian Brothers, and entered the minor seminary in the diocese of Orléans, France at age 13. Could play the flageolet (a woodwind similar to a recorder), organ and ophicleide (a brass, trumpet-like instrument), and was known as a fine singer; Franz Liszt is reported to have admired Louis’ skills at the organ.


Henry became a Dominican tertiary while in seminary, graduated at the top of his class, and was ordained on 17 May 1856, having obtained a special dispensation as he was technically too young. Received the Dominican habit on 29 June 1856, taking the name Hyacinthe-Marie. Afflicted with a recurring hemorrhaging problem, he continued his studies and was allowed to make his profession on 23 May 1859 though everyone assumed it was on his death-bed. However, he survived, soon after made a complete recovery, and became active in his Order and his house.


Noted confessor and teacher, he is known to have written 171 texts in his life. Master of novices. Prior of the convent of Corbara in Corsica, France in 1863. Prior-Provincial of Toulouse, France from 1865 to 1874. Prior of the Dominican community in Marseilles, France. Served as Prior-Provincial again from 1878 to 1888. Definitor of the Dominican General Chapter of Lyons, France in 1891. Procurator of the Dominicans, working in Rome, Italy. In 1899 Pope Leo XIII considered elevating Father Hyacinthe-Marie to cardinal, but held off due to the political problems with France that would ensure over the appointment.


Served as the 76th Master of the Dominicans from 21 May 1904 until 1916. He restored many of the suppressed Dominican provinces, and helped the Order expand into western United States. Founded the Dominican Sisters of Saint Catherine of Siena of Auch. Noted and powerful preacher. Worked for the beatifications of Blessed Reginald of Orléans, Blessed Bertrand Garrigue, Blessed Raymond of Capua, and Blessed Andrew Abellon. Helped re-organize what became the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas in Rome. He finally retired to live his remaining days as a prayerful monk at the priory of the Basilica of San Clemente in Rome.


Born

8 December 1832 in Orléans, Loiret, France as Henri Cormier Bracquemond


Died

• 12:30pm on 17 December 1916 at the priory of the Basilica of San Clemente in Rome, Italy of natural causes

• interred at the church of San Domenico e San Sisto, Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Rome in December 1934


Beatified

20 November 1994 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Restituta of Corsica


Also known as

Restitude, Restitute, Ristituta


Additional Memorial

5 August (in Calenzana, Corsica, France which commemorates her intercession that miraculously ended a plague there)



Profile

We have two stories about this martyr, one medieval with limited information, the second later in composition, and much more colourful.


The oldest sources say that Restituta fled persecution in north Africa with five male companions (possibly the Martyrs of Noli). She evangelized the Balagne region of Corsica, and was martyred by Roman authorities during one of the imperial persecutions (dates vary).


The later documents say that she was born to a pagan family with ties to the imperial Roman army, converted to Christianity as a girl and was soon denounced to anti–Christian local authorities. She was beaten and stoned to get her to renounce Christianity. When she refused, she was thrown into a fire, but would not burn. She was then beaten with iron combs, but her wounds bled milk. These miracles converted several of the soldiers who were guarding and torturing her. She was then taken out to sea and thrown in to drown, but a chunk of cork floated her back to shore while the pagans on the boat were drowned. Her tormentors finally gave up on these slow, torturous methods of murder, and beheaded her with several other stubborn Christians. These martyrs then picked up the severed heads and walked to the place where the first chapel of Saint Restituta was built.


Died

• beheaded 21 May in 217, 218, 225 or 303 (records vary)

• relics interred under the altar in the chapel of Saint Resistude in Calenzana in the 16th century and re-discovered during repairs in 1951


Patronage

• Calenzana, Corsica, France (declared in 1984 by the Congregation for Divine Worship)

• Balagne, Corsica, France (declared in 1984 by the Congregation for Divine Worship)



Saint Collen of Denbighshire


Also known as

Colan, Gollen


Profile

Monk in Wales, Brittany and Cornwall. Believed to have travelled to Rome, Italy. Lived as a hermit in a small cave near Glastonbury Abbey. Abbot of a monastery in Wales. The Welsh town of Llangollen (Collen's enclosure), Clwd is named for him, indicating that it formed around his hermitage and church.


Collen was at the right time and place to be a transitional figure in the folklore of the region. There are tales of him slaying a Welsh giantess to save the people of Llangollen (the church there still has an image of him in this triumph), and of fighting a duel with a Saracen in front of the Pope. Stories have him being taken to the land of faerie, but always as a Christian, and always showing the power of God over the old ways.


Legend says that Collen was once invited to dine with the King of the Fairies; some say he was asked by a man, some say by a fairy, and some say by a talking peacock; I cannot say. The saint declined three times, but finally accepted. Though the king appeared to live in an enormous castle, wealthy and fair, surrounded by courtiers and servants, and seated before a table groaning under the weight of good eatings. Collen, however, knew him for the lying spirit he was. The saint reminded the king of the fate of the Godless, then sprinkled holy water in all directions; in an instant there was nothing left but an angry, demonic bird, flying away from the scene.


Another version has it that Collen, while he lived as a hermit near Glastonbury, was summoned to settle the eternal May Day struggle of Gwynn ap Nudd, Lord of the Underworld, with Gwyther, Lord of Summer, for the hand of the fair Creiddylad, the Maiden of Spring. Collen ordained that the quarrel would be resolved on Doomsday, and not before. Then with a sprinkle of holy water, the faerie folk and fortress disappeared.


Born

c.600 in Wales



Blessed Pietro Parenzo


Profile

Born to the Italian nobility, the son of Giovanni, a senator and judge; his mother‘s name was Odolina. We know he had brothers, and was married at one point, but nothing else survives of his early life. Served in the court of Pope Innocent III. Chosen rector and papal governor of Orvieto, Italy in 1199, a turbulent area used as a base by Patarine Cathar heretics, and in the middle of endless struggles and machinations of the Guelphs and Ghibellines, between supporters of the Pope and those of the Emperor of Germany; Pietro was given a mission to bring peace and suppress heresy which meant he was welcomed with open arms by orthodox Catholics, with open opposition by the supporters of the various heresies and factions. Kidnapped by a gang of Patarine heretics, he was beaten and offered freedom if he would retract all anti–heresy laws in the area, and agree to never trouble the Patarines and Carthars again; he declined. Martyr. The backlash against his killers led to a popular uprising, suppression and exile of the heretics.


Born

12th century Rome, Italy


Died

• hit in the head with a hammer by Patarine heretic kidnappers on 21 May 1199 in a hut just outside Orvieto, Italy; other kidnappers stabbed his body numerous times with knives and swords

• buried in the graveyard of the church of Santa Maria in Orvieto

• relics in the Chapel of the Corporal in the cathedral of Orvieto


Beatified

• popularly considered a martyr at the time of his death, there were commemorations beginning in 1200

• his tomb became a stopping point for people passing through Orvieto while on pilgrimages to Rome, Italy

• 16 March 1879 by Pope Leo XIII (cultus confirmation)


Patronage

Orvieto, Italy



Saint Hospitius of Cap-Saint-Hospice


Also known as

Ospicio, Sospis



Profile

Hermit at a place now named Cap-Saint-Hospice in his honour, living in the ruins of an old tower, wearing heavy iron chains, living off bread and dates and not even that during Lent. Foretold the invasion of Gaul by the Lombards. A Lombard patrol c.575, finding Hospitius loaded with chains and living in isolation, decided he was some type of criminal; Hospitius agreed that he was a terrible sinner, with a litany of offenses to his shame. Convinced he was a danger of some sort, one of the soldiers raised his sword to kill the old hermit; the soldier's sword arm became paralyzed, moving again only after Hospitius made the sign of the cross over it. The soldier was converted on the spot, and spent the rest of his life in service to God. Hospitius foretold the hour of his own death, spent his last hours in prayer, took off his chains, and passed on.


Died

• 21 May 581

• buried by his friend, Austadius, Bishop of Cimiez

• relics distributed to the French towns of Lerins, Nice, Villefranche, La Turbie, and San-Sospis





Blessed Hemming of Åbo


Profile

Studied in Uppsala, Sweden and Paris, France; one of his classmates in Paris became Pope Clement VI. Priest. Canon of the cathedral of Åbo, Turku (in modern Finland) in 1329. Evangelizing bishop of Åbo in 1338 where he served for 28 years. He renewed the faith of his flock, improved the education, training and discipline of his priests, improved liturgical furnishings and diocesan finances, and worked for peace among the peoples of his area. Friend of Saint Bridget of Sweden.


Born

late 13th century in Balinge parish, north of Uppsala, Sweden


Died

21 May 1366 of natural causes


Beatified

• miracles reported at his tomb, and by 1400 there were pilgrimages made to it

• Pope Leo X approves enshrining of his relics in the cathedral of Åbo, Turku (in modern Finland) in 1514



Blessed Manuel Gómez González


Profile

Ordained in 1902 in the archdiocese of Braga, Portugal. Transferred to the diocese of Frederico Westphalen, Brazil in 1913. Known as a concerned pastor to his flock, and for his social work in the region. Martyred with his altar boy, Blessed Adilo Daronche.



Born

29 May 1877 in San José de Ribarteme, Pontevedra, Spain


Died

21 May 1924 in Feijão Miúdo, Três Passos, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil


Beatified

21 October 2007 by Pope Benedict XVI



Blessed Jean Mopinot


Also known as

Brother Léon


Profile

Member of the Brothers of the Christian Schools, entering the novitiate on 14 January 1744. Imprisoned on a ship in the harbor of Rochefort, France and left to die during the anti–Catholic persecutions of the French Revolution. One of the Martyrs of the Hulks of Rochefort.



Born

12 December 1724 in Rheims, Ardennes, France


Died

21 May 1794 aboard the prison ship Deux-Associés, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Bairfhion of Killbarron


Also known as

Barrfoin, Barrindus


Profile

Led the church founded by Saint Columba in Drum Cullen, Offaly, Ireland in the 6th century. Later lived in Killbarron near Ballyshannon, Donegal, Ireland. Legend says that the sailed to America even before Saint Brendan the Navigator.


Born

Irish


Patronage

• Drumcuillan, County Laoghis, Ireland

• Killbarron, County Donegal, Ireland



Blessed Adilio Daronch



Profile

Young lay person in the diocese of Frederico Westphalen, Brazil. Martyr.



Born

25 October 1908 in Dona Francisca, Cachoeira do Sul, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil


Died

martyred on 21 May 1924 in Feijão Miúdo, Três Passos, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil


Beatified

21 October 2007 by Pope Benedict XVI



Blessed Silao


Profile

Born to the Irish nobility. Priest. Benedictine monk. Abbot. Bishop. Having encountered opposition from a local lord, Silao went to Rome, Italy to appeal for support from Pope Gregory VII, but died on the road on the return trip.


Born

early 11th century Ireland


Died

• late 11th century in Lucca, Italy of natural causes

• relics in Lucca, Italy



Saint Paternus of Vannes


Also known as

• Paternus the Elder

• Paterno, Patern, Pern



Profile

Fifth-century bishop of Vannes in Brittany (in modern France). Late in life he retired from his see to spend his final years as a hermit.


Died

c.475



Saint Serapion the Sindonite


Profile

Early desert monk whose unflinching dedication to the ascetic life was an example to many others at the beginning of the monastic movement. Pilgrim to Rome, Italy.



Born

Egypt


Died

356 of natural causes



Saint Ageranus of Blèze


Also known as

Ayran, Ayrman


Profile

Benedictine monk. Martyred defending the altar at the monastery of Blèze, Côte-d'Or, France against Norman invaders.


Died

in 888 at Blèze, Côte-d'Or, France



Saint Polieuctus of Caesarea


Also known as

Polieuto, Polieutto



Profile

Martyr.


Died

Caesarea, Cappadocia (in modern Turkey)



Saint Isberga


Also known as

Itisberga



Profile

Sister of Charlemagne. Nun at Aire in the Artois region of France.


Died

c.800 of natural causes


Patronage

Artois, France



Saint Secundus of Alexandria


Profile

Priest. Martyred along with a group of unnamed clergy in the persecutions of Constantius for opposing the Arian heresy.


Died

Pentecost season, year unknown, at Alexandria, Egypt



Blessed Lucio del Rio


Profile

Mercedarian priest. Confessor of King James II of Castille, and the Infanta Isabella.


Born

1242


Died

1342 at the Santa Eulalia Mercedarian convent in Barcelona, Spain of natural causes



Saint Genesius of Blèze


Profile

Benedictine monk. Martyred defending the altar at the monastery Blèze, Côte-d'Or, France against Norman invaders.


Died

888 at Blèze, Côte-d'Or, France



Saint Ansuinus of Blèze


Profile

Priest. Martyred defending the altar at the monastery at Blèze, Côte-d'Or, France against Norman invaders.


Died

in 888 at Blèze, Côte-d'Or, France



Saint Berard of Blèze


Profile

Benedictine monk. Martyred defending the altar at the monastery Blèze, Côte-d'Or, France against Norman invaders.


Died

888 at Blèze, Côte-d'Or, France



Saint Sifrard of Blèze


Profile

Benedictine monk. Killed defending the altar at the Blèze Abbey, Côte-d'Or, France against Norman invaders.


Died

888 at Blèze, Côte-d'Or, France



Saint Rodron of Blèze


Profile

Benedictine monk. Killed defending the altar at the Blèze Abbey, Côte-d'Or, France against Norman invaders.


Died

888 at Blèze, Côte-d'Or, France



Saint Nicostratus of Caesarea Philippi


Profile

Soldier. Tribune in the imperial Roman army. Martyred with other soldiers.


Died

Caesarea Philippi



Saint Adalric of Blèze


Profile

Young boy. Martyred at the monastery of Blèze, Côte-d'Or, France against Norman invaders.


Died

in 888 at Blèze, Côte-d'Or, France



Saint Antiochus of Caesarea Philippi



Profile

Soldier. Tribune in the imperial Roman army. Martyred with other soldiers.


Died

Caesarea Philippi



Saint Theobald of Vienne


Also known as

Thibaud of Vienne


Profile

Archbishop of Vienne, France from 970 to 1001.


Died

1001



Saint Eutychius of Mauretania


Profile

Deacon in Mauretania Caesariensis in North Africa. Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.



Saint Timothy of Mauretania


Profile

Deacon in Mauretania Caesariensis in North Africa. Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.



Saint Polius of Mauretania


Profile

Deacon in Mauretania Caesariensis in North Africa. Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.



Saint Valens of Auxerre


Profile

Bishop. Martyred with three boys whose names have not come down to us.


Died

Auxerre, France



Saint Secundinus of Cordoba


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

c.306 in Cordoba, Spain



Saint Mancio of évora


Also known as

Mancinelli


Profile

Sixth century bishop of évora, Portugal. Martyr.



Saint Victorius of Caesarea


Profile

Martyr.


Died

Caesarea, Cappadocia (in modern Turkey)



Saint Donatus of Caesarea


Profile

Martyr.


Died

Caesarea, Cappadocia



Saint Synesius


Profile

Martyr.



Saint Vales

Profile

Fourth century priest in France.



Saint Theopompus


Profile

Martyr.



Martyrs of Egypt


Profile

Large number of bishops, priests, deacons and lay people banished when the Arian heretics seized the diocese of Alexandria, Egypt in 357 and drove out Saint Athanasius and other orthodox Christians. Many were old, many infirm, and many, many died of abuse and privations while on the road and in the wilderness. Very few survived to return to their homes in 361 when Julian the Apostate recalled all Christians; and then many of those later died in the persecutions of Julian.



Martyrs of Pentecost in Alexandria


Profile

An unspecified number of Christian clerics and lay people who, on Pentecost in 338, were rounded up by order of the Arian bishop and emperor Constantius, and were either killed or exiled for refusing to accept Arian teachings.


Died

339 in Alexandria, Egypt




புனித ஹெர்மான் ஜோசப் (St.Hermann Joseph)

குரு


பிறப்பு 

பிறப்பு: 12 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டின் இறுதியில் 

இறப்பு 

இறப்பு: 7 ஏப்ரல் 1241 

ஹோப்பன்(Hopen), ஐப்பல்(Eifel), ஜெர்மனி


இவர் ஓர் ஏழையின் குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தார். இவர் சிறுபிள்ளையாக இருக்கும்போதே கொலோனில் உள்ள ஆலயங்களுக்கு சென்று வழிபட்டு வந்தார். அப்போது செபிக்க சென்றபோது ஒருநாள் கொலோன் ஊரில் இருந்த ஓர் ஆலயத்தில், அன்னைமரியாள், கையில் குழந்தை இயேசுவை வைத்திருக்கும் ஒரு படத்தை பார்த்து, அப்படத்தின் முன் மண்டியிட்டு செபித்தார். அப்போது ஹெர்மான் தன் கையில் ஆப்பிள் பழம் வைத்திருந்தார். அதை எடுத்து அன்னைமரியிடம் கொடுக்க, குழந்தை இயேசு தன் கையை நீட்டி சிறுவன் ஹெர்மான் கொடுத்த அப்பழத்தை வாங்கிக் கொண்டார். இதைப் பார்த்து திகைத்துப் போன அவர், தான் ஓர் குருவாக வேண்டுமென்று முடிவு செய்தார். அதன்பிறகு அவர் குருமடத்தில் சேர்ந்து குருவானார். எப்போதும் செபிக்க வேண்டும், விவிலியம் வாசிக்கவேண்டும். திருப்பலியில் பங்கெடுக்கவேண்டும் என்று நினைத்து, இதுதான் துறவற வாழ்வு என்றுணர்ந்து அவ்வாழ்வை தேர்வை செய்தார். ஆனால் அங்கு அனைத்தும் அவருக்கு எதிர்மறையாக இருந்தது. அவரை அந்த துறவற மடத்தில், உணவு சமைப்பவர்களுக்கு தேவையான பொருட்களை வாங்கி கொண்டுவந்து சேர்க்கும் பொறுப்பை ஏற்றுகொள்ள சொன்னார்கள். அவரும் அப்பொறுப்பை ஏற்று தினமும் கடைக்குச் சென்று, தன்னிடம் ஒப்படைத்த வேலைகளை செய்து வந்தார். இதனால் கோவிலில் அமர்ந்து செபிப்பதற்கென தனியாக அவருக்கு நேரம் கிடைக்காததால், ஒருநாள் அன்னைமரியிடமும், தந்தை சூசையிடமும், தனது கவலைகளை செபத்தில் கூறிக்கொண்டிருந்தார். அப்போது அன்னையானவள், அவரிடம் உன் உடனுள்ள சகோதர, சகோதரிகளுக்கு நீ புரியும் உன் வேலைகளே உன்னிடமிருந்து வருகின்ற உண்மையான ஜெபம் என்றுணர்த்தினார். 


அதன்பிறகு ஹெர்மான் தனது எண்ணங்களை மாற்றிக்கொண்டு தனக்கு குறிக்கப்பட்ட வேலைகள் அனைத்தையும் மகிழ்வோடு செய்து வந்தார். அவ்வேலைகள் அனைத்தையும் ஜெபமாக மாற்றினார். அதன்வழியாக உடனிருந்த அனைவரின் அன்பையும் பெற்றார். அதிலிருந்து ஹெர்மான் அன்னைமரியின் பாடல் ஒன்றை எப்போதும் பாடிக் கொண்டே இருந்தார். அவர் தொடர்ந்து நீண்ட நாட்களாக நோன்பிருந்து ஜெபித்தார். இதனால் கடுமையான நோய்க்கு ஆளாக்கப்பட்டார். அப்போது சுல்பிக் (Zulpich) என்ற ஊரில் இருந்த சிஸ்டர்சீசியன்(Zisterzienserinn) துறவற இல்லத்திற்கு சென்றார். அங்கு அவர் ஆன்மீக குருவாக பணியாற்றினார். அவரை சந்திக்க வந்த அனைவருக்கும் ஆசீரை வழங்கி மகிழ்ச்சிப்படுத்தினார். ஹெர்மான் அத்துறவற இல்லத்திற்குள் நுழைந்தவுடனே, "இங்குள்ள கல்லறையில்தான் என்னை அடக்கம் செய்யவேண்டும், நான் இங்குதான் இறப்பேன்" என்று கூறினார். அவர் கூறியபடியே, ஒருநாள் ஆலயத்தில் ஜெபித்துக்கொண்டிருக்கும்போதே, கண்களைமூடி அமைதியாக இறைவனிடம் சேர்ந்தார்.