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02 July 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஜீலை 03

 திருத்தூதரான தூய தோமா

புனித தோமா 

( St. Thomas )

திருத்தூதர்

பிறப்பு : கி. பி 1 (முற்பகுதி)

கலிலேயா

இறப்பு : டிசம்பர் 21, 72 கி. பி

சென்னை, இந்தியா (நம்பப்படுகிறது)

ஏற்கும் சபை/ சமயம் : எல்லா கிறிஸ்தவப் பிரிவுகளும்

முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள் : 

சாந்தோம் தேவாலயம், சென்னை

நினைவுத் திருவிழா : 

ஜூலை 3 - கத்தோலிக்கம்

அக்டோபர் 6 அல்லது ஜூன் 30 - கிழக்கு மரபு

உயிர்ப்பு விழாவை தொடர்ந்து வரும் ஞாயிற்றுக்கிழமை - பொது

சித்தரிக்கப்படும் வகை : இயேசுவின் விலாவில் கையை இடுபவராக, வேல்

பாதுகாவல் : கட்டட கலைஞர், இந்தியா, மற்றும் பல

திருத்தூதர் புனித தோமா (அல்லது) புனித தோமையார், 1ம் நூற்றாண்டில் வாழ்ந்தவர். கிறிஸ்தவ புனிதராவார். இவர் இயேசுவால் தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்ட பன்னிரு திருத்தூதர்களுள் (அப்போஸ்தலர்களுள்) ஒருவர்.

"நீரே என் ஆண்டவர்! நீரே என் கடவுள்!!" (யோவான் 20:28) என்று உயிர்த்த இயேசுவை நோக்கி இவர் கூறிய வார்த்தைகள் மிகவும் புகழ்பெற்றவை.

திருத்தூதரின் கல்லறைப் பீடத்தில் இந்த வார்த்தைகளே பொறிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.

இயேசு உயிர்த்துவிட்டார் என மற்ற திருத்தூதர்கள் சொன்னதை முதலில் நம்ப மறுத்ததால் இவர் 'சந்தேக தோமா' (Doubting Thomas) என்ற பெயராலும் அழைக்கப்படுகிறார்.

இந்தியாவில் இயேசுவின் நற்செய்தியை முதன்முதலில் அறிவித்தவர் இவரே என்று பழங்கால கிறிஸ்தவ மரபும், ஏடுகளும் சான்று பகர்கின்றன. கேரளாவில் வாழும் தோமையார் கிறிஸ்தவர்களும் இதற்கு சான்றாக உள்ளனர்.

பெயரும் அடையாளமும் :

பெயர் மரபு :

இயேசுவின் திருத்தூதர்களுள் ஒருவரான இவரை நற்செய்தி நூல்கள் தோமா என்ற பெயருடனேயே அடையாளப்படுத்துகின்றன. 'தோமா' என்னும் அரமேய மொழிச் சொல்லுக்கு இரட்டையர் என்பது பொருள். இதற்கு இணையான திதைமுஸ் (Didymus, தமிழ் ஒலிப்பெயர்ப்பு: திதிம்) என்ற கிரேக்க மொழிச் சொல் யோவான் நற்செய்தியில் குறிப்பிடப்பட்டிருக்கின்றது.

இந்த பெயரின் அடிப்படையில் இவருடன் இரட்டையராகப் பிறந்த ஒரு சகோதரரோ, சகோதரியோ இருந்திருக்கலாம் என்று நம்பப்படுகிறது. பழங்கால சிரிய மரபின்படி, திருத்தூதரின் முழுப்பெயர் யூதா தோமா என்று அறியப்படுகிறது.

இந்தியாவில் கிறிஸ்தவப் பணி :



இந்தியாவில் தோமையார் முதன் முதலில் பண்டைய சேர துறைமுகமான முசிறியில் (தற்போது கேரளாவிலுள்ள) கி.பி. 52-ல் பாதம் பதித்தார். தென் இந்தியாவின் கடற்கறை ஓரமாக நற்செய்தி பணியாற்றிய இவர், ஏழரை ஆலயங்களை நிறுவினார். அவை கொடுங்கல்லூர், பழவூர், கொட்டகாவு, கொக்கமங்கலம், நிரனம், நிலக்கல், கொல்லம் மற்றும் திருவிதாங்கோடு (கன்னியாகுமரி மாவட்டம்) ஆகிய இடங்களில் அமைந்துள்ளன.

இறப்பு :

தோமையார் கி.பி 72-ல் சென்னை மயிலாப்பூரில் மரித்தார் என நம்பப்படுகிறது. 13-ம் நூற்றாண்டில் இந்தியாவில் சுற்றுப்பயணம் செய்த மார்கோ-போலோ குறிப்புப்படி சென்னை அருகே அம்புகளால் குத்தப்பட்டு இறந்தார். அவரது மீப்பொருட்கள் சென்னை சாந்தோம் தேவாலயத்தில் உள்ளன.

விழா நாட்கள் :

9ம் நூற்றாண்டில் தயாரிக்கப்பட்ட ரோமன் நாள்காட்டியில், புனித தோமாவின் விழா நாளாக டிசம்பர் 21ம் தேதி குறிக்கப்பட்டிருந்தது.

1969ம் ஆண்டு ரோமன் நாள்காட்டி திருத்தி அமைக்கப்பட்டபோது, புனித ஜெரோமின் மறைசாட்சிகள் நினைவுநாள் குறிப்பின் அடிப்படையில் திருத்தூதர் தோமாவின் விழா ஜூலை 3ம் தேதிக்கு மாற்றப்பட்டது. இருப்பினும், பெரும்பாலான ஆங்கிலிக்கத் திருச்சபைகள் டிசம்பர் 21ம் தேதியே புனிதரின் விழாவை சிறப்பிக்கின்றன. கிழக்கு மரபு வழி திருச்சபையைச் சேர்ந்தவர்கள் புனித தோமாவின் விழாவை அக்டோபர் 19ம் தேதி (ஜூலியன் நாட்காட்டியில் அக்டோபர் 6ம் தேதி) கொண்டாடுகின்றனர்.

தோமா ஆண்டவரிடம் ஒரு தனிப்பற்றுதல் கொண்டிருந்தார். நாமும் ஆண்டவருடன் சென்று அவரோடு சாக வேண்டியிருந்தாலும் தயாராய் இருப்போம் என்று கூறியவர். தோமா ஆண்டவரின் விண்ணேற்பிற்கு பிறகு சென்று போதியுங்கள் என்ற அவரின் கட்டளையை நிறைவேற்ற புறப்படுகிறார். யுசிபியுஸ் என்ற புகழ்பெற்ற வரலாற்று ஆசிரியர் கூறுகிறார். "அப்போஸ்தலர் யூதா ததேயுவை எடெஸ்ஸாவிலிருந்த அப்கர் என்ற அரசனுக்கு திருமுழுக்கு கொடுக்க அனுப்பியபின் தமக்கென பார்த்தியா மீட்ஸ், பெர்ஷியா இன்னும் பல அண்டை நாடுகளை தெரிந்துகொண்டு மறைபரப்பு பணியாற்றினார். தோமா. அப்போதுதான் இந்தியா வந்தார். "தோமாவின் பணிகள்" என்ற ஒரு நூல் கி.பி. 3ஆம் நூற்றாண்டின் முதல் கால் பகுதியிலேயே மக்களிடம் இருந்ததாக ஆதாரம் இருக்கிறது.

கொண்டோபெர்னஸ்(Condoberns) அல்லது குடுப்பாரா(Cudupara) என்ற மன்னரது ஆட்சி 46 ல் பெஷாவர் வரை பரவிக்கிடந்தது. பஞ்சாபிலிருந்து கொச்சின், திருவிதாங்கூர் சிற்றரசு வரைக்கும் பரவியிருந்தது. அதிலிருந்து " புனித தோமாவின் கிறிஸ்தவர்கள்" என்றே இப்பகுதியினர் அழைக்கப்பட்டு வந்தனர். தங்களுடைய திருவழிபாட்டுக்கு "சீரியக்" என்ற மொழியையே அன்று முதல் இன்றுவரை பயன்படுத்தியதோடல்லாமல் இன்று வரை "சீரியன் கிறிஸ்தவர்கள்" என்றும் அழைக்கப்படுகிறார்கள். சீரியக் மொழி உறுதியாக பெர்ஷியா, மெசப்பொத்தேமியா பகுதிகளிலுருந்து இறக்குமதியானது. தோமா முதன் முதலில் கிராங்கனூர் கடற்கரையை வந்தடைந்தார் எனவும், மலபாரில் மட்டும் 7 ஆலயங்கள் எழுப்பினார் எனவும், பின்னர் குமரி கடற்கரை வழியாக சென்னை வந்தடைந்தார் எனவும், அங்கே பலரையும் மனந்திருப்பிய பின் "சிறிய மலை" என்ற பெயர் கொண்ட இடத்தில் குத்திக் கொல்லப்பட்டார் எனவும் வரலாறு கூறுகின்றது. அவர் மைலாப்பூரில் அடக்கம் பண்ணப்பட்டதற்கு கல்லறை ஆதாரங்களும் உள்ளது.

1522 ஆம் ஆண்டு போர்த்துகீசியர் சென்னை வந்தபோது, அவரது கல்லறையை கண்டுபிடித்திருக்கிறார்கள். அவர்கள் கண்டுபிடித்த பொருட்கள் மைலாப்பூரில் சாந்தோம் பேராலயத்திலேயே வைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது. இவரின் திருப்பண்டங்கள் பலவும் 4 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டில் எடெஸ்ஸாவுக்கு(Edesta) கொண்டு செல்லப்பட்டதாக "தோமாவின் பணிகள்" என்ற நூலில் தெளிவாக கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது. இந்தியாவிலிருந்து மெசப்பொட்டேமியாவுக்கு எடுத்து செல்லப்பட்டதாகவும் அதில் கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது. பின்னர் எடெஸ்ஸாவிலிருந்து பின்னர் அப்ரூஸ்ஸியில் உள்ள ஓர்டோனாவிற்கு(Ordon) எடுத்து செல்லப்பட்டு இன்றுவரை புனிதமாக காப்பாற்றப்பட்டு வணக்கம் செலுத்தப்பட்டு வருவதாக கூறப்படுகிறது.

இயேசுவின் உயிர்ப்புக்குப் பிறகு தோமாவிற்கு இந்தியாவிற்குப் போகுமாறு சீட்டு விழுந்தது. எனவே அவர் இந்தியாவிற்கு வந்தார். அப்போது குண்டபோரஸ் என்னும் மன்னன் அழகு மிளிர்ந்த ஒரு மாளிகை கட்ட நினைத்தான். இந்தப் பொறுப்பை அவன் தன்னுடைய ஆலோசகராகிய ஹப்பான்ஸ் என்பவரிடம் ஒப்படைத்தான். ஹப்பான்ஸ் யாரிடம் இந்த வேலையைக் கொடுப்பது என நினைத்துக்கொண்டிருக்கும்போது, அவருக்குக் கனவில், தோமா என்னும் ஒருவர் இருக்கிறார், அவர் கட்டடக் கலையில் வல்லுநர் என்ற செய்தி வெளிப்படுத்தப்பட்டது. எனவே அவர் தோமாவை அணுகிச் சென்று, மாளிகை கட்டும் பொறுப்பை அவரிடம் ஒப்படைத்தார். மன்னர் தோமாவிடம் மாளிகை கட்டுவதற்கான போதிய பணத்தைக் கொடுத்துவிட்டு, இரண்டு ஆண்டுகள் வெளிநாட்டுப் பயணம் சென்றார்.

தோமாவோ, மன்னன் மாளிகை கட்டக் கொடுத்த பணத்தை அதற்காகப் பயன்படுத்தாமல், ஏழை எளியவர்களுக்குப் பகிர்ந்து கொடுத்தார். இரண்டு ஆண்டுகள் கழித்து, மன்னர் தோமாவை அழைத்து, “மாளிகை எங்கே?” என்று கேட்டார். அதற்கு அவர், “மாளிகை இங்கே இல்லை. விண்ணகத்திலே கட்டப்பட்டிருக்கிறது” என்றார். இதைக் கேட்டு சினமடைந்த மன்னன், தோமாவை சிறையில் அடைத்தான். இதற்கிடையில் மன்னனின் சகோதரன் காத் என்பவன் இறந்துபோனான். ஒருநாள் அவன் மன்னருக்குக் கனவில் தோன்றி, “சகோதரனே! விண்ணகத்தில் உனக்காக ஓர் அழகு மிளிர்ந்த மாளிகை கட்டப்பட்டிருக்கிறது, மேலும் நீ சிறையில் அடைத்து  வைத்திருக்கும் மனிதர் சாதாரண மனிதர் அல்ல, அவர் கடவுளின் தூதர்” என்று உரைத்தான். இதை அறிந்த மன்னன் சிறையில் இருந்த தோமாவை விடுதலைசெய்து அனுப்பினான். அதோடு மட்டுமல்லாமல் அவரிடமிருந்து திருமுழுக்குப் பெற்று உண்மைக் கிறிஸ்தவனாக வாழத் தொடங்கினார்

திதிம் என அழைக்கப்படும் தோமா கலிலேயாவைச் சார்ந்தவர். இவரும் தூய பேதுரு, அந்திரேயா, யோவான் யாக்கோபு போன்று மீன்பிடித் தொழிலைச் செய்து வந்தார். ஆண்டவர் இயேசு அழைத்த உடன், இவர் எல்லாவற்றையும் விட்டுவிட்டு அவரைப் பின்தொடர்ந்தார். விவிலியத்தில் யோவான் நற்செய்தியைத் தவிர மற்ற நற்செய்தி நூல்களில் இவரைக் குறித்த செய்திகள் காணக் கிடைக்கவில்லை. 



இயேசுவின் நெருங்கிய நண்பரான இலாசர் இறந்தபோது, இயேசு பெத்தானியாவிற்கு செல்லவேண்டும் என்று முடிவெடித்தார். அப்போது சீடர்கள் எல்லாம் இயேசுவிடம், “ரபி, இப்போதுதானே யூதர்கள் உம்மேல் கல்லெறிய முயன்றார்கள்; மீண்டும் அங்குப் போகிறீரா?” என்று சொல்லி அவரைத் தடுத்தார்கள் (யோவா 11:8). ஆனால் தோமாவோ, “நாமும் செல்வோம், அவரோடு இறப்போம்” என்று சொல்லி தான் இயேசுவுக்காக எதையும் செய்யத்  துணிந்தவர் என்பதை வெளிப்படுத்துகிறார்.


இன்னொரு சமயம் இயேசு சீடர்களிடம், “நான் போய் உங்களுக்கு இடம் ஏற்பாடு செய்தபின் திரும்பி வந்து, உங்களை என்னிடம் அழைத்துக்கொள்வேன்” என்று சொல்லும்போது தோமா, “ஆண்டவரே, நீர் எங்கே போகிறீர் என்றே எங்களுக்குத் தெரியாது. அப்படியிருக்க நீர் போகுமிடத்திற்கான வழியை நாங்கள் எப்படித் தெரிந்துகொள்ள இயலும்?” என்பார். அதற்கு இயேசு, “வழியும் உண்மையும் வாழ்வும் நானே. என் வழியாய் அன்றி எவரும் தந்தையிடம் வருவதில்லை” என்பார். (யோவா 14: 1-6). இப்பகுதியில் இயேசு சொன்னது மற்ற சீடர்களுக்கும் புரியாதிருக்கும். ஆனால் அவர்கள் இயேசுவிடம் கேள்வி கேட்கத் துணியவில்லை. தோமாதான் மிகவும் துணிச்சலாக கேள்வியைக் கேட்டு, விளக்கத்தைத் தெரிந்துகொள்கிறார். 



இயேசு தன்னுடைய உயிர்ப்புக்குப் பிறகு, சீடர்களுக்குத் தோன்றினார். அவர் தோன்றிய நேரம் தோமா அங்கு இல்லை. எனவே சீடர்கள் அனைவரும், இயேசு தோன்றிய செய்தியை தோமாவிடம் எடுத்துச் சொன்னபோது, “அவர் நான் அவருடைய கைகளில் ஆணிகளால் ஏற்பட்ட காயங்களில் என் விரலையும், அவருடைய விலாவில் ஏற்பட்ட காயத்தில் என்னுடைய கையை விட்டால் ஒழிய  நம்ப மாட்டேன் “என்கிறார். எட்டு நாட்களுக்குப் பிறகு சீடர்கள் அனைவரும் (தோமாவும் அதில் இருந்தார்) ஒன்றாகக் கூடி வந்தபோது, இயேசு அவர்கள் நடுவே தோன்றி அவர்களை வாழ்த்தினார். பின்னர் தோமாவிடம், “தோமா உம்முடைய விரலை என்னுடைய கையிலும், கையை என்னுடைய விலாவிலும் விட்டுப் பார்” என்று சொல்லிவிட்டு, “ஐயம் தவிர்த்து நம்பிக்கை கொள்” என்பார். அப்போது தோமா, “நீரே என் ஆண்டவர்! நீரே என் கடவுள்!” என்பார் (யோவா 20: 28). இப்பகுதியைக் வைத்து, நிறையப் பேர் ‘தோமா ஒரு சந்தேகப் பேர்வழி’ என்பர். ஆனால் உண்மையில் அவர் முழு உண்மையை அறிந்துகொள்வதற்காக இப்படிச் செயல்பட்டார் என்பதை இங்கே நாம் புரிந்துகொள்ளவேண்டும். “நீரே என் ஆண்டவர்! நீரே என் கடவுள்” என்று தோமா அறிக்கையிட்ட நம்பிக்கை அறிக்கையைப் போன்று வேறு யாரும் இப்படி வெளிப்படுத்தவில்லை என்பதை நாம் புரிந்துகொள்ளவேண்டும்.



இயேசுவின் விண்ணேற்றத்திற்குப் பிறகு, தோமா தற்போதைய ஈரான், பெர்சியா போன்ற பகுதிகளுக்குச் சென்று நற்செய்தி அறிவித்ததாகவும், இறுதியில் இந்தியாவின் தென்பகுதியில் வந்து நற்செய்தி அறிவித்ததாகவும் சொல்லப்படுகின்றது. ஆனால் கிபி. 52 ஆம் ஆண்டு தோமா கேரளாவில் உள்ள கிராங்கநூர் பகுதியில் தரை இறங்கினார் என்றும் அங்கே ஏழு ஆலயங்களைக் கட்டி எழுப்பினார் என்றும் உறுதியாக நம்பப்படுகின்றது. அதற்கு கேரளாவில் உள்ள தோமையார் கிறிஸ்தவர்களே சான்றாக இருக்கின்றார்கள்.

தோமா கிராங்கநூரையும் அதைச் சுற்றியுள்ள பகுதிகளிலும் சில ஆண்டுகள் பணியாற்றிவிட்டு அதன்பிறகு, சென்னையிலுள்ள மயிலாப்பூர் பகுதியில் நற்செய்தி அறிவித்தார். அவருடைய போதனையைக் கேட்டு நிறைய மக்கள் கிறிஸ்தவ மதத்தைப் பின்பற்றினார்கள். இதனால் அவருக்கு இந்து பூசாரிகளிடமிருந்து கடுமையான எதிர்ப்பு வந்தது. ஆனால் தோமா தனக்கு  வந்த எதிர்ப்புகளை எல்லாம் முறியடித்துவிட்டு, தொடர்ந்து நற்செய்தியை அறிவித்து வந்தார். ஒருசமயம் அவர் சின்ன மலையில் ஜெபித்துக்கொண்டிருந்தபோது பகைவர்கள் வந்து, அவர்மீது ஈட்டியைப் பாய்ச்சி அவரைக் கொலை செய்தார்கள். 


இவ்வாறு தோமா, முன்பு சொன்ன,  “வாருங்கள் நாமும் போவோம், அவரோடு இறப்போம்” என்ற வார்த்தையை உண்மையாக்கிக் காட்டினார்.




232 ஆம் ஆண்டு தோமாவின் புனித பொருட்கள் எடேசாவிற்கு கொண்டு செல்லப்பட்டன. 15 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டில் இந்தியாவிற்கு வந்த போர்த்துகீசியர்கள் தோமாவின் கல்லறை இருந்த இடத்தில் ஆலயம் கட்டினார்கள். 1972 ஆம் ஆண்டு அப்போது திருத்தந்தையாக இருந்த, திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பவுல் தோமாவை இந்திய நாட்டின் திருத்தூதராக அறிவித்தார்.

Feastday: July 3

St. Thomas was born a Jew and was called to be one of the twelve Apostles. His birth and death dates are unknown, but his feast day is celebrated July 3. He lived before the formal establishment of the Catholic Church but is recognized as the patron saint of architects.

He was a dedicated but impetuous follower of Christ. When Jesus said He was returning to Judea to visit His sick friend Lazarus, Thomas immediately exhorted the other Apostles to accompany Him on the trip which involved certain danger and possible death because of the mounting hostility of the authorities.

At the Last Supper, when Christ told His disciples that He was going to prepare a place for them to which they also might come because they knew both the place and the way, Thomas pleaded that they did not understand and received the beautiful assurance that Christ is the Way, the Truth, and the Life.



St. Thomas is best known for his role in verifying the Resurrection of his Master. Thomas' unwillingness to believe that the other Apostles had seen their risen Lord on the first Easter Sunday earned him the title of "doubting Thomas."

Eight days later, on Christ's second apparition, Thomas was gently rebuked for his skepticism and furnished with the evidence he had demanded - seeing in Christ's hands the point of the nails. Thomas even put his fingers in the nail holes and his hand into Christ's side. After verifying the wounds were true, St. Thomas became convinced of the reality of the Resurrection and exclaimed, "My Lord and My God," thus making a public Profession of Faith in the Divinity of Jesus.


St. Thomas is also mentioned as being present at another Resurrection appearance of Jesus - at Lake Tiberias, when a miraculous catch of fish occurred.


This is all that we know about St. Thomas from the New Testament. Tradition says that at the dispersal of the Apostles after Pentecost this saint was sent to evangelize to the Parthians, Medes, and Persians. He ultimately reached India, carrying the Faith to the Malabar coast, which still boasts a large native population calling themselves "Christians of St. Thomas."


According to tradition, Thomas was killed in an accident when a fowler shot at a peacock and struck Thomas instead. Following his death, some of his relics were taken to Edessa while the rest were kept in what is now known as India. They can still be found within the San Thome Basilica in Chennai, Mylapore, India.

The relics taken to Edessa were moved in 1258 to Italy, where they can be found in the Cathedral of St. Thomas the Apostle in Ortona, Italy. However, it is believed that Saint Thomas' skull rests in the Monastery of Saint John the Theologian on the Greek Island Patmos.


In art, Saint Thomas is commonly depicted as a young man holding a scroll, or as a young adult touching the resurrected Christ's wounds.


Saint Thomas was mentioned in several texts, including one document called The Passing of Mary, which claims then-apostle Thomas was the only one to witness the Assumption of Mary into heaven, while the other apostles were transported to Jerusalem to witness her death.

While the other apostles were with Mary, Thomas was left in India until after her first burial, when he was transported to her tomb and he saw her bodily assumption into heaven, when her girdle was left behind.

In versions of the story, the other apostles doubted Thomas' words until Mary's tomb was discovered to be empty with the exception of her girdle. Thomas and the girdle were often depicted in medieval and early Renaissance art.


Thomas the Apostle (Biblical Hebrew: תוֹמָאס הקדוש‎; Ancient Greek: Θωμᾶς; Coptic: ⲑⲱⲙⲁⲥ; Classical Syriac: ܬܐܘܡܐ ܫܠܝܚܐ‎ Tʾōmā šliḥā; Malayalam: മാര്‍ തോമാ ശ്ലീഹ mar thoma sliha), also called Didymus ("twin") was one of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus according to the New Testament. Thomas is commonly known as "Doubting Thomas" because he doubted Jesus' resurrection when first told of it (as related in the Gospel of John alone); later, he confessed his faith ("My Lord and my God") on seeing Jesus' crucifixion wounds.

According to traditional accounts of the Saint Thomas Christians of modern-day Kerala in India, Thomas is believed to have travelled outside the Roman Empire to preach the Gospel, travelling as far as the Malabar Coast which is in modern-day Kerala State, India.[1][5][6][7] According to their tradition, Thomas reached Muziris (modern-day North Paravur and Kodungalloor in Kerala State, India) in AD 52.[8][9][1] In 1258, some of the relics were brought to Ortona, in Abruzzo, Italy, where they have been held in the Church of Saint Thomas the Apostle.[10] He is often regarded as the patron saint of India among its Christian adherents,[11][12] and the name Thomas remains quite popular among the Saint Thomas Christians of India.


Gospel of John

Thomas first speaks in the Gospel of John. In John 11:16, when Lazarus has recently died, and the apostles do not wish to go back to Judea, Thomas says: "Let us also go, that we may die with him."[a]


Thomas speaks again in John 14:5. There, Jesus had just explained that he was going away to prepare a heavenly home for his followers, and that one day they would join him there. Thomas reacted by saying, "Lord, we know not whither thou goest; and how can we know the way?"

John 20:24–29 tells how doubting Thomas was skeptical at first when he heard that Jesus had risen from the dead and appeared to the other apostles, saying, "Except I shall see on his hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into his side, I will not believe."[20:25] But when Jesus appeared later and invited Thomas to touch his wounds and behold him, Thomas showed his belief by saying, "My Lord and my God".[20:28] Jesus then said, "Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: blessed [are] they that have not seen, and [yet] have believed."[20:29]


Names and etymologies

The name Thomas (Koine Greek: Θωμᾶς) given for the apostle in the New Testament is derived from the Aramaic תְּאוֹמָא or Classical Syriac: ܬܐܘܿܡܵܐ‎ Tāʾwma/Tʾōmā, equivalently from Hebrew תְּאוֹם tʾóm, meaning "twin". The equivalent term for twin in Greek, which is also used in the New Testament, is Δίδυμος Didymos.

Other names

The Nag Hammadi copy of the Gospel of Thomas begins: "These are the secret sayings that the living Jesus spoke and Didymos, Judas Thomas, recorded." Early Syrian traditions also relate the apostle's full name as Judas Thomas.[b] Some have seen in the Acts of Thomas (written in east Syria in the early 3rd century, or perhaps as early as the first half of the 2nd century) an identification of Thomas with the apostle Judas, Son of James, better known in English as Jude. However, the first sentence of the Acts follows the Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles in distinguishing the apostle Thomas and the apostle Judas son of James. Others, such as James Tabor, identify him as Judah, the brother of Jesus mentioned by Mark. In the Book of Thomas the Contender, part of the Nag Hammadi library, he is alleged to be a twin to Jesus: "Now, since it has been said that you are my twin and true companion, examine yourself…"[13]

A "Doubting Thomas" is a skeptic who refuses to believe without direct personal experience—a reference to the Apostle Thomas, due to his refusal to believe the resurrected Jesus had appeared to the ten other apostles, until he could see and feel the wounds received by Jesus on the cross.

Feast days

When the feast of Saint Thomas was inserted in the Roman calendar in the 9th century, it was assigned to 21 December. The Martyrology of St. Jerome mentioned the apostle on 3 July, the date to which the Roman celebration was transferred in 1969, so that it would no longer interfere with the major ferial days of Advent.[14] Traditionalist Roman Catholics (who follow the General Roman Calendar of 1960 or earlier) and many Anglicans (including members of the Episcopal Church as well as members of the Church of England and the Lutheran Church, who worship according to the 1662 edition of the Book of Common Prayer),[15] still celebrate his feast day on 21 December. However, most modern liturgical calendars (including the Common Worship calendar of the Church of England) prefer 3 July, Thomas is remembered in the Church of England with a Festival.[16]

The Eastern Orthodox and Byzantine Catholic churches celebrate his feast day on 6 October[17] (for those churches which follow the traditional Julian calendar, 6 October currently falls on 19 October of the modern Gregorian calendar). In addition, the next Sunday of the Easter (Pascha) is celebrated as the Sunday of Thomas, in commemoration of Thomas' question to Jesus, which led him to proclaim, according to Orthodox teaching, two natures of Jesus, both human and divine. Thomas is commemorated in common with all of the other apostles on 30 June (13 July), in a feast called the Synaxis of the Holy Apostles.[17] He is also associated with the "Arabian" (or "Arapet") icon of the Theotokos (Mother of God), which is commemorated on 6 September (19 September).[18] The Malankara Orthodox church celebrates his feast on three days, 3 July[19] (in memory of the relic translation to Edessa), 18 December (the Day he was lanced),[19] and 21 December (when he died).[19]


Later history and traditions

The Passing of Mary, adjudged heretical by Pope Gelasius I in 494, was attributed to Joseph of Arimathea.[20][21] The document states that Thomas was the only witness of the Assumption of Mary into heaven. The other apostles were miraculously transported to Jerusalem to witness her death. Thomas was left in India, but after her first burial, he was transported to her tomb, where he witnessed her bodily assumption into heaven, from which she dropped her girdle. In an inversion of the story of Thomas' doubts, the other apostles are skeptical of Thomas' story until they see the empty tomb and the girdle.[22] Thomas' receipt of the girdle is commonly depicted in medieval and pre-Council of Trent Renaissance art,[23][24] the apostle's doubting reduced to a metaphorical knot in the Bavarian baroque Mary Untier of Knots.[citation needed]

During his visit to India in 2006, Pope Benedict XVI said that Thomas had landed in western India, somewhere in modern-day Pakistan and Christianity had spread from there to south India.[25] This is contrary to the popular legend of Thomas' direct visit to Kerala and had kicked off a debate among Christians in Kerala. Some believe that Thomas was indeed Thomas of Cana who arrived in Kerala from the Middle East to India sometime between the 4th and the 9th century.

Mission in India

The Postal Department of India brought out a stamp commemorating his mission to the country.

Main articles: Saint Thomas Christians, Christianity in India, and Christianity in Kerala

Map of ancient Silk Road and Spice Route

According to traditional accounts of the Saint Thomas Christians of India, the Apostle Thomas landed in Muziris (Cranganore) on the Kerala coast in AD 52 and was martyred in Mylapore, near Madras in AD 72.[8][9][1][5] The port was destroyed in 1341 by a massive flood that realigned the coasts. He is believed by the Saint Thomas Christian tradition to have established seven churches (communities) in Kerala. These churches are at Kodungallur, Palayoor, Kottakkavu (Paravur), Kokkamangalam, Niranam, Nilackal (Chayal), Kollam, and Thiruvithamcode.[26] Thomas baptized several families, namely Pakalomattom, Sankarapuri, Palackal, Thayyil, Payyappilly, Kalli, Kaliyankal, and Pattamukku.[27] Other families claim to have origins almost as far back as these, and the religious historian Robert Eric Frykenberg notes that: "Whatever dubious historicity may be attached to such local traditions, there can be little doubt as to their great antiquity or to their great appeal in the popular imagination."


It was to a land of dark people he was sent, to clothe them by Baptism in white robes. His grateful dawn dispelled India's painful darkness. It was his mission to espouse India to the One-Begotten. The merchant is blessed for having so great a treasure. Edessa thus became the blessed city by possessing the greatest pearl India could yield. Thomas works miracles in India, and at Edessa Thomas is destined to baptize peoples perverse and steeped in darkness, and that in the land of India.

— Hymns of Saint Ephrem, edited by Lamy (Ephr. Hymni et Sermones, IV).

... Into what land shall I fly from the just?

I stirred up Death the Apostles to slay, that by their death I might escape their blows.

But harder still am I now stricken: the Apostle I slew in India has overtaken me in Edessa; here and there he is all himself.

There went I, and there was he: here and there to my grief I find him.

— quoted in Medlycott 1905, Ch II

Ephrem the Syrian, a doctor of Syriac Christianity, writes in the forty-second of his "Carmina Nisibina" that the Apostle was put to death in India, and that his remains were subsequently buried in Edessa, brought there by an unnamed merchant.[2]

The tomb of Saint Thomas the Apostle in Mylapore, India

According to Eusebius' record, Thomas and Bartholomew were assigned to Parthia and India.[29][30][31][32][33][34][35][9] The Didascalia (dating from the end of the 3rd century) states, "India and all countries condering it, even to the farthest seas... received the apostolic ordinances from Judas Thomas, who was a guide and ruler in the church which he built."

Thomas is believed to have left northwest India when an attack threatened and traveled by vessel to the Malabar Coast, possibly visiting southeast Arabia and Socotra en route, and landing at the former flourishing port of Muziris (modern-day North Paravur and Kodungalloor)[26] (c. AD 50) in the company of a Jewish merchant Abbanes/Habban (Schonfield, 1984,125). From there he is said to have preached the gospel throughout the Malabar coast. The various churches he founded were located mainly on the Periyar River and its tributaries and along the coast, where there were Jewish colonies. In accordance with apostolic custom, Thomas ordained teachers and leaders or elders, who were reported to be the earliest ministry of the Malankara Church.

Death

Martyrdom of St. Thomas by Peter Paul Rubens, 1636–1638

According to Syrian Christian tradition, Thomas was allegedly martyred at St. Thomas Mount in Chennai on 3 July in AD 72, and his body was interred in Mylapore.[36] Ephrem the Syrian states that the Apostle was killed in India, and that his relics were taken then to Edessa. This is the earliest known record of his death.[37]

The records of Barbosa from early 16th century witness that the tomb was then maintained by a Muslim who kept a lamp burning there.[38] The San Thome Basilica Mylapore, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India presently located at the tomb was first built in the 16th century by the Portuguese and rebuilt in the 19th century.[39] St. Thomas Mount has been a revered site by Muslims, and Christians since at least the 16th century.[40]


Possible visit to China

The alleged visit to China of Thomas is mentioned in the books and church traditions of Saint Thomas Christians in India (Mar Thoma Syrian Church and the Syro-Malabar rites)[41] who, for a part, claim descent from the early Christians evangelized by Thomas the Apostle in AD 52. For example, it is found in the Malayalam ballad Thomas Ramban Pattu (The Song of the Lord Thomas) with the earliest manuscript being from the 17th century. The sources clearly have Thomas coming to India, then to China, and back to India, where he died.[41]

In other attested sources, the tradition of making Thomas the apostle of China is found in the "Law of Christianity" (Fiqh al-naṣrāniyya),[42] a compilation of juridical literature by Ibn al-Ṭayyib (Nestorian theologian and physician who died in 1043 in Baghdad). Later, in the Nomocanon of Abdisho bar Berika (metropolitan of Nisibis and Armenia, died in 1318) and the breviary of the Chaldean Church[43] it is written:

1. Through St. Thomas the error of idolatry vanished from India.

2. Through St. Thomas the Chinese and Ethiopians were converted to the truth.

3. Through St. Thomas they accepted the sacrament of baptism and the adoption of sons.

4. Through St. Thomas they believed in and confessed the Father, the Son, and Holy Spirit.

5. Through St. Thomas they preserved the accepted faith of the one God.

6. Through St. Thomas the life-giving splendors rose in all India.

7. Through St. Thomas the Kingdom of Heaven took wing and ascended to China.

— Translated by Athanasius Kircher in China Illustrata (1667), Office of St. Thomas for the Second Nocturn, Gaza of the Church of St. Thomas of Malabar, Chaldean Breviary

In its nascent form, this tradition is found at the earliest in the Zuqnin Chronicle (775 CE) and may have originated in the late Sasanian period.[44][45] Perhaps it originated as a 3rd-century pseudepigraphon where Thomas would have converted the Magi (in the Gospel of Matthew) to Christianity as they dwelled in the land of Shir (land of Seres, Tarim Basin, near what was the world's easternmost sea for many people in antiquity).[46] Additionally, the testimony of Arnobius of Sicca, active shortly after 300 CE, maintains that the Christian message had arrived in India and among the Persians, Medians, and Parthians (along with the Seres).[47]

Possible travel into Indonesia

According to Kurt E. Koch, Thomas the Apostle possibly traveled into Indonesia via India with Indian traders.[48]

Paraguayan legend

Ancient oral tradition retained by the Guaraní tribes of Paraguay claims that the Apostle Thomas was in Paraguay and preached to them.

in the estate of our college, called Paraguay, and twenty leagues distant from Asumpcion. This place stretches out on one side into a pleasant plain, affording pasture to a vast quantity of cattle; on the other, where it looks towards the south, it is surrounded by hills and rocks; in one of which a cross piled up of three large stones is visited, and held in great veneration by the natives for the sake of St. Thomas; for they believe, and firmly maintain, that the Apostle, seated on these stones as on a chair, formerly preached to the assembled Indians.

— Dobrizhoffer 1822, p. 385

Almost 150 years prior to Dobrizhoffer's arrival in Paraguay, another Jesuit Missionary, F.J. Antonio Ruiz de Montoya recollected the same oral traditions from the Paraguayan tribes. He wrote:

...The paraguayan tribes they have this very curious tradition. They claim that a very holy man (Thomas the Apostle himself), whom they call "Paí Thome", lived amongst them and preached to them the Holy Truth, wandering and carrying a wooden cross on his back.

— Ruiz de Montoya 1639, Ch XVIII

The sole recorded research done about the subject was during José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia's reign after the Independence of Paraguay. This is mentioned by Franz Wisner von Morgenstern, an Austro-Hungarian engineer who served in the Paraguayan armies prior and during the Paraguayan War. According to Von Morgenstern, some Paraguayan miners while working nearby some hills at the Caaguazú Department found some stones with ancient letters carved in them. Dictator Francia sent his finest experts to inspect those stones, and they concluded that the letters carved in those stones were Hebrew-like symbols, but they couldn't translate them nor figure out the exact date when those letters were carved.[49] No further recorded investigations exists, and according to Wisner, people believed that the letters were made by Thomas the Apostle, following the tradition.

Relics

Shrine of Saint Thomas in Mylapore, 18th-century print

Holy relics of Saint Thomas in Mar Mattai Monastery

Relics of Thomas in the Cathedral of Ortona

Mylapore

Traditional accounts say that the Apostle Thomas preached not only in Kerala but also in other parts of Southern India – and a few relics are still kept at San Thome Basilica in Mylapore neighborhood in the central part of the city of Chennai in India.[50] Marco Polo, the Venetian traveller and author of Description of the World, popularly known as Il Milione, is reputed to have visited Southern India in 1288 and 1292. The first date has been rejected as he was in China at the time, but the second date is generally accepted.[50]

Edessa

According to tradition, in AD 232, the greater portion of relics of the Apostle Thomas are said to have been sent by an Indian king and brought from Mylapore to the city of Edessa, Mesopotamia, on which occasion his Syriac Acts were written.

The Indian king is named as "Mazdai" in Syriac sources, "Misdeos" and "Misdeus" in Greek and Latin sources respectively, which has been connected to the "Bazdeo" on the Kushan coinage of Vasudeva I, the transition between "M" and "B" being a current one in Classical sources for Indian names.[51] The martyrologist Rabban Sliba dedicated a special day to both the Indian king, his family, and St Thomas:

Coronatio Thomae apostoli et Misdeus rex Indiae, Johannes eus filius huisque mater Tertia (Coronation of Thomas the Apostle, and Misdeus king of India, together with his son Johannes (thought to be a latinization of Vizan) and his mother Tertia) Rabban Sliba

— Bussagli 1965, p. 255

In the 4th century, the martyrium erected over his burial place brought pilgrims to Edessa. In the 380s, Egeria described her visit in a letter she sent to her community of nuns at home (Itineraria Egeriae):[52]

We arrived at Edessa in the Name of Christ our God, and, on our arrival, we straightway repaired to the church and memorial of saint Thomas. There, according to custom, prayers were made and the other things that were customary in the holy places were done; we read also some things concerning saint Thomas himself. The church there is very great, very beautiful and of new construction, well worthy to be the house of God, and as there was much that I desired to see, it was necessary for me to make a three days' stay there.

According to Theodoret of Cyrrhus, the bones of Saint Thomas were transferred by Cyrus I, Bishop of Edessa, from the martyrium outside of Edessa to a church in the south-west corner of the city on 22 August 394.[53]

In 441, the Magister militum per Orientem Anatolius donated a silver coffin to hold the relics.[54]

In AD 522, Cosmas Indicopleustes (called the Alexandrian) visited the Malabar Coast. He is the first traveller who mentions Syrian Christians in Malabar, in his book Christian Topography. He mentions that in the town of "Kalliana" (Quilon or Kollam) there was a bishop who had been consecrated in Persia.[55]

In 1144, the city was conquered by the Zengids and the shrine destroyed.[54]

Chios and Ortona

Ortona's Basilica of Saint Thomas

The reputed relics of Saint Thomas remained at Edessa until they were translated to Chios in 1258.[56] Some portion of the relics were later transported to the West, and now rest in the Cathedral of St. Thomas the Apostle in Ortona, Italy. However, the skull of Thomas is said to be at Monastery of Saint John the Theologian on the Greek island of Patmos.[57]

Ortona's three galleys reached the island of Chios in 1258, led by General Leone Acciaiuoli. Chios was considered the island where Thomas, after his death in India, had been buried. A portion fought around the Peloponnese and the Aegean islands, the other in the sea lapping at the then Syrian coast. The three galleys of Ortona moved on the second front of the war and reached the island of Chios.

The tale is provided by Giambattista De Lectis, physician and writer of the 16th century of Ortona. After the looting, the navarca Ortona Leone went to pray in the main church of the island of Chios and was drawn to a chapel adorned and resplendent with lights. An elderly priest, through an interpreter informed him that in that oratory was venerated the Body of Saint Thomas the Apostle. Leone, filled with an unusual sweetness, gathered in deep prayer. At that moment a light hand twice invited him to come closer. The navarca Leone reached out and took a bone from the largest hole of the tombstone, on which were carved the Greek letters and a halo depicted a bishop from the waist up. He was the confirmation of what he had said the old priest and that you are indeed in the presence of the Apostle's body. He went back on the galley and planned the theft for the next night, along with fellow Ruggiero Grogno. They lifted the heavy gravestone and watched the underlying relics. The wrapped in snow-white cloths them laid in a wooden box (stored at Ortona to the looting of 1566) and brought them aboard the galley. Leone, then, along with other comrades, he returned again in the church, took the tombstone and took her away. Just the Chinardo admiral was aware of the precious cargo moved all the sailors of the Muslim faith on other ships and ordered him to take the route to Ortona.

Portal of Ortona, St Thomas' Basilica

He landed at the port of Ortona 6 September 1258. According to the story of De Lectis, he was informed the abbot Jacopo responsible for Ortona Church, which predispose full provision for hospitality felt and shared by all the people. Since then the body of the apostle and the gravestone are preserved in the crypt of the Basilica. In 1259 a parchment written in Bari by the court under John Peacock contracts, the presence of five witnesses, preserved in Ortona at the Diocesan Library, confirming the veracity of that event, reported, as mentioned, by Giambattista De Lectis, physician and writer Ortona of the 16th century.

The relics resisted both the Saracen looting of 1566, and the destruction of the Nazis in the battle of Ortona fought in late December 1943. The basilica was blown up because the belfry was considered a lookout point by the allies, coming by sea from San Vito Chietino. The relics, together with the treasure of Saint Thomas, were intended by the Germans to be sold, but the monks entombed them inside the bell tower, the only surviving part of the semi-ruined church.

Original Chios' tombstone of Thomas, brought in the crypt of Ortona's Basilica

The tombstone of Thomas, brought to Ortona from Chios along with the relics of the Apostle, is currently preserved in the crypt of St Thomas Basilica, behind the altar. The urn containing the bones instead is placed under the altar. It is the cover of a fake coffin, fairly widespread burial form in the early Christian world, as the top of a tomb of less expensive material. The plaque has an inscription and a bas-relief that refer, in many respects, to the Syro-Mesopotamian. Tombstone Thomas the Apostle on inclusion can be read, in Greek characters uncial, the expression 'osios thomas, that Saint Thomas. It can be dated from the point of view palaeographic and lexical to the 3rd–5th century, a time when the term osios is still used as a synonym of aghios in that holy is he that is in the grace of God and is inserted in the church: the two vocabulary, therefore, indicate the Christians. In the particular case of Saint Thomas' plaque, then, the word osios can easily be the translation of the word Syriac mar (Lord), attributed in the ancient world, but also to the present day, is a saint to be a bishop.

Iraq

The finger bones of Saint Thomas were discovered during restoration work at the Church of Saint Thomas in Mosul, Iraq in 1964,[58] and were housed there until the Fall of Mosul, after which the relics were transferred to the Monastery of Saint Matthew on 17 June 2014.[59][60]

Historical references

By the command of an Indian King he was thrust through with Lances

A number of early Christian writings written during the centuries immediately following the first Ecumenical Council of 325 mention Thomas' mission.

The Transitus Mariae describes each of the apostles purportedly being temporarily transported to heaven during the Assumption of Mary.

Acts of Thomas

The main source is the apocryphal Acts of Thomas, sometimes called by its full name The Acts of Judas Thomas, written circa 180–230 AD/CE,[61][62] These are generally regarded by various Christian religions as apocryphal, or even heretical. The two centuries that lapsed between the life of the apostle and the recording of this work cast doubt on their authenticity.

The king, Misdeus (or Mizdeos), was infuriated when Thomas converted the queen Tertia, the king's son Juzanes, sister-in-law princess Mygdonia and her friend Markia. Misdeus led Thomas outside the city and ordered four soldiers to take him to the nearby hill, where the soldiers speared Thomas and killed him. After Thomas' death, Syphorus was elected the first presbyter of Mazdai by the surviving converts, while Juzanes was the first deacon. (The names Misdeus, Tertia, Juzanes, Syphorus, Markia and Mygdonia (c.f. Mygdonia, a province of Mesopotamia) may suggest Greek descent or cultural influences.[62] Greek traders had long visited Muziris. Greek kingdoms in northern India and Bactria, founded by Alexander the Great, were vassals[dubious – discuss] of the Indo-Parthians.[63]

Doctrine of the Apostles

The Doctrine of the Apostles as reflected in Cureton 1864, pp. 32–34 attests that Thomas had written Christian doctrine from India.

India and all its own countries, and those bordering on it, even to the farther sea, received the Apostle's hand of Priesthood from Judas Thomas, who was Guide and Ruler in the Church which he built and ministered there". In what follows "the whole Persia of the Assyrians and Medes, and of the countries round about Babylon… even to the borders of the Indians and even to the country of Gog and Magog" are said to have received the Apostles' Hand of Priesthood from Aggaeus the disciple of Addaeus

— Cureton 1864, p. 33

Origen

Christian philosopher Origen taught with great acclaim in Alexandria and then in Caesarea.[64] He is the first known writer to record the casting of lots by the Apostles. Origen's original work has been lost, but his statement about Parthia falling to Thomas has been preserved by Eusebius. "Origen, in the third chapter of his Commentary on Genesis, says that, according to tradition, Thomas's allotted field of labour was Parthia".[65][66][67]

Eusebius

Quoting Origen, Eusebius of Caesarea says: "When the holy Apostles and disciples of our Saviour were scattered over all the world, Thomas, so the tradition has it, obtained as his portion Parthia…"[68] "Judas, who is also called Thomas" has a role in the legend of king Abgar of Edessa (Urfa), for having sent Thaddaeus to preach in Edessa after the Ascension[69][32] Ephrem the Syrian also recounts this legend.)[70]


Ephrem the Syrian

Many devotional hymns composed by Ephrem the Syrian bear witness to the Edessan Church's strong conviction concerning Thomas's Indian Apostolate. There the devil speaks of Thomas as "the Apostle I slew in India". Also, "The merchant brought the bones" to Edessa.[71]

Another hymn eulogizing Saint Thomas reads "The bones the merchant hath brought". "In his several journeyings to India/ And thence on his return/ All riches/ which there he found/ Dirt in his eyes he did repute when to thy sacred bones compared". In yet another hymn Ephrem speaks of the mission of Thomas: "The earth darkened with sacrifices' fumes to illuminate", "a land of people dark fell to thy lot", "a tainted land Thomas has purified"; "India's dark night" was "flooded with light" by Thomas.


— Medlycott 1905, pp. 21–32[dubious – discuss][better source needed]

Gregory of Nazianzus

Gregory of Nazianzus was born AD 330, consecrated a bishop by his friend Basil of Caesarea; in 372, his father, the Bishop of Nazianzus, induced him to share his charge. In 379, the people of Constantinople called him to be their bishop. By the Orthodox Church, he is emphatically called "the Theologian".[72] "What? were not the Apostles strangers amidst the many nations and countries over which they spread themselves? … Peter indeed may have belonged to Judea, but what had Paul in common with the gentiles, Luke with Achaia, Andrew with Epirus, John with Ephesus, Thomas with India, Mark with Italy?"[73][better source needed]

Ambrose of Milan

Ambrose of Milan was thoroughly acquainted with the Greek and Latin Classics and had a good deal of information on India and Indians. He speaks of the Gymnosophists of India, the Indian Ocean, the river Ganges etc., a number of times.[74] "This admitted of the Apostles being sent without delay according to the saying of our Lord Jesus… Even those Kingdoms which were shut out by rugged mountains became accessible to them, as India to Thomas, Persia to Matthew..."[75][better source needed]

Gregory of Tours

The testimony of Gregory of Tours (died 594): "Thomas the Apostle, according to the narrative of his martyrdom is stated to have suffered in India. His holy remains (corpus), after a long interval of time, were removed to the city of Edessa in Syria and there interred. In that part of India where they first rested, stand a monastery and a church of striking dimensions, elaborately adorned and designed. This Theodore, who had been to the place, narrated to us."[76]

Writings

Let none read the gospel according to Thomas, for it is the work, not of one of the twelve apostles, but of one of Mani's three wicked disciples.

 Cyril of Jerusalem, Cathechesis V (4th century)

In the first two centuries of the Christian era, a number of writings were circulated. It is unclear now why Thomas was seen as an authority for doctrine, although this belief is documented in Gnostic groups as early as the Pistis Sophia. In that Gnostic work, Mary Magdalene (one of the disciples) says:

Now at this time, my Lord, hear, so that I speak openly, for thou hast said to us "He who has ears to hear, let him hear:" Concerning the word which thou didst say to Philip: "Thou and Thomas and Matthew are the three to whom it has been given… to write every word of the Kingdom of the Light, and to bear witness to them"; hear now that I give the interpretation of these words. It is this which thy light-power once prophesied through Moses: "Through two and three witnesses everything will be established. The three witnesses are Philip and Thomas and Matthew"

 Pistis Sophia 1:43

An early, non-Gnostic tradition may lie behind this statement, which also emphasizes the primacy of the Gospel of Matthew in its Aramaic form, over the other canonical three.

Besides the Acts of Thomas there was a widely circulated Infancy Gospel of Thomas probably written in the later 2nd century, and probably also in Syria, which relates the miraculous events and prodigies of Jesus' boyhood. This is the document which tells for the first time the familiar legend of the twelve sparrows which Jesus, at the age of five, fashioned from clay on the Sabbath day, which took wing and flew away. The earliest manuscript of this work is a 6th-century one in Syriac. This gospel was first referred to by Irenaeus; Ron Cameron notes: "In his citation, Irenaeus first quotes a non-canonical story that circulated about the childhood of Jesus and then goes directly on to quote a passage from the infancy narrative of the Gospel of Luke.[Luke 2:49] Since the Infancy Gospel of Thomas records both of these stories, in relative close proximity to one another, it is possible that the apocryphal writing cited by Irenaeus is, in fact, what is now known as the Infancy Gospel of Thomas. Because of the complexities of the manuscript tradition, however, there is no certainty as to when the stories of the Infancy Gospel of Thomas began to be written down."

The best known in modern times of these documents is the "sayings" document that is being called the Gospel of Thomas, a noncanonical work whose date is disputed. The opening line claims it is the work of "Didymos Judas Thomas" – whose identity is unknown. This work was discovered in a Coptic translation in 1945 at the Egyptian village of Nag Hammadi, near the site of the monastery of Chenoboskion. Once the Coptic text was published, scholars recognized that an earlier Greek translation had been published from fragments of papyrus found at Oxyrhynchus in the 1890s.

Saint Thomas Cross

Saint Thomas Christian cross

In the 16th-century work Jornada, Antonio Gouvea writes of ornate crosses known as Saint Thomas Crosses. It is also known as Nasrani Menorah,[77] Persian Cross, or Mar Thoma Sleeva.[78] These crosses are believed to date from the 6th century as per the tradition and are found in a number of churches in Kerala, Mylapore and Goa. Jornada is the oldest known written document to refer to this type of cross as a Saint Thomas Cross. Gouvea also writes about the veneration of the Cross at Cranganore, referring to the cross as "Cross of Christians".



There are several interpretations of the Nasrani symbol. The interpretation based on Christian Jewish tradition assumes that its design was based on Jewish menorah, an ancient symbol of the Hebrews, which consists of seven branched lamp stand (candelabra).[77] The interpretation based on local culture states that the Cross without the figure of Jesus and with flowery arms symbolizing "joyfulness" points to the resurrection theology of Paul the Apostle; the Holy Spirit on the top represents the role of Holy Spirit in the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The lotus symbolizing Buddhism and the Cross over it shows that Christianity was established in the land of Buddha. The three steps indicate Calvary and the rivulets, channels of Grace flowing from the Cross.[79]

In Islam

The Qur’anic account of the disciples of Jesus does not include their names, numbers, or any detailed accounts of their lives. Muslim exegesis, however, more or less agrees with the New Testament list and says that the disciples included Peter, Philip, Thomas, Bartholomew, Matthew, Andrew, James, Jude, John, and Simon the Zealot


 St. Joseph Peter Uyen


Feastday: July 3

Death: 1838

Canonized: Pope John Paul II


Dominican tertiary, martyr of Vietnam. A native catechist, he died of abuse in prison for refusing to give up the faith and was canonized in 1988 by Pope John Paul II.



St. Gunthiern


Feastday: July 3

Death: 500


Welsh prince who became a hermit in Brittany, France.



St. Phocas the Gardener


Feastday: July 3

Death: 303


Martyred Christian gardener who lived at Sinope, in Paphiagonia, on the Black Sea and was put to death during the persecutions launched by Emperor Diocletian. Phocas is sometimes confused with Phocas of Antioch, although there is no doubt about the historical act of his martyrdom. According to tradition, he gave welcome to the Roman soldiers sent to find and execute him and, as they did not know who he was, he agreed to take them to the Phocas whom they sought. After fixing them food and allowing them to sleep in his house, he went out and dug his grave, using the rest of the night to prepare his soul. In the morning he led them to his prepared grave and informed them of his identity. When they were aghast and hesitated to slay him, he encouraged them to complete their task and behead him. He is especially venerated in the East and was long considered a patron saint for sailors.


ST. PHOCUS dwelt near the gate of Sinope, a city of Pontus, and lived by cultivating a garden, which yielded him a handsome subsistence, and wherewith plentifully to relieve the indigent. In his humble profession he imitated the virtue of the most holy anchorets, and seemed in part restored to the happy condition of our first parents in Eden. To prune the garden without labour and toil was their sweet employment and pleasure. Since their sin, the earth yields not its fruit but by the sweat of our brow. But still, no labour is more useful or necessary, or more natural to man, and better adapted to maintain in him vigour of mind or health of body than that of tillage; nor does any other part of the universe rival the innocent charms which a garden presents to all our senses, by the fragrancy of its flowers, by the riches of its produce, and the sweetness and variety of its fruits; by the melodious concert of its musicians, by the worlds of wonders which every stem, leaf, and fibre exhibit to the contemplation of the inquisitive philosopher, and by that beauty and variegated lustre of colours which clothe the numberless tribes of its smallest inhabitants, and adorn its shining landscapes, vying with the brightest splendour of the heavens, and in a single lily surpassing the dazzling lustre with which Solomon was surrounded on his throne in the midst of all his glory. And what a field for contemplation does a garden offer to our view in every part, raising our souls to God in raptures of love and praise, stimulating us to fervour, by the fruitfulness with which it repays our labour, and multiplies the seed it receives; and exciting us to tears of compunction for our insensibility to God by the barrenness with which it is changed into a frightful desert, unless subdued by assiduous toil! Our saint joining prayer with his labour, found in his garden itself an instructive book, and an inexhausted fund of holy meditation. His house was open to all strangers and travellers who had no lodging in the place; and after having for many years most liberally bestowed the fruit of his labour on the poor, he was found worthy also to give his life for Christ. Though his profession was obscure, he was well known over the whole country by the reputation of his charity and virtue.


When a cruel persecution, probably that of Dioclesian in 303, was suddenly raised in the church, Phocas was immediately impeached as a Christian, and such was the notoriety of his pretended crime, that the formality of a trial was superceded by the persecutors, and executioners were despatched with an order to kill him on the spot wherever they should find him. Arriving near Sinope, they would not enter the town, but stopping at his house without knowing it, at his kind invitation they took up their lodging with him. Being charmed with his courteous entertainment, they at supper disclosed to him the errand upon which they were sent, and desired him to inform them where this Phocas could be most easily met with? The servant of God, without the least surprise, told them he was well acquainted with the man, and would give them certain intelligence of him next morning. After they were retired to bed he dug a grave, prepared everything for his burial, and spent the night in disposing his soul for his last hour. When it was day he went to his guests, and told them Phocas was found, and in their power whenever they pleased to apprehend him. Glad at this news, they inquired where he was. "He is here present," said the martyr, "I myself am the man." Struck at his undaunted resolution, and at the composure of his mind, they stood a considerable time as if they had been motionless, nor could they at first think of imbruing their hands in the blood of a person in whom they discovered so heroic a virtue, and by whom they had been so courteously entertained. He indirectly encouraged them, saying, that as for himself, he looked upon such a death as the greatest of favours, and his highest advantage. At length recovering themselves from their surprise, they struck off his head. The Christians of that city, after peace was restored to the church, built a stately church which bore his name, and was famous over all the East. In it were deposited the sacred relics, though some portions of them were dispersed in other churches.


St. Asterius, bishop of Amasea about the year 400, pronounced the panegyric of this martyr, on his festival, in a church, probably near Amasea, which possessed a small part of his remains. In this discourse 1 he says, "that Phocas from the time of his death was become a pillar and support of the churches on earth: he draws all men to his house; the highways are filled with persons resorting from every country to this place of prayer. The magnificent church which (at Sinope) is possessed of his body, is the comfort and ease of the afflicted, the health of the sick, the magazine plentifully supplying the wants of the poor. If in any other place, as in this, some small portion of his relics be found, it also becomes admirable, and most desired by all Christians." He adds, that the head of St. Phocas was kept in his beautiful church in Rome, and says, "The Romans honour him by the concourse of the whole people in the same manner they do Peter and Paul." He bears testimony that the sailors in the Euxine, Ćgean, and Adriatic seas, and in the ocean, sing hymns in his honour, and that the martyr has often succoured and preserved them; and that the portion of gain which they in every voyage set apart for the poor is called Phocas's part. He mentions that a certain king of barbarians had sent his royal diadem set with jewels, and his rich helmet a present to the church of St. Phocas, praying the martyr to offer it to the Lord in thanksgiving for the kingdom which his Divine Majesty had bestowed upon him. St. Chrysostom received a portion of the relics of St. Phocas, not at Antioch, as Baronius thought, and as Fronto le Duc and Baillet doubt, but at Constantinople as Montfaucon demonstrates. 2 On that solemn occasion the city kept a great festival two days, and St. Chrysostom preached two sermons, only one of which is extant. 3 In this he says, that the emperors left their palaces to reverence these relics, and strove to share with the rest in the blessings which they procure men. The emperor Phocas built afterwards another great church at Constantinople in honour of this martyr, and caused a considerable part of his relics to be translated thither. The Greeks often style St. Phocas hiero-martyr or sacred martyr, which epithet they sometimes give to eminent martyrs who were not bishops, as Ruinart demonstrates against Baronius.


Saint Phocas, sometimes called Phocas the Gardener (Greek:Φωκᾶς), is venerated as a martyr by the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches. His life and legend may have been a fusion of three men with the same name: a Phocas of Antioch, a Phocas the Gardener and Phocas, Bishop of Sinope


Saint Anatolius of Alexandria

 அலெக்சாண்ட்ரியாவின் புனிதர் அனடோலியஸ் 


(St. Anatolius of Alexandria)

ஆயர், ஒப்புரவாளர்:

(Bishop and Confessor)

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. மூன்றாம் நூற்றாண்டின் தொடக்க காலம்

அலெக்சாண்ட்ரியா, டோலேமெய்க் அரசு, எகிப்து

(Alexandria, Ptolemaic Egypt)

இறப்பு: ஜூலை 3, 283

லாவோடிசியா, ரோம சிரியா (தற்போதைய சிரியாவிலுள்ள லடகியா)

(Laodicea, Roman Syria (Now Latakia, Syria)

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)



நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஜூலை 3

“லாவோடிசியா’வின் அனடோலியஸ்” (Anatolius of Laodicea) என்றும், “அலெக்சாண்ட்ரியா’வின் அனடோலியஸ்” (Anatolius of Alexandria) என்றும் அழைக்கப்படும் இப்புனிதர், ரோம சிரியாவின் (Roman Syria) மத்தியதரைக் கடலோரமுள்ள (Mediterranean) துறைமுக நகரான “லாவோடிசியா” (Laodicea) நகரின் ஆயர் ஆவார். அத்துடன், இயல்பியல் (Physical sciences) மற்றும் “அரிஸ்டோடிலியன் தத்துவத்தில்” (Aristotelean philosophy) அக்காலத்தைய முன்னோடி அறிஞர்களில் ஒருவராகவும் இருந்தார். ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை (Roman Catholic Churches) மற்றும் கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபைகள் (Eastern Orthodox) இவரை புனிதராக ஏற்கின்றன.

புனிதர் அனடோலியஸ், கி.பி. மூன்றாம் நூற்றாண்டின் தொடக்க காலத்தில், எகிப்து (Egypt) நாட்டின் இரண்டாம் பெரிய நகரான அலெக்சாண்ட்ரியாவில் (Alexandria) பிறந்து வளர்ந்தவர் ஆவார். திருச்சபையின் பெரும் விளக்குகளில் ஒன்றாக மாறுவதற்கு முன்பு, அனடோலியஸ் அலெக்ஸாண்ட்ரியாவில் கணிசமான கௌரவமுள்ள பெரிய மனிதராக வாழ்ந்தார். கணிதம், வடிவவியல் (Geometry), இயற்பியல் (Physics), சொல்லாட்சிக் கலை (Rhetoric), “வாதமுறை ஆராய்ச்சி” (Dialectic) மற்றும் வானியல் (Astronomy) ஆகியவற்றைப் பற்றிய ஒரு பெரும் அறிவைப் பெற்றிருந்தார். கிறிஸ்தவ சரித்திர ஆசிரியரான “யூசேபியஸ்” (Eusebius of Caesarea) என்பவரின்படி, அலெக்ஸாண்டிரியாவிலுள்ள அரிஸ்டாட்டிலின் அடுத்தடுத்த பள்ளியைத் தக்கவைத்துக்கொள்ள அனடோலியஸ் தகுதியுடையவராக கருதப்பட்டார். புறமத பாகன் தத்துவவாதியான “இம்பம்லிகஸ்” (Pagan Philosopher) என்பவர், சிறிது காலம் இவரது சீடர்களிடையே கல்வி கற்றார்.


அவரால் எழுதப்பட்ட பத்து கணிதப் புத்தகங்களின் துண்டுகளும், இயேசுநாதர் உயிர்த்தெழுந்த கொண்டாட்ட நாள் பற்றிய (Paschal celebration) கட்டுரைகளும் இன்றளவும் உள்ளன.

அக்காலத்தில், அலெக்ஸாண்டிரியாவின் ஒரு பகுதியாயிருந்த “புருச்சியம்” (Bruchium) பிராந்தியத்தில் நடந்த கலகத்தை அனடோலியாஸ் எவ்வாறு உடைத்தெறிந்தார் என்பதையும் யூசெபிசியஸ் எழுதியுள்ளார். ஜெனோபியாவின் (Zenobia) படைகளால் நடத்தப்பட்ட அந்த கலகம், ரோமர்களால் கடுமையாக பாதிக்கப்பட்டு பட்டினியாய் இருந்தது. அந்த நேரத்தில் புரூச்சியத்தில் (Bruchium) வாழ்ந்த துறவி, எல்லா பெண்களையும் குழந்தைகளையும், வயதான மற்றும் நோயாளிகளையும் அங்கிருந்து தப்பிப்பதற்கு ஏற்பாடு செய்தார். அது பாதுகாப்பு மற்றும் கிளர்ச்சியாளர்களை சரணடைய வைத்தது. இது, பாதிக்கப்பட்ட பல மக்களை காப்பாற்றியது, இத்துறவியின் நாட்டுப் பற்றுள்ள நடவடிக்கையாக அமைந்தது.

“லாவோடிசியா” (Laodicea) புறப்பட்ட அவரை, மக்கள் பிடித்து ஆயராக்கினார்கள். அவரது நண்பர் யூசேபியஸ் இறந்துவிட்டாரா அல்லது அவர்கள் இருவரும் சேர்ந்தே சேவை செய்தார்களா என்பது விவாதத்திற்குரிய விஷயமாகவே இருந்தது.

Also known as

Anatolius of Laodicea


Profile

Noted scientist, philosopher, scholar, teacher, and writer. He wrote ten books on mathematics alone, and Saint Jerome praised his scholarship and writing. Head of the Aristotlean school in Alexandria, Egypt. However, he was known not just as a scholar but as a humble and deeply religious man. Ignorance horrified him, and part of his work with the poor was to educate them. Held a number of government posts in Alexandria.


During a rebellion against the Roman authorities in 263, the area of Alexandria was under seige, resulting in the starvation of both rebels and citizens who had nothing to do with the uprising. Anatolius met with the Romans and negotiated the release of non-combatant children, women, the sick, and the elderly, saving many, and earning him a reputation as a peacemaker. The rebels, freed of caring for the non-combatants, were able to fight even longer. However, when they lost, Anatolius found himself with enemies on each side of the conflict, and he decided to leave Alexandria.


Anatolius emigrated to Caesaria, Palestine. His reputation as a scholar and Christian had preceeded him, and he became assistant and advisor to the bishop. In 268, while en route to the Council of Antioch, he passed through Laodicea, Syria. Their bishop, Saint Eusebius of Laodicea, had just died, they saw Anatolius' arrival as a gift from God, and insisted that he assume the bishopric. He accepted, and spent his remaining fifteen years there.


Born

Alexandria, Egypt


Died

283 at Laodicea, Syria of natural causes



Saint Eusebius of Laodicea


Also known as

• Eusebius of Alexandria

• Eusebio of...


Profile

Deacon in Alexandria, Egypt, serving under Saint Dionysius the Great. Exiled to Kefro, Libya in the persecutions of emperor Valerian c.255 for refusing to sacrifice to idols, Eusebius went into hiding to avoid the sentence, ministered to other covert Christians for several years, and cared for the sick during a plague outbreak in 260. Negotiated the surrender of women, children and elderly men to Roman troops during a siege of the Brucchium section of Alexandria. Represented his bishop at the Synod of Antioch which dealt with the heresey of Paul of Samosata and the false doctrines of Adoptionism and Monarchianism. Bishop of Laodicea, Syria (modern Latakia, Syria). A shory biography of him was included by Saint Eusebius of Caesarea in his Church History.


Born

3rd century Egypt


Died

269 in Laodicea, Syria (modern Latakia, Syria) of natural causes



Saint Anatolius of Constantinople


Profile

Patriarch of Constantinople from 449 to 458. Known for his simple, austere life, his charity to the poor, his zeal for the faith, and his opposition to heresy. He opposed the heretic Dioscurus at the Council of Chalcedon, and supported the doctrinal authority of Pope Saint Leo the Great, which put him in the midst of both theological and political turmoil. He fought against the Nestorian heresy at the Council of Ephesus. Miraculously healed from a serious illness by Saint Daniel the Stylite. May have been murdered by local heretics for his support of the Pope. Some of his writings, correspondence and hymns have survived the centuries.


Died

458 of unknown circumstances



Saint Gunthiern


Profile

Prince who became a hermit in Brittany. The local lord, Grallon, gave Gunthiern land on the Isle of Groie, near River Blavet to found a monastery. It survives today as the Benedictine house of Kemperle.


Legend says that insects once threatened to destroy the region's crops. Count Guerech I of Vannes, France, requested the saint's help. Gunthiern blessed some water and had it sprinkled over the fields. The insects fled, and the crops were saved.


Born

Welsh


Died

• c.500 in Brittany (in modern France) of natural causes

• his body was hidden during the Norman invasions, and was lost for a while

• remains re-discovered in the 11th century

• relics were translated to the Kemperle monastery



Saint Giuse Nguyen Ðình Uyen


Also known as

• Giuseppe Nguyen Dinh Uyen

• Joseph Peter Uyen



Additional Memorial

24 November as one of the Martyrs of Vietnam


Profile

Layman Dominican tertiary and catechist. Died after being imprisoned for his faith during the persecutions of Emperor Minh Mang. Martyr.


Born

c.1775 in Ninh Cuong, Nam Ðinh, East Tonkin (in modern Vietnam)


Died

4 July 1838 in prison in Hung Yên, East Tonkin (modern Viet Nam from the ill treatment he received there


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Raymond of Toulouse

Also known as

• Raymond Gayrard

• Raimund, Raimundus


Profile

Married layman. Widower. Cantor, archdeacon and canon of Saint Sernin church in Toulouse, France. Helped rebuild the church. Known for his austere lifestyle, charity and generosity to the poor, and his good relations with the local Jewish community.


Born

at Toulouse, France as Raymond Gayrard


Died

• 3 July 1118 of natural causes

• many miracles reported at his tomb, and the church became a popular pilgrimage site


Beatified

1652 by Pope Innocent X (cultus confirmation)



Pope Saint Leo II


Profile

Pope. Eloquent preacher. Interested in music. Noted for his charity to the poor. Confirmed the Sixth Council of Constantinople in 681 which condemned Monthelitism and censured Pope Honorius I for not doing the same. Secured revocation of the edict of Constans II which proclaimed the bishops of Ravenna, Italy free from the direct jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome.


Born

Sicilian



Papal Ascension

• elected 10 January 681

• consecrated on 17 August 682


Died

28 June 683 in Rome, Italy of natural causes



Saint Ioannes Baptista Zhao Mingxi


Also known as

• Zhao Mingxi Ioannes Baptista

• Ruohan

• Giovan Battista Zhao Mingxi



Profile

Layman Christian in the apostolic vicariate of Southeastern Zhili, China. Martyred in the Boxer Rebellion while trying to rescue some women and children from the rebels.


Born

c.1844 in Beiwangtou, Shenzhou, Hebei, China


Died

3 July 1900 in Beiwangtou, Shenzhou, Hebei, China


Canonized

1 October 2000 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Heliodorus of Altinum


Also known as

• Heliodorus of Altino

• Eliodoro...



Profile

A soldier in his youth. Close friend and financial supporter of Saint Jerome, and helped with the logistics of the translation of the Vulgate Bible. Followed Jerome to the east, but declined the life of a desert hermit. Bishop of Altinum, a small town near Venice, Italy which has since disappeared. Fierce opponent of Arianism.


Born

332 at Dalmatia


Died

390 at Altino, Italy of natural causes



Saint Philiphê Phan Van Minh


Also known as

• Filippo Phan Van Minh

• Philip Minh



Profile

Priest in the the apostolic vicariate of West Cochinchina (in modern Vietnam). Member of the Paris Society for Foreign Missions. Martyred in the persecutions of Emperor Tu-Duc.


Born

c.1815 at Cái Mon, Vinh Long, West Cochin-China (modern Vietnam)


Died

beheaded on 3 July 1853 at Ðinh Khao, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Petrus Zhao Mingzhen


Also known as

• Baiduo

• Zhao Mingzhen Petrus

• Pietro Zhao Mingzhen



Profile

Layman Christian in the apostolic vicariate of Southeastern Zhili, China. Martyred in the Boxer Rebellion while trying to rescue some women and children from the rebels.


Born

c.1839 in Beiwangtou, Shenzhou, Hebei, China


Died

3 July 1900 in Beiwangtou, Shenzhou, Hebei, China


Canonized

1 October 2000 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Barbara Jeong Sun-Mae


Additional Memorial

20 September as one of the Martyrs of Korea


Profile

Lay woman martyr in the apostolic vicariate of Korea. Convert to Catholicism. Moving to Seoul, she founded a group of other Christian lay women who wanted to live in community. Martyr.



Born

1777 in Yeoju, Gyeonggi-do, South Korea


Died

3 - 4 July 1801 in Yeoju, Gyeonggi-do, South Korea


Beatified

15 August 2014 by Pope Francis



Blessed Andreas Ebersbach

Profile

Premonstratensian monk. Canon of the monastery in Teplá, Bohemia (in the modern Czech Republic). Abbot of Teplá in 1599; he served in that office for 30 years. Known for his strict adhereance to the Rule of his Order, and commended by diocesan authorities for his work as a Christian catechist and apologist.


Born

c.1554 in the modern Czech Republic


Died

3 July 1629 of natural causes



Saint Irenaeus of Chiusi

Also known as

Ireneo


Profile

Deacon. Tortured and martyred with Saint Mustiola for ministering to Christian prisoners, and giving proper burial to martyrs.


Died

273 at Chiusi, Tuscany, Italy


Patronage

Chiusi, Italy




Saint Germanus of Man


Also known as

Germain, German, Jarman



Profile

Nephew of Saint Patrick. Missionary monk in Ireland, Wales and Brittany. Bishop on the Isle of Man where several locations are still named for him.


Died

c.474 of natural causes



Saint Dathus of Ravenna


Also known as

Datus, Dathius


Profile

Bishop of Ravenna, Italy during the reign of the Roman emperor Commodus. Elected to the see when a dove miraculously appeared over his head during the deliberations.


Died

190 of natural causes




Saint Hyacinth of Caesarea


Profile

Chamberlain to the emperor Trajan at Caesarea, Cappadocia. Imprisoned for his faith, his only food was meat that had been offered to idols; he starved rather than touch it. Martyr.


Died

starved to death c.120 in Caesarea, Cappadocia (in modern Turkey)



Saint Mennone the Centurian


Also known as

Memnon


Profile

Centurian in the imperial army in the reign of Diocletian and Maximian. Convert, brought to the faith by Saint Severus. Tortured and murdered for his new faith. Martyr.


Died

Byzie, Thrace (modern Vize, turkey)



Saint Firminus of Apsaros


Profile

One of seven Christian brothers who were soldiers in the imperial Roman army. Kicked out of the military, exiled and eventually martyred in the persecutions of Maximian.


Died

c.311 at Apsaros (in modern Georgia)



Saint Firmus of Apsaros


Profile

One of seven Christian brothers who were soldiers in the imperial Roman army. Kicked out of the military, exiled and eventually martyred in the persecutions of Maximian.


Died

c.311 at Apsaros (in modern Georgia)



Saint Guthagon


Profile

May have been Irish royalty. Hermit at Oostkerk, Flanders, Belgium.


Born

Eighth century Ireland


Died

• in Belgium of natural causes

• many miracles reported at this tomb

• relics translated on 3 July 1059



Saint Mark of Mesia


Profile

Martyr of the early Church for refusing to sacrifice to idols.



Died

beheaded in Mesia (in modern Spain)



Saint Maelmuire O'Gorman


Also known as

Marianus O'Gorman


Profile

Abbot of Knock, Louth, Ireland. Noted as a poet.


Born

Irish


Died

some time after 1167 of natural causes



Saint Mucian of Mesia


Also known as

Mocian


Profile

Martyr of the early Church for refusing to sacrifice to idols.


Died

beheaded in Mesia (in modern Spain)



Saint Byblig


Also known as

Biblig, Peblig, Peglig, Piblig, Publicius


Profile

A holy man with some connection to Carnarvon, Wales.


Born

Welsh


Died

5th century



Blessed Gelduin


Profile

Monk. Abbot of a monastery near Douai, France. Friend of and extensive correspondent with Saint Anselm of Canterbury.


Died

1123 of natural causes


Saint Cillene


Also known as

Killen


Profile

Monk. Elected abbot in Iona Abbey in Scotland in 726.


Born

Irish


Died

752 of natural causes



Saint Paul of Mesia


Profile

Martyr of the early Church, executed for encouraging other martyrs not to lose their faith.


Died

put to the sword



Saint Bladus 


Also known as

Blade


Profile

Early bishop on the Isle of Man.



Martyrs of Alexandria


Profile

Thirteen Christian companions marytred together. No details about them have survived but the names - Apricus, Cyrion (2 of), Eulogius, Hemerion, Julian, Julius, Justus, Menelaus, Orestes, Porfyrios and Tryphon (2 of).


Died

Alexandria, Egypt, date unknown



Martyrs of Constantinople


Profile

A group of 24 Christians martyred in the persecutions of Arian emperor Valens. We know little more than their names – Acacios, Amedinos, Ammonius, Ammus, Cerealis, Cionia, Cionius, Cyrianus, Demetrius, Eulogius (2), Euphemia, Heliodoros, Heraclios, Horestes, Jocundus, Julian, Martyrios, Menelaeus, Sestratus, Strategos, Thomas, Timotheos and Tryphon.


Died

c.367 in Constantintinople



Theodotus and Companions


Profile

Six Christians who were imprisoned, tortured and martyred together in the persecutions of Trajan. Saint Hyacinth ministered to them in prison. We know nothing else about them but their names - Asclepiodotus, Diomedes, Eulampius, Golinduchus, Theodota and Theodotus.


Died

beheaded c.110, location unknown

01 July 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஜுலை 02

 St. Aberoh (Aburom, Arianus)


Feastday: July 2

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with Atom. We are brother martyrs, living at Gamnudi, Kemet. Persecutions caused us to flee to Farama, Kemet.


At Alexandria, authorities arrested and tortured us. However, the prefect released us. We traveled to Baramon. There, officials beheaded us.

Aberoh and Atom are martyrs of the Christian church.


The brothers were citizens of Gamnudi in Egypt. They are described as: Aberoh being of tall stature and a very red appearance, with eyes as blue as indigo. Atom was also tall; his eyes were as antimony and his beard was black.


They fled Gamnudi during a persecution for Pelusium (then Farama). They were arrested at Alexandria and tortured. After being dismissed by the prefect, they went next to Baramon, where they were beheaded. Their relics were returned to Gamnudi. Their feast day is July 2 in the Coptic Church.



St. Otto of Bamberg

 பாம்பெர்க்கின் தூய ஓட்டோ 

ஜூலை 02 

பிறப்பிடம் : ஜெர்மனி

நினைவு நாள் : ஜூலை 02

அமைதியை நிலைநாட்ட

பாம்பெர்க்கின் ஆயர் மற்றும் வெறிநாய்கடி நோய் குணமாக்குபவர் 

ஏறத்தாள 1062 ஆம் ஆண்டு ஜெர்மனி நாட்டில் பிறந்த உயர்குடி மகனான ஓட்டோ என்பவர் கல்வி பயின்று இளம் வயதிலேயே ஒரு குருவாக திருநிலைப்படுத்தப்பட்டார். போலந்து நாட்டின் விலாடிஸ்லா மாநிலத்தின் குருநில மன்னருக்கு சில ஆண்டுகள் ஆன்ம ஆலோசகராக இருந்தபின்னர் 4 ஆம் ஹென்றி அரசரின் கீழ் 11 ஆண்டுகள் அறிவியல் ஆலோசகராக பணியாற்றினார். 

இதற்கிடையில், ஆயர்களை நியமனம் செய்வதில், யாருக்கு அதிகாரம் உண்டு என்ற கருத்து வேறுபாடு ஏற்பட்டு, திருச்சபையில் பதவியைத் தவறாகப் பயன்படுத்துதல், கையூட்டு பெறுதல் போன்ற நிகழ்வுகள் அடிக்கடி ஏற்பட்டன. இதைச் சரிசெய்ய நினைத்த திருத்தந்தை (போப்) ஆயர்களை திருநிலைப்படுத்தும் அதிகாரம் தனக்கு மட்டுமே உண்டு என்று அறிவித்தார். ஆனால் ஹென்றி அரசர் இதற்கு எதிராக கிளர்ந்தெழுந்தார். அவர் ஒரு எதிர் திருத்தந்தையை ஏற்படுத்தி ஓட்டோவை பாம்பெர்க்கின் ஆயராக நியமித்தார். 

ஓட்டோ ஆயர்,  ஹென்றி அரசருக்கு நம்பிக்கைக்குரியவராக இருந்தாலும், திருச்சபைக்கும் பற்றுறுதி உள்ளவராக இருந்து வந்தார். இது இவரை ஒரு தர்மசங்கடமான மற்றும் ஆபத்தான நிலைக்குத் தள்ளியது. 

அறிவார்ந்த பேச்சுவார்த்தை :


பல ஆண்டுகளாக ஹென்றிக்கும் திருத்தந்தைக்கும் இடையே அமைதிக்கான பேச்சுவார்த்தை நிகழ்த்தினார். இருதரப்பினரும் இவரது நேர்மையையும் அடக்கத்தையும் மதித்தனர். மேலும் தன்னுடைய மறைமாவட்டத்திற்காக உழைப்பதிலும், ஆலயங்கள் கட்டுவதிலும், கல்வி மேம்பாட்டுக்காகவும், சபைகள் நிறுவுவதிலும் தமது மக்களின் நன்மதிப்பைப் பெறுவதற்காகவும் உழைத்தார். 1124 ஆம் ஆண்டு, போலிஸ்லாஸ் 3 என்ற போலந்தின் சிற்றரசரின் வேண்டுதல்படி, தன்னுடன் சில குருக்களை அழைத்துக் கொண்டு பொமிரானியாவுக்கு ஓட்டோ பயணமானார். அவரது உறுதியான ஆனால் கண்ணியமான நடைமுறைகளும், ஊக்கமூட்டும் மறையுரைகளும் ஒரே ஆண்டில் ஏறத்தாள 20,000 பேர் மனம் மாற்றம் பெறக் காரணமாயிருந்தன. மேலும் இவர் 11 ஆலயங்களை நிறுவினார். கடவுளுக்கும் தமது மக்களுக்கும் சேவைபுரியும் ஒரு உண்மையான ஊழியரான ஓட்டோ, தனது மறைமாவட்டத்தில் தம் இறுதிநாட்களை செலவிட்டார். போமிரேனியாவின் திருத்தூதர் என்று அழைக்கப்பட்ட இவர் 1189 ஆம் ஆண்டு புனிதராக திருநிலைப்படுத்தப்பட்டார். 

Feastday: July 2

Birth: 1060

Death: 1139



Bishop and Apostle of Pomerania. Born in Swabia, to a noble family, he served Emperor Henry IV in various posts, including that of chancellor. However, Otto was not in favor of Henry's policies toward the Holy See, in particular his insistence of rights of investiture. Thus, when Otto was appointed bishop of Bamberg in 1103, he refused to be consecrated until receiving approval from Pope Paschal II who consecrated him in 1106. Otto was a figure in the reconciliation of the pope and Emperor Henry V. At the behest of King Boleslav III of Poland, Otto headed a missionary effort to Pomerania where he found considerable success in making converts among the local inhabitants. In honor of his work, he is known as the Apostle of Pomerania. He died in Bamberg on June 30. He was canonized in 1189.




Otto of Bamberg (1060 or 1061 – 30 June 1139) was German missionary and papal legate who converted much of medieval Pomerania to Christianity. He was the bishop of Bamberg from 1102 until his death. He was canonized in 1189.



Early life

Three biographies of Otto were written in the decades after his death. Wolfger of Prüfening wrote his between 1140 and 1146 at Prüfening Abbey; Ebo of Michelsberg wrote between 1151 and 1159); and Herbord of Michelsberg wrote in 1159.[1]


According to contemporary sources, Otto was born into a noble (edelfrei) family which held estates in the Swabian Jura. A possible descent from the Franconian noble house of Mistelbach or a maternal relation with the Hohenstaufen dynasty has not been conclusively established. As his elder brother inherited their father's property, Otto prepared for an ecclesiastical career and was sent to school,[2] probably in Hirsau Abbey or one of its filial monasteries.


When in 1082 the Salian princess Judith of Swabia, sister of Emperor Henry IV, married the Piast duke Władysław I Herman, he followed her as a chaplain to the Polish court. In 1091 he entered the service of the Henry IV; he was appointed the emperor's chancellor in 1101[3] and supervised the construction of Speyer Cathedral.


Bishop


In 1102, the emperor appointed and invested him as Bishop of Bamberg in Franconia (now in the state of Bavaria), and Otto became one of the leading princes of medieval Germany. He consolidated his widely scattered territories and during his tenure as bishop, Bamberg rose to great prominence.


In 1106 Otto received the pallium from Pope Paschal II. He achieved fame as diplomat and politician, notably during the Investiture Controversy between the emperor and the papacy. It was Bishop Otto, substituting the imprisoned archbishop Adalbert of Mainz, who clothed Hildegard of Bingen as a Benedictine nun at Disibodenberg Abbey about 1112.[4] He remained loyal to the Imperial court and, as a consequence, was suspended by a papal party led by Cuno of Praeneste at the Synod of Fritzlar in 1118. At the Congress of Würzburg in 1121, Otto successfully negotiated the peace treaty, the Concordat of Worms, which was signed in 1122.[3] In the 1130s, he continued to arbitrate between Emperor Lothair of Supplinburg and the rising Hohenstaufens.


As bishop, Otto led a model, simple and frugal life, but did much to improve his ecclesiastical and temporal realms. He restored and completed Bamberg Cathedral after it had been damaged by fire in 1081, improved the cathedral school, established numerous monasteries[3] and built a number of churches throughout his territory. He greatly expanded the town of Bamberg, rebuilding the Monastery of St. Michael, which had been destroyed by an earthquake around 1117.[5]


Missionary

Among his great accomplishments was his peaceful and successful missionary work among the Pomeranians, after several previous forcible attempts by the Polish rulers and the Spanish bishop Bernard to convert Pomerania to Christianity had failed. Otto was sent on his first mission by the Polish duke Bolesław III Wrymouth in 1124.[6] As the official papal legate, he converted a large number of Pomeranians, notably in the towns of Pyrzyce, Kamień, Szczecin, and Wolin, and established eleven churches, and became known as the "Apostle of Pomerania." He converted around 20.000 pagans.


After he returned to Bamberg in 1125, some pagan customs began to reassert themselves, and Otto journeyed once more to Pomerania in 1128. In the Diet of Usedom, he succeeded in converting all the nobles, converted further communities, and sent priests from Bamberg to serve in Pomerania. His intent to consecrate a bishop for Pomerania was thwarted by the bishops of Magdeburg and Gniezno who claimed metropolitan rights over Pomerania. Only after his death in 1139 was his former companion, Adalbert of Pomerania, consecrated as Bishop of Wolin, in 1140.



Otto died on 30 June 1139, and was buried in Michaelsberg Abbey, Bamberg. He was canonised in 1189 by Pope Clement III. Although he died on 30 June, his name is recorded in the Roman martyrology on 2 July.


The area of western Prussia around Gdańsk was Christianized via Pomerania as well, and the monastery of Oliwa at Gdańsk was established at that time, while eastern Prussia was Christianized later via Riga by the Teutonic Knights.


Saint Bernadine Realino

புனித பெர்னார்டின் ரியலினோ 

( St. Bernardin Riyalyno )

இயேசு சபை குரு :

பிறப்பு : 1530

கார்ப்பி, இத்தாலி

இறப்பு : 2 ஜூலை 1616

நினைவுத் திருநாள் : ஜூலை 02

புனித பெர்னார்டின் ரியலினோ, லெச்சே ( Letche ) என்ற ஊரில் படித்தார். இதே நகரில் 42 ஆண்டுகள் இயேசு சபைக் குருவாக பணிபுரிந்தார். இரு நகரத்தாரும் "எங்கள் புனிதர்" என்றே இவரை அழைக்கின்றார். 

பொலோஞ்ஞா பல்கலைக்கழகத்தில் படிப்புகளை முடித்தார். வெளியுலகில் பெரிய பதவிகள் காத்திருந்தன. இவர்தன் இளம் வயதில் துலிண்ட்ரா என்ற அழகி ஒருத்தியை விரும்பினார். ஆனால் அவள் எதிர்பாராத விதமாக இறந்துவிட்டாள். இவர் ஓர் முன்கோபியாக இருந்தார்.


ஒருநாள் நேம்பினஸ் (Nepinas) வீதி வழியாக இரு துறவிகள் நடந்து செல்வதை இவர் பார்த்தார். புதிதாக தோன்றிய இயேசு சபையை சேர்ந்தவர்கள் இவர்கள் என்பதை அறிந்தார். அவர்களுடன் தொடர்பு கொண்டு ஞாயிற்றுக்கிழமைகளில் அவர்களின் பலிபூசையிலும், சிறப்பாக மறையுரையிலும் பங்குபெற்றார். இவைகளே இவரது தேவ அழைத்தலுக்கு நல்ல வித்தாக திகழ்ந்தன.


அந்நாட்களில் இவரின் மனதில் பெரிய குழப்பம் ஏற்பட்டது. தம் அறையில் தனிமையில் செபமாலை ஜெபித்துக் கொண்டிருந்தார். அப்போது மரியன்னை குழந்தை இயேசுவுடன் வந்து காட்சி தந்தார். அவரின் குழப்பம் நீங்கியது. அவருக்குள் பேரமைதி நிலவியது.



பின்னர் இயேசு சபையில் சேர உறுதி பூண்டார். 1541ம் ஆண்டு அச்சபையில் சேர்ந்தார். 52 ஆண்டுகள் அச்சபையில் வாழ்ந்தார். உயர்ந்த படிப்புகள் படித்து பெரிய பட்டங்கள் பெற்றிருந்தும், தாழ்ச்சியின் பொருட்டு துணை சகோதரராகவே இருக்க விரும்பினார். ஆனால் இவரை குருத்துவத்திற்கு சபை தெரிந்து கொண்டது. குருவாக ஆனபின் லெச்சே என்ற இடத்திற்கு வந்தார். இங்கு "எல்லாருக்கும் எல்லாமாக" நடந்து அனைவரின் மதிப்பையும் அடைந்தார். இவர் ஏழைகளை பேணுவதில் மிகச் சிறந்தவராக திகழ்ந்தார். இவர் மரணப் படுக்கையில் இருந்ததை கேட்ட மக்கள் கல்லூரிக்கு படையெடுத்து சென்றனர். கல்லூரியின் நுழைவாயிலையே அடைக்க வேண்டியதாயிற்று. நகரின் தலைவரே தந்தையின் இறுதி ஆசி பெற வந்துவிட்டார். இவர் "ஓ மிகுந்த வணக்கத்துக்குரிய ஆண்டவளே" என்று மரியின் பெயரை உச்சரித்தவாறு தனது ஆன்மாவை இறைவனிடம் கையளித்தார்.


 .

Also known as

• Apostle of Lecce

• Bernardino Realini



Profile

Born to the Italian nobility. Studied law and medicine at Bologna, Italy, receiving a law degree in 1556. Mayor of Felizzano, Italy. Judge. Chief tax collector in Alessandria, Italy. Mayor of Cassine, Italy. Mayor of Castelleone, Italy. Superintendent of the fiefs of the marquis of Naples, Italy.


Following a retreat, he became a Jesuit in 1564, and was ordained in 1567. Novice master in Naples, and then was sent to found a college in Lecce, a small city in the south of Italy. He quickly became the most loved man in Lecce due to his concern and charity. He made himself appear the receiver rather than the giver, and the poor and galley slaves were his special concern. One of the more interesting miracles attributed to him concerned his small pitcher of wine which was never empty until everyone present had had enough.


On Bernadine's death bed, the city's magistrates formally requested that in the after-life he take the city under his patronage. Unable to speak, he nodded, and died soon after, whispering the names of Jesus and Mary.


Born

1 December 1530 in Carpi, Modena, Italy


Died

2 July 1616 in Lecce, Italy of natural causes


Canonized

22 June 1947 by Pope Pius XII


Patronage

Lecce, Italy (proclaimed on 15 December 1947 by Pope Pius XII)




Blessed Peter of Luxembourg


Also known as

Peter of Metz



Profile

Son of Guy of Luxembourg, count of Ligny, Belgium. Orphaned at age four. Raised in Paris, France. Canon at Notre Dame, Chartres, and Cambrai. Arch-deacon of Dreux, France. Held for a while in his early teens by the English as hostage for the return of his brother. Bishop of Metz, France in 1384 at age fourteen. Created cardinal of San Georgio, Velabro in 1386 at age sixteen by decree of anti-pope Clement VII, he used armed troops to take possession of his see, fighting against the forces of Pope Urban VI.


A noted reformer of his diocese, known for his personal austerity and penance, his prayer life, and genuine piety. He was driven from Metz and joined Clement in Avignon where he died, still in his teens. Thrown into the politics of the state and of the Church during a period of schism; Peter was wholly unequipped for it, being a child, and a simple one at that. He chose the wrong side in the dispute over the papacy, but was immediately recognized for his personal holiness.


Born

1369 in Lorraine, France


Died

1387 at the Carthusian monastery, Villeneuve, France of a fever


Beatified

1527 by Pope Clement VII


Patronage

Avignon, France




Blessed Eugénie Joubert


Profile

Fourth of eight children born to wine-makers Pietro Joubert and Antonia Celle; she was baptized on the day she was born. Educated at the Ursuline boarding school at Ministrel, France from 1881 till 1887, and then at the College of Saint Mary in Le Puy, France, run by the Sisters of Notre Dame, from 1889 to 1892. Made her First Communion on 29 May 1887. Taught catechism to local children. She joined the Sisters of the Holy Family of the Sacred Heart at Aubervilliers, France at age 19 on 6 October 1895, and made her profession on 8 December 1897. Assigned to be a catechist in Aubervilliers where she worked with poor children to prepare them for their First Communion. Sister Eugenie contracted tuberculosis in 1902. Assigned to Rome, Italy, then moved to Belgium in May 1904, but died soon after. She was known for a great devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary, and for boundless care for the children in her charge.



Born

11 February 1876 in Yssingeaux, Haute-Loire, France


Died

• 2 July 1904 in Liège, Belgium of tuberculosis

• interred in the chapel of the Sisters of the Holy Family of the Sacred Heart in Dinant, Belgium


Beatified

20 November 1994 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Swithun


Also known as

Swithin, Svithin



Profile

Raised in an abbey. Priest. Chaplain to Egbert, King of the West Saxons. Tutor to prince Ethelwolf. Bishop of Winchester, England. Miracles associated with his relics. His shrine was destroyed during the Reformation. Almost 60 ancient British churches were named for him.


His patronage of the weather arose when monks tried to translate his body from an outdoor grave to a golden shrine in the Cathedral in 871. Swithun apparently did not approve as it started raining for 40 days. The weather on the festival of his translation indicates, according to an old rhyme, the weather for the next forty days:




Born

c.800 at Wessex, England


Died

• 2 July 862 of natural causes

• relics transferred to Canterbury, England in 1006 by Saint Alphege of Winchester




Saint Lidanus of Sezze


Also known as

Lidan, Lidano



Profile

Benedictine monk. Abbot. Drained the Pontine marshes in Italy. Founded an abbey in Sezze in the Papal States (part of modern Italy).


Born

1026


Died

• 1118 at Monte Cassino, Italy of natural causes

• buried at the church at the monastery of Sezze, Italy

• church destroyed in the early 13th century and relics transferred to the cathedral of Seeze

• the largest bell in the cathedral was dedicated to him in 1312

• the city of Seeze began donating silver chalices to the cathedral in his honour in 1473

• relics re-enshrined in 1606

• relics re-enshrined in a new altar in 1672


Canonized

• c.1500 by Pope Leo X (cultus confirmation) • 9 April 1791 by Pope Pius VI (cultus confirmation)


Patronage

Sezze, Italy



Saint Monegundis


Also known as

Monégonde, Monegondes, Monegundes


Profile

She married young, and was the mother of two daughters, both of whom died in childhood, sending Monegundis into a deep depression. She eventually overcame her grief by filling the empty space in her life with God. With her husband's agreement, Monegundis became an anchoress, and built a private room where she could devote her life to solitude and prayer.


After several years of this life, Monegundis moved to Tours, France, and built a hermitage near the tomb of Saint Martin of Tours. She soon gained a reputation for holiness, other women joined her in solitude and prayer, and they built a convent dedicated to Saint Pierre le Puellier.


Born

6th century at Chartres, France


Died

• c.570 at Tours, France of natural causes

• miracles reported at her tomb



Blessed Pietro Becchetti da Fabriano


Profile

Brother of Blessed Giovanni da Fabriano Becchetti; related to Saint Thomas Beckett. Augustinian priest known for his education, wisdom, personal piety, deep prayer life and preaching. Studied in Padua, Italy in 1385. Taught at the Augustinian school in Rimini, Italy. Professor of Sacred Theology in Venice, Italy. Pilgrim to Jerusalem. Built a chapel similar to the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem at the Augustinian church in Fabriano, Italy.



Born

14th century in Fabriano, Italy


Died

• in Fabriano, Italy

• relics enshrined in the church of Sant’Agostino


Beatified

1835 by Pope Gregory XVI (cultus confirmation)



Blessed Giovanni da Fabriano Becchetti


Also known as

John Becchetti



Additional Memorial

2 June (Augustinians)


Profile

Brother of Blessed Thomas Becchetti; related to Saint Thomas Beckett. Augustinian hermit. Taught in Rimini, Italy in 1385. Taught at Oxford, England, and at the same time received a degree in theology from there.


Born

14th century Fabriano, Italy


Died

15th century Fabriano, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

1835 by Pope Gregory XVI (cultus confirmed)



Saint Martinian of Rome

புனிதர்கள் புரோசிஸஸ் மற்றும் மார்ட்டினியன்

நினைவு நாள் : ஜூலை 02 

பண்டைகால மறைசாட்சிகள்

முதலாம் நூற்றாண்டில், திருத்தூதர்கள் ஆயிரக்கணக்கான மக்களை கிறிஸ்துவுக்குள் மனம் மாற்றினார்கள். அவர்களின் பெரும்பாலோர் சாதாரண மக்கள். இவர்கள் கிறிஸ்துவைப் பற்றி அறிந்து அவரைத் தங்கள் வாழ்வில் ஏற்றுக்கொண்டனர். புரோசிஸஸ் மற்றும் மார்ட்டினியனின் வாழ்க்கைக் கதைகள் அவர்கள் ஆழமான, தகர்க்க முடியாத நம்பிக்கையை நமக்கு எடுத்துச் சொல்கின்றன. மரபுவழிக் கதைகளின்படி, உரோமை நகரில் நீரோ மன்னன் ஆண்ட காலத்தில் மெமர்டைன் சிறைச்சாலையில், புரோசிஸஸ் மற்றும் மார்ட்டினியன் என்பவர்கள் உரோமைக் காவலர்களாக இருந்தனர். உரோமையர்கள் பழங்கால கிறிஸ்தவர்களை துன்புறுத்தி சிறையில் அடைத்தனர். இதனால் மெமர்டைன் சிறைச்சாலை குற்றவாளிகளாலும் கிறிஸ்துவர்களாலும் நிரம்பியிருந்தது. அக்காலத்தில், பழங்கால கிறிஸ்துவர்களுடன் தொடர்புடைய மக்களைப்போல, புரோசிஸஸ் மற்றும் மார்ட்டினியன் இயேசுவின் நற்செய்தியால் ஈர்க்கப்பட்டார்கள். அவர்கள் கைதிகளைக் காவல் காக்கும்போது இயேசுவைப் பற்றி அதிகம் கேள்விப்பட்டு அவர்கள் கிறிஸ்துவை முழுமையாக நம்பினார்கள். 



சிறைச்சாலையில் திருமுழுக்குப் பெறுதல் :

திருத்தூதர் பேதுரு, திருத்தூதர் பவுலுடன் மெமர்டைன் சிறையில் அடைக்கப்பட்டிருந்தபோது, இவர்களுக்கும் மனம் திரும்பிய மற்ற கைதிகளுக்கும் திருத்தூதர் பேதுரு திருமுழுக்குக் கொடுத்தார். சிறைக்காவலர் தலைவர் புரோசிஸஸ் மற்றும் மார்ட்டினியன் மனம் மாறியதை அறிந்து, அவர் அவர்களிடம் இயேசுவை மறுதலித்து, ஜூபிடர் என்றும் வேற்று தெய்வச்சிலையை வணங்குமாறு கட்டாயப்படுத்தினான். பதிலாக அவர்கள் உண்மையிலேயே தாங்கள் கிறிஸ்தவர்கள் என்று கூறி சிலையின் மீது துப்பினார்கள். 

சிறையில் அடைக்கப்பட்டு, மறைசாட்சியாக உயிர்விடுதல் :

சிறைச்சாலை தலைவன், புரோசிஸ‘ம் மார்ட்டினியனும் இவர்களது நம்பிக்கையைக் கண்டு, அவர்களை சித்ரவதை செய்து அவர்கள் காவல்களுக்கு அதே சிறைச்சாலையில் அவர்களை அடைத்து வைத்தான். சில நாட்களுக்குப்பின், திருத்தூதர் பேதுருவும் பவுலும் அடைந்த மரணத்தீர்ப்பை இவர்களும் பெற்று கொலை செய்யப்பட்டார்கள்.

Profile

Prison guard at the Mamertine prison in Rome, Italy. Worked with Saint Processus. Guarded Saint Peter the Apostle and Saint Paul the Apostle when they were imprisoned in Rome. Converted to Christianity and baptized by them. Tortured and executed in the persecutions of Nero. Martyr.



Died

• beheaded on the Aurelian road outside Rome, Italy

• relics in Saint Peter's Basilica, Vatican, Rome


Canonized

publicly venerated from the 4th century



Blessed Benedict Metzler


Profile

Educated by Premonstratensians at the Mönchsrot monastery in Memmingen, Germany. Premonstratensian monk. Canon of the Bad Schussenried monastery in Biberach, Germany, making his solemn vows on 17 April 1717. Studied theology in Dillingen, Germany. Ordained on 6 January 1721. Professor of theology and philosophy while serving as prior of his house and novice master. Parish priest in Eggmansried, Germany from 1749 to 1755. Noted writer on spiritual matters.


Born

28 July 1687 in Bildstein, Austria


Died

2 July 1773 of natural causes



Saint Processus of Rome


Profile

Prison guard at the Mamertine prison in Rome, Italy. Worked with Saint Martinian. Guarded Saint Peter the Apostle and Saint Paul the Apostle when they were imprisoned in Rome. Converted to Christianity and was baptized by them. Tortured and executed in the persecutions of Nero. Martyr.



Died

• beheaded on the Aurelian road outside Rome, Italy

• relics in Saint Peter's Basilica, Vatican, Rome


Canonized

publicly venerated from the 4th century



Blessed Jarich of Mariegaarde


Also known as

Jarichus, Jaricus


Profile

Premonstratensian monk. Canon of the Mariegaarde monastery in Hallum, Friesland (in the modern Netherlands). Priest. A pious and well-educated man, he was known as a poet, a writer of biblical commentary, and a popular preacher. Parish priest in Grijn where he had a special ministry of teaching children. Chosen abbot of Mariegaarde monastery on 14 September 1238.


Born

latter 12th century Friesland (in the modern Netherlands)


Died

22 June 1242 of natural causes



Saint Oudoceus


Also known as

Eddogwy, Oudaceus, Oudecus, Oudoc, Oudocée


Profile

Son of a local leader in Brittany in France, he was dedicated to God at birth by his parents. Nephew and student of Saint Theliau. Grew up in Wales. Monk. Abbot of Llandeilo Fawr, Carmarthenshire, Wales. Third bishop of Llandaff, Wales c.580. Mauric, king of Glamorgan, assisted him in his ministry, but Oudoceus excommunicated him for assassinating a prince named Cynedu.


Born

in Brittany, France


Died

615 of natural causes



Saint Jacques Fermin


Profile

Joined the Jesuits in 1646. Priest. Missionary in Canada, working with the Onodaga, Cayuhoga and Mohawk. Established a mission on Isle La Motte in present day Vermont. Believed to have brought as many as 10,000 locals to Christianity.


Born

12 March 1628 at Rheims, France


Died

2 July 1691 in Quebec, Canada



Saint Jéroche


Profile

Seventh-century parish priest in a small village in the Brie region of France.


Died

• relics enshrined at the abbey in Rebais Seine-et-Marne, France

• relics transferred to Dagny, France



Martyred Soldiers of Rome


Profile

Three soldiers who were converted at the martyrdom of Saint Paul the Apostle. Then they were martyred, as well. We known nothing else about them but their names - Acestes, Longinus and Megistus.


Died

martyred c.68 in Rome, Italy



Martyrs in Carthage by Hunneric


Profile

A group of seven Christians tortured and murdered in the persecutions of the Arian Vandal king Hunneric for remaining loyal to the teachings of orthodox Christianity. They were some of the many who died for the faith during a period of active Arian heresy. - Boniface, Liberatus, Maximus, Rogatus, Rusticus, Septimus and Servus.



Martyrs of Campania


Profile

A group of ten Christians marytred together in the persecutions of Diocletian. The only details about them to have survived are their names - Ariston, Crescention, Eutychian, Felicissimus, Felix, Justus, Marcia, Symphorosa, Urban and Vitalis.


Died

284 in Campania, Italy



Martyrs of Seoul


Additional Memorial

20 September as part of the Martyrs of Korea



Profile

A group of eight Christians who were martyred together as part of the lengthy persecutions in Korea.


• Agatha Han Sin-ae

• Antonius Yi Hyeon

• Bibiana Mun Yeong-in

• Columba Gang Wan-suk

• Ignatius Choe In-cheol

• Iuliana Gim Yeon-i

• Matthaeus Gim Hyeon-u

• Susanna Gang Gyeong-bok


Died

2 July 1801 at the Small West Gate, Seoul, South Korea


Beatified

15 August 2014 by Pope Francis