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02 February 2024

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெப்ரவரி 03

Saint Blaise

புனிதர் பிளெய்ஸ் 

மறைசாட்சி, தூய உதவியாளர்:

பிறப்பு: தெரியவில்லை

செபஸ்டீ, வரலாற்று ஆர்மேனியா

இறப்பு: கி.பி. 316

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

ஓரியண்டல் மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஃபெப்ரவரி 3

பாதுகாவல்:

விலங்குகள், கட்டிடப் பணியாளர்கள், கால்நடை மருத்துவர்கள், தொண்டை, கல் வெட்டும் தொழிலாளர், செதுக்கும் பணி செய்பவர்கள், கம்பளி தொழிலாளர்கள், குழந்தைகள், “மராட்டி” (Maratea), “இத்தாலி” (Italy), “சிசிலி” (Sicily), “டாலமஷியா” (Dalmatia), “டப்ரோவ்னிக்” (Dubrovnik), “சியுடாட் டெல் எஸ்ட்” (Ciudad del Este), “பராகுவே” (Paraguay), “காம்பானரியோ” (Campanário), “மேடிரா” (Madeira), “ரூபியரா” (Rubiera).

புனிதர் பிளெய்ஸ், ஒரு மருத்துவரும், பண்டைய “வரலாற்று ஆர்மேனியாவின்” (Historical Armenia) “செபஸ்டீ” (Sebastea) எனுமிடத்தின் ஆயருமாவார். இது, தற்கால “மத்திய துருக்கி” (Central Turkey) நாட்டிலுள்ள “சிவாஸ்” (Sivas) எனுமிடமாகும்.

நம்மிடமிருக்கும் அவரைப்பற்றிய முதல் குறிப்பு, கி.பி. 5ம் ஆண்டின் இறுதியில் அல்லது 6ம் நூற்றாண்டின் துவக்கத்தில் உள்ள ஒரு மருத்துவர், “அடியஸ் அமிடெனஸ்” (Aëtius Amidenus) மருத்துவ எழுத்துக்களின் கையெழுத்துப் பிரதிகளில் உள்ளது; தொண்டையில் சிக்கியிருக்கும் பொருட்களை நீக்கி சிகிச்சையளிப்பதில் அவரது உதவி அங்கு இருந்திருக்கிறது. புனிதர் பிளெய்ஸ், மறைசாட்சி என்ற மகத்துவம் பெற்ற இடம், “செபஸ்டீ” (Sebastea) என்று அறிவித்தது, இத்தாலியின் பெரும் வர்த்தகரும், ஆராய்ச்சியாளரும், மற்றும் எழுத்தாளருமான “மார்க்கோ போலோ” (Marco Polo) ஆவார். இத்திருத்தலம் “சிட்டாடல்” மலைக்கு (Citadel Mount) அருகில் இருப்பதாக கி.பி. 1253ம் ஆண்டு அறிவித்தவர், பிளெமிஷ் பிரான்சிஸ்கன் மிஷனரியும், மற்றும் ஆராய்ச்சியாளருமான (Flemish Franciscan missionary and explorer) வில்லியம் (William of Rubruck) ஆவார். இருப்பினும், அது தற்போது இல்லை.

தாம் பிறந்த ஆர்மேனியாவின் செபஸ்டீ நகரில், தமது இளமையில் தத்துவம் கற்ற இவர், ஒரு மருத்துவராக பணியாற்றினார். உடல் வியாதிகளை குணமாக்கிய புனிதர் பிளெய்ஸ், ஒரு ஆன்மாக்களின் மருத்துவர் ஆவார். அனைத்து பகுதிகளிலிருந்தும், உடல் மற்றும் ஆவிக்குரிய நோய்களை குணப்படுத்துவதற்காக மக்கள் அவரிடம் திரண்டனர். தாமாக தம்மைத் தேடி வந்த விலங்குகளைக்கூட அவர் குணப்படுத்தியதாகவும், பின்னாளில், அவர் அவைகளால் உதவி பெற்றதாகவும் கூறப்படுகிறது.

பின்னர், தமது தொழிலிலிருந்து ஓய்வு பெற்ற இவர், ஒரு குகைக்கு சென்று செப வாழ்வில் ஈடுபட்டார். “செபஸ்டீ” ஆயராக, பிளெய்ஸ், தமது மக்களுக்கு தமது வாய் வார்த்தைகளை முன்னுதாரணமாக அறிவுறுத்தினார். கடவுளுடைய ஊழியரான பிளெய்ஸின் மகத்தான நற்பண்புகளும், பரிசுத்த தன்மைகளும் அவருடைய பல அற்புதங்களால் உறுதிப்படுத்தப்பட்டன.

(Acta Sanctorum) எனும் புனிதர்களின் சரித்திர பதிவு நூலின்படி, இவர் அடித்து துன்புறுத்தப்பட்டும், கூரிய இரும்பினாலான முனைகள் கொண்ட சீப்பு போன்ற ஆயுதத்தால் (Iron comb) சித்திரவதை செய்யப்பட்டும், இறுதியில் தலை வெட்டப்பட்டும், மறைசாட்சியாக படுகொலை செய்யப்பட்டார்.

கி.பி. 316ம் ஆண்டு, “கப்படோசியாவின்” ஆளுநரான (Governor of Cappadocia) “அக்ரிகோலா” (Agricola) என்பவரும், “லெஸ்ஸர் ஆர்மேனியா” (Lesser Armenia) என்றும், “ஆர்மேனியா மைனர்” (Armenia Minor) என்றும் அழைக்கப்படும் அதிகாரியும் இணைந்து, “ரோமப்பேரரசர்” (Emperor of the Roman Empire) “லிசினியஸ்” (Licinius) என்பவரின் உத்தரவின்படி, கிறிஸ்தவர்களை துன்புறுத்தத் தொடங்கினர். பிளெய்ஸ் பிடிபட்டார். விசாரணை மற்றும் கடுமையான வாதங்களின் பின்னர், அவர் சிறையில் தள்ளப்பட்டார். பின்னர் அவர் தலை வெட்டப்பட்டு படுகொலை செய்யப்பட்டார்.

அப்போஸ்தலர்களின்படி, கைது செய்யப்பட்டு, சிறைச் சாலைக்கு அவரை கொண்டு செல்லும் வழியில், தமது ஒரே குழந்தையின் தொண்டையில் மீன் முள் சிக்கியதால் துயருற்ற தாய் ஒருவர், இவரது காலடியில் வந்து விழுந்தாள். தமது குழந்தையை குணமாக்க வேண்டி அவரது பரிந்துரையை வலியுறுத்தினாள். நின்று, அவளுடைய துயரத்தைத் தொட்டு, அவர் தனது ஜெபங்களைக் கொடுத்தார்; குழந்தை குணப்படுத்தப்பட்டது. இதன் விளைவாக, தொண்டை காயங்கள் மற்றும் நோய்களுக்கு எதிரான பாதுகாப்பிற்காக பிளேஸ் அழைக்கப்படுகிறார்.

கவர்னரின் வேட்டைக்காரர்கள் அவரை திரும்ப செபஸ்டீ கொண்டு செல்லும் வழியில், ஒரு ஏழைப் பெண்ணை சந்தித்தனர். அந்த பெண்ணுடைய ஒரே பன்றியை ஒரு ஓநாய் பிடித்ததாக அழுதாள். பிளெய்ஸின் கட்டளையின்பேரில், ஓநாய் பன்றியை உயிருடனும் காயப்படுத்தாமலும் விட்டுச் சென்றது.

இவரது நினைவுத் திருநாளானது, “இலத்தீன்” (Latin Church) திருச்சபைகளில் ஃபெப்ரவரி மாதம் மூன்றாம் நாளும், “கிழக்கு மரபுவழி” (Eastern Orthodox) மற்றும் “கிரேக்க கத்தோலிக்க” (Greek Catholic) திருச்சபைகளில் ஃபெப்ரவரி மாதம் பதினொன்றாம் தேதியும் நினைவுகூறப்படுகின்றது.

Also known as

Biagio, Blase, Blasius


Profile

Physician. Bishop of Sebaste, Armenia. Lived in a cave on Mount Argeus. Healer of men and animals; according to legend, sick animals would come to him on their own for help, but would never disturb him at prayer.



Agricola, governor of Cappadocia, came to Sebaste to persecute Christians. His huntsmen went into the forests of Argeus to find wild animals for the arena games, and found many waiting outside Blaise's cave. Discovered in prayer, Blaise was arrested, and Agricola tried to get him to recant his faith. While in prison, Blaise ministered to and healed fellow prisoners, including saving a child who was choking on a fish bone; this led to the blessing of throats on Blaise's feast day.


Thrown into a lake to drown, Blaise stood on the surface and invited his persecutors to walk out and prove the power of their gods; they drowned. When he returned to land, he was martyred by being beaten, his flesh torn with wool combs (which led to his association with and patronage of those involved in the wool trade), and then beheading.


Blaise has been extremely popular for centuries in both the Eastern and Western Churches. In 1222 the Council of Oxford prohibited servile labour in England on his feast. He is one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers


Born

Armenian


Died

flesh torn by iron wool-combs, then beheaded c.316



Saint Marie Rivier


Also known as

• Marinette Rivier

• Anne-Marie Rivier

• Marie-Anne Rivier


Profile

At the age of sixteen months, Marie broke her hip in a fall that left her crippled. Her mother, refusing to give up, carried the child to a local Pieta statue each day to pray. On 8 September 1774, having seen her mother spend hours in prayer, Marie was suddenly able to walk. However, the effects of her early immobility, and the rickets she suffered, stayed with her, and even as an adult she stood only four foot, four inches tall.



At age seventeen Marie tried to join the Sisters of Notre Dame, but was refused due to her poor health, and returned to her parents' home. By age eighteen Marie was devoting herself to evangelization and care for the poor in her home parish. She started her own school in 1786, a place that welcomed the well-off and the impoverished.


When the French Revolution began in 1789, and religious expression was suppressed, Marie held covert Sunday prayer services when there was no priest available to celebrate Mass. In 1794 the government confiscated the Dominican house her school had been using, sold it, and kicked out Marie and her teachers. As they left, the convent's statue of the Virgin Mary smiled at them and moved; the little group took it as a sign, and decided to stay together. When all other convents were being closed, Marie and four like-minded friends opened a new one on 21 November 1796 near Thueyts, Ardeche, France. They became the foundation of the Sisters of the Presentation of Mary (White Ladies). The Sisters devoted themselves to teaching and home evangelization, care for orphans and the abandoned, bringing Jesus to anyone who would listen, and in their words "to pass on hope".


By the time of Marie's death, there were 350 Sisters and 114 houses; today there are over 3,000 Sisters working in France, Switzerland, Canada, United States, England, Spain, Italy, Portugal, Mozambique, Japan, Philippines, Senegal-Gambia, Ireland, Peru, Brazil, Cameroon, and Ecuador.


Born

19 December 1768 at Montpezat-sous-Bauzon, Ardèche, France


Died

3 February 1838 in Bourg-Saint-Andéol, Ardèche, France of natural causes


Beatified

• 23 May 1982 by Pope John Paul II

• the beatification miracle involved the healing of a seven-year-old girl from infantile acrodynia (caused by mercury poisoning, it leads to physical and neurological damage) on 3 February 1938


Canonized

• 15 May 2022 by Pope Francis

• the canonization miracle involved the healing of a newborn baby girl in 2015 from "early generalized non-immunological embryo-fetal hydrops" in the Philippines




Blessed Helena Stollenwerk


Also known as

• Anna Helena Stollenwerk

• Maria Stollenwerk

• Maria Virgo

• Maria Elena



Additional Memorial

28 November (Roermond, Netherlands)


Profile

Anna grew up in a pious farm family that was always involved in parish life. Feeling a call to religious life in her youth, Anna joined the Society of the Holy Childhood. She was interested in missionary work in China, and wrote about the desire to Saint Arnold Janssen, founder of the Society of the Divine Word who had sent missionaries to China in 1879. Though Saint Arnold had no immediate plans for missionary sisters, he took on Helena to work in the mission kitchen where she met three others with the same calling, doing the same work.


In 1889, to further the missionary work in Argentina, Saint Arnold founded the Sisters-Servants of the Holy Spirit. Helena became one of the first 12 Sisters, joining on 17 January 1892, taking the name Sister Maria, making her profession on 12 March 1894, and is considered their co-founder. She was a natural leader with a sense of responsibility for the mission, treated everyone, including fellow sisters, with motherly care, and became a servant to all.


The Sisters began working in Argentina in 1895, and then in Togo in 1897. In 1896, Saint Arnold founded a cloistered, contemplative branch of the Sisters; in 1898, Helena left the missions for the cloister. She contracted tubercular meningitis in 1899, made her profession as contemplative Sister on 31 January 1900, and died three days later. Her good work continues today as the Order she helped found has nearly 4,000 sisters working in 37 countries.


Born

28 November 1852 in Rollensbroich, Archdiocese of Cologne, Rhineland Palatinate, Germany as Anna Helena Stollenwerk


Died

• 3 February 1900 in Steyl, Venlo, Limburg, Netherlands of tubercular meningitis

• buried in the tomb of the Missionary Sisters in the convent of Notre Dame

• re-interred in 1907 in the cemetery of the convent

• re-interred in May 1915 in the cemetery of the new Holy Spirit convent

• some relics enshrined by the Missionary Sisters in Nettetal, Germany

• some relics enshrined by the Missionary Sisters in Steyl, Netherlands in late September 1934


Beatified

17 May 1995 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Ansgar

 புனிதர் ஆன்ஸ்கர் 

வடக்கின் அப்போஸ்தலர்/ பேராயர்:

பிறப்பு: செப்டம்பர் 8, 801

அமியன்ஸ்

இறப்பு: ஃபெப்ரவரி 3, 865 

ப்ரெமன் 

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

லூதரன் திருச்சபை

ஆங்கிலிக்கன் சமூகம்

நினைவுத்திருநாள்: ஃபெப்ரவரி 3

பாதுகாவல்: 

ஸ்கேண்டிநேவியா

புனிதர் ஆன்ஸ்கர், ஃப்ராங்க்ஸ் அரசின் (Kingdom of the East Franks) வடக்குப் பிராந்தியத்திலுள்ள "ஹம்பர்க்-ப்ரெமன்" (Hamburg-Bremen) மறைமாவட்டத்தின் பேராயராக (Archbishop) பணியாற்றியவர் ஆவார். ஐரோப்பாவின் வடக்கு நாடுகளில் கிறிஸ்தவ மறையை எடுத்துச் செல்வதிலும், மறைபரப்பு பணியாற்றியதாலும், இவர் வடக்கின் அப்போஸ்தலர் (Apostle of the North) என்று அழைக்கப்படுகின்றார்.

இவர், கி.பி. 801ம் ஆண்டு, வடக்கு ஃபிரான்சின் (Northern France) "அமியன்ஸ்" (Amiens) நகர் அருகே பிரபல "ஃபிரான்கிஷ்" (Frankish) குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தார். இவரது தாயார் இவரின் சிறு வயதிலேயே மரணம் அடைந்ததால், இவர் "கோர்பி" (Corbie Abbey) எனும் துறவற மடாலயத்தில் வளர்ந்தார். "பிகார்டி" (Picardy) நகரிலுள்ள "பெனடிக்டைன்" (Benedictine monastery) துறவு மடத்தில் கல்வி கற்றார்.

ஆன்ஸ்கர், கி.பி. 831ம் ஆண்டு, “ஹம்பர்க்” (Hamburg) மறைமாவட்டத்தின் பேராயராக நியமிக்கப்பட்டார். கி.பி. 831ம் ஆண்டு, நவம்பர் மாதம், இவர் பேராயராக அருட்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்டார். அதற்கான ஏற்பாடுகளுக்கு திருத்தந்தை நான்காம் கிரகோரி (Gregory IV) ஒப்புதல் அளித்தார். "பல்லியம்" (Pallium) (பேராயராக ஒருவர் அருட்பொழிவு செய்யப்படும் நிகழ்வின்போது அவர் அணிவதற்கான ஒருவித கம்பளியால் நெய்யப்பட்ட அங்கி, திருத்தந்தையால் அளிக்கப்படும். அதனை “பல்லியம்” என்பர்.) எனப்படும் மேலங்கியை பெற்றுக்கொள்வதற்காக ஆன்ஸ்கர் தாமே நேரில் ரோம் சென்றார்.

பின்னர் இவர் “டென்மார்க்” (Denmark), “நார்வே” (Norway), மற்றும் “ஸ்வீடன்” (Sweden) ஆகிய நாடுகளுக்கு திருத்தந்தையின் தூதுவராகத் தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டு மிகச் சிறப்பாக சுவிசேஷப் பணியாற்றினார். இதன் பயனாக ஏராளமான பெனடிக்டைன் துறவு மடங்களை அங்கெல்லாம் நிறுவினார்.

ஆன்ஸ்கர் வாழ்நாள் முழுவதும் கடினமான மயிராடைகளையே (Rough Hair Shirt) அணிந்தார். ரொட்டி மற்றும் தண்ணீரையே உணவாக அருந்தினார். எழைகளின்பால் மிகுந்த பரிவும் கருணையும் காட்டினார். கண் பார்வையற்ற சகோதர சகோதரியர்க்கும், ஊனமுற்றோர்க்கும், ஏழை எளியோர்க்கும் கருணையுடன் சேவை புரிந்தார். இவர் நற்செய்திப் பணியாற்றுவதற்காக பல இன்னல்களுக்கு ஆளானார். இருப்பினும் இறுதிவரை தமது அழைத்தலில் மனந்தளராமல் இருந்து, நம்பிக்கை இழக்காமல் ஆர்வமுடன் பணியாற்றினார்.

ஸ்வீடன் நாட்டின் முதல் மறைப்பரப்பாளர் மற்றும் "நோர்டிக் நாடுகளில்" (Nordic countries) மறை பணியாளர்களின் வரிசைக் கிரமத்தினை (Hierarchy) அமைத்தவர் என்பதாலும் இவர் “ஸ்கேண்டிநேவியாவின்” (Patron of Scandinavia) பாதுகாவலர் என அறிவிக்கப்பட்டார்.

Also known as

• Amschar, Anscario, Anschar, Anscharius, Ansgario, Ansgarius, Anskar, Oscar, Scharies

• Apostle of the North

• Apostle of Scandanavia



Profile

Born to the French nobility. Benedictine monk at Old Corbie Abbey in Picardy (in modern France) and New Corbie in Westphalia (in modern Germany). Studied under Saint Adelard of Corbie and Saint Paschasius Radbert. Accompanied the converted King Harold to Denmark when the exiled king returned home. Missionary to Denmark and Sweden. Founded first Christian church in Sweden c.832. Abbot of New Corbie c.834. Archbishop of Hamburg, Germany, ordained by Pope Gregory IV. Papal legate to the Scandanavian countries. Established the first Christian school in Denmark, but was run out by pagans, and the school was burned to the ground. Campaigned against slavery. Archbishop of Bremen, Germany. Converted Erik, King of Jutland. Great preacher, a miracle worker, and greatly devoted to the poor and sick. Sadly, after his death most of his gains for the Church in the north were lost to resurgent paganism.


Born

801 at Amiens, Picardy, France




Died

• 3 February 865 at Bremen, Germany

• relics at Bremen and Hamburg in Germany, and Copenhagen, Denmark


Our Lady of Suyapa


Also known as

• La Morenita

• Nuestra Señora de Suyapa

• Our Lady of the Conception of Suyapa

• The Dear Dark One

• Virgen de Suyapa

• Virgin of Suyapa



Profile

A title and image of the Blessed Virgin Mary popular in Honduras. The statue of this representation is in the Basilica of Suyapa, Tegucigalpa, Honduras. The sculptor and date of creation are unknown, but the statue was found by a farm worker on 3 February 1747. His family kept it as a focus for personal devotion. In 1768 a miraculous healing was attributed to Our Lady from this devotion. A chapel was built for the statue in 1777 to make public devotion possible.


The statue was stolen in 1936 by a mentally ill woman who lived close by; it was located at her home and quickly returned. The quick end of the Football War in 1969 between Honduras and El Savador was attributed to the intercession of Mary following the outpouring of prayers to her under this title. The staute was stolen against on 1 September 1986; the thief stripped it of its gold, silver and jewels, and then abandoned it in a restaurant men's room in Tegucigalpa.


The Orden de los Caballeros de Suyapa (Order of the Knights of Suyapa) is a group of men who care for the statue and its chapel, and guard it full time when it is toured around Honduras each February.


Saint Claudine Thévenet

புனித_கிளாடின்_தேவனெட் (1774-1837)

பிப்ரவரி 03

இவர் (#StClaudineOfThevenet) பிரான்சில் உள்ள ஒரு கிறிஸ்தவக் குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவர். இவரது பெற்றோர் இறைநம்பிக்கையில் உறுதியாக இருந்ததால், இவரும் இறை நம்பிக்கையில் நல்ல முறையில் வளர்ந்து வந்தார்.

இவரது காலத்தில் பிரெஞ்சுப் புரட்சியின் தீவிரம் மிகுதியாக இருந்தது. அதில் இவரது சகோதரர்கள் இருவர் கொல்லப்பட்டனர். அவர்கள் இருவரும் கொல்லப்பட்ட போது, தங்களைக் கொலைசெய்தவர்களை மன்னித்தவாறே இறந்தனர். மட்டுமல்லாமல் இவரும் அவர்களை மன்னிக்குமாறு கேட்டுக் கொண்டனர்.

இதன் பிறகு இவர் அருள்பணியாளர் அந்த்ரே காயின்ரே என்பவரோடு சேர்ந்து உழைக்கும் பெண்களின் முன்னேற்றத்திற்காகப் பாடுபட்டார். அதற்காக 'இயேசு மரியின் சகோதரிகள்' என்ற சபையை நிறுவினார். அருள் பணியாளரின் மறைவிற்குப் பிறகு இவரே அச்சபையின் தலைவியானார். 

இவர் ஏழைகள் மற்றும் பெண் குழந்தைகளின் கல்விக்காக அயராது பாடுபட்டார். அதற்காகப் பல கல்வி நிறுவனங்களைத் தொடங்கினார். இவர் ஆற்றிய பணிகளைப் பார்த்துவிட்டுப் பலரும் இவரது சபையில் இணைந்தனர். இதனால் இவரது சபை பல நாடுகளுக்குப் பரவியது. 

இவர் 1837 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார். இவரது சபை 1947 ஆம் ஆண்டு டிசம்பர் திங்கள் 31 ஆம் நாள் திருத்தந்தை ஒன்பதாம் பயஸால் அங்கீகரிக்கப்பட்டது. மேலும் இவருக்கு 1993 ஆம் ஆண்டு திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான்பால் அவர்களால் புனிதர் பட்டம் கொடுக்கப்பட்டது.

Also known as

• Mary of Saint Ignatius

• Mary of Saint Ignatius Thevenet

• Mother Saint Ignatius

• Saint of Lyon



Profile

Raised in a pious family. Two of her brothers were murdered in the excesses of the French Revolution; they went to their deaths forgiving their killers and asking Claudine to do the same. Claudine worked with working class young women around Lyon, France. In 1816, with Father André Coindre, she formed a group that would become the Religious of Jesus and Mary (Sisters of Jesus-Marie) at Lyon in 1818, a teaching order dedicated to educating poor girls. Taking the name Mary of Saint Ignatius, she served as superior of the Sisters. The Order received papal approval from Pope Blessed Pius IX on 31 December 1847, and today runs boarding schools, colleges, and retreat houses in Europe, India and North America.


Born

30 March 1774 at Lyon, France as Claudine Thévenet


Died

3 February 1837 at Lyon, France of natural causes


Canonized

21 March 1993 by Pope John Paul II




Blessed John Nelson


Additional Memorial

29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai


Profile

Studied for the priesthood at Douai, France, beginning at age 39. Ordained at Binche, Hainault (in modern Belgium) on 11 June 1576. Two of his four brothers followed him into the priesthood. John returned to England on 7 November 1576 as a missioner to London. Joined the Jesuits at some point; though the date has been lost it was probably close to the time of his arrest.


In November 1577, he performed an exorcism on one of his parishioners; during the ceremony, the person predicted Father John's impending doom. A week later, in the evening of 1 December 1577, John was arrested while at prayers, charged with Catholicism. On 30 January 1578 he managed to celebrate Mass in Newgate prison, apparently with materials that had been smuggled in. Condemned on 1 February 1578 for the treason of Catholic priesthood and refusal to acknowledge the Queen's supremacy in spiritual matters; he was thrown into the pit of the Tower of London for two days, and then excuted. His dying words were "I forgive the queen and all the authors of my death."


Born

1534 at Skelton, Yorkshire, England


Died

hanged, drawn, and quartered on 3 February 1578 at Tyburn, London, England


Beatified

29 December 1886 by Pope Leo XIII (cultus confirmation)



Blessed Iustus Takayama Ukon


Also known as

• Hikogoro Shigetomo

• Takayama Ukon



Profile

Born to a family of wealthy land owners in feudal Japan. After learning of Christianity from Jesuit missionaries, he converted at age 12. Married, layman, and a samurai. When Shogun Toyotomi Hideyoshi banned Christianity, Takayama refused to give up his faith, lost all his lands, assets, rank and power, and was exiled to the Philippines in 1614 when all Christians were ordered deported. Takayama chose his faith over his career, his position and his wealth. Though he died of natural causes, because he contracted the fatal illness due to choosing his faith over the world, he is considered a martyr.


Born

c.1552 in Haibara-cho, Nara, Japan


Died

3 February 1615 in Manila, Philippines of natural causes


Beatified

• 7 February 2017 by Pope Francis

• recognition celebrated at the Oskaka-jo Hall, Kyobashi, Osaka, Japan, presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato




Saint Hadelin of Chelles


Also known as

• Hadelin of Dinant

• Adelino, Adelin, Adelinus


Additional Memorial

11 October (translation of relics)



Profile

Born to the nobility. Benedictine monk. Spiritual student of Saint Remaclus. Worked with Remaclus at Solignac, at Maastricht, Netherlands, and at Stavelot, Belgium. Priest, ordained at by Saint Remaclus. With the assistance of Remaclus and Pepin of Heristal, he founded the Chelles Abbey, diocese of Liege, Belgium. Spent his later years as a hermit near Dinant on the Meuse.


Born

at Gascony (in modern France)


Died

• c.690 at the monastery of Celles, Namour, Belgium of natural causes

• relics tranferred to the Visé church near Liége, Belgium in 1338


Saint Lawrence the Illuminator


Also known as

• Lawrence of Spoleto

• Laurence...


Profile

Fled from Syria with 300 Catholic companions to Italy due to Monophysite persecution of Severus in 514. Ordained a priest in Rome, Italy. Preacher in Umbria, Italy. Founded a monastery at Spoleto, Italy. Bishop of Spoleto for 20 years. When he arrived to assume his see, the people rejected him as a foreigner, but the city gates miraculously opened on their own to let him in, and the people realized that God wanted him there. He later resigned to found the abbey of Farfa in the Sabine hills near Rome. A renowned peacemaker, Lawrence had the gift of healing blindness, both physical and spiritual, which led to the title Illuminator.


Born

Syrian


Died

576 at Farfa, Italy, monastery of natural causes


Saint Anna the Prophetess


Profile

Jewish, the daughter of Phanuel, tribe of Aser. Married at age fourteen; widowed at twenty-one. At age 72 she was charged with the care of the Blessed Virgin Mary at the Temple from her presentation there at age three until her betrothal to Saint Joseph. She was in attendance at the Temple when Jesus was presented. Having all her life believed in the prophecies of the Old Testament, she was the only woman in the Temple to greet Jesus.



Born

1st century BC


Died

1st century of natural causes



Blessed Alois Andritzki


Also known as

Alojs Andricki



Profile

One of six childen born to Johann Andritzki Kantor, a school teacher, and Magdalena Andritzki. Ordained on 30 July 1939 in the diocese of Dresden-Meissen, Germany. Arrested by the Gestapo for producing Christmas plays which were described as having "hostile statements" against the Nazi regime. Died in the Dachau concentration camp. Martyr.


Born

2 July 1914 in Radibor, Dresden, Germany


Died

euthanized by lethal injection on 3 February 1943 in Dachau, Oberbayern, Germany


Beatified

13 June 2011 by Pope Benedict XVI



Saint Margaret of England


Also known as

• Margaret the Englishwoman

• Margarita, Margherita, Marguerite


Profile

Born to an English mother and Hungarian father. Relative of Saint Thomas of Canterbury. Her mother died while the two were on a lengthy pilgrimage in the holy lands. Margaret then made solo pilgrimages to Montserrat in Spanish Catalonia, and Puy, France. Benedictine Cistercian nun at Sauve-Benite, diocese of Le Puy-en-Velay, France.


Born

in Hungary


Died

• 1192 at Sauve-Benite, Le Puy-en-Velay, France of natural causes

• her tomb quickly became a point for pilgrimage, and a site of miracles



Saint Werburgh of Chester


Also known as

Vereburga, Werburga, Wereburge



Profile

Born a princess, the daughter of King Wulfhere of Mercia and his queen, Saint Ermenilda. Nun. Spiritual student of Saint Etheldreda. Worked for reform in female religious houses throughout England. Reported to read minds.


Born

in Staffordshire, England


Died

3 February 699 of natural causes


Saint Berlindis of Meerbeke


Also known as

Bellaude, Berlinda



Profile

Born to the nobility, the daughter of Odolard, Duke of Lothringia and Nona, and the niece of Saint Amand of Maastricht. Odolard developed leprosy; when Berlindis would not drink from the same glass as her father, the duke disowned her. Benedictine nun at Saint Mary's convent, Moorsel, Belgium. Anchoress at Meerbeke, Belgium.


Born

at Meerbeke, Belgium


Died

702 of natural causes



Saint Leonius of Poitiers


Also known as

Leonio, Lienne


Additional Memorial

14 February (archdiocese of Poitiers, France)


Profile

Priest, ordained by his spiritual teacher Saint Hilary of Poitiers. He opposed Arianism, went into exile with Saint Hilary, and was with him when Hilary died.


Died

• late 4th century in Poitiers, Aquitaine, France of natural causes

• relics transferred to La-Roche-sur-Yon, France in 994

• relics dispersed and destroyed by anti–Catholic forces in the Hundred Years War



Blessed John Vallejo


Profile

Member of the Mercedarians at the convent of San Antonio in Valladolid, Spain. Known for his personal piety, his quiet devotion to the Order, to penance, and for the gift of prophecy; he even predicted the date of his own death. He freed more than 500 Christians enslaved by Moors in Algeria c.1561.



Died

• 25 August 1592

• body found incorrupt and his blood continue to flow after his death



Saint Celerinus of Carthage


Also known as

Celerino


Profile

Nephew of Saint Laurentinus, Saint Laurentius, and Saint Clerina. Imprisoned and tortured during the persecutions of Decius in Rome, Italy. He was eventually freed and returned home to Carthage. Ordained as a deacon by Saint Cyprian. Because he suffered so much, and because he was willing to die for the faith, he has always been listed as a martyr.


Born

Carthage, North Africa


Died

c.250 of natural causes



Saint Ia of Cornwall


Also known as

Hia, Hya, Iia, Ives


Profile

Sister of Saint Ercus (Euny). Spiritual student of Saint Baricus. Missionary to Cornwall with Saint Fingar, Saint Piala and as many as 777 companions. Legend says that to reach Cornwall, she sailed across the Irish Sea on a leaf. Saint Ives, Cornwall is named for her. Martyr.


Born

Irish


Died

martyred in 450 at the River Hayle, Cornwall, England


Saint Blasius of Armentarius


Profile

Third century shepherd in the area of Armentarius, Cappadocia (an area of modern Turkey) whose reputation for piety led to his arrest and extensive torture during a persecution of Christians in the area. He survived it, and died years later, his example having brought many to the faith. Legend says that at his death, his shepherd's staff put out roots, branched out, and later bloomed.



Also known as

Evancius, Evance


Profile

Bishop of Vienne, France in 581. Actively involved in the 1st Council of Mâcon in 581, the 2nd Council of Lyon in 582, the 2nd Council of Mâcon in 584 and the 2nd Council of Valence in 584.


Died

13 January 586 of natural causes



Blessed Helinand of Pronleroy


Also known as

Elinand, Elinando, Elinandus


Profile

Court singer and troubadour. Convert. Benedictine Cistercian monk at Froidmont, France.


Born

c.1160 at Pronleroy, diocese of Beauvais, France


Died

c.1237 of natural causes



Blessed Balbina of Assisi


Profile

A spiritual student of Saint Clare of Assisi, Balbina became a Poor Clare nun at the monastery of San Damiano. Helped found the Poor Clare monastery at Spello, Italy.


Born

1214


Died

3 February 1240 in Spello, Italy



Saint Werburgh of Bardney


Also known as

• Werburgh of Mercia

• Werburga, Werburg


Profile

Married to Ceolred of Mercia. Widow. Nun and then abbess at Bardney, England.


Born

in Mercia, England


Died

c.785 of natural causes



Saint Laurentinus of Carthage


Profile

Brother of Saint Laurentius and Saint Clerina. Uncle of Saint Celerinus. Martyred in the persecutions of Decius.


Died

3rd century near Carthage, North Africa



Saint Remedius of Gap


Also known as

Reméde, Remedio


Profile

Bishop of Gap, France.


Died

• early 5th century of natural causes

• relics transferred to Tulle, France in the 13th century


Saint Laurentius of Carthage


Profile

Brother of Saint Laurentinus and Saint Clerina. Uncle of Saint Celerinus. Martyred in the persecutions of Decius.


Died

3rd century near Carthage, North Africa



Saint Oliver of Ancona


Also known as

• Oliver of Pontonuovo

• Liberius, Oliverius, Oliverus


Profile

Benedictine monk at Santa Maria di Portonuovo at Ancona, Italy.


Died

c.1050


Saint Clerina of Carthage


Profile

Brother of Saint Laurentinus and Saint Laurentius. Aunt of Saint Celerinus. Martyred in the persecutions of Decius.


Died

3rd century near Carthage, North Africa



Blessed John Zakoly


Also known as

John of Csanad


Profile

Bishop of Csanád, Hungary. Pauline monk. Prior of the house at Diósgyor (modern Miskolc), Hungary.


Died

1494 of natural causes



Saint Anatolius of Salins


Profile

Bishop in Scotland. Pilgrim to Rome, Italy. He abandoned his see to live as a hermit at Salins, France.


Born

Scottish


Died

9th century



Saint Heridag of Hamburg


Also known as

Heridad


Profile

First priest to serve in the church in Hamburg, Germany in the early 9th century. No other information about him has survived.



Saint Caellainn


Also known as

Caoilfionn


Profile

A church in Roscommon, Ireland is named in her honor. No other information has survived.


Born

Irish


Died

6th century



Saint Blasius of Oreto


Also known as

Blasius of Cisuentes


Profile

Bishop of Oreto, Spain. Martyred in the persecutions of Nero.


Died

c.68 in Cisuentes, Spain



Saint Ignatius of Africa


Profile

Uncle of Saint Celerinus. Martyr. Saint Cyprian wrote about him.


Born

Africa


Died

3rd century Africa



Saint Sempronius of Africa


Also known as

Symphronius


Profile

Martyr.


Died

unspecified location in Africa



Saint Philip of Vienne


Profile

Bishop of Vienne, France during a period of great political turmoil and rampant heresy.



Saint Felix of Africa


Profile

Martyr.


Died

unspecified location in Africa



Saint Eutichio


Profile

Martyr.


Died

• Rome, Italy

• interred in the catacombs of the Appian Way outside Rome



Saint Hippolytus of Africa


Profile

Martyr.


Died

unspecified location in north Africa



Saint Lupicinus of Lyon


Also known as

Lupicino


Profile

Bishop of Lyon, France in 486.



Saint Tigides of Gap


Also known as

Teridio, Teridius, Tigrido


Profile

Sixth century bishop of Gap, France.



Saint Liafdag


Profile

Bishop in Jutland, Denmark. Martyred by local pagans.


Died

980 in Denmark



Saint Cuanna of Glenn


Profile

Monk. Abbot of Mag Bile in Ireland from 731 to 746.



Saint Deodatus of Lagny


Profile

Eighth century monk at Lagny, France.



Saint Felix of Lyons


Profile

Bishop of Lyons, France.

Saint Felix of Lyons! He's an important figure in early Christian history, particularly in the city of Lyon. Here's what I can tell you about him:


Life and Episcopacy:


Unfortunately, much of Saint Felix's life remains shrouded in mystery due to the limited historical records from his era (2nd century AD). We know he served as the Bishop of Lyon, France, during the late 2nd or early 3rd century.

He is remembered for his leadership during a period of intense persecution against Christians in Lyon and Vienne under the Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius.

Martyrdom and Legacy:


Saint Felix is most well-known for his martyrdom around 177 AD. According to historical accounts, he was arrested along with other Christians and subjected to various tortures and trials. He remained steadfast in his faith and refused to renounce Christianity.

Ultimately, Saint Felix was condemned to death and executed, becoming a symbol of courage and unwavering faith in the face of persecution.

His martyrdom had a profound impact on the early Christian community in Lyon and beyond. He is venerated as a saint in both the Catholic and Orthodox churches, and his feast day is celebrated on June 2nd.

there is another Saint Felix whose feast day also falls on February 3rd. This Saint Felix was not the Bishop of Lyon, but rather the Bishop of Croton (Crotone), Italy. He lived and served in the mid-4th century, making him quite distinct from the Saint Felix of Lyon of the 2nd-3rd century.


While both saints share the same feast day, they have distinct historical contexts and legacies. Here's some information about Saint Felix of Croton to avoid potential confusion:


Bishop of Croton: He served as the Bishop of Croton, located in Calabria, Italy, during the 4th century. He played a significant role in the spread of Christianity within the region and is credited with the construction of several churches.

Miracles and Veneration: Various miracles, including healing the sick and raising the dead, are attributed to Saint Felix of Croton. He is also known for his efforts to combat paganism and promote Christian orthodoxy.

Limited Information: Similar to Saint Felix of Lyon, details about his life are also scarce. However, he is venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church, and his feast day on February 3rd is celebrated locally in Croton and surrounding areas.


Benedictine Martyrs


Profile

A collective memorial of all members of the Benedictine Order who have died as martyrs for the faith.


Profiled Benedictine Martyrs

• Blessed Abel Ángel Palazuelos Maruri

• Blessed Agustí Busquets Creixell

• Blessed Albertin-Marie Maisonade

• Blessed Aleix Civil Castellví

• Blessed Ambroise-Augustin Chevreux

• Blessed Ángel Carmelo Boix Cosials

• Blessed Àngel Maria Rodamilans Canals

• Blessed Antolín Pablos Villanueva

• Blessed Antoni Lladós Salud

• Blessed Antonio Fuertes Boira

• Blessed Antonio Suárez Riu

• Blessed Augustin-Joseph Desgardin

• Blessed Càndid Feliu Soler

• Blessed Cipriano González Millán

• Blessed Claude Richard

• Blessed Conrad of Seldenbüren

• Blessed Fernando Salinas Romeo

• Blessed Francesc Maria de Paula Sánchez Solé

• Blessed Gerard of Clairvaux

• Blessed Gervais-Protais Brunel

• Blessed Ignace-Alexandre-Joseph Cardon

• Blessed Ignasi Guilà Ximenes

• Blessed Jan Chrysostom Zavrel

• Blessed János Brenner

• Blessed Jaume Caballé Bru

• Blessed Jaume Vendrell Olivella

• Blessed Joan Grau Bullich

• Blessed Joan Roca Bosch

• Blessed John Beche

• Blessed John Rugg

• Blessed John Sordi

• Blessed John Thorne

• Blessed José Antón Gómez

• Blessed José Erausquin Aramburu

• Blessed Josep Albareda Ramoneda

• Blessed Josep Maria Fontseré Masdeú

• Blessed Josep Maria Jordá i Jordá

• Blessed Julián Heredia Zubia

• Blessed Julio Fernández Muñiz

• Blessed Konrad II of Mondsee

• Blessed Leandro Cuesta Andrés

• Blessed León Alesanco Maestro

• Blessed Leoncio Ibáñez Caballero

• Blessed Lluis Casanovas Vila

• Blessed Lorenzo Santolaria Ester

• Blessed Lorenzo Sobrevia Cañardo

• Blessed Louis Barreau de La Touche

• Blessed Louis-François Lebrun

• Blessed Luis Palacios Lozano

• Blessed Luis Vidaurrázaga González

• Blessed María de la Salud Baldoví Trull

• Blessed Mariano Palau Sin

• Blessed Mariano Sierra Almázor

• Blessed Mark Barkworth

• Blessed Martín Donamaría Valencia

• Blessed Maturin-Marie Pitri

• Blessed Modeste-Marie Burgen

• Blessed Pere Vallmitjana Abarca

• Blessed Pere Vilar Espona

• Blessed Peter of Subiaco

• Blessed Philip Powel

• Blessed Rafael Alcocer Martínez

• Blessed Ramón Sanz De Galdeano Mañeru

• Blessed René-Julien Massey

• Blessed Richard Whiting

• Blessed Roger James

• Blessed Rosalie du Verdier de la Sorinière

• Blessed Santiago Pardo López

• Blessed Suzanne-Agathe Deloye

• Blessed Thiemo of Salzburg

• Blessed Thomas Pickering

• Blessed Thomas Tunstal

• Blessed Vicente Burrel Enjuanes

• Blessed William Eynon

• Blessed William Scott

• Blessed Zosimo Maria Brambat

• Five Polish Brothers

• Martyred Subiaco Benedictines of Barcelona

• Martyrs of Cardeña

• Martyrs of Croyland

• Martyrs of Messina

• Saint Abbo of Fleury

• Saint Adalbert of Prague

• Saint Ageranus of Bèze

• Saint Agigulf

• Saint Aigulf

• Saint Aigulphus of Lérins

• Saint Alban Bartholomew Roe

• Saint Altigianus

• Saint Amarinus of Clermont

• Saint Ambrose Edward Barlow

• Saint Arnulf of Novalesa

• Saint Beocca of Chertsey

• Saint Berard of Bèze

• Saint Bernard of Lérida

• Saint Bertha of Avenay

• Saint Boniface of Crediton

• Saint Bruno of Querfort

• Saint Deusdedit of Montecassino

• Saint Donatus of Messina

• Saint Elleher

• Saint Eobán of Utrecht

• Saint Ernest of Mecca

• Saint Ethor of Chertsey

• Saint Eutychius of Messina

• Saint Faustus of Messina

• Saint Firmatus of Messina

• Saint Frugentius the Martyr

• Saint Genesius of Bèze

• Saint Gerard Sagredo

• Saint Gibardus of Luxeuil

• Saint Gundekar

• Saint Hadulph

• Saint Hedda of Peterborough

• Saint Hedda the Abbot

• Saint Hilarinus

• Saint Hildebert of Ghent

• Saint John Roberts

• Saint Marinus of Maurienne

• Saint Placidus of Messina

• Saint Porcarius of Lérins

• Saint Rodron of Bèze

• Saint Rumold

• Saint Sifrard of Bèze

• Saint Stephen of Burgos

• Saint Thiento of Wessobrunn

• Saint Victorinus of Messina

• Saint Vincent of Léon

• Saint Wiborada of Gall



 Our Lady of Saideneida


Our Lady of Saideneida is a venerated icon of the Virgin Mary located in the Our Lady of Saidnaya Monastery near Damascus, Syria. It's one of the oldest and most renowned Marian shrines in the Middle East, drawing pilgrims from all over the world.


History and Legend:


The monastery itself is believed to have been founded by the Byzantine emperor Justinian I in the 6th century, following visions of the Virgin Mary.

Tradition attributes the icon of Our Lady of Saideneida to Saint Luke the Evangelist, but its exact origins remain shrouded in mystery. Some sources suggest it was brought to the monastery from Constantinople or Jerusalem around the 9th century.

The Icon:


The icon depicts Mary holding the Christ Child in her arms, both figures adorned with gold and jewels. Their serene expressions and gentle poses have captivated the hearts of believers for centuries.

The icon is said to possess miraculous powers and has been associated with countless healings, answered prayers, and acts of protection.

Significance:


Our Lady of Saideneida is revered by Christians of various denominations, including Greek Orthodox, Catholic, and Syrian Orthodox.

Muslims also hold the monastery and the icon in high regard, often visiting to seek blessings and offer prayers.

The feast day of Our Lady of Saideneida is celebrated on September 8th, drawing thousands of pilgrims to the monastery for a week-long festival.

Recent Events:


Sadly, the Syrian Civil War caused significant damage to the monastery in 2013. However, restoration efforts are underway, and the monastery remains a beacon of hope and faith for many.

Our Lady of Saideneida actually has two feast days celebrated by different communities:


September 8th: This is the main feast day recognized by most Christian denominations, including Greek Orthodox, Catholic, and Syrian Orthodox. It draws thousands of pilgrims to the monastery for a week-long festival and is associated with the icon's supposed appearance at the site.

February 3rd: This feast day is primarily observed by Eastern Orthodox Christians. It commemorates a legend associated with the Emperor Justinian I, who, while leading his army through the desert, received a vision of the Virgin Mary at the location where the monastery now stands. The Virgin instructed him to build a church there, hence the connection to February 3rd.


 Simeon the Elder


Simeon the Righteous, also known as Simeon the God-Receiver. His feast day is indeed celebrated on February 3rd in both the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic churches.


He is mentioned in the Gospel of Luke (2:25-35) as a righteous and devout man who lived in Jerusalem. When Mary and Joseph presented the infant Jesus at the Temple, Simeon was given the revelation by the Holy Spirit that he wouldn't die until he had seen the Messiah.


Upon encountering Jesus, Simeon proclaimed him as the "Light to enlighten the Gentiles and the glory of your people Israel" (Luke 2:32). He then blessed Mary and prophesied about the future suffering of Jesus and the sorrow she would experience.


Simeon is venerated as a saint for his faith, righteousness, and obedience to God's will. He is seen as a symbol of hope and anticipation for the arrival of the Messiah, and his feast day marks the culmination of the forty-day Christmas season in the Eastern Orthodox tradition.

01 February 2024

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெப்ரவரி 02

 St. Cornelius


Born unknown

Died unknown

Venerated in Roman Catholicism

Eastern Orthodox Church

Anglican Communion

Feast 20 October, 2 February,[1] 4 February,[2] 7 February, 13 September

Attributes Roman military garb

First bishop of Caesarea, Palestine, who was originally a centurion in the Italica cohort of the Roman legion in the area. Cornelius had a vision instructing him to send for St. Peter, who came to his home and baptized him, as described in Acts, chapter ten.


Cornelius (Greek: Κορνήλιος, romanized: Kornélios; Latin: Cornelius) was a Roman centurion who is considered by Christians to be the first Gentile to convert to the faith, as related in Acts of the Apostles (see Ethiopian eunuch for the competing tradition). The baptism of Cornelius is an important event in the history of the early Christian church. He may have belonged to the gens Cornelia, a prominent Roman family.

Biblical account

Cornelius was a centurion in the Cohors II Italica Civium Romanorum, mentioned as Cohors Italica in the Vulgate.[3][4] He was stationed in Caesarea, the capital of Roman Iudaea province.[5] He is depicted in the New Testament as a God-fearing man[6] who always prayed and was full of good works and deeds of alms. Cornelius receives a vision in which an angel of God tells him that his prayers have been heard; he understands that he has been chosen for a higher alternative. The angel then instructs Cornelius to send the men of his household to Joppa, where they will find Simon Peter, who is residing with a tanner by the name of Simon (Acts 10:5ff).

The conversion of Cornelius comes after a separate vision given to Simon Peter himself (Acts 10:10–16). In the vision, Simon Peter sees all manner of beasts and fowl being lowered from Heaven in a sheet. A voice commands Simon Peter to eat. When he objects to eating those animals that are unclean according to Mosaic Law, the voice tells him not to call unclean that which God has cleansed.[7]

When Cornelius' men arrive, Simon Peter understands that through this vision the Lord commanded the Apostle to preach the Word of God to the Gentiles. Peter accompanies Cornelius' men back to Caesarea.[7] When Cornelius meets Simon Peter, he falls at Peter's feet. Simon Peter raises the centurion and the two men share their visions. Simon Peter tells of Jesus' ministry and the Resurrection; the Holy Spirit descends on everyone at the gathering. The Jews among the group are amazed that Cornelius and other uncircumcised should begin speaking in tongues, praising God. Thereupon Simon Peter commands that Cornelius and his followers, "kinsmen and near friends", be baptized.[8] The controversial aspect of Gentile conversion is taken up later at the Council of Jerusalem (Acts 15).

Religious situation of Judea

Taking into account that Judea had been within the Hellenic orbit since the conquest of Alexander the Great, there was time for wise men and philosophers, both Greek and Jewish, to exchange knowledge, thus beginning the syncretism between Hellenism and Judaism, a phenomenon that occurred in the rest of his empire. Later with the arrival of the Romans (already Hellenized), there were no problems of religious tolerance (except in the case of the Zealots), since thanks to the interpretatio graeca exported by the Macedonians, it was possible to identify Caelus (Roman god) or Uranus (his Greek equivalent) and Yahweh as the Supreme God himself, allowing conversion cases like Cornelius.[9][10][11]

Significance

In this painting by Gerbrand van den Eeckhout an angel appears to the Roman centurion Cornelius. The angel tells him to seek out St. Peter.[12] The Walters Art Museum.

Can any man forbid water, that these should not be baptized, which have received the Holy Ghost as well as we?

— Acts 10:47

Cornelius is considered to be one of the first gentiles to converted to Christianity.[13]

The baptism of Cornelius is an important event in the history of the early Christian church, along with the conversion and baptism of the Ethiopian eunuch. The Christian church was first formed around the original disciples and followers of Jesus, all of whom, including Jesus himself, were Galilean, except for Judas, who was Judean. All males in the Judean community were Jews: they were circumcised and observed the Law of Moses. The reception of Cornelius sparked a debate among the leaders of the new community of followers of Jesus, culminating in the decision to allow Gentiles to become Christians without conforming to Jewish requirements for circumcision, as recounted in Acts 15.

Traditions

Certain traditions hold Cornelius as becoming either the first bishop of Caesarea, or the bishop of Scepsis in Mysia.[5][8]

Commemoration

His feast day on the new Martyrologium Romanum is 20 October. He is commemorated in the Orthodox tradition on 13 September.[7]

Cornelius is honored on the liturgical calendar of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America on February 4.[2] When Governors Island in New York City was a military installation, the Episcopal Church maintained a stone chapel there dedicated to him.[14]

The Greek-French philosopher Cornelius Castoriadis is named after him



Saint Catherine del Ricci


Also known as

• Catherine de Ricci

• Catherine dei Ricci

• Caterina, Catharine


Profile

Born to the patrician class. Her mother died when Catherine was an infant; she was raised by her godmother, but considered the Blessed Virgin Mary to be her true mother, and developed a great devotion to her. As a child, Catherine could speak to her guardian angel, and the angel taught her prayers for the rosary. At age 6 she moved to the convent school of Montecelli; her aunt was the abbess. Catherine developed a devotion to the Passion. Her father, Peter, objected to her plans to join a convent, then relented, then changed his mind again. Catherine continued her prayers at home, but when he changed his mind she fell ill. It was only when he at last agreed on her vocation that she recovered. Dominican tertiary.



She received visions and had ecstacies, but these caused some problems and doubts among her sisters – outwardly she seemed asleep or dully stupid when the visions were upon her. Catherine though everyone received these visions as part of their lives with God. She was stricken with a series of painful ailments that permanently damaged her health. Catherine met Philip Neri in a vision while he was alive in Rome; they corresponded. She could bilocate. Said to have received a ring from the Lord as a sign of her espousal to him; to her it appeared as gold set with a diamond; everyone else saw a red lozenge and a circlet around her finger.


Permanent stigmatist. At age 20 she began a 12-year cycle of weekly ecstasies of the Passion from noon Thursday until 4:00pm Friday, often accompanied by serious wounds. Her sisters could follow the course of the Passion, as the wounds appeared in order from the scourging and crowning with thorns. At the end she was covered with wounds and her shoulder was indented from the Cross. The first time, during Lent 1542, she meditated so completely on the crucifixion of Jesus that she became ill, and was healed by a vision of the Risen Lord talking with Mary Magdalene. Crowds came to see her, skeptics and sinners being converted by the sight. The crowds became to numerous and constant that the sisters prayed that the wounds become less visible; He made them so in 1554. Three future popes (Cardinals Cervini, Pope Marcellus II; Alexander de Medici, Pope Leo XI; Aldobrandini, Pope Clement VIII) were among the thousands who sought her prayers.


Novice-mistress. Sub-prioress. Prioress at age 30. Noted reformer of her house. Correspondent with Saint Charles Borromeo and Pope Saint Pius V.


Born

23 April 1522 at Florence, Italy as Alessandra Lucrezia Romola de' Ricci


Died

2 February 1590 at Prato, Italy of natural causes


Canonized

29 June 1746 by Pope Benedict XIV




Saint Maria Domenica Mantovani


Also known as

Mother Maria of the Immaculate


Profile

Eldest of four children born to Giovanni and Prudenza Zamperini, Maria grew up in a small farm village She received only three years of elementary school, learned religion from her pious parents, and was early drawn to religious life. In her teens, Maria's parish priest and spiritual director, Blessed Giuseppe Nascimbeni, encouraged her to visit the sick, teach catechism, and become active in her parish work.



On 8 December 1886, Maria made a private vow of virginity, and asked for Our Lady's guidance in how best fulfill her religious vocation. In 1892, Maria and Father Nascimbeni founded the Congregation of the Little Sisters of the Holy Family with four women; Maria took the name Mother Maria of the Immaculate, but everyone simply called her Mother. Their mission was to promote parish life and help the spiritual and material well-being of people in need, and Maria served as first Superior General, guiding the Congregation for the next 40 years. She was known for the depth and intensity of her prayer life, her devotion to Our Lady, and her gentle spiritual guidance to her sisters and the townspeople alike. Today the Little Sisters of the Holy Family work in Italy, Switzerland, Albania, Africa, Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, and Paraguay, serving children and youth, families, priests, the elderly and the disabled in parishes.


Born

12 November 1862 in Castelletto di Brenzone, Italy


Died

2 February 1934 in Castelletto di Brenzone, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

• 27 April 2003 by Pope John Paul II

• the beatification miracle involved the 6 March 1999 healing of a one-day-old girl in Bahía Blanca, Argentina who fell from her hospital bed and received a head injury resulting in severe brain damage and a coma


Canonized

• 15 May 2022 by Pope Francis

• the canonization miracle involved the healing of an 11 year old girl of "epileptic state of illness; coma; cardio-respiratory arrest; acute respiratory failure; infections in patient with myelomenigocele and derived hydrocephalus, lower limb paraplegia" in 2011 in Bahía Blanca, Argentina



Saint Maria Katharina Kasper

புனிதர் மரியா கேதரீனா கேஸ்பர் 

மறைப்பணியாளர்/ நிறுவனர்:

பிறப்பு: மே 26, 1820

டெர்ன்பச், அம்ட் மொண்டபவ்ர், நஸ்ஸாவு, ஜெர்மன் கூட்டமைப்பு

இறப்பு: பிப்ரவரி 2, 1898 (வயது 77)

டெர்ன்பச், அன்டெர்வெஸ்டெர்வட்க்ரெய்ஸ், ப்ரூஸியா, ஜெர்மன் பேரரசு

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

முக்திப்பேறு பட்டம்: ஏப்ரல் 16, 1978

திருத்தந்தை ஆறாவது பவுல்

புனிதர் பட்டம்: அக்டோபர் 14, 2018

திருத்தந்தை ஃபிரான்சிஸ்

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஃபெப்ரவரி 2

பாதுகாவல்:

இயேசு கிறிஸ்துவின் எளிய பணியாளர்கள் சபை

புனிதர் மரியா கேதரீனா கேஸ்பர், ஒரு ஜெர்மன் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் அருட்சகோதரியும், "இயேசு கிறிஸ்துவின் எளிய பணியாளர்கள் சபையின்" (Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ) நிறுவனருமாவார். சமய வாழ்வில் ஈடுபட வேண்டுமென்ற ஆவல் சிறுவயதிலிருந்தே இருப்பினும், காலம் தாழ்ந்தே அவர் திருச்சபையின் அருட்சகோதரியானார். இவரது தந்தையும் சகோதரர் ஒருவரும் மரித்துப் போனது, மற்றும் இவரது மோசமான பொருளாதார நிலை ஆகியவற்றின் காரணமாக, இவரது ஆன்மீக ஆசைகள் நிறைவேறுவதில் காலதாமதம் ஏற்பட்டன. தமது அர்ப்பணிப்புள்ள வாழ்க்கையில், ஏழைகளுக்கும் நோயுற்றோர்க்கும் உதவுவது மற்றும் சேவையாற்றுவது ஆகியனவற்றுக்காக அவர் குறிப்பிடப்படுகிறார்.

அன்றைய ஜெர்மன் கூட்டமைப்பின் (German Confederation) "வெஸ்டெர்வட்க்ரெய்ஸ்" (Westerwaldkreis) மாவட்டத்தின் "டெர்ன்பச்" (Dernbach) எனும் நகரில் பிறந்த இவரது திருமுழுக்குப் பெயரும், கேதரீனா (Katharina) ஆகும். பக்திமிகு விவசாயியான "ஹெயின்றிச் கேஸ்பர்" (Heinrich Kasper) இவராதது தந்தையார் ஆவார். தந்தையின் நான்காவது மனைவியான "கேத்ரீனா ஃபஸ்ஸல்" (Katharina Fassel) இவரது தாயார் ஆவார். இவர், தமது பெற்றோரின் நான்கு குழந்தைகளில் மூன்றாவது குழந்தை ஆவார்.

அவருடைய குழந்தை பருவத்தில், விவிலியம் பற்றின் குறிப்பிட்ட முக்கியத்துவம் வாய்ந்தவற்றையும், மற்றும் கிறிஸ்துவின் சாயல்களைப்பற்றியும் கற்றுத் தேர்ந்தார். கேதரின், தார்மீக பாத்திரத்தின் வலுவான உணர்வுடன் வெளிப்படையாக அறியப்பட்டார். உடல்நிலை ஆரோக்கியமற்றிருந்த கேதரின், தமது ஆறு வயது முதல் பதினான்கு வயது வரை, தமது சொந்த ஊரிலுள்ள பள்ளியில் கல்வி கற்றார். பெற்றோரின் உருளைக்கிழங்கு வயலிலும், துணி நெசவு செய்தல் உள்ளிட்ட வீட்டு வேலைகளிலும் பெற்றோருக்கு உதவினார். அயலாரின் குழந்தைகளுக்கு கதைகள் சொல்வதிலும் பாடல்கள் பாடிக் காட்டுவதிலும் மகிழ்ச்சியடைந்தார்.

வயல்வெளிகளில் வேலை செய்துவந்த கேத்தரின், வயல்களை சுற்றிலும் சாலைகள் அமைப்பதற்காக கல் உடைக்கும் வேலையும் செய்தார். அடிக்கடி மரியாளின் திருத்தலமொன்றிற்கு பயணம் செய்த அவர், அடிக்கடி, அருகாமையிலுள்ள குழந்தைகளையும் அழைத்துச் சென்றார். சிறுவயது பருவத்தில், அவரது ஆன்மீக வேலைப்பாடுகள் வெளிப்படுத்தப்பட்டு, "கர்த்தருக்குள் என்னைப் பரிசுத்தம் பண்ணிக்கொள்ளுகிறதற்கான ஒரு பெரிய ஆசை என்னுள் உணர்ந்தபோது," நான் ஒரு சிறுமியாக இருந்தேன்" என்று அவர் பின்னாளில் எழுதினார். பெற்றோரின் கஷ்ட நிலைக்கு உதவுவதற்காக வயல்களில் வேலை செய்து வந்த கேத்தரின், "நான் வேலைக்குச் சென்றபோது எனக்குள் கடவுளின் இருப்பை உணர்ந்தேன்" என்று பின்னாளில் எழுதினர்.

கி.பி. 1841ம் ஆண்டு, அவரது தந்தை இறந்துவிட்டார். மற்றும் கி.பி. 1842ம் ஆண்டு, அவருடைய சகோதரர்களில் ஒருவர், நெதர்லாந்தில் வியாபாரத்தில் இருந்து வீடு திரும்பும் வழியில் இறந்து போனார். இவர்களுடைய இறப்பால், இவர்களுடைய குடும்பம் சிதறிப்போனது. ஏற்கனவே மோசமாயிருந்த அவர்களுடைய பொருளாதார நிலைமை, நிலைமையை மேலும் மோசமாக்கியது. அதனால் கேதரினும், அவருடைய தாயாரும் வீட்டை விட்டு வெளியேறி, வேறு இடத்திற்கு செல்லும் கட்டாயத்துக்குள்ளானார்கள். கேதரினும், அவருடைய தாயாரும் மத்தியாஸ் முல்லர் (Matthias Müller) என்பவரின் வீட்டில் ஒரு அறையை வாடகைக்கு எடுத்துக் கொண்டார்கள். அவர், நெசவுப்பணியை ஒரு வேலையாக செய்யத் தொடங்கினார். கேதரின், தமக்காகவும், தமது தாயாருக்காகவும், பத்து சென்ட் காசுகளுக்காக வேலை செய்தார். சிறிது காலத்தின் பின்னர், அவரது தாயார் மரித்துப் போனார். இதன்காரணமாக தனித்து விடப்பட்ட கேதரின், சுயமாக ஆன்மீக வாழ்க்கைக்கான அழைப்பை ஏற்று நடக்காத தொடங்கினார். கேதரின் ஒரு ஒப்புக்கொள்ளப்பட்ட மறைப்பணியாளராக ஆக விரும்பினார். ஆனால், ஏற்கனவே உள்ள ஆன்மீக சபைகளில் சேர விரும்பவில்லை. இது அவருக்கு கடினமான காரியமாக அமையும் என்று அவர் எண்ணினார். பெண்களுக்கான சபைகள் இல்லை என்பதாலும், மதச்சார்பற்ற தன்மை காரணமாக, தான் தமது சொந்தப் பிரதேசத்தை விட்டு வெளியேற வேண்டி நேரிடும் என்பதாலும் அவர் அதனை விரும்பவில்லை. மேலும், அவருக்கு அருகாமை நகரான "மொண்டபௌர்" (Montabaur) எனும் நகரிலும், ஆண்களுக்கான சபைகளை சேர்ந்த "ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன்" மற்றும் "சிஸ்டர்ஸியன்" (Franciscan and Cistercians) துறவு மடங்களே இருந்தன. அவர்களின் பிரசன்னம் மற்றும் அவர்களின் தற்போதைய மத நடவடிக்கைகளால் அவர்களின் ஆன்மீக வாழ்வு அமைந்திருந்தது.

கேதரின், உள்ளூர் வாசிகள் மற்றும் அவர்களது குடும்பத்தினரின் உதவிகளுடன் தமக்கான சிறு இல்லத்தை "டெர்ன்பச்" (Dernbach) நகரில் கட்டி எழுப்பினார். பிற்காலத்தில், இது, அவர் உருவாக்கின சமூகத்தின் இல்லமாக மாறியது. கிராமத்தில் குழந்தைகளையும் நோயாளிகளையும் பேண உதவிய முதல் உள்ளூர் பெண்கள் தங்களுடைய சொந்த வீடுகளில் வாழ்ந்து வந்தனர்.

குறிப்பாக அவர்களின் நடவடிக்கைகள் வளர்ந்த காரணங்களால், அவரது குழுமத்தின் நடவடிக்கைகள் கவனிக்கப்படாமல் போய்விடவில்லை. உள்ளூர் மாநகராட்சி மன்றத் தலைவர் (Mayor), இவர்களது குழுமத்தைப் பற்றின ஒரு பொது அறிவிப்பை வெளியிட்டார். அவர்களுக்கு சில வழிகாட்டுதல்களை அளித்த அவர், அவர்களுக்கு நன்கொடைகளை வழங்கும்படி கிராமவாசிகளை கேட்டுக்கொண்டார். அருகாமையிலுள்ள "வர்ஜெஸ்" (Wirges) மற்றும் "மாண்டபாவர்" (Montabaur) நகரங்களிலுள்ள கத்தோலிக்க குருக்களுக்கும் இவர்களது குழுமம்  பற்றின தகவல்கள் கொடுக்கப்பட்டன. ஏற்கனவே கேதரின் விஜயம் செய்திருந்த "லிம்போவின் ஆயர்" (Bishop of Limburg) "பீட்டர் ஜோசப் ப்ளூம்" (Peter Joseph Blum) என்பவருக்கும் அவர்கள் தகவலளித்தனர். உள்ளூர் கிராமத்திலிருந்தும், சுற்று வட்டார கிராமங்கலிருந்தும் பெண்கள் கேதரினின் இல்லத்தில் இணைந்தனர். ஒழுங்கமைக்கப்பட்ட சமய வாழ்க்கைக்கு அர்ப்பணிக்கப்பட்ட ஒரு சங்கமாக மாறிய இது,  கேதரின் உருவாக்கும் ஆன்மீக சபைக்கான அடிப்படையை இது உருவாக்கியது.

கி.பி. 1851ம் ஆண்டு, ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம், 15ம் தேதி, ஆயர் ப்ளூம் (Bishop Blum), வர்ஜெஸ் ஆலயத்தில் (Wirges Church), குழுவின் முதலாவது உறுதிப்பாடுகளைப் பெற்றார். "இயேசு கிறிஸ்துவின் எளிய பணியாளர்கள் சபை"

(Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ) நிறுவப்பட்டது. கேதரின் (மற்றும் பிற பெண்கள்) ஒப்புக்கொள்ளப்பட்ட மறைப்பணியாளர்களாக அறிவிக்கப்பட்டார்கள். "கேதரின் கேஸ்பர்", "மரியா" எனும் ஆன்மீகப் பெயரை ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார். இவர்களது சபையானது, மிக விரைவில் வேகமாகப் .பரவியது. அவற்றின் செயல்பாடுகளை பார்வையிடுவதற்காக மரியா கேத்தரின் கேஸ்பர் பல்வேறு இல்லங்களுக்கும் வருகை தந்தார். கி.பி. 1859ம் ஆண்டு, சபையினர் விரைவில் நெதர்லாந்து (Netherlands) நாட்டுக்கும் வந்தனர். கேஸ்பர், சபையின் சுப்பீரியர் ஜெனரலாக (Superior General) ஐந்து முறை தொடர்ச்சியாக சேவை செய்தார். கி.பி. 1854ம் ஆண்டு, சபையின் முதல் பள்ளி திறக்கப்பட்டது. கி.பி. 1860ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 9ம் தேதி, திருத்தந்தை ஒன்பதாம் பயஸ் (Pope Pius IX), இவர்களது சபைக்கு பாராட்டு ஆணையை வழங்கினார். கி.பி. 1890ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், 21ம் நாளன்று, திருத்தந்தை "பதின்மூன்றாம் லியோ" (Pope Leo XIII) இச்சபைக்கு அங்கீகாரம் வழங்கினார். கி.பி. 1868ம் ஆண்டு, அமெரிக்காவின் (United States of America) சிகாகோ (Chicago) போன்ற நகரங்களிலும் இச்சபை பரவியது.

கி.பி. 1898ம் ஆண்டு, ஜனவரி மாதம், 27ம் தேதி, டெர்ன்பச் (Dernbach) நகரில், “இயேசுவை ஆலயத்தில் அர்ப்பணித்தல்” திருநாளன்று, (Presentation Feast) மரியா கேதரின் கேஸ்பர், இருதய நோயினால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டு, மாரடைப்பினால் மரித்துப்போனார். சபையின் தலைமை இல்லத்தின் (Motherhouse) அருகேயுள்ள, அருட்கன்னியரின் தனிப்பட்ட கல்லறையில் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டார். அவருடைய மிச்சங்கள், தலைமை இல்லத்திலுள்ள சிற்றாலயத்துக்கு இடமாற்றம் செய்யப்பட்டது. இவர் உருவாக்கி நிர்மாணித்த சபை, மெக்சிக்கோ (Mexico), இந்தியா (India) உள்ளிட்ட உலக நாடுகளில் செயல்படுகிறது. அவரது மரணத்தின்போது, 193 இல்லங்களில், 1725 மறைப்பணியாளர்களுடன் செயல்பட்ட சபை, 2008ம் ஆண்டு, 104 இல்லங்களில், 690 மறைப்பணியாளர்களாக குறைந்துபோனது.

Also known as

• Catalina Kasper

• Catherine Kasper

• Maria Caterina Kasper



Profile

Third of four children born to Heinrich Kasper and Katharina Fassel, poor but devout peasants; she had four half-sisters from her father's first marriage. A happy, out-going child, Maria was an avid reader with a fondness for both the Bible and The Imitation of Christ by Thomas a Kempis. Health problems often kept her home from school, but there she learned to spin and weave. She worked with her parents in the fields, and when she could do it, earned extra money by breaking stones for road construction.



Maria she felt an early call to religious life, and would lead pilgrimages of other children to local Marian shrines. However, her father died when she was 21, one of her brothers when she was 22, and the family was left so poor that Maria had to stay to help them survive by selling her weaving. When her mother died, Maria felt she could finally follow her vocation, and with the approval of the bishop of Limburg, Germany, she started a small house with several friends who also felt the call. They became a formal association in 1845, and on 15 August 1851 they were established as the Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ, a congregation dedicated to caring for the poor. Maria served as superior for five consecutive terms. The Handmaids opened their first school in 1854, spread to the Netherlands in 1859, received a decree of praise from Pope Pius IX on 9 March 1860, and formal approval by Pope Leo XIII on 21 May 1890. Her order continues its good work today with 690 sisters in 104 houses in Germany, the Netherlands, the United States, Mexico and India.


Born

26 May 1820 in Dernbach, Westerwaldkreis, Germany


Died

• 2 February 1898 in Dernbach, Westerwaldkreis, Germany of complications following a heart attack on 27 January 1898

• re-interred at the chapel of the motherhouse of the Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ in 1950


Beatified

• 16 April 1978 by Pope Paul VI in Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City, Rome, Italy

• the beatification miracle involved the instantaneous cure of Sister Mary Herluka, a member of the Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ, of severe tuberculosis in September 1945


Canonized

• 14 October 2018 by Pope Francis at Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome, Italy

• the canonization miracle took place in India in 2012



Saint Jean-Théophane Vénard


Additional Memorial

24 November as one of the Martyrs of Vietnam


Profile

Raised in a pious family; one brother became a priest, and was later curator for Theophane's writings, and another was the bishop of Poitiers, France. Studied at the College of Doue-la-Fontaine, Montmorillon, Poitiers, and the Paris Seminary for Foreign Missions. Ordained on 5 June 1852. Missionary to southeast Asia, leaving on 19 September 1852. Worked fifteen months at Hong Kong, then transferred to West Tonkin (in modern Vietnam).



Christians in the area were being persecuted by order of the ruler Minh-Menh. Just before Theophan's arrival, new anti–Christian orders had forced priests and bishops to go into hiding in forests and caves. Father Vénard, whose health had never been good, suffered terribly, ministering to his flock by night and, when he could find a secure location, by day for nearly four years. Betrayed by an ostensible parishioner, he was arrested on 30 November 1860. He was tried for the crime of being Christian, and was given ample opportunity to save himself by denying Christ; he declined. He was kept in a cage for several weeks prior to his execution, during which he wrote a series of joyful, consoling letters to his family. One of the Martyrs of Vietnam.


Born

21 November 1829 at Saint-Loup, diocese of Poitiers, France


Died

• beheaded on 2 February 1861 at Ô Cau Giay, Hanoi, Tonkin (in modern Vietnam)

• his head was stuck on a pole as a warning to others, but was later recovered and preserved as a relic in Tonkin

• the rest of his body was sent back to his family, and is interred in the crypt of the Missions Etrangères in Paris, France


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II




Blessed Louis Alexander Alphonse Brisson


Also known as

Alois Brisson



Profile

The only child of Toussaint and Savine Brisson. Educated by a local priest who had a large library; Louis read everything, but was especially interested in science. Seminarian in Troyes, France. Ordained on 19 December 1840. Teacher at the Visitation school in Troyes. Chaplain to the Visitation Sisters in Troyes. Confessor, spiritual director and eventual biographer of Mother Marie Therese de Sales Chappuis, superior of the Visitation house. With her help, and that of Saint Francisca Salesia, he founded the Oblate Sisters of Saint Francis de Sales in 1859 to minister to girls working in textile factories. Established Saint Bernard's College in Troyes in 1869. On 27 August 1876, Louis and five other priests formed the Oblates of Saint Francis de Sales. Late in his life, the French government closed all religious houses, and the Oblates transferred their General House to Rome, Italy; being too elderly and frail to travel so far, Father Louis saw them off and then retired to spend his remaining days at his family home in Plancy, France.


Born

23 June 1817 in Plancy-l'Abbaye, Aube, France


Died

2 February 1908 in Plancy-l'Abbaye, Aube, France


Beatified

22 September 2012 by Pope Benedict XVI




Blessed Peter Cambiano


Also known as

• Peter de Ruffi

• Peter of Ruffia

• Peter Cambiani

• Peter Cambiano av Ruffi



Additional Memorial

7 November (Dominicans)


Profile

Peter's father was a city councillor, his mother was from a noble family, and the boy was raised in a pious household. He received a good education, and was early drawn to religious life, with a personal devotion to Our Lady of the Rosary. Joined the Dominicans in Piedmont, Italy at age 16. He continued his studies, and was ordained at age 25. Noted preacher throughout northern Italy. He worked to bring the heretical Waldensians back to the Church. Appointed inquisitor-general of the Piedmont.


In January 1365 Peter and two Dominican brothers went on a preaching mission through the mountains between Italy and Switzerland, working from the Franciscan friary at Susa, Italy. Peter's preaching brought many back to the faith, which earned him the anger of the Waldensians. Three of the heretics came to the friary, asked to see Peter, and then murdered him at the gate. Martyr.


Born

1320 in Chieri, Piedmont, Italy


Died

• stabbed to death with daggers on 2 February 1365 by Waldensian heretics outside the Franciscan friary of Susa, Italy

• buried at the Franciscan house as it was considered unsafe to transport his body through the hostile heretical territory

• relics translated to the Dominican house in Turin, Italy in 1517 after the friary was destroyed by an invading army


Beatified

4 December 1856 by Pope Pius IX (cultus confirmation)



Saint Jeanne de Lestonnac


Also known as

• Jane de Lestonnac

• Joan de Lestonnac



Profile

Married Gaston de Montferrant, Baron of Landiras, in 1572 at age 16. Mother of seven, five of whom lived to adulthood; two of the five entered religious life. Widowed at age 41, she ran the affairs of her estate and castle by herself.


Believing that her obligations to the world were finished, she entered a Cistercian house at Toulouse, France at age 46. She was not up to the rigors of the order's discipline, became seriously ill, and wanted to die at the monastery; her superiors refused to allow it. On her last night at the monastery, she had a vision of Mary who presented an image of Jeanne helping lost children.


Returning to her estate, she slowly started this work with local women and priests which led to the foundation of the Sisters of the Company of Mary, devoted to the education of girls and slowing Calvinism. It was approved by Pope Paul V on 7 April 1607; Joan was elected superior in 1610. Today the congregation has grown to 2,500 sisters in 17 countries.


Born

27 December 1556 at Bourdeaux, France


Died

2 February 1640 of natural causes


Canonized

15 May 1949 by Pope Pius XII




Blessed Stephen Bellesini


Also known as

• Aloysius Bellesini

• Stefano Bellesini


Additional Memorial

3 February (Augustinians)



Profile

Born to the Italian nobility. Became Augustinian in 1790 at age 16 at the monastery of Saint Mark in Venice, Italy, taking the name Stephen; he made his profession on 31 May 1794. Studied in Rome and Bologna in Italy. During the French Revolution troops shut down religious houses in the region, and dissolved the Augustinians; this ended Stephen's studies, and left him without his religious community.


He devoted himself to preaching and religious education for children. He organized a free school for poor children at Trentino. It was called La Scola per gnent (The School for Nothing), and had nearly 500 students and several lay teachers. His work impressed the governors of Trent, Italy, and they appointed him inspector of the province's schools.


When the Augustinians were restored, Stephen return to religious life. Novice master at Rome and Citta delle Pieve, Italy. Parish priest in 1831 at Genazzano, Italy, site of the shrine of Our Lady of Good Counsel. Devoted to his parishioners, Stephen made endless sick calls, working with victims of a cholera epidemic in 1840 until contracting the disease himself.


Born

25 November 1774 at Trent, Italy as Aloysius Bellesini


Died

2 February 1840 of cholera and an infection that developed from a cut on his leg received by an accidental fall while visiting the sick at Genazzano, Italy


Beatified

27 December 1904 by Pope Pius X



Candlemas

ஆண்டவரைக் கோவிலில் காணிக்கையாக ஒப்புக்கொடுத்த விழா (02-02-2021) 

கி.பி. 526 ஆம் ஆண்டு கான்ஸ்டான்டிநோபுள் நகரை மிகப்பெரிய கொள்ளை நோய் தாக்கவே, சிறியவர் முதல் பெரியவர் வரை மக்களில் நிறையப்பேர் இறந்து போனார்கள். இதைப் பார்த்த யாவரும் செய்வதரியாமல் திகைத்தார்கள். அப்போது திருத்தந்தை முதலாம் ஜஸ்டின், இந்த கொள்ளை நோயை முடிவுக்குக் கொண்டுவர ஒரே வழி, மக்கள் அனைவரையும் ஆண்டவருக்கு ஒப்புக்கொடுத்து ஜெபிப்பதுதான் எனத் தீர்மானித்து, அவ்வாறு ஜெபித்தார். இதனால் விரைவிலேயே கொள்ளைநோய் நீங்கியது. அனைவரும் பெருமகிழ்ச்சி அடைந்தார்கள்.

உடனே திருத்தந்தை அவர்கள், ஆண்டவர் மக்களை சிறப்பான விதத்தில் கொள்ளைநோயியிலிருந்து காப்பாற்றியதால், அனைவரையும் ஆண்டவர் இயேசுவை கோயிலில் காணிக்கையாக ஒப்புக்கொடுத்த விழாவைக் கொண்டாடப் பணித்தார். அப்படித் தோன்றியதுதான் இவ்விழா.

வரலாற்றுப் பின்புலம்

இன்று நாம் ஆண்டவர் இயேசுவை கோவிலில் காணிக்கையாக ஒப்புக்கொடுத்த விழாவைக் கொண்டாடுகின்றோம். இதற்கான வரலாற்றுப் பின்புலத்தை ஆராய்ந்து பார்க்கின்றபோது, அது விடுதலைப் பயண நூலிலே காணக்கிடக்கிறது.

ஆண்டவராகிய கடவுள் இஸ்ரயேல் மக்களை எகிப்து என்னும் அடிமைத்தன வீட்டிலிருந்து விடுப்பதற்காக பத்துவிதமான வாதைகளை அனுப்பினார். அவற்றில் ஒன்றுதான் ஆண் தலைப்பேறுகளைக் கொல்லுதல். ஆண்டவரின் தூதர் எகிப்து நாட்டினரின் வீடுகளைக் கடந்துசெல்கிறபோது இரத்தம் தெளிக்கப்படாத வீடுகளில் இருந்த ஆண் தலைப்பேறுகளைக் கொன்றுபோடுகிறார். அதேநேரத்தில் ஏற்கனவே இரத்தம் தெளிக்கப்பட்டு இருந்த இஸ்ரயேலரின் வீடுகளில் இருந்த ஆண் தலைப்பேறுகளை அவர் கொல்லாமல் கடந்துசெல்கிறார். இதன் பொருட்டுதான் ஆண் தலைப்பேறு அனைத்தும் ஆண்டவருக்குச் சொந்தம் என்ற ஒரு நிலை உருவாகிறது. இதனை விடுதலைப் பயண நூல் 13:2 ல் நாம் வாசிக்கின்றோம், “தலைப்பேறு அனைத்தையும் எனக்கு அர்ப்பணம் செய்; இஸ்ரயேல் மக்களிடையே மனிதரிலும் கால்நடைகளிலும் கருப்பையைத் திறக்கும் எல்லாத் தலைப்பேறும் எனக்குரியவை”.

மோசேயின் சட்டப்படி ஒரு தாய் ஆண் குழந்தை பெற்றெடுக்கும் போது ஏழு நாள் விலக்கு இருந்து எட்டாம் நாள் அக்குழந்தைக்கு விருத்தசேதனம் செய்ய வேண்டும். அதைத் தொடர்ந்து உதிரத் தீட்டு முடியும்வரை 33 நாள்களும் தூய பொருள்களைத் தொடாமல் இருக்க வேண்டும். பெற்றெடுக்கும் குழந்தை பெண்ணாக இருந்தால், இரண்டு வாரம் விலக்கு இருப்பதுடன் பின்பு 66 நாள்கள் உதிரத்தீட்டு முடியும்வரை தூய்மையான எதையும் தொடமல் இருக்க வேண்டும்.

காலக்கெடு முடிந்த பிறகு, ஓராண்டு நிறைவுற்ற செம்மறி ஒன்றை எரிபலியாகவும், புறாக்குஞ்சு அல்லது காட்டுப்புறா ஒன்றைப் பாவம் போக்கும் பலியாகவும் குருவிடம் கொடுக்க வேண்டும். அவர் அதனை ஆண்டவர் திருமுன் கொண்டு வந்து காணிக்கையாக்கி குழந்தை பெற்றெடுத்த பெண்ணின் இரத்தத் தீட்டை நீக்குவார். ஆட்டுக்குட்டி கொண்டுவர இயலாதவர்கள் இரண்டு காட்டுப் புறாக்களை அல்லது இரண்டு புறாக்குஞ்சுகளைக் கொண்டு வந்து ஒன்றை எரிபலியாகவும், மற்றதை பாவம் போக்கும் பலியாகவும் கொடுப்பது வழக்கம் (லேவி 12:2-8).

மேலும் மனிதரானாலும், விலங்குகளானாலும் தலைப் பேறானவை அனைத்தும் ஆண்டவருக்கே உரியது. ஆயினும் மனிதரில் தலைப் பேறானவைகளை ஈடு கொடுத்து மீட்டுக் கொள்ள வேண்டும் என்பதை விதிமுறைகளுள் ஒன்று (எண் 18:15)

அதன்படி மோசேயின் சட்டத்தை நிறைவேற்ற, இயேசுவைக் கோவிலில் அர்ப்பணிக்க, மற்றும் தானும் தூய்மையாகும் பொருட்டு அன்னை மரியா ஆலயத்திற்குச் சென்றார்.

இயேசு தலைப்பேறு என்பதனால் மரியாவும் யோசேப்பும் அவரைக் கோவிலில் காணிக்கையாக ஒப்புக்கொடுத்து ஆண்டவரின் கட்டளையை, மோசேயின் சட்டத்தை நிறைவேற்றுக்கிறார்கள். மோசேயின் சட்டப்படி, குழந்தையை காணிக்கையாக ஒப்புக்கொடுக்கும் நாளில் செம்மறி ஒன்றை எரிபலியாகவும், புறாக்குஞ்சு அல்லது காட்டுப்புறா ஒன்றை பாவம்போக்கும் பலியாகவும் குருவிடம் ஒப்படைக்கவேண்டும். ஆனால் மரியாவும் ஜோசேப்பும் ஆட்டுக்குட்டியை கொண்டுவர வசதி இல்லாததால் இரு மாடப்புறாக்களைக் கொடுத்து மோசேயின் சட்டத்தை நிறைவேற்றுகிறார்கள். இயேசு இறைமகன். அப்படியிருந்தாலும் அவருடைய பெற்றோர்கள் மோசே இட்ட கட்டளையை நிறைவேற்றி, எல்லாருக்கும் முன்மாதிரியாய் விளங்குகிறார்கள்.

இயேசுவைக் கோவிலில் காணிக்கையாக ஒப்புகொடுக்கும்போது அங்கே சிமியோனும் அன்னாவும் வந்து அவரைக் கண்டுகொள்கிறார்கள்.

இவ்விழா ஆறாம் நூற்றாண்டைச் சேர்ந்த திருத்தந்தை முதலாம் ஜஸ்டின் என்பவரால் திருச்சபையில் சேர்க்கப்பட்டது என்பதை மேலே பார்த்தோம். ஆனால் எட்டாம் நூற்றாண்டில்தான் இவ்விழா இன்னும் விமரிசையாகக் கொண்டாடப்பட்டது. எட்டாம் நூற்றாண்டைச் சேர்ந்த திருத்தந்தை முதலாம் செர்கியுஸ் என்பவர்தான் குருக்களும் இறைமக்களும் கையில் மெழுகுதிரிகளை ஏந்தி, பவனியாகச் செல்லவேண்டும் என்ற நிலையை உருவாக்கினார். அதனால்தான் இவ்விழா மெழுகுதிரி திருநாள் என்றும் அழைக்கப்படுகின்றது.

Also known as

• Our Lady of the Candles

• Presentation of the Infant Jesus in the Temple

• Presentation of the Lord

• Purification of the Blessed Virgin

• Candelas (Spanish)

• Candelora (Italian)

• Chandeleur (French)

• Hromnice (Feast of Candles among the Slovaks and Czechs)

• Lichtmess (German)

• Stretenije Gospoda (Meeting of the Lord by the Slavs of the Eastern Rite)

• Svijetlo Marijino (Light Feast of Mary in Yugoslavia)



About the Feast

The feast commemorates the purifying of the Blessed Virgin according to the Mosaic Law, 40 days after the birth of Christ, and the presentation of the Infant Jesus in the Temple. The feast was introduced into the Eastern Empire by Emperor Justinian I, and is mentioned in the Western Church in the Gelasian Sacramentary of the 7th century. Candles are blessed on that day in commemoration of the words of Holy Simeon concerning Christ "a light to the revelation of the Gentiles" (Luke 2), and a procession with lighted candles is held in the church to represent the entry of Christ, the Light of the World, into the Temple of Jerusalem. "Candlemas" is still the name in Scotland for a legal term-day on which interest and rents are payable (2 February).





Saint Giovanni Battista Clemente Saggio


Also known as

• Nicola da Longobardi

• Nicholas of the Longobards



Profile

Born to a poor peasant family, Giovanni was a clever boy who enjoyed study, but had to work the fields with his father instead of going to school. He was a pious child, and would spend whole days in prayer in a local Minim church. At 20, against his family's wishes (legend says that he was struck blind when his mother objected, and only recovered his sight when she agreed to let him follow his vocation), he became an Oblate friar of the Order of the Minims, taking the name Nicola. Miracle worker.


Born

• 6 January 1650 in Longobardi, Cosenza, Italy as Giovanni Battista Clemente Saggio

• legend says that a light shown down on the house at the moment of his birth


Died

• 2 February 1709 in Rome, Italy of natural causes

• he had previously predicted the date and time of his death


Canonized

• 23 November 2014 by Pope Francis

• canonization celebrated in Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City, Rome, Italy



Blessed Andrea Carlo Ferrari


Also known as

Andreas Ferrari


Additional Memorial

1 February (in Milan, Italy)



Profile

Educated in the seminary of Parma, Italy. Ordained on 20 December 1873 in Parma. Episcopal delegate of Mariano, February 1874. Coadjutor Bishop of Fornovo di Taro, Italy on 4 July 1874. Vice-rector of the Parma seminary, and professor of physics and mathematics in 1875. Rector of the seminary in 1877. Professor of fundamental theology, ecclesiastical history and moral theology in 1878. Bishop of Guastalla, Italy on 29 May 1890. Bishop of Como, Italy on 29 May 1891. Created cardinal on 18 May 1894. Archbishop of Milan, Italy on 21 May 1894. Chose his middle name of Carlo in honour of Saint Charles Borromeo. Participated in the conclave of 1903 that elected Pope Saint Pius X, and of 1914 that chose Pope Benedict XV.


Born

13 August 1850 at Lalatta, Pratopiano, diocese of Parma, Italy


Died

• 2 February 1921 at Milan, Italy of natural causes

• buried in the chapel Virgo Potens, cathedral of Milan


Beatified

10 May 1987 by Pope John Paul II


Works

1885: Summula theologiae dogmaticae generalis



Saint Burchard of Würzburg

வூர்ட்ஸ்பூர்க் ஆயர் பூர்க்ஹார்டு Burkhard von Würzburg

பிறப்பு 

700 (?), 

இங்கிலாந்து

இறப்பு 

2 பிப்ரவரி, 753 (அ) 754, 

பவேரியா, Germany

பாதுகாவல் : எலும்பு நோய், மூட்டு வலி

இவர் 741 ஆம் ஆண்டு வூர்ட்ஸ்பூர்கின் முதல் ஆயராகத் தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார். இவர் 750 ஆம் ஆண்டு வூர்ட்ஸ்பூர்கில் அந்திரேயா Andreas என்ற பெயரில் துறவற இல்லம் ஒன்றை நிறுவினார். அதன்பிறகு சால்வாடோர் Salvatordom என்ற பேராலயம் ஒன்றை எழுப்பினார். 855 ஆம் ஆண்டு இப்பேராலயமானது எரிக்கப்பட்டது. இவர் ஏறக்குறைய 10 ஆண்டுகள் ஆயராக இருந்தார் என்று இவரின் வரலாறு கூறுகின்றது. இவர் ஆயராக இருந்தபோது விசுவாசத்தைப் பரப்ப பெரிதும் உழைத்தார் என்று சொல்லப்படுகின்றது. நற்செய்திப் பணிக்காக பயணம் செய்யும்போது இறந்தார் என்று கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது. வூர்ட்ஸ்பூர்கில் அக்டோபர் 14 ஆம் நாள் இவருக்கு விழா எடுக்கப்பட்டு வருகின்றது. இவர் எழுப்பிய அந்திரேயா துறவற இல்லம் இன்று புனித பூர்க்கார்டு St. Burkhard துறவற இல்லம் என்றழைக்கப்படுகின்றது

Also known as

Burchardus, Burkard, Burkhard



Additional Memorial

14 October (translation of relics; Diocese of Würzburg, Germany)


Profile

Born wealthy, he felt early called to the Church and working with the poor. Inspired by Saint Boniface, he became a missionary in the area of modern Germany. First bishop of Würzburg, Franconia, consecrated by Saint Boniface in 741 and confirmed by Pope Saint Zachary in 743. Under his ministry all of Franconia converted, and several monasteries were founded by and for his people. Promoted devotion to Saint Killian who had previously worked in the region. A favourite of King Pepin the Short. Burchard led the party that sought Pope Zachary's decision on who should be the king of the Franks. Resigned his bishopric in 752, and spent the rest of his days in solitude and prayer.


Born

in England


Died

• 754 in Germany of natural causes

• buried at Mount Saint Mary or Old Würzburg

• relics transferred in 983 to the monastery of Saint Andrew in Würzburg, Germany

• the monastery has since been renamed in hounour of Burchard



Saint Adalbald of Ostrevant


Also known as

• Adalbald d'Ostrevant

• Adalbald of Douai

• Adalbaldus, Albold, Adelbald, Adalbade, Adalbaud


Additional Memorial

2 May (translation of relics to Douai, France)


Profile

Born to the nobility of Flanders, Belgium. Son of Saint Gertrude the Elder. Duke of Douai, France. Served in the courts of King Dagobert I and King Clovis II. While suppressing a rebellion in Gascony, he met and married Saint Rictrude of Marchiennes, daughter of Ernold. Though they were happy together, they fought constant opposition from her family who opposed his military incursion in their region. Father of Saint Maurontius of Douai, Saint Clotsindis of Marchiennes, Saint Eusebia of Hamage, and Saint Adalsindis. Adalbald and Rictrudis dedicated themselves and their fortunes to religious projects and care of the poor.


Born

at Flanders, Belgium


Died

• murdered c.651 by an in-law while on the road to Gascony

• listed as a martyr by many sources

• miracles reported at his tomb

• relics at Saint Amand les Eaux, Elanone and Douai, France



Blessed Simon of Cassia Fidati


Also known as

• Simon Fidati

• Simon of Cascia


Additional Memorial

16 February (Augustinians)



Profile

Simon joined the Augustinian Hermits as a young man. Initially a student of the natual sciences and philosophy, as he grew older he became more and more drawn to religious matters, theology and Bible scholarship. Priest. Though he preferred solitude, prayer and study, and always avoided positions of authority, his preaching, writing and spiritual guidance led many to live more faithful and Christian lives.


Born

c.1295 in Cascia, Italy


Died

• 2 February 1348 in Florence, Tuscany, Italy during a plague epidemic

• relics enshrined in the church of Saint Augustine in Cascia, Italy

• relics enshrined in the crypt chapel in the Basilica of Saint Rita in Casia


Beatified

1833 by Pope Gregory XVI



Blessed Bernard of Corbara



Profile

Born to the Italian nobility, part of the family of the counts of Montemarte. A well-educated and pious young man, he was a friend and travelling companion of Saint Peter Nolasco from whom he received the Mercedarian habit as a lay knight; Bernard joined the Order on 10 August 1218, the founding day of the Mercedarians. He was later ordained, and for a while was the only Mercedarian priest; he served as novice master for the Order as he was considered to be an excellent example. Sent to Algiers to ransom Christians who were being held by Moors, Father Bernard was imprisoned and enslaved for two years. Returning to Spain, he worked with Blessed Mary de Cerevellon, and helped her found the first female branch of the Mercedarians in 1265.



Born

Corbara, Orvieto, Italy


Died

• mid-13th-century Barcelona, Spain of natural causes

• interred in the Mercedarian church in Barcelona

• body reported to be incorrupt



Saint Lawrence of Canterbury


Profile

Benedictine monk. At the order of Pope Saint Gregory the Great, he accompanied Saint Augustine of Canterbury to evangelize England in 597. Upon Augustine's death, Lawrence became archbishop of Canterbury. When the Britons began to abandon Christianity and return to the old pagan customs, Lawrence planned to abandon them and return to France. However, he had a dream in which he was rebuked and scourged by Saint Peter the Apostle for giving up on his flock. Lawrence remained, redoubled his efforts at evangelization, and converted King Edbald who brought many of his subjects to the faith. Legend says that Lawrence carried physical scars from his dream beating by Saint Peter.



Born

6th century


Died

2 February 619 in Canterbury, England of natural causes



World Day for Consecrated Life


Additional Memorial

Sunday following 2 February (United States)


About

Begun in 1997 by Pope John Paul II, the World Day for Consecrated Life was intended to serve three purposes


• to praise the Lord and thank him for the great gift of consecrated life


• to promote a knowledge of and esteem for the consecrated life by the entire People of God


• to allow those in consecrated life to celebrate together the marvels which the Lord has accomplished in them, to discover by a more illumined faith the rays of divine beauty spread by the Spirit in their way of life, and to acquire a more vivid consciousness of their irreplaceable mission in the Church and in the world


It serves an opportunity to highlight the extraordinary contributions of men and women religious as well as a time to pray for vocations to the consecrated life.



Saint Columbanus of Ghent


Profile

Abbot of an Irish community. Following a series of Viking raids, he led his community to safer fields in Belgium. On 2 February 957 Columbanus became a hermit in the cemetery near the church of Saint Bavo, Ghent. He developed a wide reputation for holiness and attracted new followers. His name is in the litany to be recited in Belgium during public emergencies.


Born

Ireland


Died

• 15 February 959

• buried in the cathedral of Ghent, Belgium



Saint Adeloga of Kitzingen


Also known as

Adela, Adaloja, Hadeloga



Profile

Frankish princess. Benedictine nun. Founded the Benedictine convent of Kitzingen in Franconia (part of modern Germany), and served as its first abbess.


Born

Frankish


Died

c.745 of natural causes



Saint Apronian the Executioner


Profile

Executioner for imperial Rome. He was a witness at the trial of Saint Sisinnius who was charged with Christianity in the persecutions of Diocletian. Sisinnius' statement of his faith converted Apronian. He was martyred soon after.


Died

beheaded c.304 at Ancona, Italy



Saint Marquard of Hildesheim


Profile

Monk at New Corbey Abbey, Saxony (in modern Germany). Bishop of Hildesheim, Germany from 874. One of the Martyrs of Ebsdorf.


Born

9th century


Died

martyred in 880 in battle at Ebsdorf, Germany



Saint Theodoric of Ninden


Profile

Bishop of Ninden, Germany. One of the Martyrs of Ebsdorf.


Born

9th century


Died

martyred in 880 in battle at Ebsdorf, Germany



Saint Agathodoros of Tyana


Profile

After public announcing his Christianity, Agathodorus was tortured and martyred for his faith.


Died

Tyana, Cappadocia (modern Nigde, Turkey)



Saint Bruno of Ebsdorf


Profile

Duke. Leader of the army that became the Martyrs of Ebsdorf.


Died

880 in battle at Ebsdorf, Germany



Saint Flosculus of Orleans


Also known as

Floscolo, Flosculo, Flou


Profile

Bishop of Orleans, France.


Died

480 of natural causes



Saint Sicharia of Orléans


Also known as

Sicaire, Sigeria, Sicaria


Profile

Fifth century nun whose story has not survived.



Blessed Colomba Osorio


Profile

Nun. Abbess at Archen. Martyred with several of her sisters.


Died

982



Saint Feock


Profile

There is a church named for her in Cornwall, England. No other information has survived.


Born

may have been Irish



Saint Mun


Profile

Fifth century bishop, ordained by his uncle Saint Patrick. Late in life he became a hermit on the island of Lough Ree, Ireland.



Saint Abclasta


Also known as

Addasta


Profile

Martyr.



Martyrs of Ebsdorf


Also known as

Ebsdorf Martyrs


Profile

Members of the army of King Louis III of France under the leadership of Duke Saint Bruno of Ebsdorf. The martyrs died fighting invading pagan Norsemen, and defending the local Christian population. Four bishops, including Saint Marquard of Hildesheim and Saint Theodoric of Ninden, eleven nobles, and countless unnamed foot soldiers died repelling the invaders.


Died

martyred in the winter of 880 in battle at Luneberg Heath and Ebsdorf, Saxony (modern Germany)



Martyrs of Rome


Profile

28 Christians who were martyred in Rome, Italy. No other information has survived, and we are not sure if they were martyred together, or just memorialized together. We know the names -


Bonosia • Cajus • Candidus • Cappa • Castula • Cornelianus • Felicianus • Felicitas • Felix • Firmus • Fortunatus • Gregorius • Hilarus • Ingenuus • Martialis • Mauritius • Mustula • Papyrius • Placidus • Rogatian • Rogatus • Salustius • Saturninus • Secundian • Secundula • Victoria (2 of) • Victor


Died

c.212 in Rome, Italy




Our Lady of Candelaria


Our Lady of Candelaria! She's a fascinating figure revered in many places around the world, primarily in the Canary Islands and the Philippines. Let me tell you a bit about her:

Origins and Image:

Canary Islands: Our Lady of Candelaria (Virgen de Candelaria) is the patron saint of the Canary Islands, Spain. The center of her worship is located in the city of Candelaria, Tenerife, where a magnificent basilica stands in her honor. She is depicted as a Black Madonna, referred to affectionately as "La Morenita."

Philippines: In the Philippines, she is venerated as Our Lady of Candles (Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria). The most notable image is enshrined in Jaro Cathedral, Iloilo City, and known as "Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria de Jaro."

Celebrations and Significance:


Feast Day: Both in the Canary Islands and the Philippines, her feast day is celebrated on February 2nd, known as Candlemas (also the Presentation of Jesus). In the Canary Islands, the festivities include a lively "Romeria" pilgrimage and a solemn Mass, while in the Philippines, grand processions and devotions draw in pilgrims from all over the country.

Significance: Our Lady of Candelaria embodies hope, faith, and resilience. She's often prayed to for protection against various challenges, including epidemics, droughts, volcanic eruptions, and more. Her image unites communities and inspires devotion, making her a powerful symbol of cultural and religious identity.


 Our Lady of Good of Coromoto


Our Lady of Good Counsel of Coromoto! She holds a special place in the hearts of Catholics, particularly Venezuelans. Here's what I can tell you about her:


Apparitions and Significance:


Apparitions: Coromoto, Venezuela, saw two alleged apparitions of the Virgin Mary to the chief of the Coromoto tribe in the 17th century. In 1651, she urged him to seek baptism and in 1652, left behind a small painting on his skin depicting her as a mestiza holding the infant Jesus, a powerful symbol of hope and unity.

Patronage: Due to these apparitions, Our Lady of Coromoto was declared the Patroness of Venezuela in 1942, signifying her immense importance for the nation's faith and identity.

Image and Basilica:


Painting: The original miraculous painting of Our Lady of Coromoto is enshrined in the National Shrine of Coromoto, a beautiful basilica built in her honor in Guanare, Venezuela. It attracts pilgrims from all over the country and beyond.

Representation: The Virgin Mary is depicted as a mestiza woman, reflecting the multicultural heritage of Venezuela, and highlighting her message of acceptance and inclusion.

Feast Day: Her feast day is celebrated on September 8th and February 2nd  


 Our Lady of Good Success


Our Lady of Good Success (Nuestra Señora del Buen Suceso) is a fascinating and lesser-known Marian title with a captivating history and intriguing prophetical messages. Here's what I can tell you about her:


Origins and Apparitions:


In 1594, Our Lady of Good Success began appearing to Mother Mariana de Jesus Torres, a cloistered Conceptionist nun in Quito, Ecuador. These apparitions lasted for over forty years, offering Mary's guidance and predictions for the future.

Mary requested to be venerated under the title "Our Lady of Good Success" and requested a specific image to be created, depicting her holding a scepter, a crown of thorns, and a lily.

February 2nd: Some communities, particularly in Ecuador, celebrate Our Lady of Good Success on the same day as Our Lady of Candelaria (another title of the Virgin Mary) and the Presentation of Jesus in the Temple. This connection draws similarities between the themes of light, purification, and hope associated with both Marian figures.



Santa María de Santa Anita


Santa María de Santa Anita is a Marian title associated with a miraculous image of the Virgin Mary venerated in the town of Santa Anita, in the state of Veracruz, Mexico. The image is said to have been found by a shepherd in the early 17th century, and it quickly became a popular object of devotion.


The image of Santa María de Santa Anita is a small, wooden statue of the Virgin Mary. She is depicted standing on a crescent moon, holding the infant Jesus in her arms. The statue is dressed in a white gown and a blue mantle, and she is crowned with a golden crown.


The feast day of Santa María de Santa Anita is celebrated on February 2nd. On this day, thousands of pilgrims flock to Santa Anita to venerate the image. The festivities include a procession through the town, a Mass, and a fireworks display.


Santa María de Santa Anita is known for her many miracles. She is said to have cured the sick, raised the dead, and protected the town from natural disasters. She is also known for her intercession in cases of lost love and financial hardship.


Santa María de Santa Anita is a beloved figure in Mexico. She is a symbol of hope and faith, and she is a source of comfort and strength for her devotees.


Here are some additional details about Santa María de Santa Anita:


The image of Santa María de Santa Anita is enshrined in the Basilica of Santa María de Santa Anita, which was built in the 17th century.

The basilica is a popular pilgrimage destination, and it is visited by millions of people each year.

Santa María de Santa Anita is the patron saint of the town of Santa Anita, and she is also the patron saint of the state of Veracruz.

The feast day of Santa María de Santa Anita is a public holiday in the state of Veracruz.