Wednesday, February 22, 2023

Saint Matthias The Apostle Feast Day - 24 February

Quoted from Learn Religions [1]:

The Life of Saint Matthias the Apostle
 
He lived during the 1st century in ancient Judea (now Israel), ancient Cappadocia (now Turkey), Egypt, and Ethiopia. While preaching the Gospel message, Matthias emphasized the importance of self-control. In order to experience the peace and joy that God intends, Matthias said, people must subordinate their physical desires to their spiritual desires.

The physical body is only temporary and subject to many temptations to sin and illnesses, while the spiritual soul is permanent and able to discipline the body for good purposes. Matthias preached that the Holy Spirit will empower people to exercise self-control over their unhealthy physical desires so they can experience good health in both body and soul.

Matthias Replaces Judas

In Acts 1, the Bible describes how the people who had been closest to Jesus (his disciples and mother Mary) chose Matthias to replace Judas after Jesus ascended to heaven. Saint Peter the Apostle led them in a prayer for God's guidance, and they ended up choosing Matthias. Matthias had known Jesus personally during Jesus' public ministry, from the time Saint John the Baptist baptized Jesus until Jesus' death, resurrection, and ascension.

[1] https://www.learnreligions.com/st-matthias-the-apostle-124663, quoted without hyperlinks, bold-type original.

Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Saint Valentine Feast Day - Bishop And Martyr - 14 February

Quoted from Wikipedia [1]:

Saint Valentine was a clergyman – either a priest or a bishop – in the Roman Empire who ministered to persecuted Christians. He was martyred and his body buried on the Via Flaminia on February 14, which has been observed as the Feast of Saint Valentine (Saint Valentine's Day) since at least the eighth century
.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Valentine, quoted without hyperlinks and references.

Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Our Lady Of Lourdes Feast Day - 11 February

Quoted from The Catholic Company [1]:

February 11 is the feast day of Our Lady of Lourdes, one of the most famous apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary that took place in southern France. On this day in 1858 a young, poor girl named Bernadette Soubirous was out collecting firewood with her sister and another friend near a grotto when she saw a vision of a lovely lady.

In the words of St. Bernadette,

"I raised my head and looked towards the grotto. I saw a Lady dressed in white, wearing a white dress, a blue girdle and a yellow rose on each foot, the same color as the chain of her Rosary."  

In the vision Our Lady was praying the rosary.

Bernadette reluctantly told her parents of the apparition, and in response they forbade her from going back to the grotto. A few days later, on February 14th, Bernadette was permitted to return to the grotto, and again the Lady appeared to her. This happened again on February 18th.  On this third visit the Lady asked Bernadette to come back to the grotto every day for the next two weeks.

At these subsequent visits the Lady (who had not yet identified herself as the Blessed Virgin Mary) asked for a chapel to be built on the grounds, for Bernadette to pray for the conversion of sinners, and for her to drink the spring water that was revealed to her at the grotto.

Word of these apparitions spread rapidly and caused quite a stir in town. In response, Bernadette was detained, interrogated, and harassed by the civil authorities as if she were a common criminal. The villagers, however, came to her rescue and demanded that the child be released.

Through all these difficulties that came to her because of the apparitions, Bernadette was given an interior strength:

"There was something in me that enabled me to rise above everything.  I was tackled from all sides, but nothing mattered and I was not afraid."

Many of the townspeople believed that Mary was appearing to Bernadette, and they came down in large numbers to the grotto to pray. The spring that the Lady asked Bernadette to drink from quickly revealed itself to be blessed water with miraculous healing properties.

On March 25th, the Feast of the Annunciation, the Lady appeared at the grotto again, this time identifying herself as the Immaculate Conception.

"With her two arms hanging down, she raised her eyes and looked up at the sky, and it was then that she told me, joining her hands together now at the height of her breast, that she was the Immaculate Conception. Those were the last words she ever said to me."

The Marian dogma of the Immaculate Conception had only recently been pronounced by Pope Pius IX a few years previous, on December 8, 1854. This infallibly defined dogma declared that the Blessed Virgin Mary, "from the first moment of her conception, by a singular grace and privilege of almighty God, and in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, Saviour of the human race, was preserved free from every stain of original sin is a doctrine revealed by God and, for this reason, must be firmly and constantly believed by all the faithful."

As for herself, Bernadette suffered much, not only through physical suffering due to her chronic poor health, but also through the jealousy and suspicion from others because she was given the grace of visits from the Blessed Mother. This proved true the words Our Lady spoke to Bernadette at the grotto, "I do not promise to make you happy in this world, but in the other."

Four years after Our Lady of Lourdes appeared to St. Bernadette, the local bishop ruled that the apparitions were authentic. St. Bernadette eventually entered a religious house where she continued to suffer physically, uniting her suffering to Christ, and died at an early age.

Today a beautiful church has been erected on the grounds near the grotto at Lourdes. After Rome and the Holy Land, Lourdes, France is the most popular place of pilgrimage for Catholic faithful. The water of Lourdes is readily available to all pilgrims, and numerous healings have been medically documented to have occurred there, as well as conversions to the faith because of these miracles. St. Bernadette's feast day is February 18th.




Tuesday, January 31, 2023

The Presentation Of Child Jesus At The Temple - 2 February

Quoted from Wikipedia [1]:

In addition to being known as the Feast of the Presentation of Jesus at the Temple, other traditional names include Candlemas, the Feast of the Purification of the [Blessed] Virgin [Mary].

Quoted from Catholicism.org [2]:

The Presentation of the Child Jesus in the Temple.  Forty days after the birth of Jesus, His virginal Mother went to the Temple to fulfill the rite of purification, for which she had no need, but to which, in her humility, she submitted because it was one of the requirements of the Jews.  This was the first day Jesus ever entered a church.  He was carried there by His Blessed Mother and Saint Joseph, and presented to His Eternal Father in the Temple.  Most of the Jews, men and women, in the Temple in those days were wicked and faithless people.  There was one old man named Simeon whose faith and belief in the coming of the Messias was still true.  He took the Child Jesus in his arms and uttered the beautiful canticle: “Now Thou dost dismiss Thy servant, O Lord, according to Thy word in peace, because my eyes have seen Thy salvation which Thou has prepared before the face of all peoples; a light to the revelation of the Gentiles and the glory of Thy people, Israel.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presentation_of_Jesus_at_the_Temple, quoted without hyperlink and footnote.

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Saint John Chrysostom Feast Day - 27 January

Quoted from St. Gregory Orthodox Church [1]:

Popularity with many often brings about hatred by some, and truth, spoken forthrightly and bluntly can inspire hatred in those for whom the truth hurts most. St. John Chrysostom, Patriarch of Constantinople at the turn of the 4th to the 5th century, experienced this phenomenon dramatically.

John was born in Antioch around the year 344, little more than 30 years after Emperor Constantine had given Christianity a legal status in the Roman Empire. The young man’s education was directed toward a career as a lawyer and he showed remarkable talent as an orator.

John’s parents became Christians and, at the age of 23, John also was baptized and the direction of his life was forever changed. Recognizing the seriousness of the commitment required of a Christian, John decided to live as a monk, eventually forming a monastery as he was joined by others. He was beloved by his fellow monks and became an example to all, both in the monastery and in the city of Antioch, for his godly life.

Desiring to become closer to God, John left the monastery and went further into the wilderness to be a hermit. However, illness forced him to return to Antioch for medical care, and there Patriarch Meletios (who had baptized him) tonsured John as a Reader in the Church. Some time later, John was ordained a Deacon and after five years of diaconal service, he felt called to return to his monastery.

Patriarch Meletios traveled to Constantinople to attend the Second Ecumenical Council and while there, reposed in the Lord. His successor in Antioch was Flavianos, who had a dream in which he was told that he should ordain John to the priesthood and bring him back to the city. Taking the dream seriously, Flavianos went to the monastery, where he found that John had had a similar dream. The Patriarch had to console the monks, as they were not happy to lose their beloved John. When the two arrived in the city, crowds of people gathered to rejoice that the now famous monk had come back to them.

John was especially popular for his preaching. His early oratorical skills had been put to good use in explaining the teachings of the Church and in stirring the hearts of the people to greater zeal. He was given the nick-name “Chrysostom”, meaning “golden mouthed”, because of the beauty of his words. These beautiful words were often directed toward those who followed false teachings.

When Nectarios, the Patriarch of Constantinople died near the end of the century, John was elected to succeed him. But the humble priest-monk did not believe himself worthy of so exalted a position and the near-riot that ensued showed that the people of Antioch were certainly not willing to give up their beloved preacher.

So John had to be taken away from Antioch with “cloak and dagger” tactics. An anonymous note was sent to him requesting that he come to a church outside the city to meet with someone who needed his help. When he arrived, a coach was waiting and soldiers placed him in the carriage and whisked him away from Antioch. When they arrived in Constantinople, a huge crowd of people greeted John’s arrival with great joy. John was enthroned as Patriarch of Constantinople on December 15, 398 and now the most important work that God had for him began.

St. John experienced adulation from most of the Christians of Constantinople and beyond. People flocked to hear him preach and teach and they frequently reacted to his sermons by applauding, a practice which John put a stop to. We are privileged to have many of these sermons in written form for our instruction now. The most famous one is the Paschal sermon which we hear every year at the Easter Vigil.

But many in the capital city of the Empire were still pagans, pseudo-Christianity abounded, and the Arian heresy was growing. The level of morality was very low. The new Patriarch’s sermons, while loved by the faithful Christians, were too uncomfortable for some. When it was obvious that the pleasure-seeking life of the Empress Eudoxia was the target of condemnation, she began to plot to have the Patriarch removed.

Empress Eudoxia finally succeeded in her efforts to trap St. John or falsely accuse him. The ridiculous accusations ranged from selling the marble from one of the churches to murder! The Patriarch was sent into exile to a small Armenian village. There, he was was once again afflicted with illness and he died on November 13, 407 and was buried in Comana.

But John, the golden-mouthed, was not forgotten by the people and before long, he was regarded as one of the great “Doctors” of the Church, along with Ss. Basil, Gregory the Theologian, and Gregory the Great. The Liturgy which he composed became the standard for the Eastern rite and his writings continue to instruct Christians to this day.

The Christians of Constantinople began to demand that the holy relics of their beloved saint be returned to the city where he served as Patriarch. The Emperor Theodosius the Younger wrote a letter in the name of his mother, Eudoxia, begging the forgiveness of the saint for her wrongs against him. The relics were brought back to the imperial city in the year 438 and placed in the Church of the Holy Apostles. However, these relics were then stolen by crusaders in 1204 and eventually taken to Rome where they remained until November 27, 2004. At that time, Pope John Paul, in a gesture of reconciliation and brotherly love, gave the relics of the beloved saint to Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and they are now displayed for veneration at St. George’s Church in Constantinople (Istanbul).


Monday, January 23, 2023

Conversion Of Saint Paul The Apostle - 25 January

Quoted from My Catholic Life! [1]:

Paul was born a Jew in the Roman city of Tarsus, in modern-day Turkey. On the eighth day, he was circumcised and received the Hebrew name Saul. At a young age, Saul began to study the Law of Moses in Jerusalem under Gamaliel, a member of the Sanhedrin and one of the most respected Pharisees and Doctors of the Law of his era. The Pharisees had enumerated 613 laws found within the Torah, the first five books of the Bible. Saul would have studied each of these laws carefully.

When Saul was in his early twenties, Jesus of Nazareth began His public ministry during which Jesus challenged the rigid interpretations that the Pharisees taught about the Law of Moses. Jesus was crucified three years later when Saul was about twenty-five. Now a Pharisee himself, Saul was diametrically opposed to Jesus’ new teachings, believing that they were in opposition to the Law of Moses that he had come to know so well through the distorted lens of the pharisaical teachings. After Jesus’ crucifixion, Saul zealously devoted himself to persecuting those who were followers of Jesus. Even when his own teacher, Gamaliel, recommended the followers of Jesus be ignored, Saul could not hold himself back.

The earliest documented martyrdom, in the early Church after Jesus’ death, took place with Saul’s consent, when those who stoned Saint Stephen laid their cloaks at the feet of Saul as Saul looked on. After that, Saul received a letter of permission from the high priest in Jerusalem to go beyond Jerusalem, searching from house to house to arrest those who followed Jesus, bringing them back in chains to stand trial in Jerusalem. As he took this letter of permission with him on a journey to Damascus, Saul had an experience that would not only change his life forever but also change the entire world.

“On his journey, as he was nearing Damascus, a light from the sky suddenly flashed around him. He fell to the ground and heard a voice saying to him, ‘Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?’ He said, ‘Who are you, sir?’ The reply came, ‘I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting’” (Acts 9:3–5). With that, Saul was blinded, had to be led into the city of Damascus, and stayed there for three days, fasting, praying, and pondering this encounter.

In that city was a disciple of Jesus named Ananias. Ananias knew about Saul’s persecution of the Church and feared him greatly. But Jesus appeared to Ananias and told him to go to Saul, lay his hands on him, heal him, and baptize him. Jesus explained that “this man is a chosen instrument of mine to carry my name before Gentiles, kings, and Israelites, and I will show him what he will have to suffer for my name” (Acts 9:15–16). Ananias did as he was instructed, and Saul listened, converted, was baptized, and began a new life as an apostle of the Lord Jesus. Eventually Saul began to use his Roman name “Paul” rather than his Hebrew name “Saul.”

Our feast today not only celebrates Saint Paul, it specifically celebrates his conversion. Think about that glorious conversion. Those three days that Saul spent in Damascus, after encountering Jesus on the road, changed his life. During those three days, he pondered Jesus’ words, fasted, prayed, listened, thought, and changed. Facing the truth within his soul may not have been easy, but he did it. From that time on, the zeal that he had poured into persecution became zeal for the spreading of the Gospel.

The first three years after his conversion were spent in Arabia, perhaps in prayer, study, and preparation for his new mission. God used this time of solitude to bring about a deeper conversion in Saul’s heart and to form him into a powerful instrument. After three years, he returned to Damascus and then continued to travel far and wide, proclaiming Jesus as the Christ. Over the approximately twenty-seven years that followed, Paul arguably became the greatest evangelist in the history of the world. At least thirteen of the twenty-seven New Testament books are traditionally attributed to Paul, providing us with much of what we know about Jesus. His letters are not only historical in nature, they are also rich in theology, providing the most sturdy foundation for all that we believe as Christians today. Paul personally founded more than a dozen Christian communities during his missionary travels, but the members of those communities then went forth to found many more, making Paul not only a spiritual father to many early Christians but also a spiritual grandfather to countless others....

In his mid-fifties, Paul was arrested and spent years in prison awaiting trial. Being a Roman citizen, he appealed to Rome and was eventually sent there for trial. In Rome, he suffered martyrdom at around the age of sixty, possibly as a result of the persecutions of the Emperor Nero. Though we do not know for certain how he died, tradition states that he was beheaded with a sword.


Sunday, January 22, 2023

The Espousals Of Mary And Joseph Feast Day - 23 January

Quoted from Wikipedia [1]:

The Espousals of the Blessed Virgin Mary or Marriage of the Virgin Mary is a Christian feast is celebrated by certain parts of the Roman Catholic Church such as the Oblates of Saint Joseph. It was formerly generally observed on January 23, but was removed from many local calendars by the Sacred Congregation of Rites....

The first definite knowledge of a feast in honour of the espousals of Mary dates from August 29, 1517, when with nine other Masses in honour of Mary, it was granted by Leo X to the Nuns of the Annunciation, founded by Saint Jeanne de Valois. In certain particular churches the espousals of the Virgin Mary and St. Joseph are honoured with an office on January 23. The Oblates of St. Joseph celebrate January 23 as the feast of “The Holy Spouses Mary and Joseph”.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Espousals_of_the_Blessed_Virgin_Mary, quoted without bold type, hyperlinks and references.