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november 1
all saints' day
october
10
eleven martyrs of almeria, spain
the
spanish civil war began in 1936. it has
been described as a struggle between atheism
and belief in god. the particular object
of persecution was the catholic church.
in three years, 12 bishops; 4,184 priests;
2,365 monks and 300 nuns died for the faith.
today we celebrate eleven of those martyrs:
two bishops, a diocesan priest, seven brothers
of the christian schools, and a young lay
woman. the bishops were from almeria and
gaudix, spain. the seven brothers of the
christian schools were teachers at st. joseph
college in almeria. father pedro castroverde
was a well-known scholar and founder of
the teresian association. victoria diez
molina belonged to the teresians. she had
found a spiritual treasure in the way this
group prayed and lived their christian responsibilities.
victoria was a teacher in a country school
and was very active in her parish.
all eleven martyrs chose to die for jesus
rather than give up their catholic faith.
brother aurelio maria, soon to be killed,
was the director of st. joseph college.
he said: "what happiness for us if
we could shed our blood for the lofty ideal
of christian education. let us double our
fervor so to become worthy of such an honor."
bishop medina of gaudix said: "we have
done nothing to deserve death. but i forgive
you so that the lord will also forgive us.
may our blood be the last shed in almeria."
bishop ventaja of almeria had many opportunities
to flee the country. he chose instead to
remain with his suffering people, his suffering
church. father castroverde, the teresian
founder, wrote in his diary: "lord,
may i think what you want me to think. may
i desire what you want me to desire. may
i speak as you want me to speak. may i work
as you want me to work." he was killed
on july 28, 1936.
victoria molina was jailed on august 11,
1936. she and seventeen others were led
to an abandoned mine shaft and to their
death. victoria comforted the others and
said: "come on, our reward is waiting
for us." her last words were: "long
live christ the king."
pope john paul ii proclaimed these martyrs
"blessed" on october 10, 1993.
we can ask these eleven heroes of god to
give us their courage. we could make the
prayer of blessed pedro castroverde our
own:
lord, may i think what you want me to think.
may i desire what you want me to desire.
may i speak as you want me to speak. may
i work as you want me to work. amen.
let
us make the prayer of blessed pedro castroverde
our own:
lord, may i think what you want me to think.
may i desire what you want me to desire.
may i speak as you want me to speak. may
i work as you want me to work.
top
october
11
st. kenneth
this
saint, who is sometimes called st. canice
or kenny, lived in the sixth century. he
was born in ireland and is famous in both
ireland and scotland. his father was a bard,
that is, a professional singer of ballads
and stories in song. as a young man, kenneth
went to wales to study for the priesthood.
st. cadoc was his teacher. after he became
a priest, he went to visit rome. he then
returned to ireland to study at the school
of st. finnian. kenneth became good friends
with three other irish saints-kieran, comgall
and columba.
after preaching throughout ireland, st.
kenneth went with st. columba to scotland
on a mission to the pagan king brude. when
this king angrily seized his sword to strike
the two missionaries, it is said that st.
kenneth made the sign of the cross, and
a miracle took place. the king's hand was
suddenly paralyzed, and the saints were
saved. st. kenneth and st. columba were
always close friends. once columba was sailing
with some companions. kenneth was far away
in his monastery in ireland. suddenly he
became aware that columba was in great danger
at sea. he jumped up from the dinner table
and ran to church to pray for his beloved
friend. out at sea, columba cried to his
frightened companions: "don't be afraid!
god will listen to kenneth. right now he
is running to church with only one shoe
on to pray for us!" and as he said,
they were saved.
st. kenneth started several monasteries
and converted many nonbelievers. he became
famous for his zealous preaching of the
gospel. even more, he became well-known
for the perfect way in which he himself
practiced the teachings of jesus.
although
kenneth and columba often worked in different
places, they knew that prayer is a powerful
expression of friendship. what would happen
if i prayed more often for my friends and
those who are close to me?
top
october
12
st. felix and st. cyprian
felix
and cyprian were african bishops who lived
in the fifth century. they suffered with
over 4,900 martyrs in the terrible persecution
by the vandals. huneric, the vandal king,
drove these christians into exile in the
libyan desert. they were treated with great
cruelty by the moors.
a holy bishop named victor used to try to
help the poor christians who had been shut
up in a horrible prison. they were packed
in without sufficient air or light. he wrote
the story of their courage and their sufferings.
bishop victor says that when they were ordered
into exile in the terrible desert, they
came out of that prison singing hymns. other
christians burst into tears at the sight
of their great courage. even women and children
went with them to exile and death. the story
is told of bishop st. felix. he was so old
and so crippled that someone said to the
vandal king: "you might just as well
leave him here to die." but king huneric
cruelly answered, "if he cannot ride
a horse, he can be dragged by oxen."
in the end, they decided to tie the brave
old bishop to a donkey and he was carried
off to die in the desert.
we also celebrate st. cyprian. this bishop
lived two centuries after st. cyprian of
carthage who is honored on september 16.
today's cyprian risked his own life to take
care of as many prisoners as he could. he
spent all his time and strength, plus everything
he owned, to assist them. at last, he, too,
was arrested and sent into exile. there
he also died a martyr from the cruel treatment
reserved for christians.
these
two men followed the example of jesus as
leaders in the church. they sought to serve
those whom they guided with great generosity.
top
october
13
st. edward
king
st. edward was one of the best loved of
all the english kings. he lived in the eleventh
century. because of enemies in his own country,
he had to live in normandy, france, from
the time he was ten until he was forty.
however, when he came back to rule, all
the people welcomed him with great joy.
st. edward was a tall, well-built man, but
he was never healthy. still he was able
to rule his country well and keep peace
most of the time. this was because he trusted
in god and held firm when necessary. king
edward went to daily mass. he was a gentle,
kind man who never spoke sternly. to poor
people and foreigners, he showed special
charity. he also helped monks in every way
he could. it was his justice to everyone
and his love for god's church that made
st. edward so popular with the english people.
they would cheer him as he rode out of the
castle.
although he was a king with great power,
st. edward showed his honesty by the way
he kept his word-to god and to people. while
he was still living in normandy, he had
made a promise to god. he said that if his
family would see better times, he would
go on a pilgrimage to st. peter's tomb in
rome. after he was made king, he wanted
to keep his vow. but the nobles knew that
there would be no one to keep the peace
among the warlike people in the land. so,
although they admired his devotion, they
did not want him to go. the whole matter
was brought to the pope, st. leo ix. he
decided that the king could stay home. he
said that king edward was to give to the
poor the money he would have spent on the
trip. he also was to build or repair a monastery
in honor of st. peter. obediently, the king
carried out the pope's decision. he died
in 1066 and was buried in the marvelous
monastery he had rebuilt. he was proclaimed
a saint by pope alexander iii in 1161.
this
holy king tried throughout his life to use
the gifts he had been given in order to
help others. how do i use the gifts i have
to do good?
top
october
14
st. callistus i
this
great pope and martyr lived in the first
part of the third century. he was once a
young slave in rome, who got into serious
trouble. his master, a christian, had put
him in charge of a bank. somehow, callistus
lost the money deposited with him by other
christians. in fear, he ran away from rome.
he was caught, after jumping into the sea
to try to get away. his sentence was a terrible
one: he was chained and put to hard labor
in a mill.
from this punishment callistus was released,
only because his creditors hoped he could
get some of their money back. but once again
he was arrested, this time for having gotten
into a fight. he was sent to the mines of
sardinia. when the emperor freed all the
christians who had been condemned to those
mines, callistus was freed, too. from that
time on, things began to go better for him.
pope st. zephrinus came to know and trust
the freed slave. he placed him in charge
of the public christian cemetery in rome.
this cemetery is now named after st. callistus
himself. many popes were buried in it. callistus
proved himself worthy of the pope's confidence
in him. st. zephrinus not only ordained
him a priest, but also made him his friend
and advisor.
later on, st. callistus himself became pope.
some people complained because he showed
too much mercy to sinners. however, the
holy pope ruled that even murderers could
be admitted to communion after they had
done penance for their sin. this great pope
always defended the true doctrine of jesus.
he ended his life in 222 with a glorious
martyrdom.
the
life of st. callistus can remind us that
god can choose anyone to do his work-we
only need to have faith in his power.
top
october
15
st. teresa of avila
teresa
was born in avila, spain, on march 28, 1515.
as a little girl in her parents' rich home,
teresa and her brother rodrigo loved to
read the lives of the saints and martyrs.
it seemed to them that the martyrs got to
heaven an easy way. the two children set
out secretly to go to the land of the moors.
as they walked along, they prayed that they
might die for christ. but they had not gotten
far when they met an uncle. he took them
back to their worried mother at once. next
the children decided to be hermits in their
garden. this didn't work out either. they
could not get enough stones together to
build their huts.
st. teresa herself wrote down these amusing
stories of her childhood. the fact is that
when she grew to be a teenager, however,
she changed. teresa read so many novels
and foolish romances that she lost much
of her love for prayer. she began to think
more of dressing up to look pretty. but
after she recovered from a bad illness,
teresa read a book about the great st. jerome.
then and there, she made up her mind to
become a bride of christ. as a nun, teresa
often found it hard to pray. besides that,
she had poor health.
teresa wasted time every day in long, foolish
conversations. but one day, in front of
a picture of jesus, she felt great sorrow
that she did not love god more. she started
then to live for jesus alone, no matter
what sacrifice had to be made. in return
for her love, the lord gave st. teresa the
privilege of hearing him talk to her. she
learned to pray in a marvelous way, too.
st. teresa of avila is famous for having
opened new carmelite convents. these convents
were filled with sisters who wanted to live
holy lives. they made many sacrifices for
jesus. teresa herself gave them the example.
she prayed with great love and worked hard
at the convent tasks.
st. teresa was a great leader and true lover
of jesus and his church. she died in 1582
and was proclaimed a saint by pope gregory
xv in 1622.
she was declared a doctor of the church
by pope paul vi in 1970.
st.
teresa taught that we must have a great
trust in god's care for us. she wrote that
a person who possesses god, lacks nothing;
god alone is enough.
top
october
16
st. margaret mary
margaret
mary lived in the seventeenth century. she
is the famous french nun to whom jesus showed
his sacred heart. as a child, she was a
happy little girl who loved the nuns at
school. but when she was eleven, she became
very sick. it was four years before she
was well again. her father had died, and
an aunt had moved into their home. this
aunt and her husband made margaret mary
and her mother suffer very much. almost
every day, the teenager would hide in the
garden to cry and pray. what hurt her most
was seeing her mother get hurt.
yet margaret mary grew to love good times.
a few years later, she was considering marriage.
her mother wanted her to marry and so did
her relatives. they were worried about her,
especially when she brought beggar children
into the garden to try to teach them. margaret
mary hesitated a while, neither marrying
nor entering the convent. at last she decided
on the convent.
she joined the visitation sisters and was
a kind, humble sister. often she made others
impatient since she was slow and clumsy.
but she was dear to jesus. he began to appear
to st. margaret mary to show her how much
he loves us all. jesus wanted her to spread
devotion to his sacred heart. it was a very
hard thing to do. many people thought margaret
mary had not really seen jesus at all. some
were angry with her for trying to spread
the new devotion. this brought her great
suffering. yet she did her best to carry
out the lord's wish. jesus blessed her hard
work and pain. today, this wonderful devotion
to the sacred heart is practiced all over
the world.
our lord made great promises to st. margaret
mary for those who are devoted to his most
sacred heart. some of these promises are:
"i will comfort them in all their afflictions.
i will establish peace in their homes. i
will bestow abundant blessings on all their
undertakings. i will bless every place where
a picture of my heart shall be displayed
and honored." the greatest promise
jesus made is this: "my divine heart
shall be the safe refuge in the last moment
to all those who receive holy communion
on the first friday for nine months in a
row."
st.
margaret mary understood in a special way
how deeply jesus loves each of us. we can
learn from her to trust in the heart of
jesus, which-as she wrote-is filled with
"love to meet our every need."
top
october
17
st. ignatius of antioch
st.
ignatius of antioch has been well-known
since earliest times. he was born in the
year 50. st. jerome and st. john chrysostom
both thought of his tomb as near the city
gates of antioch. ignatius was the third
bishop of antioch. this is the city where
st. peter labored before he moved to rome.
it is also the city where followers of jesus
were first called christians. ignatius was
condemned to death during the reign of emperor
trajan. he was led from antioch to the center
of roman cruelty-the amphitheater.
although he journeyed to rome under military
guard, ignatius stopped in smyrna and troas.
from each of those cities, he wrote letters
to the christian communities. in this way,
he used the same methods of preaching the
good news as the great st. paul. one of
the letters ignatius wrote from troas was
to st. polycarp, a fellow bishop, who is
also a martyr. we celebrate his feast on
february 23.
when the beloved ignatius arrived in rome,
he joined the brave christians who waited
in prisons. the day came when the bishop
was pushed out into the amphitheater. two
fierce lions devoured him. he left the beautiful
witness of christian life and his letters.
st. ignatius died around 107.
"pray
for me, so that i shall not fail the test."
let us find courage in the witness and prayers
of st. ignatius.
top
october
18
st. luke
it
is generally believed that luke was a gentile
doctor. he was a good, kind man who came
to know the lord from the great apostle
paul. after he had become a christian, he
went everywhere with paul. luke was a great
help to him in spreading the faith. the
bible calls luke "the beloved physician."
st. luke is the author of two books in the
bible: the gospel of luke and the acts of
the apostles. although he did not meet jesus
while the lord was on this earth, he wanted
to write about him for new converts. so
he talked to those who had known jesus.
he wrote down all that they had seen the
lord do and heard him say. it is believed
that luke learned some important information
from the blessed virgin mary herself. mary
would have been the person who could describe
the details of the angel gabriel's appearance
to her at the annunciation. mary could have
best told about the birth of jesus in bethlehem
and the flight of the holy family into egypt.
luke also wrote the story of how the apostles
began to teach the message of jesus after
he went back to heaven. it is in luke's
book, the acts of the apostles, that we
learn how the church began to grow and spread.
st. luke is the patron saint of doctors.
we are not sure when or where luke died.
he is one of the four evangelists, or gospel
writers.
from
the gospel of luke, we learn the mercy and
compassion of jesus. take some time today
to prayerfully read part of the gospel he
wrote.
top
october
19
st. isaac jogues, st. john de brebeuf and
companions--the north american martyrs
over
three hundred years ago, six jesuit priests
and two holy laymen, all from france, died
as martyrs here in north america. these
eight men were martyred between 1642 and
1649. they were a group of the bravest and
most daring missionaries in the new world.
they risked everything they had to bring
christ to the native people. after much
hard work, they converted many of the huron
tribe. but the iroquois, bitter enemies
of the hurons, put them all to death.
st. john de brebeuf had tuberculosis. he
was so sick in france that he could not
even teach many classes. yet he became a
marvelous, valiant apostle. his courage
amazed the fierce iroquois as they tortured
him to death. st. isaac jogues was tortured
by the mohawks, but was freed by the dutch.
he went back to france, but as soon as he
could, he returned to north america. father
jogues was killed with a tomahawk by the
bear clan of the mohawks. st. anthony daniel
had just finished celebrating mass for his
huron converts when the iroquois attacked
the village. the christian indians begged
him to try to escape. but father daniel
stayed. he wanted to baptize all those who
were crying to him for baptism before they
would be killed. the iroquois burned him
to death in his little chapel. st. gabriel
lallemont was tortured to death with st.
john de brebeuf. st. charles garnier and
st. noel chabenel were both killed with
tomahawks. st. charles was first shot by
an iroquois musket during a surprise attack,
but he still tried to crawl to help a dying
man. he was killed by a hatchet blow.
father chabenel had found life very hard,
but had made a vow to stay in north america.
he was killed by a huron traitor. the two
lay helpers, rene goupil and john lalande,
were both killed with tomahawks. so it was
that these heroes of christ gave their lives
for the native people of north america.
after their death, new missionaries were
able to convert almost every tribe that
the martyrs had known. these brave men,
often called the north american martyrs,
were proclaimed saints in 1931 by pope pius
xi.
the
greatest desire of these saints was for
others to know the love and friendship of
jesus. isaac jogues once spoke his willingness
to teach the gospel, saying, "i want
whatever our lord wants, even if it costs
a thousand lives."
top
october
20
st. paul of the cross
paul
danei of ovada, italy, was born into a family
of merchants in 1694. he was a good christian
and practiced his faith. when he was nineteen,
paul decided to become a soldier. after
a year he left the army. during the summer
of 1720 paul had some kind of a spiritual
experience. he had three visions of starting
a new religious order. he couldn't imagine
what was happening, so he went to his bishop
for guidance. the bishop investigated and
believed that the visions were real. he
told paul to go ahead with his special call.
he should do what he was being told in the
visions to do.
paul spent forty days in prayer and penance.
during that time he wrote a rule that he
and the followers of his new congregation
could base their style of life on. paul
was joined by his brother john and two other
young men. paul and john were ordained priests
by pope benedict xiii in 1727.
ten years later, the first passionist monastery
was started. pope clement xiv approved the
new order. he also approved the rule a short
time later. besides the three vows of poverty,
chastity and obedience, paul of the cross
added a fourth vow: devotion to the passion
of christ. by 1747, the passionists had
three monasteries. they were preaching parish
retreats throughout italy.
when he died in 1775, paul of the cross
was starting a congregation of passionist
nuns. he was proclaimed a saint by pope
pius ix in 1867.
st.
paul taught that in the cross of jesus we
find real wisdom. when we find ourselves
in difficulty or suffering, let us pray
for this wisdom.
top
october
21
st. hilarion
hilarion
lived in the fourth century. he was an unbelieving
teenager when he left his home in palestine.
he was on his way to egypt to go to school.
there he learned about the christian faith,
and soon he was baptized. hilarion was only
about fifteen at the time. his conversion
started him out on a glorious journey leading
him closer to god. before long, he was off
to visit the famous st. anthony in the desert.
(we celebrate his feast on january 17.)
hilarion wanted to be alone to serve jesus,
whom he had just come to love.
hilarion stayed two months with st. anthony,
but it was not quiet enough there for him.
many people came to st. anthony for help.
hilarion could not find the peace he was
looking for, so he left. after giving everything
he had to the poor, he went into the wilderness
to live as a hermit.
hilarion had to battle many temptations.
at times it seemed to him as if none of
his prayers were heard at all. yet he did
not let these temptations stop him from
praying even harder.
after twenty years in the desert, the holy
man worked his first miracle. soon many
people began coming to his hut to beg his
help. several men asked him to let them
stay with him to learn from him how to pray
and do penance. in his great love for god
and people, the saint invited them to stay.
but finally, when he was sixty-five, he
began to travel. he went from one country
to another in search of peace and quiet.
however, the fame of his miracles of mercy
always brought crowds of visitors. a few
years before his death in 371, hilarian
at last felt that he was truly alone with
god. he was eighty years old when he died.
the
value of solitude was well known to this
saint. is there a time in my day when i
can be alone with god?
top
october
22
blessed timothy giaccardo
joseph
giaccardo was born on june 13, 1896, in
narzole, italy. his parents were hard-working
farmers. joseph acquired good habits from
them. they loved their catholic faith, which
he learned from them. joseph prayed to jesus
in the eucharist and to mary. he had a little
statue of mary on a ledge in his room.
joseph became a regular mass server. that
is how he met a young priest who came to
help at st. bernard's church. the priest
was about to begin a wonderful new religious
order, the society of st. paul. his name
was father james alberione. joseph liked
him very much. father alberione was impressed
with joseph, too. he guided joseph in the
spiritual life. the boy entered the seminary
in alba to study for the priesthood. in
1917, though still a seminarian, joseph
asked his bishop for permission to leave
the seminary. he wanted to join father alberione's
new order. the bishop reluctantly permitted
joseph to enter the society of st. paul.
joseph professed his vows in 1920. he chose
the name "timothy" after the best
loved disciple of st. paul. father timothy
was ordained two years later, the first
priest in father alberione's new congregation.
the order had just been started in 1914.
father timothy's particular vocation as
a pauline priest was to be a media apostle.
he wrote, edited, printed and distributed
the word of god. he performed many responsible
tasks with courage and humility. some people
did not understand the apostolate of the
society of st. paul and the daughters of
st. paul. they wondered how priests, brothers
and sisters could be publishers. how could
they use media as their tools for communicating
the good news? father timothy helped people
understand the marvelous vocation of the
paulines. he also was a great teacher of
the priests and religious who were called
to this new apostolate. he served the lord
in northern italy and in rome. he became
father alberione's closest associate. in
fact, father alberione called blessed timothy
"most faithful of the faithful."
but he was not going to be the successor
of the pauline founder, as father alberione
had hoped. father timothy became very ill
with leukemia. he died on january 24, 1948.
he was proclaimed "blessed" by
pope john paul ii on october 22, 1990.
timothy
giaccardo was a member of the society of
st. paul, a community founded to use the
modern means of communication to spread
the good news of jesus christ. how do i
communicate gospel values in my life? how
often do i think about what kind of values
are presented in the media i use (movies,
newspapers, websites, etc.)?
top
october
23
st. john capistrano
st.
john capistrano was born in italy in 1386.
he was a lawyer and governor of the city
of perugia. when enemies of the city threw
john into prison, he started to think about
the real meaning of life. john's political
enemies were not in a hurry to release him.
he had plenty of time to realize that what
mattered most was the salvation of his soul.
so when he was miraculously set free, john
entered a franciscan monastery. he was thirty
at the time. for john, life as a poor friar
was a big change. he had to sacrifice his
independence for the love of jesus. and
he tried with all his heart to do this.
after he became a priest, john was sent
out to preach. he and his former novice
master, st. bernardine of siena, spread
devotion to the holy name of jesus everywhere.
john preached throughout europe for forty
years. all who heard him were moved to love
and serve the lord better.
an outstanding moment in the life of this
saint came at the battle of belgrade. the
turks had made up their minds to conquer
europe and to wipe out the church of jesus.
the pope sent st. john capistrano to all
the christian kings of europe to beg them
to unite to fight the mighty turkish army.
the kings obeyed this poor, barefoot friar.
he stirred up their love of god and their
courage with his fiery words. but even though
a big army of christians came to fight mohammed
ii and his turks, it looked as though they
would lose. the enemy army was much bigger.
then it was that the saint himself, though
he was seventy years old, ran to the front
lines and encouraged the men to keep fighting.
holding his crucifix up high, this thin,
small old man kept crying, "victory,
jesus, victory!" and the christian
soldiers felt full of more courage than
ever. they fought until the enemy ran away
in fear.
st. john capistrano died a short time later,
on october 23, 1456. he was proclaimed a
saint in 1724.
"[priests]
have been placed here to care for others.
their own lives should be an example to
others, showing how they must live in the
house of the lord."
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october
24
st. anthony claret
anthony
was born in spain in 1807. it was the same
year that napoleon invaded the country.
perhaps that was a "hint" of the
exciting events that would follow anthony
through life. he became a priest in 1835
and was assigned to his home parish. later
he went to rome and worked to help the missions.
he joined the jesuits as a novice, but his
health failed. he returned to spain and
became a pastor. father anthony knew that
the whole world was a mission field. he
had the heart of a missionary. he was a
dedicated preacher in his parish. he gave
conferences to priests. father
anthony was convinced of the power of the
printed word. he wrote at least 150 books.
his most well-known book, the right way,
has reached millions of people.
some people did not understand the value
of father anthony's initiatives. his success
and his zeal threatened them. perhaps the
opposition was permitted by the lord so
that this energetic priest could visit the
canary islands in 1848. he spent a year
there preaching the good news. then he returned
to catalonia, spain, and his preaching ministry
there. in 1849, anthony started a new religious
order called the missionary sons of the
immaculate heart of mary. they are known
as claretians.
queen isabella ii of spain thought highly
of st. anthony. she suggested that he was
the best person to become archbishop of
santiago, cuba. his apostolate in cuba turned
out to be an exciting seven years. archbishop
anthony visited parishes, speaking out against
social evils, especially slavery. he blessed
marriages and baptized children. he was
a reformer and had enemies. he received
death threats often but did not stop his
wonderful work until he was recalled to
spain in 1857.
during anthony's priesthood he was head
of a seminary in madrid. he established
the school of st. michael to foster arts
and literature and even tried to start a
school of agriculture. he went to rome to
help prepare for the first vatican council
in 1869 and died in 1870. st. anthony mary
claret was declared a saint by pope pius
xii in 1950.
st.
anthony encouraged others, especially lay
people, to be faithful to the gospel in
their daily lives. how often do i consider
my own life in relation to the teaching
of christ?
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october
25
blessed richard gwyn
richard
was a welshman who lived in the sixteenth
century. queen elizabeth i ruled england
and wales. because most people in wales
were still catholic, the queen and her officials
tried to crush the faith by cruel laws.
priests or people who were loyal to the
holy father were put in prison. they were
often tortured and killed. richard became
a catholic after he had finished college
and had become a teacher.
before long, he was a hunted man. he escaped
from jail once and a month later was arrested
again. "you will be freed," he
was told, "if you will give up the
catholic faith." blessed richard absolutely
refused. he was brought to a non-catholic
church by force. he upset the preacher's
whole sermon by clanking his chains loudly.
furious, the officials put him in the stocks
for eight hours, and many came to abuse
and insult him.
more time in prison and torture sessions
followed. the queen's men wanted him to
give them the names of other catholics,
but richard would not. at his trial, men
were paid to lie about him, as one of them
admitted. the men on the jury were so dishonest
that they asked the judge whom he wanted
them to condemn. after blessed richard was
sentenced to death, his wife and baby were
brought to court. "do not imitate your
husband," the poor woman was told.
in disgust, she bravely snapped, "if
you want more blood, you can take my life
with my husband's. if you give more money
to your witnesses, they will surely find
something to say against me, too."
as blessed richard was being martyred, he
cried out in terrible pain: "holy god,
what is this?" one of the officials
mockingly answered: "an execution of
her majesty, the queen." "jesus,
have mercy on me!" exclaimed the martyr.
then he was beheaded. the beautiful religious
poems blessed richard wrote in prison are
still in existence. in them, he begged his
countrymen of wales to be loyal to the catholic
faith. blessed richard died a martyr in
1584. he was proclaimed "blessed"
by paul vi in 1970.
in
the example of bl. richard, we are reminded
that our faith is a treasure to be held
with conviction and loved deeply.
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october
26
st. evaristus
st.
evaristus lived in the second century. he
was from a jewish family in bethlehem. they
were living in greece at the time of their
son's birth. evaristus was brought up in
the jewish religion. his father was so pleased
with the boy's virtue and knowledge that
he sent him to the best teachers.
evaristus became a christian when he grew
older. so great was his love for his new
faith that he decided to become a priest.
at rome, where he performed his ministry,
everyone grew to admire and love him. so
it was that when the pope was martyred,
evaristus was chosen to take his place.
he felt he was completely unworthy of being
pope, but god knew better.
these were times of persecution for the
church. such bad lies were spread about
the catholic faith that the romans thought
nothing of putting christians to death.
every man who became pope was almost certain
of being arrested. for about eight years,
pope st. evaristus ruled the church. his
zeal was so great that the number of believers
grew larger every day. at last, however,
he was captured.
the jailers were amazed to see the joy on
the holy old man's face as he was led to
prison. st. evaristus thought himself very
privileged to have been found worthy to
suffer and die for jesus. no better gift
could have been given him than his martyrdom.
pope st. evaristus died in 107.
often
our lives take unexpected turns, but if
we find our strength in god, he will give
us his peace.
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october
27
blessed contardo ferrini
contardo
was born in 1859. his father was a teacher
of mathematics and physics. mr. ferrini
began very early to teach his little son
his own love for study. as a young man,
contardo could speak many languages besides
italian. he did very well in every school
and college he went to. his great love for
study and for his catholic faith made his
friends nickname him their own "st.
aloysius." (st. aloysius gonzaga was
a young jesuit saint known for the goodness
and generosity of his life.) it was contardo
who first started clubs for college students
to help them become good christians.
when he was twenty-one, he was offered a
chance to study at the university of berlin
in germany. it was hard for him to leave
his home in italy, but he was happy to meet
devout catholics at the university. he wrote
down in a little book what he felt the first
time he received the sacrament of reconciliation
in a foreign land. it thrilled him to realize
that the catholic church is really the same
everywhere a person goes.
by the next year, contardo was trying to
decide whether he should become a priest
or a monk, or whether he should marry. he
kept asking himself just what he should
do. as it turned out, he took a vow to give
himself only to god. he lived that vow as
a lay person; he never became a priest or
brother. he went on teaching and writing.
he tried always to become a more perfect
christian. while enjoying his favorite sport
of mountain-climbing, he would think of
god, the creator of all the beauty he saw.
people noticed that there was something
different about professor ferrini. once
when he had passed by with his usual warm
smile, someone exclaimed, "that man
is a saint!"
contardo ferrini died of typhoid fever on
october 17, 1902. he was only forty-three
years old. he was declared "blessed"
by pope pius xii in 1947.
gifted
with great intelligence, bl. contardo put
his learning at the service of others.
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october
28
st. simon and st. jude
these
two apostles of jesus are honored on the
same day. st. simon was called "the
zealous one" because he had so much
devotion to the jewish law. once he had
been called by the lord to be an apostle,
he gave his heart and his energy to preaching
the gospel. with the other apostles, he
received the holy spirit on the first pentecost.
then it is believed that he went to egypt
to preach the faith. afterward he went to
persia with the apostle st. jude, and the
two of them were martyred there.
st. jude is sometimes called thaddeus, which
means "the brave one." it was
he who asked the lord a famous question
at the last supper. jesus had said: "he
who loves me will be loved by my father,
and i will love him and manifest myself
to him." and st. jude wanted to know:
"lord, how is it that you are about
to manifest yourself to us and not to the
world?" jesus gave him the answer:
"if anyone love me, he will keep my
word, and my father will love him, and we
will come to him and make our abode with
him."
st. jude is sometimes called the saint of
"desperate or impossible cases."
people pray to him when things seem hopeless.
often god answers their prayers through
the intercession of this beloved apostle.
simon
was known as the "zealous," and
jude was called the "brave." let
us pray for their missionary courage and
love in our own lives.
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october
29
st. narcissus
narcissus
lived in the second and early part of the
third centuries. he was an old man when
he was made bishop of jerusalem. narcissus
was an excellent bishop. everyone admired
his virtues-everyone except people who chose
to live evil lives. three enemies of the
saint accused him of a terrible crime. one
said: "may i die by fire if it is not
true!" the second said: "may i
be wasted away by leprosy if it is not true."
the third said: "may i be struck blind
if it is not true." yet no one believed
their lie. the people had seen narcissus'
good life. they knew the kind of person
he was.
although no one believed the wicked story,
narcissus used it as an excuse to go off
to live in the desert. his whole trust was
in god, whom he had served so lovingly.
and god showed that the story of those men
was absolutely false. narcissus returned
to be bishop of jerusalem, to the great
joy of his people. although he was even
older, he seemed to be more zealous than
ever. in fact, he seemed stronger than ever,
too, for a few years. then he became too
weak to carry on. he begged god to send
him a bishop to help out. our lord sent
him another saint, alexander of cappadocia.
with great love and zeal, they ruled the
diocese together. narcissus lived to be
over 116 years old. he died in the year
215.
it
may be tempting to listen to or participate
in gossip about another person, but we can
remember that only god truly knows each
one of us inside and out.
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october
30
st. alphonsus rodriguez
this
spanish saint was born in 1553. he took
over the family business of buying and selling
wool when he was twenty-three. three years
later, he got married. god sent him and
his wife mary two children. but many sufferings
now came to alphonsus. business began to
be bad, his little daughter died and then
his wife. now this businessman began to
think of what god might have in mind for
him. he had always been a devout christian.
but from then on, he prayed, did penance,
and received the sacraments more than he
had ever done.
when he was nearly forty, alphonsus' son
died, too. despite his great sorrow, he
prayed and asked god for the gift of trust.
alphonsus soon asked to be admitted into
the society of jesus. however, he was told
that he must study first. so he went back
to school. little boys made fun of him.
he had to beg for his food, because he had
given his money to the poor. at last, he
was accepted as a brother and was made door-keeper
at a jesuit college.
"that brother is not a man-he is an
angel!" his superior said of him years
later. priests who knew him for forty years
never heard him say or do anything wrong.
his kindness and obedience were known to
all. once, all the chairs in the house,
even the chairs from the bedrooms, had been
used for a forty hours devotion. by mistake,
brother alphonsus' chair was not returned
until the following year. yet he never mentioned
the fact to anyone.
during his long life, st. alphonsus had
to conquer very strong temptations. besides
that, he had physical pains. even as he
lay dying, he spent a half hour in terrible
agony. then, just before he died, he was
filled with peace and joy. he kissed his
crucifix and looked lovingly at his fellow
religious. he died in 1617 with the name
of jesus on his lips.
despite
the great tragedies he faced, alphonsus
held fast to his hope and trust in god.
let us pray for this same hope to sustain
us.
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october
31
st. foillan
foillan
was an irish monk who lived in the seventh
century. his two brothers have also been
declared saints. they were some of the many
zealous irish apostles. they left their
homeland to help other countries that had
fewer priests than ireland. sts. foillan,
fursey and ultan went to england first.
they established a monastery in burgh castle.
from this spot, they did missionary work
among the east angles. when invaders of
the land robbed the monastery of everything
it had, sts. foillan and ultan decided to
preach the gospel in france. their other
brother, st. fursey, had already worked
as a missionary and had died there.
king clovis ii welcomed the two holy missionaries
as he had welcomed their brother before
them. foillan was given land by blessed
itta and her daughter. st. gertrude asked
him to preach to the nuns of the convent
over which she was abbess. he did so, and
had great influence on them. he also did
missionary work among the people. in fact,
st. foillan is a well-remembered irish saint
in europe.
one day, after celebrating mass for st.
gertrude and her nuns, father follian set
out on a journey with three companions.
they were going to see his brother ultan,
who was preaching in another area. while
passing through a forest, they were attacked
by a band of robbers and killed. their bodies
were not found for about two and a half
months. then st. gertrude had st. foillan
buried with honor in the abbey he had started.
on
this day, we can recall in our prayers all
people who have been the victims of violence
throughout the world.
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