SAINT OF THE DAY!

Discussion in 'The Saints' started by Prayslie, Jul 24, 2025.

  1. Prayslie

    Prayslie Archangels

    2) SAINT PETER GONZALEZ
    DOMINICAN PRIEST
    (1190 - 15 April, 1246)

    Peter González, also referred to as Pedro González Telmo, Saint Telmo, or Saint Elmo, was born in 1190 in the city of Astorga, Spain, of an illustrious family. After studies in which he excelled, he was named canon of the Cathedral. His uncle, the Bishop of Astorga, obtained for him from Rome the position of dean of the chapter of canons.

    He became a priest as a step to high office. One Christmas Day, it was planned for Peter to take possession of the dignity at Christmas. A vain youth filled with the spirit of the world, Peter desired that the ceremony should take place with great pomp before the whole city. Astride a magnificent horse in full harness, he rode through the streets of the city. When he reached a place crowded with onlookers, he spurred his horse to make it prance more elegantly and raise the applause of the people. But the horse tripped and threw the rider into a puddle of mud. The applause immediately changed into derision and laughter.

    Embarrassed and knowing that his parishioners thought he was a fake, Peter withdrew from the world for a period of prayer and meditation. During this time, he had a conversion and spent the rest of his life making up for his lost youth. He joined the Dominicans and shunned those who tried to convince him to return to his old ways, saying: "If you love me, follow me! If you cannot follow me, forget me!"

    He served as the confessor and court chaplain to King Saint Ferdinand III of Castile, and reformed court life. He also worked for the crusade against the Moors, went into the battlefields, and worked for humane treatment of Moorish prisoners.

    Fearing that the honors and easy life offered by the king's court would lead him to return to his previous ways, he left the court and evangelized to shepherds and sailors. He became apostle and preacher to the poor, and especially to sailors. He received the gift of miracles. He preached without stop until his last days and foretold his own death, which took place on April 15, 1246. The sailors of Spain and Portugal still invoke him in every storm under the name of St. Elmo (Elm or Telm).

    "Public humiliation led Peter Gonzalez to a true conversion experience and set him on the road to sainthood."

    He died in 15 April, 1246 and was beatified in 1254 by Pope Innocent IV.

    PATRON: Spanish, Mariners and Portuguese sailors.

    PRAYER: Almighty God, you bestowed the singular help of Blessed Peter on those in peril from the sea. By the help of his prayers may the light of your grace shine forth in all the storms of this life and enable us to find the harbor of everlasting salvation. We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. - General Calendar of the Order of Preachers. Amen.

    St. Peter Gonsalez: Pray for us!
     
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  2. peregrin

    peregrin Principalities

    a Blessed for today
    Lydwine of Schiedam (1380-1433)

    April 14 is the feast day of Blessed Lydwine of Schiedam, born April 18, 1380, in Schiedam, in the County of Holland. She died June 14, 1433. At the age of fifteen she suffered a severe fall while skating on the frozen River Schie, breaking a rib, and never recovered. For the remaining thirty-seven years of her life she was bedridden, progressively losing the use of her limbs, her sight, and her ability to eat, subsisting according to the testimony of contemporaries on the Eucharist alone. She bore mystical wounds and was visited by numerous ecclesiastics who attested to her condition. She is patron of the sick, of those who suffer chronic illness, and of skaters

    Note: This entry predates the Consulta Medica. The miracle documentation is drawn from the beatification process concluded under Pope Leo XIII in 1890, not from modern Vatican medical review.
    ◾The prodigies accepted in her beatification process were drawn from contemporary witness accounts compiled in the fifteenth century and reviewed in the 1890 process. The specific medical documentation is held in the beatification dossier at the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints and has not been reproduced in full in public sources.

    Blessed Lydwine, who transformed unbearable suffering into intercession for others, pray
    for us.
     
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  3. Prayslie

    Prayslie Archangels

    SAINT OF THE DAY
    WEDNESDAY, 15 APRIL, 2026

    SAINT PATERNUS
    BISHOP, MONK, HERMIT, RENOWNED PREACHER
    (482 - 550)

    St. Paternus was born at Poitiers, about the year 482. His father, Patranus, with the consent of his wife, went into Ireland, where he ended his days in holy solitude. Paternus, fired by his example, embraced a monastic life in the abbey of Marnes. After some time, burning with a desire of attaining to the perfection of Christian virtue, he passed over to Wales, and in Cardiganshire founded a monastery called Llan-patern-vaur, or the church of the great Paternus.

    He made a visit to his father in Ireland, but being called back to his monastery of Marnes, he soon after retired with St. Scubilion, a monk of that house, and embraced an austere anchoretical life in the forests of Scicy, in the diocese of Coutances, near the sea, having first obtained leave of the bishop and of the lord of the place. This desert, which was then of great extent, but which has been since gradually gained upon by the sea, was anciently in great request among the Druids. St. Paternus converted to the faith the idolaters of that and many neighboring parts, as far as Bayeux, and prevailed upon them to demolish a pagan temple in this desert, which was held in great veneration by the ancient Gauls.

    In his old age he was consecrated Bishop of Avranches by Germanus, Bishop of Rouen. Some false brethren having created a division of opinion among the bishops of the province with respect to St. Paternus, he preferred retiring rather than to afford any ground for dissension, and, after governing his diocese for thirteen years, he withdrew to a solitude in France, and there ended his days about the year 550.

    PRAYER: All-powerful and ever-living God, you called Saint Paternus to guide your people by his word and example. With him we pray to you: watch over the pastors of your Church with the people entrusted to their care, and lead them to salvation. We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
     
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  4. peregrin

    peregrin Principalities

    another Saint of today
    April 15 marks the death anniversary of Saint Damien of Molokai, born Jozef De Veuster on January 3, 1840, in Tremelo, Belgium. He died on this date in 1889 in the leper settlement of Kalaupapa on the Hawaiian island of Molokai, having contracted leprosy himself after sixteen years ministering to its residents. He was beatified by Pope John Paul II on June 4, 1995, and canonized by Pope Benedict XVI on October 11, 2009. He is patron of those suffering from leprosy and Hansen's disease, of Hawaii, and of outcasts.
    ◾The miracle confirmed by the Vatican's Consulta Medica as medically inexplicable for his canonization concerned Audrey Toguchi of Hawaii, who suffered from liposarcoma, a malignant tumor of fatty tissue. Following prayer to Blessed Damien, she experienced a complete and lasting recovery that her physicians could not account for by any medical means. The case was submitted to the Consulta Medica, whose experts determined the healing to be scientifically inexplicable, clearing the way for canonization.

    Saint Damien of Molokai, who made yourself a leper among lepers out of love, pray for us.
     
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  5. padraig

    padraig Powers

    I read am account of one Irish Jesuit priest who researched the life of St Margaret Mary Alocoque. He said that every moment of her life seemed to be full of the most harrowing suffering. Hardly a moment of relief. A victim soul.

    The same with St Lydwine. Pt is astonishing to read of such courage, trust and never ending hope. The Cross transformed.

     
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  6. Prayslie

    Prayslie Archangels

    SAINTS OF THE DAY
    THURSDAY, 16 APRIL, 2026

    1) SAINT BERNADETTE
    2) SAINT ENGRATIA AND THE EIGHTEEN MARTYRS OF SARAGOSSA


    1) SAINT BERNADETTE

    Marie Bernadette Soubirous was the eldest child of an impoverished miller. At the age of fourteen she was ailing and undersized, sensitive and of pleasant disposition but accounted backward and slow. Between 11 February and 16 July 1858, in a shallow cave on the bank of the river Gave, she had a series of remarkable experiences. On eighteen occasions she saw a very young and beautiful lady, who made various requests and communications to her, pointing out a forgotten spring of water and enjoining prayer and penitence. The lady eventually identified herself as the Virgin Mary, under the title of 'the Immaculate Conception'. Some of these happenings took place in the presence of many people, but no one besides Bernadette claimed to see or hear 'the Lady', and there was no disorder or emotional extravagance. After the appearances ceased, however, there was an epidemic of false visionaries and morbid religiosity in the district, which increased the reserved attitude of the church authorities towards Bernadette's experiences.

    For some years she suffered greatly from the suspicious disbelief of some and the tactless enthusiasm and insensitive attentions of others; these trials she bore with impressive patience and dignity. In 1866 she was admitted to the convent of the Sisters of Charity at Nevers. Here she was more sheltered from trying publicity, but not from the 'stuffiness' of the convent superiors nor from the tightening grip of asthma. 'I am getting on with my job,' she would say. 'What is that?' someone asked. 'Being ill,' was the reply. Thus she lived out her self-effacing life, dying at the age of thirty-five. The events of 1858 resulted in Lourdes becoming one of the greatest pilgrim shrines in the history of Christendom. But St. Bernadette took no part in these developments; nor was it for her visions that she was canonized, but for the humble simplicity and religious trustingness that characterized her whole life.

    PATRON: Bodily ills; illness; Lourdes, France; people ridiculed for their piety; poverty; shepherdesses; shepherds; sick people; sickness.

    SYMBOLS: Young girl kneeling in front of a grotto, before the Blessed Virgin ("The Immaculate Conception") who wears a white dress, blue belt, and a rose on each foot. Bernadette is sometimes pictured after she received the habit.

    St. Bernadette: Pray for us!

    2) SAINT ENGRATIA AND THE EIGHTEEN MARTYRS OF SARAGOSSA

    St. Optatus and seventeen other holy men received the crown of martyrdom on the same day, at Saragossa, under the cruel Governor Dacian, in the persecution of Diocletian, in 304. Two others, Caius and Crementius, died of their torments after a second conflict.

    The Church also celebrates on this day the triumph of St. Encratis, or Engratia, Virgin. She was a native of Portugal. Her father had promised her in marriage to a man of quality in Roussillon; but fearing the dangers and despising the vanities of the world, and resolving to preserve her virginity, in order to appear more agreeable to her heavenly Spouse and serve Him without hindrance, she stole from her father's house and fled privately to Saragossa, where the persecution was hottest, under the eyes of Dacian. She even reproached him with his barbarities, upon which he ordered her to be long tormented in the most inhuman manner: her sides were torn with iron hooks, and one of her breasts was cut off, so that the inner parts of her chest were exposed to view, and part of her liver was pulled out. In this condition she was sent back to prison, being still alive, and died by the mortifying of her wounds, in 304.

    The relics of all these martyrs were found at Saragossa in 1389.

    St. Engratia and the Eighteen Martyrs of Saragossa: Pray for us!
     
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  7. Dave Fagan

    Dave Fagan Ave Maria

    FB_IMG_1770814209774(1).jpg

    Saint Bernadette, pray for us.
     
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  8. peregrin

    peregrin Principalities

    Saint Bernadette Soubirous (1844-1879)

    The Blessed Virgin Mary:
    "Jo noun póouy pas prumété de-bous hase uroussi en aquéou mounde, mès en l'autre"
    (original Gascon/Lourdes dialect: )

    "I do not promise to make you happy in this world, but in the next"
    February 18, 1858. Third apparition


    The miracles through her intercession:
    ◾On May 2, 1925, the Church certified two miracles for her beatification: the healing of Henri Boisselet from tubercular peritonitis following a novena to Bernadette, and the healing of Sister Marie-Mélanie Meyer from a gastric ulcer after a pilgrimage to Bernadette's tomb.
    ◾For her canonization in 1933, two further miracles were accepted: the recovery of Archbishop Lemaître of Carthage from a chronic amoebic infection, and the complete healing of Sister Marie de Saint-Fidèle from Pott's disease, a form of spinal tuberculosis.

    Saint Bernadette pray for us.
     
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  9. padraig

    padraig Powers

    I think the thing I love most about Bernadette was her ability to cut through the bullshit. For instance when one priest asked her why she had eaten herbs at the grotto she asked him if he had never eaten salad?

    When someone said he did not believe she had seen Our Lady she told him her mission was to report what had happened not to convince people they were true.

    When her religious superiors had promised her she would be left in peace in the convent without hordes of visitors and yet another Bishop called at the convent to see her she vehemently complained that they were breaking their word.

    In this she reminds me of St Joan of Arc who pretty well took a sword of her tongue to the clergy questioning her,

    This reminds me that we should not create plaster saints, not to put them in our own boxes/ Not to think they only do and say nice things.

    Look at Jesus in the Gospels. He comes very much across as a real human being. Anything but nice. Very often very far from nice. Not someone to be put in a nice box of our own making.

    Plus they come across as having a very fine sense of humour.

    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Apr 16, 2026 at 6:22 AM
  10. peregrin

    peregrin Principalities

    Bon Dieu!
     
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  11. Prayslie

    Prayslie Archangels

    SAINT OF THE DAY
    FRIDAY, 17 APRIL, 2026

    SAINT ANICETUS
    POPE

    PAPACY BEGAN - 157 AD
    PAPACY ENDED - 20 APRIL, 168 AD

    St. Anicetus, the twelfth Pope after St. Peter, first saw the light of day in Syria, toward the end of the first century. He was carefully educated by his parents, and was gifted by God with great natural abilities, especially with a clear, penetrating mind. He made, by his untiring perseverance, such progress in all sciences that he was accounted among the best scholars of his time. In addition to this, the life he led was so blameless, that he was a model to every one of Christian perfection. The most shining of all his virtues was his truly apostolic zeal in protecting and disseminating the true faith.

    Therefore, when Pius I. had ended his life by a glorious martyrdom, Anicetus was unanimously elected his successor amid great rejoicing. And in truth, the Church needed at that period, a Pope as learned, zealous and holy as himself, as she was assailed and persecuted in all possible ways by divers heretics. Valentinus and Marcion, two Heresiarchs, had already commenced to sow the poison of their corruption in Rome, and even a wicked woman named Marcellina, who had adopted the teachings of Carpocrates, had already many followers. The saddest fact of all, however, was that the Catholics, themselves, became very indolent in the practice of their faith, and their conduct was not such as their religion required. This inspired the heretics with hope of being able to instill their spurious doctrines into their minds, as we know by experience that the surest road to apostasy from the true faith, is indifference and debased morals.

    St. Anicetus, although he perceived all this with great pain, did not become disheartened. Calling on God for aid, he began earnestly to work. By daily sermons, by teaching and exhortation, he endeavored to move the Catholics to more fervency in their religion, as well as to a reformation of their lives. The example of his own holy life gave the greatest force to his words. He lived like a Saint, and all his thoughts were directed to lead his flock to salvation. He was an enemy to even the most innocent amusement, and found his only pleasure in prayer and in working for the honor of God and the salvation of souls. He employed the greater part of the night in devotional exercises, and during the day he was only found in Church, in the dwellings of the sick, or poor, or at home occupied in study or prayer. He chastised his body by fasting and other penances.

    To his enemies he was kind and charitable; to the poor, liberal; while in danger and persecution he was fearless and strong. This beautiful example of their shepherd was soon followed by the Catholics residing at Rome with such zeal, that, according to the testimony of Hegesippus, the historian, the whole city became a habitation of sanctity. This change in the morals of the people was the most efficacious means of preserving them in the true faith, as the best safeguard of faith is a pious and blameless life. As far as the heretics were concerned, who endeavored to implant in the hearts of the Romans the seeds of their false doctrines, the holy father had the greatest compassion on them on account of their lost souls. He left nothing untried to bring them to the knowledge of their error, but he thought it prudent to banish those who remained inflexible from the city. Polycarp, a disciple of St. John, came to Rome at the time of Anicetus, to discuss several points with him, which were to be settled for the welfare of the faithful. All was happily concluded and Polycarp paid the greatest honors to the holy Pope, everywhere praising his saintly conduct.

    For eight years had Anicetus governed the Church with wonderful wisdom and power, when during the persecution of Marcus Aurelius he was seized, and being inflexible in the confession of his faith, he was decapitated.

    PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS

    St. Anicetus was an enemy of even innocent amusements. His entire occupation was prayer and working for the honor of God and the salvation of souls. The greater part of the night he employed in devotional exercises. During the day he was only to be found at Church, in the dwellings of the poor or sick, or at home occupied in study and prayer: hence only in places where the functions of his station called him. What have you to remark on all these points. Compare your life with the life of the Saint and blush with shame to find how little you resemble him in all these points. St. Anicetus refrained even from innocent amusements. Do you not frequently seek even such as are sinful? St. Anicetus occupied himself only with prayer and works for God and the salvation of souls. In what consists your occupation? How much time do you devote to prayer?

    St. Anicetus spent the greater part of the night in prayer; you do not even pray during the day, much less do you do so at night? How have you passed many a night. Remember the time when the half, nay even the whole night was too short for your frivolous or perhaps sinful amusements. You did not find it hard then to cut short your hours of rest, but if you were told to employ one short hour during the night in prayer, you would think it impossible to overcome your sleep. Learn by this, how you not only deceived others but also yourself. St. Anicetus was only to be found at such places where the functions of his station called him. Where are you to be found during the day? Ah! very rarely at Church; seldom, if ever, where your station, your labors call you! where are you then? Ah! perhaps in a bar-room ; at the gaming table ; at a ball; in frivolous or dissolute company! Will you ever be able to justify your conduct before God? Most assuredly not. Hence examine your conscience and reform where you have done wrong.

    St. Anicetus: Pray for us!
     
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  12. peregrin

    peregrin Principalities

    another Saint of today

    Saint Kateri Tekakwitha (1656-1680), whose death anniversary falls on April 17 (and is her feast day in Canada), is the first Native American saint and a patron of ecology.

    ◾The miracle approved for her 2012 canonization, after review by the Consulta Medica in Rome, involved five-year-old Jake Finkbonner. Diagnosed with necrotizing fasciitis (flesh-eating bacteria) following a cut to his lip while playing basketball, he faced a grave prognosis with rapid tissue destruction. After his family and community prayed for her intercession and a relic of St. Kateri was placed on him, the infection halted its progression overnight with no medical explanation; he made a full recovery.

    Saint Kateri Tekakwitha, pray for us.
     
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  13. Dave Fagan

    Dave Fagan Ave Maria

    st-kateri-tekakwitha-non-laminated.jpg

    Saint Kateri Tekakwitha, pray for us.
     
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