Called to Love More

This is a reprint of one of my more popular blog posts, which I re-run each year on this day. Saint Benedict was the founder of western monasticism; to this day, most monks and nuns worldwide follow some variation of his “Little Rule for Beginners“. Benedict had a twin sister, Scholastica, whose feast day is today. Under her brother’s guidance, […]

» Read more

A Prayer to Saint Monica

Born of Christian parents about the year 331 at Tagaste in Africa, Monica was reared under the strict supervision of an elderly nurse who had likewise reared her father. In the course of time she was given in marriage to a pagan named Patricius. Besides other faults, he possessed a very irascible nature…

» Read more

Butt-Kicked for Truth Telling

On this day in the Year of Our Lord 373 died a great champion and defender of Catholic Orthodoxy, a saint, and a doctor of the Church. Saint Athanasius was Patriarch of Alexandria for 45 years during the time of the Arian heresy, which he opposed with every fibre of his being. The Arians held that Christ was a creature […]

» Read more

Saint Patrick was an Englishman!

Well that got your attention, didn’t it? It’s not quite true of course; Patrick may have been born on the isle of Britain, but in a time before the Angles had arrived and started making it Angland. No, his family were Roman Catholic churchmen from the Roman Imperial province of Britannia. Today, nobody is going to go around speaking in […]

» Read more

A Prayer to Saint Monica

Born of Christian parents about the year 331 at Tagaste in Africa, Monica was reared under the strict supervision of an elderly nurse who had likewise reared her father. In the course of time she was given in marriage to a pagan named Patricius. Besides other faults, he possessed a very irascible nature… Her marriage was blessed with three children: […]

» Read more

Vote!

Today is election day in the United States. If you’re an American citizen, and you’re eligible to vote, get out there and do your civic duty! I for one am looking forward to the blare of campaign advertising settling down to a whimper of recrimination and regret. Let the 2016 races begin! (Oh, and happy St. Leonard‘s day!)

» Read more

Time, Time, Time

Today is the feast of Saint Thomas the Apostle. Except when it isn’t. The feast days of most saints are the day they died. For Thomas, today is properly the feast commemorating “the Translation of Saint Thomas” – the day on which his relics were translated (moved) from Mylapore in India to Edessa in Mesopotamia in A.D. 232. Presumably, this […]

» Read more

Visitation

Mary’s month of May draws to a close with the Feast of the Visitation. This feast celebrates the visit of Mary, pregnant with Jesus, to her cousin Elizabeth, pregnant with John the Baptist (Gospel of Saint Luke, Chapter 1 verses 39 – 56). Luke’s account culminates in one of the great New Testament songs, Mary’s Magnificat, which we recite at […]

» Read more

Not the Vigil

Tomorrow is forty days since Easter, the Solemnity of the Ascension, when Christ ascended into heaven in what has to be one of the great comic scenes in the Bible: [A]s they were looking on, he was lifted up, and a cloud took him from their sight. While they were looking intently at the sky as he was going, suddenly […]

» Read more
1 2 3 4