Jehanne

This year, I’m going to forgo my lamentation of the mobile Epiphany. For today, 6 January 2012, is the 600th birthday of one of the most truly remarkable women who ever lived. And she was burned at the stake when she was 19 years old. She was known as Jehanne la Pucelle, Joan the Maiden. In 1429 at the tender […]

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Happy New Year!

It’s the first of January, and I’m clearly looking and feeling my very best after last night’s festivities. We rarely throw parties, but when we do, we invariably overdo it a bit. Last night’s feast had libations aplenty and a table groaning with food for our family and friends old and new. Everybody brought something to share. Combine that with […]

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For the Crime of Being a Priest

Today I’m going to upset some of my (Protestant) Christian friends who see the Reformation as a good thing. I don’t. Here is one of many, many reasons why. December 1 is the feast of Saint Edmund Campion, a Jesuit martyr. The matter-of-fact beginning to his entry on Wikipedia reads as follows: Saint Edmund Campion, S.J. (24 January 1540 – […]

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First Called

My son’s middle name is Andrew, after his mother’s uncle. The name itself means “brave one” in Greek. Today is the feast of Saint Andrew, a brave man if ever there was. Saint Andrew is sometimes known as “First called” since he was the first of John the Baptist’s followers to become disciples of Jesus. He quickly recruited his brother […]

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Cecilia

Today the Church celebrates the memorial of Saint Cecilia, virgin and martyr. Cecilia is one of the most famous and most venerated of Roman martyrs, even though the facts of her martrydom are a little vague. Legend has it that she, her husband Valerian, and her brother-in-law Tiburtius were martyred during the reign of Emperor Alexander Severus, about the year […]

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Drowning in Divine Mercy?

By an extraordinary coincidence, today is the feast day of both the saint who gave the Divine Mercy devotion to the world, and of one of the disciples of Saint Benedict. Interestingly, neither of these feasts are on the universal calendar. Saint Mary Faustina Kowalska (1905 – 1938) was a Polish nun who received a vision of Christ as the […]

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Happy Michaelmas!

Today is officially the “Feast of Saints Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael, Archangels” or, in the old calendar, the “Dedication of the Basilica of Saint Michael the Archangel”. Whatever you call it, the most common name is Michaelmas. It is one of several harvest festivals celebrated throughout Christian Europe. In England this is one of the “quarter days”, which was marked […]

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A Tale of Two Saints

Today we celebrate the feasts of two very different men. One lived in the first century and probably died a martyr. The other lived during the 20th century and died at the ripe old age of 81. One was the disciple of Peter and Paul, becoming the second Pope after Saint Peter’s martrydom. The other was a simple Capuchin friar. […]

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The Blood of a Martyr?

Today at 9:30AM, a small vial of dried blood in Naples turned to liquid, as it has done several times a year since at least the 1380s. A great crowd had gathered to witness this event. The man holding up the vial, Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe, the Archbishop of Naples, was nearly brought to tears. The announcement was greeted by a […]

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Plea to Saint Monica, whose Feast is Today

Dear Saint Monica, troubled wife and mother, many sorrows pierced your heart during your lifetime. Yet, you never despaired or lost faith. With confidence, persistence, and profound faith, you prayed daily for the conversion of your beloved husband, Patricius, and your beloved son, Augustine; your prayers were answered. Grant me that same fortitude, patience, and trust in the Lord. Intercede […]

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Towards a New Cluny

Saint Benedict

On this, the Feast of Saint Benedict, I thought I’d ruminate on the meaning of “reform”. Typically, when the Church, or some organization within the Church, has talked about reform, the word pretty specifically meant clearing out the laxness and shortcuts that had appeared in practices, devotions, and liturgy. The fact is, all organizations staffed by humans tend to get […]

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