Gunpowder, Treason, and Plot

Today in 1605, a cabal of Catholic plotters, hoping to turn back the tides of reformation and restore a Catholic monarch to the throne of Great Britain, attempted to assassinate the very Protestant King James. Their plan – if you can dignify it by calling it a plan – was to blow up the House of Lords during the State […]

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Reformation Day

Protestants all over the world celebrate “Reformation Day” on October 31. I don’t. In 2017, on the five hundredth anniversary of Martin Luther’s revolt, I wrote a lengthy essay on exactly why not, and I think it’s worth reprinting in its entirety. Five Hundred Years Today is the five hundredth anniversary of the beginning of the Protestant Reformation. It is […]

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Saints Crispin and Crispinian

Today is the 607th anniversary of King Henry V’s famous victory over the French at the Battle of Agincourt. As Shakespeare reminds us in his Henry V, this battle took place on the feast of Saints Crispin and Crispinian. May you have the joy of the feast! The two saints were beheaded during the Diocletian persecution in AD 285, give […]

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Saint Edward the Confessor

With the death of the late Queen Elizabeth II still fresh in our minds, it is worth turning our attention to her saintly predecessor, Edward the Confessor, whose feast day is today. He was the son of the unfortunate King Æthelred the Unready and Emma of Normandy. Being the King’s seventh son, he never expected that he himself would reign, and he took […]

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Our Lady of the Pillar

On October 12, AD 40, the Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to the Apostle Saint James near the town of Caesaraugusta in the Roman Province of Hispania, in what is now Zaragoza, Spain. He was discouraged. His mission in Hispania was largely a failure, with few converts and only a handful of ordained men to preach the Gospel here, at the […]

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Lepanto

by G.K. Chesterton White founts falling in the Courts of the sun,And the Soldan of Byzantium is smiling as they run;There is laughter like the fountains in that face of all men feared,It stirs the forest darkness, the darkness of his beard;It curls the blood-red crescent, the crescent of his lips;For the inmost sea of all the earth is shaken […]

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We Don’t Talk: Saint Bruno and Silence

Stat crux dum volvitur orbis – “The Cross is steady while the world turns” (motto of the Carthusian Order) Saint Bruno (d. 1101), whose feast day is today, famously founded the contemplative Carthusian Order. The Carthusians are hermits living in a cloistered quasi-community, famously adhering to a vow of silence, and who to this day celebrate their own distinctive liturgical rite. Source, […]

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Drowning in Divine Mercy?

By 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 Saint Mary Faustina Kowalska (1905 – 1938) was a Polish nun who received a vision of Christ […]

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Saint Francis of Assisi: Not Just a Birdbath

Saint Francis of Asissi

Just about everybody knows Saint Francis. He’s the plaster birdbath guy, right? The saint who hung around with fuzzy pastel animals. Well, sort of. “Sanctify yourself and you will sanctify society.” (Saint Francis of Assisi) Not Saint Francis I very nearly took “Francis” as my confirmation name. It might have been awkward, though, what with being engaged to Francine at […]

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Saint Jerome

Saint Jerome should be the patron saint of grumpy old men. Born in the Roman province of Dalmatia in modern Slovenia, he studied in Rome starting in about the year 360. During a journey to Syria in 373, he fell ill and had a vision that caused him to devote the rest of his long life to the service of […]

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