Delightful article here on a great American saint Richard Becker, Catholic Exchange: St. Katharine and her two sisters were raised in a devout Catholic family that happened to be wealthy, and her parents refused to allow the wealth to disrupt the … Continue reading
Category: Lives of the Saints
Saint Gregory of Narek was a Catholic
This morning, I telephoned an old Armenian Catholic friend to ask him about Saint Gregory of Narek, recently proclaimed Doctor of the Church by Pope Francis. Joe speaks fluent modern Armenian and reads the old classical Armenian literature. He was, for a … Continue reading
New Doctor of the Church: Armenian Saint Gregory of Narek
Catholic Culture: St. Gregory of Narek, an Armenian Catholic monk who lived in what is now Turkey and died in 1005, has been named by Pope Francis a Doctor of the Church. Read more here.
Pope Canonizes First Sri Lankan Saint, Father Joseph Vaz
Vatican Information Service; On the morning of Wednesday 14 January, the Holy Father transferred from the apostolic nunciature in Colombo to Galle Face Green. This urban park in the heart of the financial district of Colombo spreads over five hectares … Continue reading
Blessed Palestinian Melkite Nun, Stigmatist, Approved for Canonization
CNA: Pope Francis on Saturday approved the advancement in the causes for sainthood of eight men and women, including two Palestinian nuns and an 20th century Italian wife and mother. The Holy Father authorized the promulgation of the decrees for … Continue reading
St. Martin of Tours Raised Unbaptized Catechumen to Life
From the account of Saint Martin’s biographer, Sulpicius Severus, a certain man joined the saint’s monastery in France for instruction as a catechumen. He died while the saint was away. When Saint Martin returned the deceased was still laid out … Continue reading
Just a Few Unusual Happenings in the Lives of the Saints
Unusual Things in the Lives of the Saints I am writing this without doing reference work. These accounts are in my memory, having read many books on the saints, including Father Alvin Butler’s magnum opus: short, but sometimes not so … Continue reading
New Jersey Sister of Charity to Be Beatified October 4
This is great news for my family. My aunt is a Sister of Charity at Saint Elizabeth’s Convent where Sister Miriam Theresa resided. My aunt worked with the late Sister Zita at the Sister Miriam Theresa League House. The new … Continue reading
First Korean Priest Was a Martyr: So, Too, His Father and Grandfather
Last words of Saint Andrew Kim: “I have held communication with foreigners, it has been for my religion and for my God. It is for Him that I die. My immortal life is on the point of beginning. Become Christians … Continue reading
Padre Pio Bilocated to Cardinal Mindszenty’s Prison Cell
TFP website: Vaticanist Andrea Tornielli has published on the Vatican Insider site a serious testimony about Padre Pio’s bilocation to the Hungarian dungeon where Joszef Cardinal Mindszenty was imprisoned in the fifties.The Hungarian anticommunist cardinal was a fierce adversary of … Continue reading
100 Years Ago Today Pope Saint Pius X Passed Away
Great tribute follows from Rorate Caeli website: Thank you, Saint Pius X! Please, intercede for us in Heaven above, that we may accomplish the words of the Apostle to the Gentiles you made your lifelong aspiration: “to restore all things in … Continue reading
The Church in Korea, Founded by Sages, Not Missionaries
Of course, the missionaries came soon after the true Faith took root. And, for the Faith to grow, the blood of martyrs provided the nourishment. Sometime in the mid-eighteenth century, Korean ambassadors working in China came across Catholic books in … Continue reading
Oregon Student Speaks About a Martyr Saint, His Great-Great-Great-Grandfather
Catholic News Service: Phu Nguyen, a University of Portland sophomore, is descended from a saint. Phu’s great-great-great-grandfather died for abiding by his faith. The Vatican considers the torture endured by the renowned Vietnamese martyrs among the worst in the history … Continue reading
Saint Margaret Mary and the Sacred Heart
The most popular of all the saints named Margaret, with the exception of that of the Scots and their own Queen Saint Margaret, is Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque, the “Beloved Disciple of the Sacred Heart.” She was born at Lhautecour, … Continue reading
Eight More Saint Margarets: Here are the Two Earliest, More Coming
After posting a column about Saint Margaret Clitherow, whose feast day is tomorrow, I wondered how many saints there were with the name “Margaret”? I could name several, including Margaret of Scotland, Margaret Mary Alacoque (whose life I wrote about here), … Continue reading