Placidus and Companions, Martyrs, A.D. 546.
by VP
Posted on Sunday October 05, 2025 at 01:00AM in Saints
"ST. PLACIDUS was a disciple of St. Benedict. St. Gregory relates, that having fallen into a lake, as he was fetching some water, St. Benedict, who was in the monastery, knew of the accident, and calling Maurus, said to him, "Brother, run, make haste; the child is fallen into the water." Maurus, having begged his blessing, ran to the lake, and walked upon the water to some distance from the land, to the place where Placidus was floating, and taking hold of him by the hair, returned with the same speed. St. Benedict ascribed this miracle to the disciple's obedience. St. Placidus advanced daily in holy wisdom, and the exercise of all virtues, so that his life seemed a true copy of that of his holy master, St. Benedict. Being sent by him into Sicily, he there founded a church and monastery, near the port of Messina. Having lived there with thirty monks, in wonderful sanctity, a Pagan barbarian, with a fleet of pirates from Africa, landed in Sicily, and out of hatred to the Christian name, put them all to the sword for their faith in Christ, which he could not persuade them to renounce, in the year 546. 
Pray for all who suffer; and in particular for those, who lie under temptation of renouncing their faith, on account of preferment, interest, or other temporal conveniences. See if some of these considerations do not prevail on you to pass the bounds of duty to the creed or commandments. Great grace is necessary to keep you steady. Make provision therefore against the time of temptation. Christians have to subdue corruption, and live by the spirit of Christ.
 They must open their breasts to this holy spirit; and put their whole 
hearts so under its conduct, that all other motions being suppressed, 
their thoughts, desires, affections, words, and actions may be regulated
 by this divine guest, and they may do in all things, not now what they will, but what God wills in them. This is the only way to give their lives to Christ, and the only way to die for Him." The Catholic Year by Fr. John Gother
Saint Francis of Assisi, Confessor
by VP
Posted on Saturday October 04, 2025 at 01:00AM in Saints
Saint Francis, Holy Name Cathedral Raleigh NC VP
"I also beseech in the Lord, all my brethren who are, or who shall be, or who desire to be priests of the Most High, that whenever they wish to celebrate Mass, they be pure, and offer with purity and reverence the true Sacrifice of the most holy Body and Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ with a holy and perfect intention; not from any earthly motive, nor for the fear or love of any creature, as though desiring to please men; but let every will (according to the grace given) be directed solely to the most High God, and do you desire to please Him alone, for He alone works in this holy Sacrifice according to His good pleasure, as the Lord has Himself said: "Do this in remembrance of Me:" and he who does otherwise becomes a traitor like Judas.
Remember, O priests, my brothers, how it is written in the law of Moses, that those who transgressed even in corporal sacrifices were condemned by God to death, without any mercy. What a far more terrible punishment will he deserve, who tramples under foot the Son of God, and treats the Blood of the New Testament by which he is sanctified as a vile thing, and offers insult to the Holy Ghost! A man stained with sin despises and tramples on the Lamb of God, when, as the Apostle says, not discerning the sacred Bread, which is Christ, from other food, he eats unworthily by being guilty of unworthy actions; for the Lord has said by His Prophet: "Cursed is the man who does the work of God with negligence or fraud." And on account of those priests who will not lay these things seriously to heart, we are condemned, when Our Lord days: " I will curse your blessings."
Hearken, my brethren. If the Blessed Virgin Mary is honored, as she well deserves, for having borne our Savior in her most holy womb; if St. John the Baptist trembled, and did not dare to touch the forehead of his Lord; if the Holy Sepulcher in which this same Lord reposed for a short time is so venerated - how holy, how just, and how worthy ought not he to be who touches with his hands, receives into his mouth and heart, and gives to others, this God Who is now no more to die, but Who will live and be glorified for ever, on Whom the angels desire to gaze! Understand your dignity, O priests, my brothers, and " be ye holy, because He is holy." As God has honored you more than all others through this Mystery, do you love, reverence, and honor Him through this Mystery. It is a great misery, and a deplorable weakness, when you have Him thus present, that you should care for anything else in the whole world. Man should be seized with fear, the earth should tremble, and the heavens rejoice exceedingly, when Christ the Son of the living God descends upon the altar in the hands of the priest.
O admirable greatness! O stupendous condescension! O humble sublimity! the Lord of the universe, God, and the Son of God, so abases Himself that for our salvation He hides Himself under the form of a morsel of bread! See, O my brethren, the lowliness of your God! pour out your hearts before Him and humble yourselves, that you may be worthy to be exalted by Him. Do not keep back anything of yourselves, that He Who gives Himself to you without reserve may receive your entire being."
Source: Works of the Seraphic Father St. Francis of Assisi By Saint Francis (of Assisi) 1882St. Thomas of Hereford, Bishop and Confessor, AD 1282
by VP
Posted on Friday October 03, 2025 at 01:00AM in Saints

"This saint was most nobly born, being the eldest son of William, Lord Cantelupe, and allied by his mother's side to the royal families of England and France. From his childhood he despised worldly pleasures, and walked in the lovely paths of innocence and truth. The fear and love of God grew up with him, and accompanied him to the universities, first of Oxford, then of Paris, where he made great progress in learning, but much more in the science of the saints.
St. Thomas resolved to consecrate himself to God in the ecclesiastical state; and was made chancellor of the university of Oxford. In this office he shone so brightly, that King Henry III. appointed him chancellor of the kingdom. In this eminent office his virtues shone with still greater lustre, to the benefit of the whole nation. After the king's death, however, he gladly resigned the seals of his office, and returned to Oxford, where he took the degree of doctor of divinity. He had always lived in the greatest purity of conscience, and was eminent in Christian simplicity, candor, and humility. He exhibited heavenly prudence in his whole conduct, and great devotion to the divine service, especially in celebrating Mass. He was remarkable for patience and meekness under sufferings and injuries, and great temperance and sobriety in eating and drinking; as also for daily mortification, watching, fasting, and perfect charity for every neighbor. His charity produced in him such an aversion for detraction, that he would sharply rebuke such as he found guilty of it.
These virtues so recommended him, that he was chosen Bishop of Hereford. From that time, he became a greater saint than before. His zeal for the Church seemed to have no bounds; and such was his charity, that he seemed born only for the relief of his neighbor, both spiritual and temporal. No reviling language or ill treatment could ever provoke him to anger; his enemies he always treated with respect and tenderness, and would never bear the least word which might reflect upon them or any others.
After St. Thomas had for some years illustrated the whole Church of this nation by his eminent sanctity, he went to Rome for some ecclesiastical affairs. This journey was very fatiguing to the saint, on account of his age and infirmities; but he would never spare himself in the cause of God and his Church. In his way home, he was overtaken by his last illness at Montefiascone in Tuscany. He received the last sacraments with incredible cheerfulness and devotion, and made the sufferings and death of his Redeemer the constant subject of his fervent prayer, in which he calmly gave up the ghost, in the sixty-third year of his age, in the year 1282. Pray for this nation, that God would be its protector, and visit it with all blessings, spiritual and temporal."
The Catholic Year; Or Daily Lessons on the Feasts of the Church by Rev. Fr. John GOTHER 1861
Prayer for the Bishops
                                O Jesus, Prince of Pastors, Shepherd and
 Bishop of our souls, give our bishops ................ all those 
virtues, which they need for their sanctification!  May they watch over 
themselves and the entire flock, with which the Holy Spirit has 
entrusted them!  Fill their hearts with Thine own Spirit! Give them 
faith, charity, wisdom and strength!  Send them faithful co-laborers in 
the great work of saving and guiding souls!  Make them shepherds after 
Thine own heart, living only for their holy office, fearing nobody but 
Thee, and hoping for nothing but Thee, in order that when Thou shalt 
come, to judge shepherds and flocks, they may obtain the unfading reward
 of eternal life! Amen
                            
                            Imprimatur: Most Rev. Vincent S. Waters, D.D. Raleigh, N.C. March 25, 1956
Saint Théodore Guérin
by VP
Posted on Friday October 03, 2025 at 01:00AM in Saints

"What strength the soul draws from prayer! In the midst of a storm, how sweet is the calm it finds in the heart of Jesus. But what comfort is there for those who do not pray?" – Saint Théodore Guérin
“What have we to do in order to be saints? Nothing extraordinary; nothing more than what we do every day. Only do it for [God’s] love.”—Saint Theodora Guérin
"A woman of uncommon valor, one of those religious athletes whose life and teachings effect a spiritual fecundity that secures vast conquests to Christ and His Church. It is a beautiful and forcible setting of those sublime truths that underlie the eternal plan of creation and establish the relationship that should exist between the Sovereign Maker and the creature fashioned by His word; showing clearly how Providence is just and holy in wise dispensation, man often perverse in selfish conceit. It proves that the arm of the Lord is not shortened; that the gift of God abideth with the just, whose advancement shall have success forever. (Ecclus. Xi 17).
(...) Every one who pledges himself to the work of saving souls must expect to suffer if his ministry is to be profitable. Multiplied labors are not the greatest rigors. Distress of mind and heart, human weakness, lack of sympathy and support, misunderstands, to say nothing of the malice of men and the snares of the devil - this is the burden of the apostolate. All seem to know it, yet when it comes to the exercise how few are found with magnanimity of soul enough or with spiritual nerve enough to endure the test! Many there are who are willing to sit with Christ at His table but few to share His fast; many to behold His glory, few to bear His ignominy. (A Kempis)
It is in generous acceptance of the cross that strength comes for the warfare; so it is also in self-sacrifice that we discern the halo of holiness - God's presence in His elect.
Sacrifice shorn of its glory, inasmuch as it was scarcely recognized, epitomizes the life of Mother Théodore Guérin. The keynote of her intensely spiritual character is sounded in these lines addressed to the estimable Bishop of Mans: "I consider it the greatest privilege of my life to have suffered something for my God." Truly the lesson of Calvary was well understood by this spouse of a crucified King! It must needs be that rich endowment of supernatural favor was her recompense.
This is the age of hidden saints. A bloody persecution may not be sending victors to the eternal courts, but the sword of trial is as sharp as the blade of the executioner; and though a martyr's triumph is not proclaimed from the Church's altar, a martyr's palm is borne by those sequestered Servants of God who now "follows the Lamb whithersoever He goeth."
(...)
In deploring the scarcity of vocations to the religious life when the field was so vast and the laborers so few, we observe that the cause she assigned was the same that today holds back so many nobly gifted young men and women from responding to the call of the divine Master. Appeal to the religious impulses of nature is hushed by irresistible pleasure-seeking, softness, and love of one's ease, which incapacitate souls for anything approaching the valorous in self-sacrifice; strangers to the arbitrament of virtue, their lives are as aimless as useless." Introduction by Cardinal Gibbons, Life and life-work of Mother Theodore Guérin : foundress of the Sisters of Providence at St.-Mary-of-the-Woods, Vigo County, Indiana
Short Biography:
"Mother Theodore Guerin is the foundress of St. Mary of the Woods, Indiana.
Born in 1798, ( Born Anne-Thérèse Guerin in the village of Etables–sur–Mer in Brittany, France) of fervent Catholic parents, she entered the community of the Sisters of Providence of Ruille, recently established by the Abbe Dujarie, who is also the founder of the Brothers of the Holy Cross. After several years of successful work as head of important establishments, at the request of Bishop de la Hailandiere of Vincennes, Indiana, she was sent by her superior to found an educational establishment in the New World. She and her Sisters reached Terre Haute, Ind., on October 22, 1840. A boarding school was opened in 1841. The first boarders arrived on July 4 of the same year. Tribulations from within and from without sorely tried the heart of the foundress. Several times credit was refused to the Sisters at the stores, and the immediate necessities of the community and the pupils were relieved by Providential intervention. Often after a frugal breakfast, nothing was left for dinner, and the Sisters would have to go and beg potatoes and eggs from the neighboring farms.
 Calumnies and disappointments of all sorts fell thick upon the establishment. Mother Guerin herself
 was deposed from office on two different occasions, and the bishop went
 so far as to excommunicate her. Amidst these trials she found refuge in
 God: "Let us pray more," she would tell her Sisters, "and rest quiet in 
the Providence of the Sacred Heart. Can we think that our good God will 
abandon us? No, not as long as we cling to Him! Courage, hope and pray." 
On days when her heart was sinking beneath weight of all the afflictions that fell upon her, she would exclaim: "Hail, crosses, great and small, spiritual and temporal, inward and outward, hail! I kiss your feet, unworthy as I am of your shadow." One day when her life-work was threatened with total extinction, she spent the whole night before the Blessed Sacrament and there, in the stillness of the chapel, poured forth her soul in indescribable anguish. It was remarked the next morning that she received Holy Communion with a radiant countenance. When the chaplain asked her what made her so happy, she answered simply: "In the cross is infusion of heavenly sweetness." She would often repeat to her daughters: "All that we teach the children must be done for the glory of God and the good of souls. The profit that the community derives from it is a secondary consideration." "A Sister of Providence cannot go to heaven alone; if she is not surrounded by the souls she has brought to the knowledge and love of God, she herself will not find the way to the heavenly home."
Before her death, in 1850, she had the consolation of seeing her work solidly established in many dioceses. " The Annals of St. Joseph, Norbertine Fathers, March 1919.
| Canonized on   | October 15, 2006, by Pope Benedict XVI | 
|---|
Prayer: 
Saint Mother Theodore Guerin,
valiant woman of God,
intercede for us in our needs.
Implore for us through Jesus, the Christ,
the gifts of a living faith,
abiding hope
and steadfast charity,
so that
through a life of prayer
and service with others
we may aid in promoting
the Providence of God
among all peoples.
Saint Mother Theodore Guerin, pray for us.
Amen.
(With Ecclesiastical Approval)
St. Thérèse de Lisieux, Carmelite
by VP
Posted on Wednesday October 01, 2025 at 12:57PM in Saints
St. Therese, Our Lady of Lourdes, Raleigh NC
"Now it is in the Host that I can see you carry your annihilation in full. How humble you are , oh Divine King of Glory in submitting Yourself to all your priests without making any distinction between those who love you and those who, alas, are lukewarm or cold in your service! You descend from Heaven to their call. They can anticipate or delay the time of your Holy Sacrifice. You are always ready! (Proverb 20)"-- St. Therese of Lisieux
St. Thérèse is the advocate of priests; indeed one of the intentions of the Carmelite Order is to pray for priests.
"The second piece of knowledge I acquired concerned God's Priests. Up to this time I could not understand the chief aim of the Carmelite Reform. The thought of praying for sinners afforded me the utmost delight, but I was surprised at the idea of praying for priests, whose souls I deemed purer than crystal. In Italy, I understood my vocation, and the long journey was well worth undertaking to gain such useful knowledge.
During that month I met many holy priests. Yet I saw that despite the sublime dignity of the Priesthood, which raises them above the Angels, they still remain men, and subject to human frailty. Now if those whom Our Lord in the Gospel calls "the salt of the earth' -if holy priests have need of our prayers, what must be the needs of the lukewarm? Has not Our Lord said also: "If the salt lose its savour, wherewith shall it be salted?" (Matt. V. 13)" A Compendious Critical Life of St. Thérèse of Lisieux: The Little Flower By Andrew Edward Breen 1928
- From Therese to Celine, July 14 1889"
 
"Celine, during the short moments that remain to us, let us not lose our time...Let us save souls...souls are being lost like flakes of snow, and Jesus weeps, and we...we are thinking of our sorrow without consoling our Fiance...Oh,Celine, let us live for souls... let us be apostles...let us save especially the souls of priests; these souls should be more transparent than crystal...Alas, how many bad priests, priests who are not holy enough...Let us pray, let us suffer for them, and on the last day, Jesus will be grateful. We shall give Him souls!
Celine, do you understand the cry of my soul? "
- From Celine to Sister Agnes of Jesus, Sister Mary of the Sacred Heart, and Therese, July 1880.:
 
"Oh! how necessary it is to pray for priests! I find they have a great responsibility; there is so much to do, and in my opinion, they don't do all that is within their power. Never any sermons, never any paternal instructions, never any visits to their flocks. Most of them don't know their parishioners. I would say, without judging the priests in particular, that I find the people much more excusable than the priests. They don't know their duties, how then would they carry them out? I don't think God expects anything from them. 
It's true that in these parts there are only old priests, very aged and infirm, and they no longer have the zeal and strength of youth to lift up the crowds.
However, I will resume once again the chapter of my impressions of all that is around me... I don't understand how they can seek to build up a human family when there is scarcely anyone who devotes himself to forming these people in spiritual matters. Earthly marriages form bodies, the soul produces souls, but how many souls without wings! Who, then, will engender souls for heaven? Oh, little sisters, this will be ourselves through our mystical union with Jesus and our soul... And this union will not stop at tens but at a thousand million! The world doesn't understand us, that thinks us selfish, says we are living a useless life; it will see later on the ones who worked the most. People will compare with astonishment the variety of Vocations."
- From Therese to Celine, October 1890
 
"Dear Celine, I always have the same thing to say to you. Ah! Let us pray for priests; each day shows how few the friends of Jesus are...It seems to me this what He must feel the most, ingratitude, especially when seeing souls who are consecrated to Him giving others a hear that belongs to Him in so absolute a way.
- St. Therese of Lisieux Spiritual Maxims
 
"Our vocation is not to go and reap in the Father's fields: Jesus does 
not say to us: " Cast down your eyes and reap the harvest"; our mission 
is still more sublime. Here are the words of the Divine Master: "Lift up
 your eyes and see..." see that in Heaven there are empty places; yours 
it is to fill them...you are as Moses praying on the mountain; ask of Me
 laborers and I will send them; I await but a prayer, a sigh from out 
your heart!"
St. Remigius, Arbishop of Rheims, Confessor, A.D. 533.
by VP
Posted on Wednesday October 01, 2025 at 01:00AM in Saints
"He was the great apostle of the French nation. Prayer, meditation on the Holy Scriptures, the instruction of the people, and the conversion of infidels, heretics, and sinners, were the constant employment of this holy pastor. Clovis, the king of the French, was converted after gaining a great victory, in consequence of calling on Christ to assist him. St. Remigius prepared him for Baptism by the usual practices of fasting, penance, and prayer, and solemnly baptized him at Rheims. Under the protection of this great monarch, St. Remigius wonderfully propagated the gospel of Christ by the conversion of a great part of the French nation; in which work, God endowed him with an extraordinary gift of miracles. Having been bishop above seventy years, St. Remigius died in the year 533. Pray for all the pastors in God's Church, that they may be as eminent in virtue, as in dignity; that they may be watchful over their flocks, and teach the gospel by their example. Pray for all princes throughout the world, who as yet live in darkness, and know not Christ or his truths; that God would powerfully draw them to himself, and raise up some apostolic men in these our days, who may be instruments of this great work, for the good of innumerable souls. Pray that all Christians may live up to what they profess. What a melancholy sight it must be, when looking on ourselves, we discover the general method of our lives to have so very little regard to what Christ teaches, and so often to depart quite from him, as if we had no faith in his ways, or no interest in walking in them? The gospel charges us to be humble, meek, temperate, just, clean of heart, and not to love the world or ourselves; and we too often live as if we believed not in the gospel, and had no faith in its promises.
On this first day of the month, recommend yourself and all yours to the protection of Heaven, and consider upon the means for the amendment of past failings, that you may not be always the same." The Catholic Year by Fr. John Gother
Prayer: Almighty, eternal God, who didst establish the empire of the Franks to be, throughout the world, the instrument of thy divine will, and the sword and bulwark of thy holy Church: ever and in all places prevent, we beseech thee, with thy heavenly lifth, the suppliant sons of the Franks; so that they may both see what they ought to do to promote thy kingdom in this world, and, in order to fulfill what they have seen, may continually increase in charity and in valor. Amen (The Liturgical Year: The time after Pentecost, v. 5-6. 1903 By Dom Prosper Guéranger)
					