Sunday, December 11, 2022
December 23--St. John of Kanty, Priest and Professor
Monday, December 5, 2022
December 11-St. Damasus I, Pope
He was pope, but he was opposed by a faction who elected another man pope, an anti-pope, which resulted in factional violence. He was accused of murder and adultery, but eventually cleared himself in both civil court and a Church synod. These are not particularly auspicious events in the life of a pope!
St. Damasus I, pope from A.D. 366-384, lived in the time of the Church when it was no longer officially persecuted. Emperor Constantine I signed the Edict of Milan in A.D. 315, which allowed freedom of religion, thus finally legalizing Christianity. The Catholic Church then enjoyed the privileges of peace! During his papacy, the Catholic Church was named the state religion of the Roman Empire by Emperor Theodosius I in 380. So, it fell to St. Damasus to make sure that the Catholic Church did not fall into error, condemning numerous heresies, especially Arianism, which taught that Jesus was not God! He also commissioned St. Jerome, his personal secretary, to write an updated translation of the Bible into Latin, called the Vulgate. He also called the Council of Rome in 382 to codify the official canon of Sacred Scripture, which was identical to that declared as dogma at the Council of Trent in the 16th century.
St. Damasus was quite a busy man, with controversies, successes, and setbacks. How does his life reflect on today's situation? One, popes are not universally liked. Two, popes are not always appreciated for what they do and sometimes opposed. Three, popes are given to us by God to do the hard work of shepherding Jesus' flock, which can be quite difficult. Four, popes deserve our respect and prayers regardless of their popularity or ability to persuade us of God's ways for us. May God give us holy men to shepherd us.
Friday, November 25, 2022
December 7--St. Ambrose, Bishop and Doctor of the Church
He initially refused the position of bishop, faced down an emperor, comforted a mother in her sorrows, and baptized the greatest philosopher of the first millennium. Who is he? None other than St. Ambrose of Milan, who became one of the first Doctors of the Church. When the position of bishop opened in Milan in A.D. 374 he was serving as governor of the province. He was not a baptized Christian, but the people acclaimed him bishop anyway, whereupon he ran away to hide. Once, the emperor heard about the election, he affirmed it and Ambrose accepted, being baptize and ordained within the week.
However, once he became bishop, he invested his whole life into serving the people, correcting the heresy of Arianism, teaching orthodox theology in great homilies, and guiding the liturgy of Milan, which is called the Ambrosian Rite and still used today. He confronted Emperor Theodosius in 390 after the emperor allowed/ordered the massacre of citizens of Thessalonica. St. Ambrose required the emperor to do penance before he could receive the Eucharist. Theodosius did so. According to legend, he also comforted St. Monica when she came to him in tears: "The child of those tears shall never perish." That child was St. Augustine, who came to Milan to listen to St. Ambrose's sermons. They gave him the intellectual grounding he needed to convert to Christianity, with St. Ambrose baptizing him.
St. Ambrose responded to God's call by giving his life over to God. We, too, are called to give our lives to God. We are called live our lives as disciples of Jesus: loving, witnessing, serving, praying, worshiping, and working to bring about the Kingdom of God here on earth in our families, jobs, and associations. We are called to the greatness of holiness!
Monday, October 24, 2022
November 1--All Saints' Day
Monday, January 17, 2022
January 23--St. Marianne Cope (St. Marianne of Moloka’i), Virgin and Religious
Sunday, January 9, 2022
January 19—Sts. Marius, Martha, Audifax, and Abachum, Parents and Sons—Martyrs
Today we celebrate a family of martyrs! They were martyred in A.D. 270 in Rome. They buried other martyrs and then became the object of persecution and torture. Maris and his sons were beheaded, and their bodies burnt. Martha was drowned outside of Rome at a place now called Santa Ninfa. According to tradition, a Roman woman gathered the remains of the family and had them buried on her estate, which became a place of pilgrimage. They are inscribed in the Roman Martyrology, which is the official list of saints recognized by the Church. They are not on the General Roman Calendar because we only know with certainty their names and their place of burial.
How is it that a whole family could be martyred? They were willing to die for what they believed in. They were witnesses to their faith in Jesus Christ and the hope of the Resurrection. Are our families prepared to do the same? Do we believe to the point of witnessing to our faith in Jesus Christ? Are we willing to live lives of heroic virtue? Do people see in us what others saw in our saints—a love of God which can’t be denied or suppressed?
Do we live the Corporal and Spiritual Works of Mercy so that others cannot but see our faith? We need to clothe the naked, shelter the homeless, visit the sick and the imprisoned, give food and drink to the hungry and thirsty, bury the dead, instruct the ignorant, comfort the afflicted, warn the sinner, counsel the doubtful, bear wrongs patiently, forgive offenses patiently, and pray for the living and the dead. This is Jesus’ command! Then everyone will know we are Christians, by our love! May Sts. Marius, Martha, Audifax, and Abachum guide us and pray for us!
Monday, January 3, 2022
January 13—St. Hilary of Poitiers, Bishop and Doctor of the Church
Is Jesus God or not? That was key question of the fourth century and beyond that faced the Church. Some, with Arius, said that since Jesus was “begotten of the Father,” that meant he was a creature, albeit the first creature of God. Others, with St. Athanasius, said that Jesus is “begotten, not made” and thus consubstantial with the God the Father. Today’s saint helped hammer home the truth of who Jesus is by his opposition to the Arians and support of St. Athanasius, so much so he was called “Hammer of the Arians” and “Athanasius of the West.”
Born about A.D. 310 in Poitiers, France to pagan parents, St. Hilary received a good pagan education, later studying Scripture, thus resulting in his conversion to Christianity, along with his wife and daughter. He was elected bishop of Poitiers around A.D 350. Even though Arianism was condemned at the Council of Nicaea in A.D. 325 it was still in force throughout the empire, much due to the efforts of different emperors. So St. Hilary attempted to get Arian bishops turned back to the true faith. He also wrote Emperor Constantius II to stop Arians persecuting orthodox Christians, which resulted in his exile in 356. After his exile in 361, he returned in Poitiers and continued to fight for the true understanding of the Trinity against the Arians. He died in 367.
Falsehoods and lies take a long time to die. They are like a many-headed hydra, which keeps sprouting new variations on lies that are condemned and refuted. We need to endure and persevere in living the Truth. St. Paul wrote: “No, in all these things we conquer overwhelmingly through him who loved us” (Rom. 8:37). We must remain faithful to the Truth of Jesus Christ. St. Hilary, pray for us.