Saint of the Day

May 25: Saint Aldhelm

Saint Aldhelm was born in the year 640 in England into a noble family. He decided to live as a hermit, then became a monk, and eventually served as a spiritual director to other monks. When he became abbot, he reformed his abbey along the lines of the Benedictine reform that was sweeping Europe at the time. The changes he made were so successful that he established other houses, as well as churches. The first church organ in all of England was installed around the year 700 under his direction.

But Aldhelm’s building skills weren’t his only gift. He was an inspiring preacher, a poet and musician, and was widely known for his spiritual writing. When disputes arose between the Celtic Christians and the Anglo-Saxon Christians, Aldhelm was sent to Rome to discuss and resolve the differences between the two groups of people with the pope.

Aldhelm was named bishop of Sherborne in 705 and died four years later of natural causes.

Saint Aldhelm, show me how to reform my life.

Saint of the Day

May 24: Blessed John of Prado

Blessed John of Prado was born into a noble family in Spain in the late sixteenth century. He became a Franciscan friar with the great hope of bringing the Gospel to those who had never heard it before, but his superiors first ordered him to preach in his native country. He was a humble, holy, and gifted priest, so it was probably out of jealousy that cruel gossip about him later caused him to be relieved of his position as superior. But when the lies were proved to be lies soon afterward, John was restored to his position and even made minister of a new Franciscan province in Spain.

A plague caused the death of many Franciscan friars serving in Morocco in north Africa, so John begged to be sent to serve there. When he arrived, he immediately began serving the Christian slaves living in the country, particularly by administering the sacraments to them. The Muslim authorities arrested John, along with the priest and brother who accompanied him, and put them to work at slave labor.

He was brought out of prison and interrogated by the local sultan on two occasions. John was scourged after the first examination because he tried to explain the Christian faith to the sultan. During the second interrogation, John turned to talk to Christians in the room who had apostatized and become Muslims, rather than addressing the sultan. In anger, the sultan struck him, had him shot with arrows, and then had him burned to death. John died on this date in 1636.

Blessed John, teach me how to forgive.

Saint of the Day

May 23: Saint Michael of Synnada

Saint Michael of Synnada was just a young man when he moved to Constantinople (modern Turkey) in the late eighth century. He studied under one future saint (Tarasius) and became friends with another (Theophylact) at that time. He lived as a monk, was ordained a priest, and then was named bishop of Synnada.

As a prominent bishop of the Church, Michael attended the Second Council of Nicaea in the year 787. Over the next two decades, he served on important diplomatic missions for the Byzantine emperor to a Muslim caliph, the pope, and Charlemagne, the king of the Franks. When a new Byzantine emperor began mercilessly punishing those who used icons to pray—a heresy later known as iconoclasm—Michael was put in prison in the year 815. His friends, Saint Tarasius and Theophylact, also suffered persecution for their opposition to the emperor’s iconoclasm. Michael survived imprisonment and died in 826 of natural causes.

Saint Michael, help me to find holy friends.

Saint of the Day

May 22: Saints Castus and Aemilius

Today’s saints, Castus and Aemilius, teach us that not every Christian went cheerfully and quickly to martyrdom.

The early Church father, Saint Cyprian, bishop of Carthage, tells us most of what we know about the two men. During the persecution of the Roman emperor Decius, they were arrested for being Christians and were brutally tortured. Because of the pain, they gave in. They were released when they capitulated about their Christian faith.

Later, they were bitterly sorry for having renounced their faith in Christ and repented. Around the year 250, they were arrested again for the same reason. This time, they remained faithful, even when they were executed by being burned to death.

Saints Castus and Aemilius, help me to rely not on my strength, but on Christ’s. 

Saint of the Day

May 21: Blessed Hemming of Abo

Blessed Hemming of Abo was born in Sweden in the late thirteenth century and studied in Paris before becoming a priest. One of his fellow students was the man who became Pope Clement VI.

Hemming served as bishop of Abo for twenty-eight years, and he improved the training of his priests, served as a peacemaker, and was an effective administrator of his diocese. Saint Bridget of Sweden was a contemporary and friend.

He died in 1366, but so many miracles were reported at his tomb that it had become a place of pilgrimage by 1400.

Blessed Hemming, help me to find holy friends.

Saint of the Day

May 20: Blessed Columba of Rieti

Blessed Columba (1467-1501) was born in the city of Rieti, Italy, into a modest family of weavers and tailors. Though she was named Angiolella at birth, everyone called her Columba.

The story of Columba’s life bears a striking similarity to that of the great Saint Catherine of Siena. Like Catherine, she dedicated her life to God when she was still a young girl. Like Catherine, she experienced visions. Like Catherine, she cut off her hair to make herself less marriageable when her parents tried to arrange a match for her. And she too became a Dominican tertiary, living at home and praying. Columba began serving others when she was nineteen years old, notably bringing a convicted murderer to repentance before his execution.

Pope Alexander VI, who is best known today for his illegitimate children and lavish lifestyle, was impressed with Columba and asked her advice about certain matters. Since her response came with warnings and reproaches, the details were apparently never made public. Unsurprisingly, one of the pope’s illegitimate children took a great dislike to the virgin-prophet of Rieti and instigated a persecution of her. Columba was falsely accused of performing magic and was deprived of her priest-confessor as a result. But she bore the scandal and false accusations with patience until eventually the matter blew over.

Columba died of a painful illness, praying for and encouraging Christians to charity, when she was only thirty-four years old.

Blessed Columba, teach me patience in my suffering.

Saint of the Day

May 19: Blessed Augustine Novello

Blessed Augustine Novello (d. 1309) was given the name Matthew at birth and grew up in Termini, Italy. He became a brilliant lawyer in the city of Bologna, so brilliant that be became chancellor to the king. During a great battle, the king was killed, and Matthew was wounded and left for dead. He vowed that if he recovered, he would give his life to God.

So he did. As soon as he was well enough, he entered the brand new order of Hermits of Saint Augustine. But he did so as a mere laybrother and told no one of his past life and education. In time, the community found itself ensnared in a complicated lawsuit. Brother Augustine (the name Matthew took when he entered religious life) offered to help. He summarized the community’s response so expertly that the opposition’s lawyer recognized it almost immediately as the work of the famous and presumed dead Matthew of Termini.

The order quickly took advantage of Augustine’s abilities and put him to work creating the constitutions required by Rome for the establishment of a new order. Augustine served as prior general for a time before retiring to live as a hermit. He died on this date.

Blessed Augustine, help me to take the lowest place.

Saint of the Day

May 18: Saints Theodotus and Thecusa

Today the Church commemorates Saints Theodotus and Thecusa, along with other unnamed Christians who were martyred with them. Their city was Ancyra (in modern Turkey), and we believe they died in the year 304, when the persecution of Christians was particularly fierce. Some say that the Roman emperor Diocletian wasn’t particularly opposed to Christians at the start of his reign, but by this point, he’d come to see them as a danger to the safety of the empire. Not believing in the Roman gods was seen as an act of treason.

That’s about all we know about today’s saints for certain. But a lovely story–of dubious reliability–expands on these details.  According to that tradition, Theodotus was an innkeeper who risked his life to bury other Christian martyrs before being arrested and tortured to try to make him give up his faith. Thecusa was a young Christian woman who had also been imprisoned. During an annual feast for the goddess Athena, women who were about to consecrate themselves to the goddess publicly disrobed and bathed in a fountain, in sight of everyone. The governor ordered Thecusa to join them. When she (of course) refused, she was executed.

Holy Martyrs, show me how to behave like a true follower of Christ.

Saint of the Day

May 17: Blessed John Ziatyk

Blessed John (Ivan) Ziatyk was born in Poland in 1899 and was ordained a Catholic priest of the Greek rite. He entered the Redemptorist order in 1935 and became well known as a preacher.

During the Nazi occupation of Poland, John served as prior in a monastery. After World War II, he became Vicar General of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church—but primarily because all of his superiors had been arrested or expelled by the Communist government. In 1950, the facts that he continued to remain faithful to the Church and was a Redemptorist priest were sufficient to cause him to be arrested, imprisoned, and sentenced to a labor camp. While in a camp in Irkhutsk, Russia, he was beaten so badly that he died three days later; it was Easter Sunday, May 17, 1952.

Blessed John, help me to forgive with the heart of Christ.

Saint of the Day

May 16: Saint Peregrine of Auxerre

There have been many Saint Peregrines in the history of the Church, and many people know of Saint Peregrine Laziosi, who was miraculously cured of cancer. Today’s Saint Peregrine lived many centuries before that one.

Peregrine was apparently born in Rome and was sent to preach the Gospel to the pagans living in Auxerre, France, and to serve as their first bishop. He traveled throughout the countryside, as well as in the city, teaching about Jesus Christ. When the imperial governor ordered a new temple to be consecrated to the god Jupiter, Peregrine took the opportunity of its consecration to speak publicly about the Christian faith to the assembled people. The governor ordered him to be arrested, tortured, and then put to death when he refused to renounce his faith in Christ. This happened around the year 261.

Saint Peregrine, show me how to live and die for Christ.