Agost-7-acem Sogglem Santam
Agost 7-acem Sogglem Santam
Page URL: https://ocaminhodossantos.blogspot.com/2021/08/agost-7-acem-sogglem-santam.html .IT IS A MORTAL SIN to take part in the liturgical life of any non-Christian sect, such as of the Caerularians or Byzantine Heretics-Schismatics, the Protestants, the Modernist Apostates & PanReligionist "Vatican 2" Sect, the Mahometans, the Hindus, etc. and to refuse to adhere to the true Catholic Pope, the Vicar of Christ, at this time, His Holiness Pope Michael I, and every soul that dies in these errors will assuredly be Eternally Damned to Hell.
Aiz asa Hollandantlem Schiedam Saibinn-acem Fest.
The Statue of Our Lady of Schiedam is located in Schiedam, Holland. The chronicle relates that a merchant, who had stolen this image, embarked with the intention of selling it at a fair at Antwerp. Mysteriously, he could never get away from the port. Alarmed at this prodigy, he restored the image which he had taken away, and it was solemnly translated to the Church of Saint John the Baptist. It was at the shrine of Our Lady of Schiedam that the mystic, St Ludwina spent whole nights in prayer. Born at Schiedam on April 18, 1380, at an early age Ludwina was drawn toward the Our Lady of Schiedam and prayed a great deal before this miraculous image. The Mother of God revealed to her the extent of suffering Christ would ask her to endure, but likewise assured her that she, Mary, would sustain her through her grace and intercessory power. (Interestingly, the name Ludwina means "suffering.") One winter day in 1395, when Lidwina was about 15 years old, she went out to skate with her friends. At one point she fell on the ice so hard that she broke a rib that would not heal. At first, Ludwina began to have difficulty walking, and had severe headaches, nausea and thirsts. It was only the beginning, though, as the wound became gangrenous and the disease spread all over her body, without, however, killing her. For the rest of her life she was bedridden and lay in indescribable pain, and in the last seven years of her life was completely blind. It seemed impossible that she could remain alive in such condition, as even parts of her body fell off and blood would pour out from her mouth, ears, and nose. The Blessed Virgin Mary was true to her word, though, as was St Ludwina in accepting the will of God in imitation to Our Lady's Fiat. St Ludwina prayed much despite her suffering, and was particularly devoted to the Eucharist and willingly bore her anguish for the love of God. She was also a stigmatic, and her diet consisted for some time of nothing other than the Blessed Sacrament. St Ludwina received various visions, many of them of Heaven and Hell. On Easter Sunday in the year 1433 she had a final vision and received the Last Rites from Our Lord Himself. After 38 years of suffering, St Ludwina died a holy death at the age of 53.Raiancem Saibinnacem Fest, Nuestra Señora de los Reyes de Sevila, Espana.
The Sacred Pontifical Congregation of Rites on June 25, 1947 instituted the liturgical feast of Our Lady of the Kings, principal patron of Seville, for August 7 as a double of first class.Sant Caetanacem Fest
São Caetano (Gaetano dei Conti di Thiene) or St Cajetan of Tiene, confessor, founder of the Theatines, at Naples in Campania. He, through singular confidence in God, made his disciples practice the primitive mode of life of the Apostles. Being renowned for miracles, he was ranked among the saints by Pope Clement X. (RM).- The Holy Martyrs of Arezzo in Tuscany St Donatus, bishop, who among other miraculous deeds, made whole again by his prayers (as is related by Pope St Gregory), a sacred chalice which had been broken by pagans. Being apprehended by the imperial officer Quadratianus, in the persecution of Julian the Apostate, and refusing to sacrifice to demons, he was struck with the sword, and thus consummated his martyrdom. With him suffered also the blessed monk St Hilarinus, whose feast is celebrated on July 16, when his body was translated to Ostia. (RM).
- The Holy Martyrs of Augsburg Saints Afra, her mother Hilaria, and servants Saints Digna, Eutropia and Eunomia. Augsburg was first evangelized by St Lucius. Centuries later, St Narcissus, bishop of Gerona in Spain, with the deacon St Felix, flying from the Diocletianic persecution, took refuge in Augsburg, now in Bavaria. They found rooms in the house of Afra, who, with her servants, were also prostitutes. Seeing Saints Narcissus and Felix pray and bless the food before eating made Afra curious, and was taught about Jesus Christ and how He came to save sinners, including the prostitute Mary of Magdala, and being struck by the grace of God, they were all baptized after 7 days of instructions. Being accused by their former clients, the governor or judge Gaius demanded that they resume the worship of the devils, as commanded by Emperor Diocletian, but refusing, they were burned to death on an island in the river Lech, August 7, 304. (References: 1. Lives of the Saints and Blessed of Bavaria for the Instruction and Edification of the Christian People, based on Ruinart, edited by Dr Magnus Jocham, Professor of Theology and Spiritual Counselor to the Archbishop of Munich, with the approval of the Most Revered Archbishop of Munich, published at Freising, 1861. 2. Legend of the Saints for Catholic Schools and Families by Fr Charles Borromeo Bestlin, parish priest of the city of Weil, 1857.)
- The Holy Martyrs of Como or of Samolaco Saints Carpophorus, Exanthus, Cassius, Severinus, Secundus and Licinius, Roman soldiers of the Thebean Legion who fled the persecution of Maximian, and who were beheaded for the confession of Christ. They are associated with fellow-soldiers and martyrs of the Thebean Legion, Saints Fidelis of Como, Alexander of Bergamo, Felinus and Gratianus (RM).
- The Holy Martyrs of Gondar in Dibauria in Abyssinia Saints Agathangelus Noury, of Arab descent, and Cassianus Vas Lopes Neto, of Portuguese descent, French Franciscan missionaries in Africa, martyred, murdered, by the Jacobite heretics, August 7, 1638, out of hatred of the Christian faith.
- The Holy Martyrs of Lancaster Saints Martin of St Felix, OFM., baptized as John Woodcock (alias Farington and Thompson), Thomas Whittaker (alias Starkie) and Edward Bamber (alias Reding, Richardson, Wallis, and Walsh), Christian priests, martyred, murdered, August 7, 1646, by the Criminals, Satanists, Traitors, Apostates and Usurpers of England, Maranos and Freemasons, for refusing to worship Satan, refusing to be traitors, refusing to accept the "Kings of England," as "Popes of England." Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
- The Holy Martyrs of Nisibis in Mesopotamia, St Dometius, a Persian monk, who was stoned to death with two of his disciples, under Julian the Apostate. (RM).
- The Holy Martyrs of Rome, Saints Peter, Julian, and eighteen others, under Valerian and Gallienus. (RM).
- St Albert, Carmelite, confessor, wonderworker, his birthday today in the Lord at Messina in Sicily. (RM).
- St Albert, Camaldolese monk at the monastery of the Holy Cross at Sassoferrato in the Picenum in Italy.
- St Claudia. «The Christian faith came to Roman Britain, now the Nations of England and Cymru or "Wales" in the first century AD. Tertullian wrote a tract against the Jews about 200 AD and mentions that there were areas in Britain that were inaccessible to the Romans but had been conquered by Christ. The first notable Christian was probably a man named Bran, who was the father of Caractacus, king of the Silurian Britons. He, and his family were taken captive to Rome in 50 AD, and faced a public execution. Included in this party were Bran's father Llyr Llediaith, his son Caractacus, and the children of Caractacus who included the beautiful Claudia and probably Linus. When they arrived in Rome, in chains, the emperor Claudius had Caractacus brought before the Roman Senate. There he made an impassioned speech and as a result was not only given a pardon but also a pension and rooms in the Imperial palace. Caractacus was eventually returned to England as a puppet king but his family were retained in Rome as surety for his loyal behaviour. They were allowed to live normally in Rome. It was probably during this time that the whole family became Christians. We do know from Paul's epistle to the Romans, written in 58 AD, that there were several Christians in Caesar's household at this time. It is very likely that these people shared the Christian gospel with the Royal hostages who were also living in the imperial palace. It is possible that it was this same Linus who became one of the leading members of the church in Rome. A Linus eventually became its senior elder or bishop in the latter half of the first century. Clement, the early church father, who lived in Rome at this time wrote of the "saintly Linus, brother of Claudia." Bran, Linus and Claudia's grandfather, eventually returned to Britain in AD 58 where he was the focus for the church that developed around him. The ancient Welsh Triads tell us that Bran brought the faith of Christ to the Cambrians. It was likely that this same Claudia married a young Roman Senator named Pudens, whose full name was Rufus Pudens Pudentia. His family owned a large home in the centre of Rome. A Spanish poet, called Martial, lived in Rome at this time. He was not only a contemporary of Pudens but also his friend. He usually wrote short scurrilous poems but he treats his friend's marriage with great respect. Several of his poems mention this marriage: "O Rufus, my friend Pudens marries the foreigner Claudia." Although Claudia was a relatively common name, the following poem suggests that this Claudia was the daughter of Caractacus. "Concerning Claudia Rufina - Seeing Claudia Rufina has sprung from the azure Britons, how come she has the feeling of a Latin maid? Thanks to the gods, she has borne many children to her holy husband." The description of a Roman Senator as being 'holy' is most unusual. Tradition reports that the Senator St Pudens was an early revert. This affluent couple used their home as a Christian centre, and it is likely that Paul might have visited their house. At first this house, which still stands in Rome was called the 'Palatium Britannicum,' presumably because of the link with the family of Caractacus. Another name was the 'Hospitium Apostolorum,' or 'Apostles House.' The apostles referred to probably were Saints Peter and Paul. Today the house is called the Church of St Pudentiana. There is an inscription on the wall of this church saying, "This is the house of St Pudens, in which, many martyrs were buried by Saints Pudentiana and Praxedes themselves." St Praxedes was one of the sons of Saints Pudens and Claudia. It is known that the children of this couple were martyred for their Christian faith. Another interesting fact is that Emperor Constantine the Great, the first Christian Roman Emperor, was himself a fourth generation descendant of Caractacus through another of his sons, Cyllinus. Cyllinus' son was named Coel, who during his short reign founded the fortress town of Colchester in Essex, which still bears his name. Most people know of him as 'Old King Cole' of nursery rhyme fame! Coel's daughter, Helen, was a Christian and she became the mother of Constantine the Great. St Paul mentions the names of these leading Roman Christians in one of his epistles to Timothy: "Eubulus greets you, and so do Pudens, Linus, Claudia and all the brothers." (2 Timothy iv, 21) Another tradition makes St Claudia the daughter of Cogidubnus, a British ally of Claudius, and was named Claudia after Emperor Claudius.»
- St Conrad Nantwein, came to Wolfratshausen on horseback in 1286 on a pilgrimage to Rome. As the incumbent judge Gantner learned that the pilgrim had supposedly seduced an underage boy, he had Conrad arrested and brought to Castle Wolfratshausen. Meanwhile the judge observed that Conrad travelled with a considerable sum of money. To obtain it, Gantner convicted him without questioning witnesses to burning at the stake. Stadler's Vollständiges Heiligen-Lexikon (complete lexicon of saints) from 1858 says that the judge coveted Conrad's beautiful horse. Conrad was asked at what place he wished to be burned. He took off the top of his pilgrim's staff and threw it over the river Loisach saying "Where this falls down shall be my place of execution." He is said to have indeed been burnt there. At this place the church St Conrad Nantwein stands today. From the place of martyrdom miracles were reported soon after. So exists a tradition that the blinded horse of judge Gantner could see again after a piece of bone from the ashes of the burnt martyr was held in front of its eyes. The remaining bones were kept in a chapel, raised in honour of the martyr only a few years later at the place of execution. The brain pan and pilgrim's bottle of the saint were also preserved. Pilgrims started pouring in because of the marvelous events, and pope Boniface VIII canonized Conrad in 1297. In 1624 St Nantwein church was built in the baroque style to accommodate the large number of visiting believers, which still stands at the spot today. The relics, meanwhile lined in silver, had to be given over to the state in 1801 to contribute to the war chest. After several changes in ownership, the brain pan got into the possession of a Munich citizen in 1928, who gave it to the Munich Stadtmuseum where it remains. The pilgrim's bottles are missing to this day. The quarter of Wolfratshausen where the Saint was burned derives its name Nantwein from the saint.
- St Croman or Cronan, bishop-abbot of Magh-bile, now known as Moville, County of Down, Ireland. Today is his birthday in the Lord, August 7, 647 or 649.
- St Donatianus, bishop of Chalons in France. (RM).
- St Donatus of MünsterEifel: «Donatus is a 2nd-century Roman soldier and martyr. His parents were Faustus and Flaminia. When Faustus was deathly ill, his wife Flaminia sought the intercession of St Gervasius, who assured her that her husband would recover and beget a son. This came to pass, and Flaminia named the boy Donatus, which means "gift." She educated him in the Christian faith. At the age of 17, he enlisted in the famed 12th Legion "Fulminatrix," i.e., the "Thundering Legion." He rapidly rose through the ranks and soon became a personal bodyguard to the emperor Marcus Aurelius. In the year 173 the 12th Legion was engaged in the Marcomannic Wars in Moravia along the Danube frontier. According to the contemporary writer Dio Cassius, part of the legion was surrounded and nearly overwhelmed when it was miraculously saved by a divine thunderstorm. Cassius attributed the thunderstorm to the invocation of Mercurius by Aurelius' Egyptian sorcerer, Arnuphis, but Tertullian and other Christian writers ascribed the miracle to the prayers of the many Christians in that Legion. Later legend credited Donatus as the leader of the Christians' prayers. After the miracle, Donatus gave thanks to God, for which he was martyred by the emperor. He was buried by his mother in the Catacombs of St Agnes. Over the centuries, access to the catacombs was lost. In 1646, the catacombs were re-opened, and the relics of Donatus and many other saints were re-discovered. Pope Innocent X bequeathed Donatus' relics to the Jesuit church in Münster Eifel, and they were carried in procession from Rome to the Rhineland. On June 30, 1652 the relics were at St. Martin's church in Euskirchen as a Jesuit priest, Fr Heerde, was saying mass in the morning. With the conclusion of benediction, lightning struck the church and lit the altar and the priest on fire. He immediately invoked the aid of St Donatus and was miraculously restored unharmed. This miracle spread the fame of the Roman martyr throughout the region.»
- St Donatus, a Briton, patron of Llandunwyd, Glamorgan in Cymru or "Wales," his history is lost.
- St Donatus, archdeacon of Imola.
- St Donatus, bishop of Besançon.
- St Faustus, a soldier, who obtained the palm of martyrdom at Milan after many combats, in the time of Aurelius Commodus. (RM).
- St Hyperechius, one of the Egyptian Desert Fathers.
- St Jordanus Forzate of Padua, a monk, he participate in the resistance against the depredations of the monster Ezzelinus II, who had earlier also persecuted St Anthony of Padua, dying in exile in Venice, August 7, 1248.
- St Leodebod, it seems that 2 seperate persons, one a martyr under pagan Rome, the other, formerly abbot of St Aignan in Orleans, the founder & first abbot of St Benedict on the Loire at Fleury, have been conflated.
- St Michael de la Mora y de la Mora, Mexican priest, martyred, murdered, August 7, 1927, by the Criminals, Satanists, Traitors, Apostates and Usurpers of New Spain or "Mexico," Maranos and Freemasons, for refusing to worship Satan, refusing to be traitors, refusing to accept these traitors and their illegal and fraudulent "government" as "Popes of Mexico." Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
- St Molacca or Molocca of Tulach-h-Olainn, now Tullyallen, in the County of Louth, Ireland.
- St Nicholas Postgate, Christian priest, martyred, murdered, August 7, 1679, by the Criminals, Satanists, Traitors, Apostates and Usurpers of England, Maranos and Freemasons, for refusing to worship Satan, refusing to be traitors, refusing to accept the "Kings of England," as "Popes of England." Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
- St Victricius, his birthday today in the Lord, at Rouen. Whilst he was yet a soldier under Julian, he threw away his military belt for Christ, and after being subjected by the tribune to many torments, was condemned to capital punishment. But the executioner who had been sent to put him to death being struck blind, and the confessor's chains being loosened, he made his escape. Afterwards being made bishop, by preaching the word of God, he brought to the faith of Christ the barbarous people of Belgic Gaul, and finally died a confessor in peace. (RM).
- St Vincent, Franciscan, prophet, wonderworker, died in the Lord, August 7, 1504, in his hermitage in the forest outside the convent of St Julian near L'Aquila, Italy. St Christina Ciccarelli saw his soul taken to heaven by angels. At his death, the entire forest around his hut was lit by a great light; this led to a custom of lighting the convent and the part of the nearby forest every year overnight, August 6-7.
POPE ST SIXTUS II AND COMPANIONS, MARTYRS
Pope St Sixtus II, baptized as Xystos, was martyred along with six of his deacons, Saints Januarius, Vincentius, Magnus, Stephanus, Felicissimus and Agapitus, August 6, 258 in the persecution of Emperor Valerianus. For that reason, his and his companion-martyrs Dies Natalis feast has always been August 6, the same day as the feast of the Transfiguration of Our Lord Jesus Christ.In October 1958, Pope Pius XII died. A group of Non-Catholics, Modernist Liberal Protestants, seized the Vatican. They openly reject the First Commandment, reject what the Catholic Church has always and unchangeably taught, instead teaching that all gods are one, all religions are true, all ways, "if walked in faithfulness," lead to Eternal Salvation. These are Satanists. In 1969, these Satanists have pretended to have changed the feast of Pope St Sixtus II from August 6 to August 7.
Only if you believe, with these Satanists, Roncalli, Montini, Luciani, Wojtyla, Ratzinger and Bergoglio, that the God of the Bible is the same as the Demons Allah, Buddha, Ganpati, Krishna, Rama, etc., only then can you accept the "Authority" of Non-Catholics to "change" a Catholic liturgical feast, to change the feast of a Catholic Saint!