Setem-14-acem Sogglem Santam
Setem-14-acem Sogglem Santam
Page URL: https://ocaminhodossantos.blogspot.com/2021/09/setem-14-acem-sogglem-santam.html.- Roodmas, or Crossmas, the Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross.
- Our Lady of the Hermits or of Einsiedeln.
- Commemoration of Saints John Chrysostom, Pope St. Cornelius, Cyprian of Carthage, Empress St. Aelia Flavia Flaccilla, Albert of Jerusalem, Raymond of Moncada. And Others.
MAJOR AND/OR GREAT FEASTS

Flee From Satan's Church
When Pope Pius XII died in October 1958, Public, Pertinacious and Manifest Satanists seized the Vatican Basilica and from there masquerade as the Catholic Church.However, Catholic Law excludes Public, Pertinacious and Manifest Heretics and Apostates from the Catholic Church, and all their pretended "acts" are null and void.
All who observe and pretend to legitimize the Pretensions and Masquerades of these Satanists, thereby certify themselves satanists, and that their "gods" are the Demons Ganpati, Allah, etc., the "gods" of the Accursed Latrocinium of "Vatican2."
God Demands Obedience And Excludes All False 'gods'

For what participation hath justice with injustice?
Or what fellowship hath light with darkness?
And what concord hath Christ with Belial?
Or what part hath the faithful with the unbeliever?
And what agreement hath the temple of God with idols?
For you are the temple of the living God; as God saith: I will dwell in them, and walk among them; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people.
Wherefore, Go out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing:
And I will receive you; and I will be a Father to you; and you shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty." (2 Corinthians vi, 14 fl.; http://drbo.org/chapter/54006.htm)

And they said: we will not walk.
And I appointed watchmen over you, saying: Hearken ye to the sound of the trumpet.
And they said: We will not hearken." (Jeremias vi, 16-17; http://drbo.org/chapter/28006.htm)
God's Firewall Against Satan and Satan's Lies of Pretended "New Gospels" eg Montanism, Mahomettanism, Waldensianism, Lutheranism, Calvinism, Modernism, etc.

Which is not another, only there are some that trouble you, and would pervert the gospel of Christ.
But though we, or an angel from heaven, preach a gospel to you besides that which we have preached to you, let him be accursed. As we said before, so now I say again: If any one preach to you a gospel, besides that which you have received, let him be accursed." Galatians 1, 6-9 http://drbo.org/chapter/55001.htm

He that continues in the doctrine, the same has both the Father and the Son.
If any man come to you, and bring not this doctrine, receive him not into the house nor say to him, God speed you (Best wishes).
For he that says unto him, God speed you, takes part with his wicked works." 2nd Epistle of St. John i, 9-11; http://drbo.org/chapter/70001.htm
Proof of Satanism
Please read this page for context: https://www.traditioninaction.org/HotTopics/b021ht_Guru.htm.That Antipopes Roncalli, Montini, Luciani, Wojtyla, Ratzinger & Bergoglio were and are Satanists is evident from the Bible, particularly the First Commandment.
The ability to discern and distinguish between Christians and Satanists is proof of whether one is a Christian or a Satanist.
The refusal to acknowledge that the Antipopes Roncalli, Montini, Luciani, Wojtyla, Ratzinger & Bergoglio were and are Public, Pertinacious and Manifest Satanists and heads of a non-Catholic sect, is proof that one is a Satanist, a public enemy of the Living God.
- + Roodmas, or Crossmas, often confused with the Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, when the emperor HeracIius, after defeating king Chosroes of Persia, brought it back to Jerusalem. Sept. 14 marks the dedication of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem in 335 A.D. The Second Council of Nicæa, 787 A.D. drew the distinction between veneration of the cross and worship or latria, "which, according to the teaching of the faith, belongs to the Divine nature alone." Petavius noted that this cult must be considered as not belonging to the substance of religion, but as being one of the things not absolutely necessary to salvation. Thus, the honor paid to the image passes to the prototype; and he who adores the image, adores the person whom it represents. According to Christian tradition, the True Cross was discovered (called the Feast of the Invention of the Holy Cross) March 6, or May 3, 326 A.D. by St. Helena, the mother of the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great, during a pilgrimage she made to Jerusalem. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre was then built at the site of the discovery, by order of Helena and Constantine. The church was dedicated nine years later, with a portion of the cross. One-third remained in Jerusalem, one-third was brought to Rome and deposited in the Sessorian basilica Santa Croce in Gerusalemme (Holy Cross in Jerusalem), and one-third was taken to Constantinople to make that city impregnable. This 335 A.D. feast of the Dedication of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre was a two-day festival: although the actual consecration of the church was on 13 September, the cross itself was brought outside the church on September 14 so that the clergy and faithful could pray before the True Cross, and all could come forward to venerate it. In Western Christianity, the Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday of the calendar week after the one in which the feast day occurs are designated as one of each year's four sets of Ember days.
MARIAN FEASTS
September 11: Our Lady of the Hermits or of Einsiedeln.
Not very far from the city of Zurich stands the village of Einsiedeln, small in size, but large in importance. The name of the village means "hermitage" and refers to the very early Middle Ages when St. Meinrad hit upon this spot in the search through the Gloomy Forest, for a quiet place where he could build a cell and meditate and pray, far from the noise and distraction of the world. St. Meinrad's cell then became a place of pilgrimage, and the clear woodland spring in which he quenched his thirst became a fountain of miraculous power. In the fifteenth century when the good hermit had long been done to death by two villanous thugs, a chapel was built on the site of his ruined cell and in the chapel was placed a simple wooden statue of the Holy Virgin and her Child. In the centuries that followed, the statue of Our Lady of the Hermits or of Einsiedeln turned black, and from then on her miraculous powers to heal the sick and the crippled became firmly established. A great convent sprang into being around her, a vast complex of buildings housing many hundreds of monks. A new chapel of Grace was finally built for her in the most elaborate baroque style, and a huge church constructed over it, protecting it as a very percious and wonderful thing. This Chapel of Grace stands of course on the site of the former chapel which had been built where the ruins of St. Meinrad's cell had stood. The convent became the residence of the highest princes of the Church, the repository of all that was rare and beautiful in illuminated manuscripts, gold and silver church plate, painting, and enbroidery. During World War I, when a change of residence for the Pope was discussed, it was Einsiedeln which was chosen to receive him in case of necessity. The doorway and pillars near the Chapel of Grace are today hung thick with crutches, canes and braces of all kinds, discarded by happy pilgrims who have been cured by Our Lady of the Hermits. Every year thousands of pilgrims come to the village from all over the world. In olden times they came on foot. Now they arrive by train and proceed up the village street in a body, chanting hymns. There was a time when they went up the cobbled street on their knees. Pausing in front of the mighty church with its imposing curved and colonnaded entrance, they drank from every one of the 12 spouts of St. Meinrad's fountain, murmuring prayers as they did so. Then into the church they streamed and knelt at the wrought iron screen which is in front of the Chapel of Grace and behind which stands the Madonna and her Child, both robed in costly silks and crowned with gold and flashing jewels.
The Church of Our Lady of the Hermits, is part of Einsiedeln Abbey. The history of Einsiedeln Abbey starts with St. Meinrad of Einsiedeln. Born in 797 to an aristocratic German family, he was educated at the abbey school on Reichenau Island in what is today Germany. Meinrad became a monk and was later ordained a priest. After gaining public attention for reportedly performing miracles, Meinrad established a hermitage in 829 in the Einsiedeln forest of Switzerland, searching for privacy. He was murdered by two robbers in January 861. Over the next 80 years, other hermits occupied Meinrad's hermitage. In 934 Eberhard, previously Provost of Strassburg, built the Einsiedeln abbey and church on the hermitage site, becoming its first abbot. According to legend, the church was consecrated in 948 in person by Jesus Christ, the Four Evangelists, St. Peter, and St. Gregory the Great. Pope Leo VIII investigated and confirmed the miracle. It was last ratified by Pope Pius VI in 1793, who confirmed the acts of all his predecessors. In 965 Gregory, the third Abbot of Einsiedeln, was named a prince of the Holy Roman Empire by Emperor Otto I. His successor abbots would hold that title until the dissolution of the empire in 1806. In 1039, Meinrad's relics were transferred from Reichenau Island to Einsiedeln for enshrinement. In 1274, the abbey and its dependencies were incorporated into an independent principality by Rudolf I of Germany. This gave the abbot political jurisdiction over the abbey lands. During the early 16th century, the standards of discipline at Einsiedeln started to decline, but Ludovicus II, a monk of St. Gall who was Abbot of Einsiedeln from 1526 to 1544, restored a stricter observance. The abbey remained unaffected by the Protestant Deformation in Switzerland. Abbot Augustine I (1600–29) led the movement to create the Swiss Congregation of the Order of St. Benedict in 1602. Augustine established unrelaxed observance in the abbey and promoted a high standard of scholarship and learning amongst his monks. The Einsiedeln abbey church was rebuilt by Abbot Maurus between 1704 and 1719. In 1779, the Abbatial Principality was occupied by the Marano Kleptocracy of France during its invasion of Italy. The abbey celebrated the millennium of St. Meinrad of Einsiedeln in 1861. Pope Pius XI granted a pontifical decree of canonical coronation towards its venerated Marian image on March 21, 1934. The rite of coronation was executed by the Archbishop of Milan, Alfred Cardinal Schuster, coinciding with the abbey's millennium on September 14, 1934. The religious pilgrimages which have never ceased since the days of St. Meinrad, have tended to make Einsiedeln on a par with the Basilica della Santa Casa and Santiago de Compostela, serving as a major stopping point on the Way of Saint James leading there. The statue of the Virgin Mary from the 15th century is enshrined within the "Chapel of Grace" nerected by Eberhard, and remains the venerated object of their devotion. It is the subject of the earliest preserved print of pilgrimage, by the anonymous artisan Master E.S. in 1466. The chapel is located in the great abbey church. September 14 & October 13 are the main days of pilgrimage. Sept. 14 is the anniversary of the consecration of the original church in 948 AD. Oct. 13 is the anniversary of the translation of St. Meinrad's relics to Einsiedeln in 1039 AD.- + The Holy Martyrs of Carthage: In the Roman province of Africa, in the time of the emperors Valerian and GalIienus, St. Cyprian, Patriarch of Carthage, most renowned for holiness and learning, consummated his martyrdom by decapitation, after enduring a most painful exile, near the seashore, six miles from the city. There suffered also in the same place the holy martyrs Saints Crescentianus, Victor, Rosula, and Generalis. As Sept. 14 is celebrated as the Feast of the Exhaltation of the Holy Cross, the feast of St Cyprian is celebrated Sept. 16.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Rome: In the Appian road, during the persecution of Decius, Pope St. Cornelius, who, after being banished, was scourged with leaded whips, and then beheaded with twenty-one others of both sexes, which number includes Saints Caerealis, a soldier, and his wife Sallustia, who had been instructed in the faith by the same Cornelius. As Sept. 14 is celebrated as the Feast of the Exhaltation of the Holy Cross, the feast of Pope St. Cornelius is celebrated Sept. 16.
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- + Empress St. Aelia Flavia Flaccilla (356 - 386), also called Placilla, was a Roman empress and first wife of the Roman Emperor Theodosius I. Like him, she was of Hispanian Roman descent. During her marriage to Theodosius, she gave birth to two sons, the future Emperors Arcadius and Honorius, and a daughter, Aelia Pulcheria. In about 375–376, Flaccilla married Theodosius I, a son of Count Theodosius. At the time Theodosius had fallen out of favor with Valentinian I and had withdrawn to civilian life in Cauca, Gallaecia. Their first son Arcadius was born prior to the elevation of his parents on the throne. Their second son Honorius was born September 9, 384. Their daughter Pulcheria predeceased her parents as mentioned in the writings of St. Gregory of Nyssa. Valens, emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire was killed in the Battle of Adrianople (August 9, 378). He was survived by his wife Albia Dominica and his daughters Anastasia and Carosa. He had however survived his only son, Valentinianus Galates. His nephew Gratian, Emperor of the Western Roman Empire, was his heir and assumed control of the Eastern Empire with his younger half-brother Valentinian II as his nominal co-ruler. On January 19, Gratian declared Theodosius, magister militum per Illyricum, to be his new colleague in the Eastern Roman Empire. Theodosius seems to have been the seniormost officer of Roman origins available for promotion at the time. Merobaudes and Frigeridus, the two magistri militum in praesenti were probably not considered due to their Germanic origins. At this point Flaccilla became the Empress consort and was given the title Augusta. She was a fervent supporter of the Nicene Creed. Sozomen reports her preventing a conference between Theodosius and Eunomius of Cyzicus who served as figurehead of Anomoeanism, the most radical sect of Arians, who believed that Jesus was in no way similar to the Father. Ambrose and Gregory of Nyssa praise her Christian virtue and comment on her role as "a leader of justice" and "pillar of the Church". Theodoret reports on her works of charity, personally tending to the disabled. He quotes her saying that "To distribute money belongs to the imperial dignity, but I offer up for the imperial dignity itself personal service to the Giver." She died early in 386. Her death is mentioned by (among others) Claudian, Zosimus, Philostorgius and Joannes Zonaras. According to the Chronicon Paschale, the Palatium Flaccillianum of Constantinople was named in her honor.
- + St. Albert, Patriarch of Jerusalem. Albert Avogadro was born into a wealthy and promininent Italian noble family. Well educated, especially in theology and law. Ordained, he served as canon at the Holy Cross Abbey in Mortara, Italy, and was later elected Prior or Abbot. Bishop of Bobbio, Italy in 1184. Bishop of Vercelli, Italy. Mediated disputes between Pope Clement III and Frederick Barbarossa, and for his efforts was named Prince of the Empire. Papal legate to Northern Italy. Negotiated peace between Parma and Piacenza in 1199. Helped formulate the Rule for Saint Borcard and his hermits. This Rule later was adopted as the Rule for the Carmelites, and thus Albert is considered a co-founder of the order. Patriarch of Jerusalem in 1205 under Pope Innocent III, a position that generally led to conflict with the Mahomettan infidels, and martyrdom. Since his lands were wholly in the hands of Saracens, he established his see city at Acre. Held the office nearly ten years. Well known for his involvement in both state and church matters, and as a peacemaker to the Frankish factions in his see. Summoned to serve in the General Council of the Lateran, but murdered before he could attend. Albert was stabbed to death by a disgruntled hospital administrator he had been forced to fire, in the Church of St. John of Acre, September 14, 1215 while part of the procession of the feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross.
- + St. Anastasius Peter, baptized as Peter Bruch Cotacans, member of the Brothers of the Christian Schools, today is his Birthday in the Lord, September 14, 1936 in Madrid, Spain, being martyred by Communist terrorists. Not yet beatified or canonized by a Catholic Pope.
- + St. Anthony Rondon, Mercedarian missionary to the Araucani people of Chile, noted for his pious life, his success in bringing the Araucani to the faith, as a miracle worker, and for living to the age of 102. Not yet beatified or canonized by a Catholic Pope.
- + St. Claude Laplace, French priest, imprisoned on a ship with hundreds of other priests and starved to death, by the Satanists, Apostates and Traitors of France, and their Maranocracy, September 14, 1794 Rochefort, France. Not yet beatified or canonized by a Catholic Pope.
- + St. Cormac, first bishop of Cashel in Ireland. Born in 836 AD, he was a friend of St. Columba. He was made the first bishop of Cashel, Ireland. He compiled and wrote The Psalter of Cashel, a glossary of the Irish language which survives until today. Today is his birthday in the Lord, in 908 A.D.
- + St. Crescentius, the young son of St. Euthymius, ended his life by the sword, under the judge Turpilius, on the Salarian road, at Rome, during the persecution of Diocletian.
- + St. John Chrysostom, bishop of Constantinople, who was sent into exile through the conspiracy of his enemies, but was recalled by a decree of the Sovereign Pontiff, Innocent I. He died on the way to his exile from the ill-treatment he received at the hands of the soldiers who guarded him. His feast is celebrated on January 27, the day on which his sacred body was translated to Constantinople by Theodosius the Younger.
- + St. John Gabriel Taurin Dufresse. Member of the Society of Foreign Missions of Paris. Missionary to Szechuan, China in 1775. Imprisoned for six months in 1784 during a government persecution of Christians. He was re-assigned to Macao, but return to the Chinese missions in 1788. Titular bishop of Thabraca and co-adjutor Vicar Apostolic of Se-Ciuen, China on July 24, 1798; he succeeded to the Vicar Apostolic on November 15, 1801. Spent the next 15 years in constant danger during the persecution of Christians and foreigners. Murdered, martyred September 14, 1815 at Chengdu, Sichuan, China. Not yet beatified or canonized by a Catholic Pope.
- + St. Maternus, his birthday in the Lord at Treves. He was a disciple of the blessed apostle Peter, and brought to the faith of Christ the inhabitants of Tongres, Cologne, Treves, and of the neighboring country.
- + St. Odilard, a bishop of Nantes in France.
- + St. Peter of Tarentaise. At age 20, he joined the Benedictine Cistercians at Bonneveaux, France, along with his father and two brothers. First abbot of Tamie Abbey in the Tarentaise Mountains where he built a hospice for travellers. He was forced to become Archbishop of Tarentaise, France c. 1142. He worked to reform the diocese, removing corrupt clergy, supporting dedicated priests, caring for the poor, promoting education, and revitalizing the faith and church involvement of all his flock. Started the custom of May Bread - free bread and soup distributed throughout the mountain region; the tradition continued for centuries until ended by the Satanic French Revolution. In 1155 Peter disappeared only to be found hiding out as a lay brother in a Cistercian abbey in Switzerland; he had badly missed the simple life of a pious monk, but agreed to return to his duties as a bishop. Advisor to popes, kings and laity, he defended papal rights in France, and worked to bring peace between King Louis VII of France and Prince Henry II of England. Died 1174 at Bellevaux Abbey, France. He was canonized in 1191 by Pope Celestine III.
- + St. Raymond of Moncada, a Spanish knight who fought against the invading Mahomettan Infidels to defend Christians. Friend of Stfd. Peter Nolasco who received him into the Mercedarians as a lay knight on August 10, 1218, the founding of the Order.
GREAT FEASTS
Collective of Martyrs
Translations
Individual Saints
OREMUS
Most Holy Mary, Mother of God, and our Mother, and all you Saints, Fathers and Mothers, Apostles, Martyrs, Confessors, Virgins, Popes, Bishops, Doctors, Abbots, Priests, Brothers and Sisters, Hermits, Monks, Teachers and Evangelists and Missionaries, Champions and Heroes of Jesus Christ, whose feasts are today, named and unnamed, we pray to you for your intercession and guidance, lead us away from error and evil and into the Grace and Love of God, that with your assistance, we may join you in Eternity with the Living God, we make this prayer through Jesus Christ Our Lord, Who Lives and Reigns, in the Unity of the Godhead, with the Father and the Holy Ghost, one God, forever and ever, Amen.Lúcío Mascarenhas.
Ministério Metamorfose: O Caminho dos Santos de Lúcío Mascarenhas. https://www.vaticaninexile.com.