Setem-2-acem Sogglem Santam

Setem-2-acem Sogglem Santam

Page URL: https://ocaminhodossantos.blogspot.com/2021/09/setem-2-acem-sogglem-santam.html.

MAJOR FEASTS

  1. King St Stephen of Hungary
  2. St Margaret the Fair of Louvain.
  3. St Justus of Lyons (pictured)
  4. St Aviv of Edessa


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. 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'

"I am the Lord thy God, who brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. Thou shalt not have strange gods before me." Exodus xx, 2-3; http://drbo.org/chapter/02020.htm "The gods of the pagans / heathens / gentiles are devils" Psalm 95, 5 "Pagans / heathens / gentiles sacrifice to devils, and not to God" 1 Corinthians x 20 "Bear not the yoke with unbelievers. 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) "Thus saith the Lord: Stand ye on the ways, and see and ask for the old paths which is the good way, and walk ye in it: and you shall find refreshment for your souls. 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

"I wonder that you are so soon removed from him that called you into the grace of Christ, unto another gospel. 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 "Whosoever revolteth, and continueth not in the doctrine of Christ, hath not God. He that continueth in the doctrine, the same hath 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. For he that saith unto him, God speed you, communicateth 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.

  1. Marian Calendar

    1. September 2, 1441: Unsere Liebe Frau von den Brennesseln in Heilbron or Our Lady of the Nettles at Heilbron or Helbron in Franconia, now in Germany, a city distinct from Heilsbron in the Bavarian Franconia.

      The Abbot Matthew Orsini wrote, "Our Lady of Helbron, or of Nettles, in Franconia, in Germany. This image began to work miracles in the year 1441." (Triple Courone, n. 73). A wayside image of Our Lady in Heilbronn had spoken. The pilgrimage began in 1442 and was still prosperous sixty years later. In 741, Heilbronn is first mentioned in an official document of the Diocese of Würzburg as Villa Helibrunna, together with a Basilica of St Michael the Archangel, and in 841, King Louis the German set up court here for a period of time. The name Heilbrunna means "healing well" and hints to a well that is located not far from the basilica. The Church of St Kilian is apparently built on the site of the Basilica. With the Deformation of the Protestants, who are Satanists, St Kilian has been converted into a Temple of Satan, a Demonarium. Under the Italian brigand Napoleon Buonaparte, Heilbron was annexed to Wurttemberg, it is that part of Franconia included in the "state" of Baden-Wurttemberg in modern Germany, the Federal Republic of Germany. It seems that the Satanists of the Deformation have destroyed this chapel as there is no further mention of it, and it cannot be located.

      On The Cult of Mary, Mother of God, by St Alphonsus Liguori in his The Glories of Mary

      «People outside the Church cannot endure our calling Mary our hope. They say that God alone is our hope, and that He curses those who put their trust in creatures, according to the prophet Jeremias, "Cursed is the person who trusts in human beings." (Jer. xvii, 5) Mary, they argue, is a creature, and how can a creature be our hope? But in spite of this, the Church recommends that all priests and religious raise their voices every day in the name of all the faithful and call Mary by the sweet name of "Our Hope" – the hope of all. St. Thomas says that we can place our hope in a person in two ways – as a principal cause and as a mediate cause. Thus those who expect something from a king put their trust in him as their sovereign, and in his ministers or his favorite as intercessors. When the favor is granted, it comes really from the king, though the favorite is the intermediary. Hence the petitioners have a right to call the minster or favorite through whom they received it their "hope." The King of Heaven, being infinite Goodness, desires in the highest degree to enrich us with His graces. But because confidence is a necessary condition for being heard, and because He wants to increase our confidence, He has given us His own Mother as our Mother and intercessor, and has granted her all power to help us. So it is that He wishes us to place our hope for salvation and every blessing in her. Those who put their trust in Mary, who, being the Mother of God, is able to secure grace and eternal life for them, are truly blessed and acceptable to the heart of God.»

    2. FEASTS OF TRANSLATIONS

    3. + The Feast of the Translation of Saints Justus and Viator. Justus, bishop of Lyons, and confessor, who was endowed with extraordinary sanctity, and a prophetic spirit. When a violently insane criminal sought sanctuary in the cathedral of Lyon after attacking people in the street, the man was seized and killed by an avenging mob who ignored the sanctity of the church and the tradition of sanctuary. Justus was so disillusioned with the people, and what he considered his failure to bring them the real faith, that he abandoned his see and retired into a desert of Egypt, with his lector Viator. When he had for some years led an almost angelical life, and the end of his meritorious labors had come, he went to our Lord to receive the crown of justice, on October 14th. His holy body, together with the relics of his lector Viator, was afterwards taken to Lyons on this day.

    4. COLLECTIVE OF MARTYRS

    5. + The Holy Martyrs of Adrianopolis in Thrace, now called "Edirne" by the Infidel turks, Saints Aithalas, Ammun, whipped to death by the pagan Roman Empire.

    6. + The Holy Martyrs Saints Evodius and Hermogenes, brothers, and Callista, their sister.

    7. + The Holy Martyrs Saints Antoninus, Diomedes, Eutychianus, Hesychius, Julianus, Leonides, Menalippus, Pantagapes, Philadelphus, and Philip. They consummated their martyrdom, some by fire, some by water, others by the sword or by the cross.

    8. + The Holy Martyrs of Louvain in the Brabant Saints Albert or Amand, his wife and niece Margaret called the Fair, the Brave, in French Fiere, in Flemish, Toste, September 2, 1225. They were martyred in the St George's Inn on the banks of the Dyle or Deel, by certain ruffians, in the beginning of the thirteenth century; Margaret, because she would not consent to sin; for St Thomas Aquinas teaches that all Christian virtues, being protestations of our faith, and proofs of our fidelity to God, they are a true motive of martyrdom. Born to a poor family, in her late teens she worked as a maid at the St Joris Inn in Louvain in the Duchy of Brabant owned by her uncle Albert. Albert and his wife eventually sold the inn, each planning to enter religious life; Margaret planned to become a Cistercian or Bernardine nun. On the eve of their departure, however, a group of eight pilgrims arrived asking for hospitality. Animated by Christian charity, the two spouses were unable to shirk the duty of welcoming, even if the moment was somewhat inopportune. The travelers were actually brigands. Margaret, who had been absent to purchase wine, found her masters killed and the house burglarized on her return. The evildoers then took hold of her and took her away as part of their booty. Gagged and dragged towards the northern part of the city, the girl fiercely resisted the solicitations and threats, to be finally raped and stabbed, murdered. Her mangled body, now lifeless, was thrown into the waters of the Dyle. She was barely eighteen. Her body was recovered, and buried along the river bank; a large fish pushed the body up-stream and an angel hovered over the river, shining a light on the body until some one came to recover it. Her body was found in the water by fishermen, who hid her body and buried it on the bank, and did not publicize it, fearing that they themselves would be blamed. Duke Henry I of Brabant was staying on the Keizersberg. That night his attention was drawn to a wondrous glow over the water and the singing of angels in the sky. So they dug the spot and found her body, and it was carried in a solemn procession by the duke and his wife, and all the citizens of the city and buried in a wooden chapel next to the St. Peter's Church. Later the chapel was enclosed into the church. Devotion developed after miracles occurred near her original grave site beside the river. Her immemorial veneration at Louvain, and the exposition of her relics in this chapel, and distributions of the same, approved by the archbishops of Mechlin, are proofs of her rank in the Belgic Martyrologies. See an account of her martyrdom in Caesarius, the Cistercian monk of the same age at Heisterbac, near Bonne, Dial. l. 6, c. 34. She lived in the time of Henry I, duke of Brabant, who died near Cologne, in 1235, and was buried in the chancel of St Peter's church in Louvain. Not long after their death, Margaret's life was written down by the Cistercian monk Caesarius, prior of the monastery of Heisterbach; he was closely associated with the Brabant Cistercian monastery Villers just south of Brussels. That was the monastery that Albert or Amandus had wanted to enter. Caesarius wrote that Amandus and his wife appeared to a monk of Villers after their death. He asked them where they were. They answered that they had not yet attained perfect glory. Then the monk asked about the girl. Whereupon they said: "All that grace we have received, we owe to the merits of Margaret. We dare not even look up to the glory in which she is." And Caesarius concludes: "Do you see now how much simplicity and guiltless living contribute to martyrdom?"

    9. + The Holy Martyrs of Nicomedia Saints Zeno and his sons Concordius and Theodorus.

    10. + The Holy Martyrs of Paris Saints Solomon and Companions, Lasallian brothers, and others, a group of 191 or more priests, religious and laity, martyred, murdered September 2, 1792, by the Maranos and the Maranocracy illegally occupying France. Solomon had been baptized as William Nicholas Louis Leclerq. Saints Ambrose Augustine Chevreux, Andrew Abel Alricy, Andrew Angar, Andrew Grasset de Saint Saviour, Anna Alexandre Charles Mary Lanfant, Anthony Charles Octavien du Bouzet, Anthony Mathew Augustine Nogier, Apollinaris of Posat, Armand Anne Auguste Antonin Sicaire Chapt de Rastignac, Armand de Foucauld de Pontbriand, August Dénis Nezel, Bernard Francis de Cucsac, Bertrand Anthony de Caupenne, Charles Carnus, Charles Francis le Gué, Charles Jéremie Bérauld du Pérou, Charles Louis Hurtrel, Charles Regis Mathew de la Calmette de Valfons, Charles Victor Véret, Claude Anthony Raoul Laporte, Claude Bochot, Claude Cayx Dumas, Claude Chaudet, Claude Colin, Claude Fontaine, Claude Francis Gagnières des Granges, Claude Louis Marmotant de Savigny, Claude Ponse, Claude Rousseau, Claude Silvanus Raphaël Mayneaud de Bizefranc, Daniel Louis André Des Pommerayes, Denis Claude Duval, Eloy Herque du Roule, Eustache Félix, Francis Balmain, Francis César Londiveau, Francis Dardan, Francis Dumasrambaud de Calandelle, Francis Hyacinthe lé Livec de Trésurin, Francis Joseph de la Rochefoucald Maumont, Francis Joseph Monnier, Francis Joseph Pey, Francis Lefranc, Francis Louis Hébert, Francis Louis Méallet de Fargues, Francis Urbain Salins de Niart, Francis Varheilhe Duteil, Gabriel Desprez de Roche, Gaspard Claude Maignien, George Girault, George Jérôme Giroust, Gilbert John Fautrel, Gilles Louis Symphorian Lanchon, Henry August Luzeau de la Mulonnière, Henry Hippolyte Ermès, Henry John Milet, James Alexandre Menuret, James Augustin Robert de Lézardières, James de la Lande, James Dufour, James Francis de Lubersac, James Friteyre Durvé, James Gabriel Galais, James John Lemeunier, James Joseph Le Jardinier des Landes, James Julius Bonnaud, James Léonor Rabé, James Louis Schmid, James Stephen Philippe Hourrier, John André Capeau, John Anthony Barnabus Séguin, John Anthony Guilleminet, John Anthony Hyacinthe Boucharenc de Chaumeils, John Anthony Joseph de Villette, John Anthony Savine, John Anthony Seconds, John Baptiste Bottex, John Baptiste Claude Aubert, John Baptiste Jannin, John Baptiste Mary Tessier, John Baptiste Michael Pontus, John Baptiste Nativelle, John Charles Caron, John Charles Le Grand, John Charles Mary Bernard du Cornillet, John Charton de Millou, John Francis Bonnel de Pradal, John Francis Bousquet, John Francis Burté, John Francis Mary Benoît Vourlat, John Goizet, John Henry Gruyer, John Henry Louis Michael Samson, John Joseph de Lavèze Bellay, John Joseph Rateau, John Lacan, John Lemaître, John Louis Guyard de Saint Clair, John Mary du Lau de Alleman, John Michael Philippot, John Peter Bangue, John Peter Duval, John Peter Le Laisant, John Peter Simon, John Philippe Marchand, John Robert Quéneau, John Thomas Leroy, Joseph Bécavin, Joseph Falcoz, Joseph Louis Oviefre, Joseph Mary Gros, Joseph Thomas Pazery de Thorame, Julian Francis Hédouin, Julian le Laisant, Julian Poulain Delaunay, Julius Honorius Cyprian Pazery de Thorame, Laurence, Louis Alexis Mathias Boubert, Louis Barreau de La Touche, Louis Benjamin Hurtrel, Louis Francis André Barret, Louis Francis Rigot, Louis John Mathew Lanier, Louis Joseph Francis, Louis Laurent Walter, Louis le Danois, Louis Longuet, Louis Mauduit, Louis Remi Benoist, Louis Remy Nicholas Benoist, Loup Thomas Bonnotte, Marcus Louis Royer, Martin Francis Alexis Loublier, Mary Francis Mouffle, Mathurin Nicholas de la Ville Crohain le Bous de Villeneuve, Mathurin Victoir Deruelle, Michael André Sylvester Binard, Michael Francis de la Gardette, Michael Leber, Nicholas Bize, Nicholas Clairet, Nicholas Claude Roussel, Nicholas Colin, Nicholas Gaudreau, Nicholas Mary Verron, Oliver Lefebvre, Peter Bonzé, Peter Brisquet, Peter Brisse, Peter Claude Pottier, Peter Florent Le Clercq, Peter Francis Hénocq, Peter Francis Pazery de Thorames, Peter Gauguin, Peter James de Turmenyes, Peter James Mary Vitalis, Peter John Garrigues, Peter Landry, Peter Louis de la Rochefoucauld Bayers, Peter Louis Gervais, Peter Louis Joret, Peter Louis Joseph Verrier, Peter Michael Guérin, Peter Michael Guérin du Rocher, Peter Nicholas Psalmon, Peter Paul Balzac, Peter Ploquin, Peter Robert Regnet, Peter St James, Philibert Fougères, Rene Joseph Urvoy, Rene Julian Massey, Rene Mary Andrieux, Rene Nativelle, Rene Nicholas Poret, Robert Francis Guérin du Rocher, Robert le Bis, Saintin Huré, Sebastian Desbrielles, Solomon le Clerq, Stephen Francis Dieudonné de Ravinel, Stephen Michael Gillet, Thomas John Montsaint, Thomas Nicholas Dubray, Thomas Rene Dubuisson, Urbanus Lefebvre, Vincent Abraham, Vincent Joseph le Rousseau de Rosencoat, William Anthony Delfaut, Yves Andrew Guillon de Keranrun, and Yves John Peter Rey de Kervisic. Beatified on October 17, 1926 by Pope Pius XI. Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.

    11. + The Holy Martyrs of Rome Saints Maxima and Ansanus, martyred in the persecution of Diocletian.

    12. + The Holy Martyrs of Spain Saints Baldomer Margenat Puigmitja, Fortunatus Barrón Nanclares, John Franquesa Costa, Joseph María Laguía Puerto and Lawrence Insa Celma, martyred, murdered September 2, 1936, by the Maranos and the Maranocracy illegally occupying Spain.

    13. COLLECTIVE OF NON-MARTYR SAINTS OR ISO-MARTYRS

    14. + Saints Albert Prezzati and Vitus, Benedictine monks, founders of the Cluniac abbey of Saint James in Pontida in Italy, Vitus serving as its first abbot and Albert serving as its 2nd abbot after Vitus died.

    15. INDIVIDUAL SAINTS

    16. + St Agricola, son of St Magnus of Avignon, a Gallo-Roman senator who became a monk and then bishop. Agricola moved to Lerins, France, his father's see, at age 14, becoming a monk there at age 16. He was made coadjutor bishop of Avignon with his father in 660. He became bishop in 670. He built a church and Benedictine convent in Avignon, the church staffed with his brother monks. Noted preacher, and famous for his charity and defense of the poor and sick against civil authorities. His blessing ended an invasion of storks, leading to his patronage of them, and his emblem in art. His prayers were said to produce rain, good weather and fine harvests.

    17. + St Antoninus, martyr at Pamiers in France, whose relics are kept with great veneration in the church of Palencia.

    18. + St Antoninus, martyr at Apamea in Syria, he was a stonemason in predominantly pagan Aribazus, Syria. He denounced the non-Christian practices of his neighbors, then left his village and became a hermit for two years. He then returned to his village and destroyed the pagan idols there. He afterwards moved to Apamea, Syria where he built a church and where he was martyred.

    19. + St Aviv or Habib, 4th-century deacon in Edessa, Syria, friend of Saints Shamuna and Gurias, he escaped execution in the persecutions of Galerius in which Shamuna and Gurias were murdered. When imperial tolerance was declared for Christianity in 311, Aviv returned to the city and his ministry. Eleven years later, in the persecutions of Emperor Licinius and the governor Lisania, he was tortured and executed, burned at the stake in Edessa, Syria in 322. Though he died, his body did not burn up, and he was buried next to Saints Samonas and Gurias.

    20. + St Burchard also called Brocard, monk on Mount Carmel who was chosen prior of his house. Around the year 1210, he asked St Albert, patriarch of Jerusalem, to write a Rule for the monks. This Rule became the foundation for the Carmelite Order. Pope Honorius III objected to its use because it did not have his prior approval. The Pope received a vision of the Blessed Virgin Mary who supported the rule; Honorius gave his approval. Brocard ruled his house for 35 years, setting an example for devotion to the Rule, and gaining great respect from the region's Muslim Infidels.

    21. + St Colum MacBlann, Irish saint.

    22. + St Cosmas, a monk, he fled the Monothelites to Crete, living as a naked hermit.

    23. + St Eleazar, 3rd son of Aaron and nephew of Moses. With his brother Ithamar, he is the ancestor of the Israelite priestly class.

    24. + St Elpidius, bishop of Lyons, confessor.

    25. + St Elpidius, hermit and abbot on Mount Luca in Cappadocia, an angel convinced him to emigrate to the March of Ancona. The town of Cluana, now Sant Elpidio a Mare, bears his name and glories in the possession of his sacred body.

    26. + St Enan, an Irish saint.

    27. + St Hieu, a nun, she received the veil from St Aidan of Lindesfarne, and later became abbess at Tadcaster in Yorkshire.

    28. + St Ingrid Elofsdotter of Skanninge, Swedish Dominican nun.

    29. + St Lanfranc, 11th bishop of Vercelli, successor of St Aemilianus I.

    30. + St Lolan, a bishop, allegedly a native of Galilee. He left his homeland to preach the Gospel in Scotland.

    31. + St Nonnosus, abbot on Mount Soractes, who, by his prayers removed a rock of huge dimensions, and was renowned for other miracles. Died in the Lord, Septemer 2m 575.

    32. + St Prosperus, bishop of Tarragona in Spain during the occupation of Spain by the Muslim Infidels, died September 2, 715.

    33. + St Seanan of Laithrech-Briuin, an Irish saint.

    34. + St Stephen, King of Hungary, who, being adorned with divine virtues, was amongst the Apostles of the Hungarians. He was received into Heaven by the Virgin Mother of God, on the day of her Assumption, August 15, his Dies Natalis. However, his liturgical feast has been set for today, September 2, by Pope Innocent XI, in commemoration of the Liberation of Buda, now Budapest, from the Abomination of Desolation that is Mahomettanism, through the invocation and intercession of King St Stephen, by the brave Christian army.

    35. + St Syagrius, bishop of Autun.

    36. + St Theodota, widow, mother of Saints Evodius, Hermogenes and Callista, when she refused an offer of marriage by imperial prefect Leucatius during the persecutions of Diocletian, he denounced her as a Christian, had her arrested, beaten and martyred at Nicaea in Bithynia.

    37. + St Valentinus, 4th bishop of Strasbourg in Alsatia.

    38. + St William, bishop of Roschild, confessor. He was an English priest of eminent sanctity and zeal, and chaplain to king Canutus. In one of the voyages which that prince made from England to Denmark, the zealous servant of God who attended him, was so moved with compassion at the sight of the ignorance, idolatry and superstition under which that nation groaned, that he desired to stay behind to preach Christ, and the pure maxims of the gospel. 1 He gained innumerable souls to God, and was advanced to the episcopal see of Roschild, in the island of Zealand. King Swein III Estrithius contracted an incestuous marriage with a near kinswoman, the daughter of the king of Sweden. The holy pastor endeavoured in vain to remove so pernicious a scandal by remonstrances, and at length proceeded to a sentence of excommunication, which severity brought the king to his duty. The same king having once caused some persons to be put to death without a public or legal trial, the saint met him at the church door the next day, and holding out his pastoral staff, forbade him to enter the house of God till his hands were cleansed from the blood he had unjustly spilled; and seeing some of the courtiers draw their swords, he presented his neck, saying he was ready to die in defence of the church of God. The king, who had always the highest veneration for the holy prelate, entered into himself, bitterly bewailing his sin, and after doing penance and making satisfaction, was conducted into the church by the bishop himself. In this example, whilst we commend the pastor's zeal, to whom nothing was dear on earth besides God's honour, we ought not to be less edified with the humble dispositions in which the king received correction. From that time the saint and the penitent concurred, with all their strength, in the most perfect union of hearts, to promote the cause of piety and religion. Upon the death of the king his corpse was conveyed to Roschild, the burial place, and at that time the ordinary residence of the kings of Denmark. St William is said to have prayed on this occasion that he might not be separated from his friend, and dying at the same time he was interred together with him, and in the same place, in 1067, having passed forty years in Denmark. The Danes were converted to the faith by the preaching of St Anscharius, and his associates and successors, Ebbo, Withmar, Rembert, &c. Eric I, king of Denmark, was baptized in 826, in the reign of the Emperor Louis Debonnair. King Swein II apostatized; but his successor Knut or Canute II the Great, king of England, carried or sent into Denmark from this island many zealous apostolic missionaries, who re-established that church. Canute being dead at Shaftsbury in 1040, Magnus obtained the crown of Denmark, and dying in 1043, was succeeded by Swein III Estrithius, who died in 1067.


    Metamorphosis Ministry of Lúcío Mascarenhas. https://www.vaticaninexile.com.


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