Setem-5-acem Sogglem Santam
Setem-5-acem Sogglem Santam
Page URL: https://ocaminhodossantos.blogspot.com/2021/09/setem-5-acem-sogglem-santam.html .- Our Lady of the Rule;
- Our Lady of the Woods;
- Exaltation of St Lawrence Justinian;
- Saints Bertin the Great;
- Gentilis the Martyr;
- Obdulia of Toledo;
- Romulus;
- Victorinus of Amiternum.
MAJOR / 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. 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'
God's Firewall Against Satan and Satan's Lies of Pretended "New Gospels" eg Montanism, Mahomettanism, Waldensianism, Lutheranism, Calvinism, Modernism, etc
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.
Virgen de Regla, Chipiona, Cádiz, Andalucía, Spain
The story goes that St Augustine of Hippo in North Africa revered this Black Madonna statue or even carved it; that Augustinian hermits brought it to southern Spain; that it was hidden from the Moors in a well under a fig tree, and found with the help of an apparition of the Virgin by a priest from Leon in the 1300s, near the Castle of Regla or Rule. The wooden statue is 2 feet high. The Virgin is seated on a throne with a headless Child standing on her left knee. Since the 1600s the image has been sumptuously vested and displayed with a doll-like Child between her hands, outside the robes. Some art historians date the statue to around 1200, others to 1300. The shrine dates from the 1300s. In subsequent centuries, devotion to Our Lady of Rule sailed from this town at the mouth of the Guadalquivir on Spain's southern coast around the world to places as distant as Cuba and the Philippines. Chipiona's present sanctuary in neo-medieval style was completed in 1906. On September 5, 1954, Peter Cardinal Segura y Sáenz, Archbishop of Toledo, crowned the statue the Virgin de Regla, Queen of Chipiona.- September 5, 1478: Our Lady of the Woods or Notre Dame du Bois, near Arras. A knight, who attempted to turn this chapel into a stable, in the year 1478, was killed on the spot by his horse. (Triple Couronne, n. 62)."
September 5, 1621: Our Lady of the Woods, Galloro
The little tiled picture of Our Lady of the Woods, found in 1621 at Galloro, marked the site of an older church built there in her honor and long since ruined. The tile was discovered by a small boy named Santi Bevilacqua, who was an orphan and lived with his uncle at L'Ariccia. Santi had been sent to watch the sheep, and was in the nearby brambles picking berries when he saw a low stone wall half-hidden in the brush and decided to investigate. He followed the wall and at one point fell into the brambles. When he picked himself up, he saw a picture of the Madonna painted on the wall. Being a pious child, he knelt and said a prayer; then, the following day he returned with a bouquet of flowers. Soon a number of his friends were coming with him to the Madonna in the woods. They brought flowers and sang hymns as they went along. This did not impress the neighbors, who feared for their fruit with so many children passing by. Finally, the children set about making a path that would let them into the brambles by an easier way, and in the course of their construction unwisely set fire to the brush. Quite a fire ensued and they were forbidden to go into the brush or into the woods to play. Sometime after this Santi was playing in his carpenter shop and fell asleep in a corner near a pile of lumber. The lumber fell on him as he slept and he awoke only in time to cry out to the Madonna of the Woods to save him. His frightened uncle, removing the lumber, discovered the boy unhurt and demanded to know who had saved him. The boy told him again about the Madonna at Galloro. The uncle made inquiries, and found that there was indeed a wall there which had once formed part of a church. There was an attractive little tile on one side of it, showing the Madonna. He set about rebuilding the church. Research revealed that the tile had been painted by a monk of Grotto Ferrata and that the church had been a pious venture of a good woman. There had been a dispute of the ownership of the land, and the church was abandoned. The years had converted the site into a wilderness again. Santi's uncle with great perseverance and with the help of the Madonna, got the funds together and started rebuilding the church. Others helped, and in time a chapel was built to Our Lady of the Woods, and also a home for priests. Santi went there to live, so that he could serve Masses at the shrine. By 1633, there were fifteen Masses said daily, and the pilgrims were coming in such droves to see Our Lady of the Woods that a fine new church had to be built. The site was nearby but it required the moving of the picture, which was set into the stone wall. It took much skill and prayer to move the picture without damage, but it was finally accomplished by a devout group of workmen, chanting litanies as they worked. Plague and cholera both passed by Galloro when people prayed at the shrine of Our Lady. These and other miracles endeared her to the people, and it is still a place of pilgrimage.- Blessing of the Statue of Our Lady of Fourviere or Notre-Dame-de-Fourvière, La Roquebrou, Cantal, Auvergne, France, Sept. 5, 1886.
- Coronation of Our Lady Madonna di Piedigrotta, Naples, Italy, Sept. 5, 1802.
- Miracle of Our Lady of the Immaculate Concepation or Immacolata, Gerace, Reggio Calabria, Calabria, Italy, Sept. 5, 1943.
- Our Lady, Matka Boska, Wola Gulowska, Adamów, Luków, Lublin, Poland, Patron of the September Soldiers of 1939.
- Apparition and finding of the statue of Our Lady, Sept. 5, 1238, called Nuestra Señora de la Fuensanta, Villel, Teruel, Aragon, Spain.
- + Feast of the Exaltation of St Lawrence Justinian to the Episcopacy of Venice. He was the first Patriarch of Venice, who, by glorious miracles and virtues, illustrated the episcopal dignity which he received against his will on this day. His birthday is January 8.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Alexandria Saints Raisa or Iraida. She was a daughter of a priest of Alexandria and was a nun at the local cloister. Once she saw a ship loaded with men, women, clergy and monks. They had been arrested for being Christians. Nobody knew where they were being taken. She visited the imprisoned Christians and was seized and also put in fetters. Then the ship reached Antinoia or Antinoopolis in Egypt, where the imprisoned were tortured and executed in the year 308, under Diocletian and Maxentius.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Aquae Cutiliae Saints Victorinus, bishop of Amiternum in Abruzzo in Italy, martyr, in the time of Nerva Trajan he was tortured and martyred under Nerva Trajan. Being renowned for sanctity and miracles, he was elected bishop of Amiternum by the whole people, but he was banished by the pagan Roman Empire, with other servants of God, to Aquae Cutiliae also called the Baths of Vespasian or to Contigliano, where spring forth fetid sulphurous waters, and was suspended with his head downward by order of the judge Aurelianus. Having for the name of Christ endured this torment for three days, he was gloriously crowned, and went victoriously to our Lord. His body was taken away by the Christians, and buried with due honors at Amiterno.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Capua Saints Quinctius, Arcontius, and Donatus.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Constantinople, Saints Urbanus, Theodore, Menedemus, and their ecclesiastical companions, seventy-seven in number, who were put in a ship by the command of the emperor Valens, and burned on the sea for the Christian faith.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Melitine in Armenia Saints Eudoxius, Zeno, Macarius, and their companions to the number of eleven hundred and four, who threw away their military belts, and were put to death for the confession of Christ, in the persecution of Diocletian.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Spain Saints James Giron Puigmitja, John Rafi Figuerola, Joseph Cardona Dalmases, Joseph Claveria Mas, Joseph Puig Bret, Joseph Sole Maimo, Matthew Casals Mas, martyred, murdered at several different places by the Maranos and the Maranocracy illegally occupying Spain, September 5, 1936.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Tonkin Saints Peter Nguyen Van Tu, Vietnamese Dominican priest, and Joseph Canh Luang Hoang or Hoàng Luong Canh, and Companions. St Peter was a Vietnamese Dominican priest. St Joseph was a Vietnamese physician, catechist and Dominican tertiary, an inhabitant of Thò-Hà, he was loved by everyone for the particular diligence with which he practiced the medical profession, which also offered him the possibility of baptizing dying children. Because of his faith he was arrested during the persecution of 1838. In prison he was joined by other Christians, all future martyrs, and was comforted by the Dominican priest St Peter Tu. The guards repeatedly induced him to step on the Crucifix, but rather than carry out this outrage, he preferred to heroically testify his faith and his love for Jesus Christ. Together with the other prisoners, he received the palm of martyrdom, September 5, 1838 in Bac Ninh Tai, in Tonkin, Vietnam. Beatified May 27, 1900 by Pope Leo XIII. Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
- + St Albert, hermit, wonderworker, and later, together with the Marquis of Casaco, founders of the Abbey of Butrio, and 1st Cluniac abbot of Butrio, died in the Lord, September 6, 1073.
- + St Alto, founder and abbot of Altmunster, he is celebrated on February 9 and September 5.
- + St Alvitus, a relative of St Rudesind, he became a Benedictine monk at Sahagun, Spain, he was made bishop of Leon, Spain in 1057. He transferred the relics of St Isidore from Seville to Leon.
- + St Anselm, 2nd or 3rd abbot of Anchin, near Pecquencourt in the diocese of Cambrai, France, in succession to Saints Alard and Haymeric, and which was built on the site of the hermitage of St Gordanus or Jordanus, died in the Lord, Sept. 5, 1088.
- + St Anseric, bishop of Soissons, he built the church of St Stephen and transferred the relics of Saints Crispinus and Crispinianus there, and the church still bears their name. He died Sept. 5, 652.
- + St Bertin the Great, monk at the abbey of Luxeil, abbot of St Mummolinus, later renamed to St Bertin, at Sithiu in the vicinity of Terouanne, died in the Lord, Sept. 5, 709.
- + St Brecc-Buaid or Bricin, said to have been of Tuaim-Dreacain, now Toomregan, county of Cavan, Ireland.
- + St Charbel, martyred Sept. 5, 107, in the persecution of Traianus.
- + St Eolang of Aghabullogue, Irish saint.
- + St Florentius Dumontet de Cardaillac, priest in the diocese of Castres, France, martyred, murdered at Rochefort by the Maranos and the Maranocracy illegally occupying France for refusing to become a Satanist and a Traitor, Sept. 5, 1794, not yet canonized by a Catholic Pope.
- + St Genebald, relative of St Remigius of Rheims, he was made bishop of Laon, France. For some unnamed fault he committed, he sentenced himself to seven years of continuous penance.
- + St Gentilis, martyr. He was born in about 1290 to the noble Finaguerra family of Matelica in Italy. Attracted as a child by the Franciscan ideal, he became a priest, and dedicated his life to the works of the apostolate in the various regions of Italy. Eager to imitate St Francis, he retired in solitude and penance on the sacred mountain of La Verna, in Tuscany, where for his virtues he was destined several times to lead the brothers. After this intense spiritual preparation he went as a missionary to Egypt, but here the difficulties in learning the Arabic language seemed to him so insuperable that he decided to return home. The Lord helped him in an amazing way, because in a short time he was able to speak not only Arabic, but also the languages ??of the neighboring nations. In this way he was able to carry the evangelical announcement in Egypt and in the Sinai peninsula, in the Holy Places of the Holy Land, and in all the East. His heated and vibrant preaching, accompanied by many miracles, produced thousands of conversions and baptisms. This aroused the wrath of the Muslim Infidels, who, unable to bear that so many people embraced the True Faith, during a preaching in the territory of Tauris or Toringa in the Persian Empire, he was attacked and with a blow from the scimitar, they beheaded him, September 5, 1340. Part of his body, much venerated by the Christians of those regions, was requested by the Venetian navigator and merchant Nicholas Quirini and transported by ship to Venice where it was placed in the basilica of Santa Maria Gloriosa also called the Church of the Frati, where it is still venerated today. Pope Pius VI on February 2, 1795 granted to celebrate the feast on September 5.
- + St Gerbrand, monk of the Premonstratensian monastery in Dokkum, Friesland, the modern Netherlands, later its 4th abbot. Friend of, and correspondent with, King St Louis IX of France. In his speeches, he invited the Frisians to participate in King St Louis' Crusades. Pope Clement IV (1265-68) therefore gave him in 1268 the title Sacrae militiae dux, or Holy Leader of the Crusade. He made his followers take the cross and support the crusade with their alms. Died while attending the Premonstratensian general chapter at the mother house at Laon, October 11, 1267. A nun from Sionfjellet had a vision where she saw Gerbrand die and be taken to heaven. Today is probably a feast of the translation of his relics.
- + St Herculanus, martyr, at Porto.
- + St John the Good, a native of Siponto in Italy, monastic student of Saints John of Matera and of Jordan of Pulsano. Founder and 1st abbot of the monastery of St Michael the Archangel on the island of Mljet Dálmata on the coast of Dalmatia, in modern Croatia, facing Mont Gargano.
- + St Jordan, Benedictine monk at Pulsano, Italy. Student of St John of Pulsano. Abbot-general of Pulsano from 1139 to his death, Sept. 5, 1152.
- + St Obdulia, virgin, martyr, at Toledo, most probably under Diocletianus.
- + St Romulus, prefect of Trajan's court. For reproving the cruelty of the emperor towards Christians, he was scourged with rods, and beheaded, Sept. 5, 112.
MARIAN CALENDAR
DAMNED, see Unam Sanctam, Cantate Domino of the Council of Florence, Pope Paul IV's Cum ex Apostolatus Officio
- Mother Teresa, nee Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu, Modernist Apostate & Panreligionist, September 5, 1997.
OREMUS
Most Holy Mary, Mother of God, and our Mother, and all you Saints, Fathers, Mothers, Brothers, Sisters, Popes, Archbishops, Bishops, Hermits, Monks, Martyrs, Virgins, Champions and Heroes of Jesus Christ, whose feasts is 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.
Metamorphosis Ministry of Lúcío Mascarenhas. https://www.vaticaninexile.com.
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