Setem-7-acem Sogglem Santam
Setem-7-acem Sogglem Santam
Page URL: https://ocaminhodossantos.blogspot.com/2021/09/setem-7-acem-sogglem-santam.html .- Vigil of the Nativity of Our Lady, the BVM.
- St Chiaffred
- St John of Nicomedia
- St Stephen of Chatillon
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'
![]() Satanist Heresiarch & Antipope John Baptist Montini aka "Paul VI" bears witness that he will be in Hell with his fellow-pagans. |
"I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.- Exodus xx, 2-3; http://drbo.org/chapter/02020.htm
"You shall not have strange gods before me."
"The gods of the pagans / heathens / gentiles are devils."- Psalm 95, 5; http://drbo.org/chapter/21095.htm
"Pagans / heathens / gentiles sacrifice to devils, and not to God."- 1 Corinthians x 20.; http://drbo.org/chapter/53010.htm
![]() Satanist & Spiritual Murderess Agnes "Teresa of Calcutta" bears witness that she is a pagan, an Apostate. |
"Bear not the yoke with unbelievers.- 2 Corinthians vi, 14 fl.; http://drbo.org/chapter/54006.htm.
"For what participation has justice with injustice?
"Or what fellowship has light with darkness?
"And what concord has Christ with Belial?
"Or what part has the faithful with the unbeliever?
"And what agreement has the temple of God with idols?
"For you are the temple of the living God; as God says: '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 you separate,' says 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,' says the Lord Almighty."
"Thus saith the Lord: 'Stand on the ways, and see and ask for the old paths which is the good way, and walk in it: and you shall find refreshment for your souls.'- Jeremias vi, 16-17; http://drbo.org/chapter/28006.htm.
"And they said: 'We will not walk.'
"And I appointed watchmen over you, saying: 'Hearken to the sound of the trumpet.'
"And they said: 'We will not hearken.'"
God's Firewall Against Satan and Satan's Lies of Pretended "New Gospels" eg Montanism, Mahomettanism, Waldensianism, Lutheranism, Calvinism, Modernism, etc.
![]() Satanist & Spiritual Murderess Agnes "Teresa of Calcutta" bears witness that she is a pagan, an Apostate. |
"I wonder that you are so soon removed from him that called you into the grace of Christ, unto another gospel.- Galatians 1, 6-9 http://drbo.org/chapter/55001.htm
"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."
"Whosoever revolts, and continues not in the doctrine of Christ, does not have God.- 2nd Epistle of St. John i, 9-11; http://drbo.org/chapter/70001.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."
"This Most Holy Roman Church... firmly believes, professes, and proclaims that those not living within the Catholic Church, not only pagans, but also Jews and heretics and schismatics, cannot become participants in eternal life, but will depart 'into the everlasting fire which was prepared for the devil and his angels' (Matt. xxv, 41), unless, before the end of life, the same have been added to the flock; and that the unity of the ecclesiastical body is so strong, that only to those remaining in it, are the sacraments of the Church of benefit for salvation, and do fastings, almsgiving, and other functions of piety and exercises of Christian service produce eternal reward, and that no one, whatever almsgiving he has practiced, even if he has shed blood for the name of Christ, can be saved, unless he has remained in the bosom and unity of the Catholic Church."- Holy & Ecumenical Council of Florence, under Pope Eugene IV, following St. Fulgentius of Ruspa, disciple of St. Augustine of Hippo. |
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.
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September 7: Vigil of the Nativity of Our Lady, instituted by Pope Gregory II in 722. (Balingh. in Galend.)
The day destined for the parturition of St Anne and for the birth of her, who was consecrated and sanctified to be the Mother of God, had arrived: a day most fortunate for the world. This birth happened on the eighth day of September, fully nine months having elapsed since the Conception of the soul of our most holy Queen and Lady. St. Anne was prepared by an interior voice of the Lord, informing her, that the hour of her parturition had come. Full of the joy of the Holy Ghost at this information, she prostrated herself before the Lord and besought the assistance of his grace and his protection for a happy deliverance. Presently she felt a movement in her womb similar to that which is proper to creatures being born to the light. The most blessed child Mary was at the same time by divine providence and power ravished into a most high ecstasy. Hence Mary was born into the world without perceiving it by her senses, for their operations and faculties were held in suspense. As she had the use of her reason, she would have perceived it by her senses, if they would have been left to operate in their natural manner at that time. However, the Almighty disposed otherwise, in order that the Princess of heaven might be spared the sensible experience otherwise connected with birth. She was born pure and stainless, beautiful and full of grace, thereby demonstrating, that she was free from the law and the tribute of sin. Although she was born substantially like other daughters of Adam, yet her birth was accompanied by such circumstances and conditions of grace, that it was the most wonderful and miraculous birth in all creation and will eternally redound to the praise of her Maker. At twelve o-clock in the night this divine luminary issued forth, dividing the night of the ancient Law and its pristine darknesses from the new day of grace, which now was about to break into dawn. She was clothed, handled and dressed like other infants, through she excelled all mortals and even all the angels in wisdom. Her mother did not allow her to be touched by other hands than her own, but she herself wrapped her in swaddling clothes: and in this St Anne was not hindered by her present state of childbirth; for she was free from the toils and labors, which other mothers usually endure in such circumstances. So then St. Anne received in her arms her, who was her daughter, but at the same time the most exquisite Treasure of all the universe, inferior only to God and superior to all other creatures.September 7, 1480: Our Lady of Zyrowice
The Feast of the Miraculous Descent of the Icon of Our Lady of the Pasture or of Zyrowice, at Zyrowice, a town in Eastern Poland illegally occupied and annexed to Belarus by the Soviets and Nazis by the Molotov-Ribbentrop Treaty. That icon is said to have miraculously descended from the heavens in 1480 in the sight of a group of shepherds pasturing their animals. A copy of the icon is enshrined in the Church of Saints Sergius and Bacchus in Rome. The original icon and church seems to have been destroyed by the Occupation Satanist Russian regimes of the Tsarists and Soviets.September 7, 1350: Feast of Our Lady of the Olives of Mount Roverano
Celebrates the apparitions and the miraculous blooming of olive trees, Sanctuario di Nostra Signora dell'Ulivo or Madonna di Roverano, in the hamlet of Termine di Roverano, in via Roverano, in the municipality of Borghetto di Vara in the province of La Spezia in Liguria, Italy. The religious building is located between the municipalities of Borghetto di Vara and Carrodano, among olive and chestnut groves. Our Lady appeared in 1350 to two shepherd girls near Mount Roverano, one of them being a mute from birth and who was healed and thereafter able to speak; Our Lady asked the mute to call the local parish priest who, after being informed by the shepherdess that she had been healed of her disability, immediately rushed to the mountain together with the villagers. Here the faithful found a Marian picture on an olive tree, according to what Our Lady had said; shortly thereafter, the first construction work on the sanctuary began. The first quotation describing the "Roverano chapel" dates back to a document dated 1518, on the occasion of the visit of Monsignor Philip Sauli, bishop of Brugnato.
September 7, 1528: Feast of Our Lady of the Miracle or Our Lady of Boden, Santuario della Madonna del Boden, at Boden in Ornavasso, in the province of Verbano-Cusio-Ossola in the Piedmont, Italy.
Up until the 15th century, the place of this sanctuary was known for the image of the Virgin painted on the wall, which was venerated by the locals. Before becoming a sanctuary, it was a consecrated oratory built on the ruins of a previous little chapel. The local people, speaking the Walser German dialect, had a great devotion to the icon of the chapel, Madonna della Cappelletta. Towards the middle of the 17th century, the oratory was expanded and the choir, two chapels, sacristy and a portico were added. The side naves and restored altar date back to the middle of the following century. Today the building has three naves separated by four arches. On September 7, 1528 the shepherdess Maria della Torre, who looked after the cattle entrusted to her in the woods above the Boden, fell asleep, probably due to fatigue. Waking up late at night and noting the disappearance of the cattle, the darkness and the loneliness, she invoked the Madonna. At that point Maria began to fall wrapped in a vivid light and at the end of the fall she found herself, unharmed, at the foot of the Boden chapel where her flock was waiting for her gathered. She thanked the Virgin for saving her and begged her to help her find her way home. Here the women, who were looking for her, were amazed to see her arrive bathed in light. Starting September 8, 1530, the feast of the Our Lady of Miracles or the Madonna of Boden, began being celebrated on the Nativity of Our Lady. The painting in the original chapel deteriorated over time and was later replaced with a 30 cm tall statue depicting the Coronation of the Our Lady.
September 7, 1755: Feast of the Sanctification of the Church of Our Lady of Limbach or Maria Limbach, in Limbach in Eltmann, in the Steigerwald, district of Bamberg, Lower Franconia, Bavaria.
This church is built adjacent to the Spring of Mercy, to which several miraculous cures have been attributed. Prince-Bishop Frederick Charles von Schönborn, bishop of Würzburg, ordered this church to be built after he was healed from a hip problem at the healing well of Limbach. Dedicated in the year 1755, the Pilgrimage Church Visitation of the Virgin Mary or Wallfahrtskirche Mariaheimsuchung in Limbach stands as the last major work of the architect, Balthasar Neumann . The stunning Rococo interior is complemented by the High Altar, a masterpiece completed in 1761 by the renowned sculptor Johann Peter Wagner. Eltmann is a town in the Haßberge district of Lower Franconia, in Bavaria, Germany. It lies on the south bank of the Main river, 18 km west of Bamberg. It comprises the town proper, and its outlying districts, Dippach, Eschenbach, Limbach, Lembach, Roßstadt, and Weissbrunn, as well as an industrial district. Eltmann lies within the Steigerwald. The Bundesstraße 26 passes through town, and the Autobahn 70 has an interchange adjacent to town. Eltmann receives rail service from the German national railway system, Deutsche Bahn, at the Ebelsbach-Eltmann train station.
September 7, 1921: Foundation of the Legion of Mary
The Legion of Mary was founded on September 7, 1921 at Myra House, Francis Street, in Dublin, to help the Catholic laity fulfil their baptismal promises to be able to live their dedication to the Church in an organized structure, which would be supported by fraternity and prayer, by performing the traditional Works of Mercy, both the Corporal Works of Mercy: Feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, clothe the naked, shelter the homeless, visit the imprisoned, visit the sick, bury the dead; and the Spiritual Works of Mercy: Admonish the sinner, instruct the ignorant, counsel the doubtful, comfort the sorrowful, bear wrongs patiently, forgive all injuries, pray for the living and the dead. The Legion was initially open only to women. It opened to men in 1929. Each member promises to say daily prayers, attend weekly meetings, and perform two hours of service per week. The Legion draws its inspiration from St Louis of Montfort's book True Devotion to Mary. The Legion first started out by visiting women with cancer in hospitals, but it soon became active among the most destitute, notably among Dublin prostitutes. Duff subsequently laid down the system of the Legion in the Handbook of the Legion of Mary in 1928. The image of Mary on the Legion's prayer booklet shows her succoring souls in Purgatory. The Legion soon spread around the world. At first, it was often met with mistrust because of its then-unusual dedication to lay apostolate. After Pope Pius XI praised it in 1931, the Legion had its mistrust quelled. The Legion is organized along the lines of the Roman Army. The basic unit of the Legion is called a Praesidium, which is normally based upon a parish. The Praesidium, usually a group of 3–20 members, meets weekly in its parish. The Curia is the next level, each supervising several Praesidia. The next level is the Comitium, which is in charge of several Curiae, usually over an area like a medium city or a part of a province. The next level is the Regia, which is in charge of larger territories like a province or state. The Senatus is the next level, and it generally has control over the Regiae in a very large area, usually a country or a very large territory. The Concilium is the highest level and has its seat in Dublin. It has control over the whole Legion. Each level of the Legion has the same officers: the President, the Vice-President, the Secretary, the Treasurer, and the Spiritual Director. The last is always in the clergy, but all other offices are held by the laity. All positions regardless of responsibility are voluntary and the Legion has no paid workers.- Feast of Our Lady of the Snows or Nossa Senhora das Neves, Peneda, Arcos de Valdevez, Viana do Castelo, Minho, Norte, Portugal.
- September 7, 1470: Feast of the Apparition and Miracle of Our Lady Crowned or Santa Maria Incoronata, Ancona, Marche, Italy.
- September 7, 1706: Feast of the Victory of Our Lady of Superga or Madonna di Superga, Turin, Italy.
- September 7, 1709: Feast of the Sanctification of the Chapel of Our Lady of Tredos or Notre Dame de Tredos, Riols, l'Herault, Languedoc-Roussillon, France.
- September 7, 1719: Feast of the Enshrinement of the Icon of Our Lady of the Pasture or Madonna del Pascolo, Rome.
- September 7, 1724: Feast of the Coronation of Our Lady of Purity or Madonna della Purità, Naples, Italy.
- September 7, 1771: Feast of the Coronation of Our Lady of Grace or Maria Vergine delle Grazie, Castel del Piano, Grosseto, Tuscany, Italy.
- September 7, 1919: Feast of the Coronation of Our Lady of the Tower or Madonna della Torre, Sovere, Bergamo, Lombardy, Italy.
- September 7, 1919: Feast of the Sanctification of the Chapel of Our Lady of Arla or Madonna d'Arla, Sonvico, Ticino, Switzerland.
- September 7, 1941: Feast of the Re-Dedication of the Church of Our Lady of Coudray or Notre Dame du Coudray, Bain de Bretagne, Ille et Vilaine, Brittany, France.
MARIAN CALENDAR
- + The Holy Martyrs of Benevento Saints Festus, deacon, and Desiderius, lector, in the diocese of Benevento, martyr. They are part of the larger group, the Holy Martyrs of Puteoli Saints Januarius, bishop, Festus, Desiderius, Sossius, Proculus, deacon and the laymen Eutyches, and Acutius, martyred in the Diocletianic persecution under the judge Dragontius.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Corsica Saints Paragorius, Partenopeus, Parteus and Severinus, soldiers of the Roman Empire, all natives of Noli in Italy, martyred on Corsica for being Christians.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Kosice Saints Marcus Crisin or Krizevcanin, priest of Esztergom, Stephen Pongracz and Melchior Grodziecki, Jesuit priests,
kidnapped, tortured and murdered by the Protestants led by the Satanist, traitor and apostate George I Rakoczi, Sept. 7 & 8, 1619 in Kosice in Hungary, now in Slovakia, for refusing to worship Satan and refusing to become traitors and allies of the Muslim Infidels. Beatified January 15, 1905 by Pope St Pius X. Not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
- + The Holy Martyrs of La Chapelle in Picardy in the diocese of Laon Saints Grimonia, or Germana, and Proba, virgins, martyrs. Grimonia was an Irish maiden of illustrious birth who dedicated herself as a virgin, fled her native Ireland from an arranged marriage. She was martyred in defence of her chastity in the place of her retirement in Picardy in the diocess of Laon. On the spot where she was martyred in defence of her chastity, a chapel was built for her relics. The miracles of healing that occurred there led to pilgrimages and the growth of the town called La Chapelle. In the wars in the fifteenth century her relics were translated to the abbey of Hennin Lictard, between Douay and Lens where she is honoured together with St Proba her fellow martyr. See Stilting, ad 7 Sept. p. 80.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Nagasaki Saints Thomas Tsugi or Tsuji, Jesuit priest, together with John Maki Jizaemon and his adoptive father Louis Maki Soetsu, September 7, 1627, by the Buddhists of Japan instigated by the Dutch Calvinist Satanists. Beatified May 7, 1867 by Pope Pius IX.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Rochefort Saints Claudius Barnabas Lawrence de Mascloux and Francis de Oudinot de la Boissiere, priests in the diocese of Limoges, France, martyred, murdered by the Maranos and the Maranocracy illegally occupying France, Sept. 7, 1794, at Rochefort, for refusing to become with them a Satanist and a Traitor. Not yet canonized by a Catholic Pope.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Spain Saints Anthony Bonet Sero, priest, Ascension of St Joseph Calasanz, nun, baptismal name Ascension Lloret Marcos, Felix Gomez-Pinto Pinero, priest, and Gregory Sanchez Sancho, priest, martyred, murdered by the Communist terrorists Maranos and the Maranocracy illegally occupying Spain, Sept. 7, 1396, at several different places, for refusing to worship Satan and for refusing to become Traitors. Not yet canonized by a Catholic Pope.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Troyes Saints Nemorius or Memorius, deacon, and 5 Companions, martyrs, sent by St Lupus, bishop of Troyes, to treat with Attila and the Huns but were instead martyred by the barbarians.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Tyburn Saints Ralph or Randolf or Rudolf Corby alias Corbington, Carlington, Carter, Jesuit priest and John Duckett, grandson of St James Duckett the martyr, Christian priest, martyred, murdered by the Maranos and the Maranocracy illegally occupying England, September 7, 1644 at Tyburn, London, England for refusing to become a Satanist and a Traitor. Beatified December 5, 1929 by Pope Pius XI.
- + The Holy Martyrs of Woodlark Island Saints John Baptist Mazzucconi, martyr, priest of the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions, sent as a missionary to Papua New Guinea, martyred together with Companions and others, September 7, 1855 on Woodlark Island, Milne Bay, Papua New Guinea. Not yet canonized by a Catholic Pope.
- + Saints Alchmund and Gilbert, bishops of Hexham in Northumbria, confessors. St Alcmund was consecrated to this see in 767, and passed to eternal glory on September 7, 780. St Gilbert or Tilberht or Tileberht, succeeded him in the episcopal dignity, which he held to his happy death in 789. Their eminent sanctity is celebrated by Simeon of Durham, Roger of Hoveden, the Annals of Peterborough, and other Martyrologies. The history of the translation of their relics by a canon regular of the monastery of Hexham, an eye-witness, in the middle of the twelfth century, is published by Mabillon, Act. SS. sæc. 3, part. 1, and Suysken the Bollandist, p. 117.
- + Pope St Adrian III, his birthday in the Lord at Espina Lamberti or St Caesarius on the Panar (San Cesario sul Panaro), July 8, 885, which is his feast day. His interment was today, Sept. 7, 885, at the Abbey of St Silvester at Nonantola. He was remarkable for his zeal to reconcile the Eastern churches with the Holy See. He died in the odor of sanctity, and became widely celebrated by his miracles. Pope Adrian III or Hadrian III, in Latin: Adrianus or Hadrianus was the bishop of Rome and ruler of the Papal States from May 17, 884 to his death. He served for little more than a year, during which he worked to help the people of Italy in a very troubled time of famine and war. Adrian III was born in Rome and baptized as Agapitus. Adrian laboured hard to alleviate the misery of the people of Italy, prey to famine and to continuous war. He is also known to have written a letter condemning the Christians of both Muslim-ruled and Christian-ruled parts of Spain for being too friendly with the Jews in these lands. Adrian died in July 885 at San Cesario sul Panaro near Modena while on a trip to Worms, in Germany, at the invitation of Emperor Charles the Fat, to attend an Imperial Diet called to settle the imperial succession and discuss the rising power of the Muslim Infidels. Adrian's death and subsequent burial in the church of San Silvestro Nonantola Abbey near Modena is commemorated in the sculpted reliefs (c. 1122) that frame the doorway of this church. His relics are found near the high altar, and his tomb at once became a popular place of pilgrimage. He was canonized by Pope Leo XIII in 1891.
- + St Albinus or Alpinus, bishop of Chalons. A feast of the translation of his relics is celebrated May 2.
- + St Alexander, Franciscan priest of Chieri in Italy, died in the Lord, Sept. 7, 1505.
- + St Athanasius, martyr at Aquileia.
- + St Augustalus, bishop, possibly of Arles, confessor.
- + St Balan or Balin or Balloin, an Anglo-Saxon, together with St Colman, bishop of Lindisfarne, he and his brothers Saints Gerald, Berikert and Hubritan, dissented from the Synod of Whitby's decision to adopt the Roman dating of Pascha, and so withdrew to Ireland, to a place called Tech-Saxan, or the House of the Saxons. His feasts are celebrated Sept. 3 and 7.
- + St Berengarius Bertrandi, Franciscan priest in France.
- + St Carissima, fled marriage to live as a hermitess at Albi and later as a nun at Viants, died in the Lord, Sept. 7, 505. In 1494 the bishop Louis d'Amboise had the relics of St Carissima and other local saints transported in a sarcophagus under the main altar of the cathedral of Albi.
- + St. Catherine Aliprandi was an Italian Claretian nun. Catherine was born around 1466 into a noble family, and her parents destined her to marry a rich man. Still in her thirties, she managed to convince her husband to join the Franciscan order, allowing her to enter the monastery of St. Clare in Alessandria. In 1526 she was destined, with five sisters, to found a new monastery in Asti, which took the name of the Convent of Jesus. In this convent she was the concierge, and soon became famous for the spirit of prayer, the prophecies and the miracles that the faithful attributed to her. During the siege placed on Asti by Fabrizio Maramaldo, she was instructed to pray day and night until victory was achieved on November 13, 1526. As she had prophesied, she fell victim to the plague and died September 7 1529, singing the praises of Mary, the vigil of whose nativity her companions were celebrating at that time. Her liturgical feast is fixed by Holy Mother Church for September 21.
- + St Chiaffred, also known as Godfred, Theofredus, Ciafrè, Chaffre, Teofredo, Jafredo, Jafredus, Eufredus, Jofredus, Sinfredus, Zaffredus, his name was probably Theudofridus, was a member of the Theban Legion who fled the massacre of the Legion to Piedmont but was later captured and martyred there, at Crissolo. In about 522, a man fell from a precipice near Crissolo but remained unharmed due to the intercession of St Chiaffred. His relics were translated from Crissolo to Revello in 1593, and thence to the cathedral of Saluzzo in 1642. The Theban Legion was recruited in the region of the Thebaid in Upper Egypt and composed of only Christians. Mauritius was the leader (primicerius) of the legion. Emperor Maximianus Herculeus, who ruled together with and under Emperor Diocletianus, crossed the Alps with an army that included this legion, to quell a revolt in Gaul by a people known as the Bagaudae. At the Octodurum (now Martigny / Martinach) on the Rhône River on Lake Geneva (Lac Léman), the entire army was ordered before the battle to sacrifice to the pagan gods in the traditional Roman manner to ensure military success. The Christian legion refused, and in the face of threats from Maximian, retreated to Agaunum in Wallis (now Saint-Maurice-en-Valais) in the Rhone Valley and encamped there. As a punishment and deterrent, every tenth man was executed. It had no effect, and again every tenth was executed. When the remainder stood faithful to God, the entire remnant of 6,666 soldiers was massacred. This happened in the year 287 A.D. The massacre went down in history as the triumph of the Christian conscience. Elsewhere, other members of the legion, refugees from the Massacre at Agaunum, are said to have been martyred, and local cults developed.
- + St Clodoald or Cloud, priest, confessor in the territory of Paris. Son of King Clodomir and Clotilde, and grandson of King Clovis and St Clotilda. His father died in battle when his children were still quite young. The king's sons were raised in Paris, France by their grandmother, St Clotilda, until an ambitious uncle murdered two of them in a power grab. Clodoald escaped, renounced all claims to the throne, and lived as a hermit under the tutelage of the hermit St Severinus. Clodoald later withdrew to Provence but his hermitage became a destination point for pilgrims, and he returned to Paris, where he was ordained a priest. He built the monastery of St Cloud near Paris. The town of St Cloud grew up around the monastery. Died in the Lord, Sept. 7, 560 A.D.
- + St Dunod, a regulus or petty king among the British fighting off the English invasion and colonization of his homeland, later retreated into the western parts of Britain, now Cymru or "Wales," where he became a hermit, and later abbot of Bangor.
- + St Eunan, 1st bishop of Raphoe in Ulster in Ireland. The monastery of Raphoe, founded by St Columb, and restored by St Adamnan, being converted into an episcopal see, St Eunan was appointed to govern it. He is the titular saint of the Church, and a mass for his festival on September 7 is approved by Pope Clement XII among the masses printed for the Irish churches, at Paris in 1734.
- + St Eustachius, priest in Beauvais, France, he joined the Cistercians at the abbey in St Germer de Fly, and was later elected abbot. He was sent as Apostolic legate to England by Pope Innocent III, and later, as the Apostolic legate to fight Albigensianism in southern France.
- + St Eupsychius, martyr at Caesarea in Cappadocia, in the time of the emperor Hadrianus. Accused of professing Christianity, he was cast into prison. His release following shortly after, he immediately sold his patrimony, and distributed the proceeds of it partly to the poor and partly to his accusers, whom he regarded as his benefactors. But being again arrested, under the judge Sapritius, he was lacerated, pierced through with a sword, and thus consummated his martyrdom.
- + St Evurtius, bishop of Orleans in France, he was first a subdeacon of the Roman Church, and afterwards, through the divine favor, was designated bishop of that city by a dove.
- + St Faciolus, Benedictine monk of Saint Cyprian Abbey, Poitiers, France.
- + St Goscelinus, bishop of Toul, died in the Lord, Sept. 7, 962.
- + St Gratus, bishop of Aosta, wonderworker, confessor, died in the Lord, Sept. 7, 470. A feast of the translation of his relics from the Church of St. Lawrence where he was buried, to the Church of St Ursus, is celebrated March 27.
- + St Hilduard or Hilward or Garibald, missionary in Flanders, founder-abbot of St Peter's abbey at Dickelvenne, now in Belgium.
- + St John, martyr. At Nicomedia, seeing the cruel edicts against Christians posted up in the public square, and being inflamed with an ardent faith, stretched forth his hand, took them away and tore them up. This being reported to the emperors Diocletianus and Maximianus, then residing in that city, they gave orders that he should be subjected to all kinds of torments, which the noble champion bore with such cheerfulness of spirit, as not to show on his countenance the least trace of pain or grief. Septemer 7, 303.
- + St John of Lodi, bishop of Gubbio, died in the Lord, Sept. 7, 1106.
- + St Mary of Bourbon, princess of France, Poor Clare nun at the monastery of Saints George and Clare in Amiens, France.
- + St Pamphilus, bishop of Capua, confessor.
- + St Regina, virgin, martyr, in the diocese of Autun, under the proconsul Olybrius. After having suffered imprisonment, the rack, and burning with torches, she was condemned to capital punishment, and so went to her spouse.
- + St Sozon or Sozonte, martyr, at Pompeiopolis in Cilicia, who, who smashed up a silver idol and gave the pieces to the poor to buy food, for which, being thrown into the fire, he yielded up his spirit, in the time of the emperor Maximianus.
- + St Stephen, Carthusian, bishop of Die, he is the patron saint of Chatillon des Dombes, died in the Lord, Sept. 7, 1208. Stephen was born in 1149 or 1150 A.D. in Chatillon-des-Dombes, into a noble family. As a teenager, assiduous in prayer, he already practiced fasting and abstinence. At 25 he entered the Charterhouse of Portes-en-Bugey, until he became its prior. Later, reluctantly, he accepted the dignity of bishop of Die, in southeastern France. He held the diocese for a few months, before he died in Die on September 7, of the same 1208. But already in life, during his priory in Portes, several miracles were attributed to him: the healing of a sick woman, which took place a few days before her death, the prophecy concerning the birth of the Dominican Order in 1215; the appearance of demons to the non-observant faithful. The miracles continued even after his death, to the point that in 1231 the archbishop of Vienne and other French bishops asked for his canonization. In 1557, after a survey of his remains, his body was found intact; but in 1561 the tomb was desecrated by the Huguenots, the Protestant Deformers and Satanists of France.
COLLECTIVE OF MARTYRS
COLLECTIVE OF SAINTS NOT MARTYRS
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.