Setem-9-acem Sogglem Santam

Setem-9-acem Sogglem Santam

Page URL: https://ocaminhodossantos.blogspot.com/2021/09/setem-9-acem-sogglem-santam.html.

MAJOR AND/OR GREAT FEASTS

Our Lady of La Antigua of Seville
  1. Our Lady of La Antigua of Seville (pictured).
  2. Dedication of the Church of Our Lady of Le Puy.
  3. St. Peter Claver
  4. St. Mary Toribia La Cabeza
  5. St. Ciaran MacAntsaoir or Ciaran the Younger
  6. St Wulfhilda, abbess of Barking

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'

"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 revolts, and continues not in the doctrine of Christ, does not have God.

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.

MARIAN CALENDAR

  1. Our Lady of La Antigua

    During the siege of the city of Seville, King St. Ferdinand III of Castile prostrated himself before Our Lady of the Kings (La Virgen de los Reyes) to ask for her help in liberating Seville from the Infidels and invaders. Calling him by name, the Virgin assured him of her protection and asked that an image of her which was hidden in Seville be venerated. An angel appeared and guided him into the city to reach the main mosque inside which he was shown the wall, now transparent as crystal, which hid the image of the Virgin painted centuries earlier, just as it had been told to him by Mother Mary in her apparition. After liberating Seville, King Ferdinand III restored the former Cathedral of Seville which the Infidels had desecrated as a mosque. The miraculous image was located in a side chapel of this Cathedral of Seville. This cathedral was rebuilt in the 14th century, and the image was preserved, due to which, it becan to be called "Our Lady of the Old (Cathedral)" or Nuestra Senora da Antigua. The section of the wall on which this painting is made, weighing 18 tons, was moved to its current location after the old Cathedral of the Savior was demolished and reconstructed, moved into the New Cathedral of Our Lady of the Seat, where it is located in its own chapel.
  2. September 9: Feast of the Dedication of the Church of Our Lady of the Puy or Le Puy, in Velay, France.

    "St George, who was its 1st bishop, had marked out the site of this church, which as not built till about the year 221. The Blessed Virgin herself gave the charge of it to St Evodius, or Vosi, the 7th bishop, whom she ordered to transfer his episcopal see to Puy. St Evodius obeyed the Blessed Virgin, but when he wished to consecrate his new church, it was made known to him that the dedication of it had been performed by angels; the doors opened of themselves, the bells run of themselves, the candles were found lighted, and the holy Chrism, which the angels had used, appeared quite fresh upon the altar and the walls." (Odo Gisseus, de Virg, Anciens., book 2, c. 7, 8 and 9). On the road which passes the shrine of Our Lady of the Thorn high up in the Jura Mountains, there is the shrine of Our Lady of Puy. All crusaders passed this on their way to the Holy Land on pilgrimage to rescue the Holy Places from the hands of the Infidels. There was scarcely a knight who did not go to bid farewell to Our Lady of Puy and ask her to care for his dear ones, should he not return. Close to this shrine lived a wealthy nobleman, lord of a beautiful, spacious castle in the gorge, who offered hospitality to all while they made their devotions to the Mother of God and entrusted themselves body and soul to the Gracious Virgin Mary. Le Puy claims to be the location of the earliest vision of the Blessed Virgin after her death when she appeared to a sick woman in the first century A.D. It happened in this way: In about the year 46 St Peter sent missionaries into a land that was then known as Gaul, now France. St George of Velay was the first Bishop of that See. In about the year 70 there was a widow from Ruessium named Villa who was a new convert and became sick with a high fever. Villa prayed to the Blessed Virgin for a cure, and Mary appeared to her, asking Villa to climb Mount Anis to be healed. Villa, believing in the apparition, had her servant carry her to the place indicated. When they reached the spot, the servant set Villa down to rest upon a large rock. Villa fell asleep, and when she awoke she found she was completely cured. As the woman had slept, she saw, in a dream, a celestial female, whose dazzling robes floated like a white mist, and whose head was encircled by a crown of precious stones; this woman, of exquisite beauty, was surrounded by a retinue of angels. "Who," asked Villa, of one of the blessed spirits, "who is that queen so gracious, so noble, and so beautiful, who comes to me, a poor, sick woman, in my extreme affliction?" "It is the Mother of God," replied the angel; "she has made choice of this rock to be invoked here, and she charges you to inform her servant George of it. That you may not take the order of Heaven for a vain dream, arise, woman, you are healed." When she awoke, the woman had, in fact, no more languor or fever. Filled with gratitude, she lost no time in running to the bishop, and relating to him with her own mouth the message of the angel. It seems that the Mother of God desired that a church eventually be built there, for when Villa told Bishop George of her miraculous cure, he climbed the mount himself with some of the clergy to see the place. Arriving at the very spot, St George was startled to come upon an impossible sight. Even though it was the middle of summer, the peak of Mount Anis was inexplicably covered in snow. Then, as they marveled, a stag came from out of a thicket and stood before them, marking with his careful steps the outline of the rock upon which Villa had recently been cured. St George had a fence built around that rock to preserve the place, but it was not until a much later date that the spot became the location of a new church altar. It wasn't until the year 221, well over a century later, when the Blessed Virgin, accompanied by angels, appeared to a paralyzed woman who besought her assistance through ardent prayer. Mary told the woman to ascend Mount Anis, which she immediately did. Upon reaching the fence Saint George had erected there, the woman was instantly cured. The Mother of God appeared to the woman now to request that a church be built in her honor upon that holy ground. Pope St Callistus I gave permission for the church to be constructed, and it was St Martialis who built the church. He left there a priceless relic – one of the sandals of the Blessed Virgin Mary. When the church was completely finished the bishop went to Rome to request a solemn consecration for the church. He had not gotten far when he ran into two dignified old men, each of whom carried a gilded chest. They said the chests held precious relics brought all the way from Rome to be deposited at the new church at Mount Anis, and then told the bishop that heavenly angels had already consecrated the church. Saying so, the pair disappeared. The bishop went back to the church barefoot, and upon going inside found it brilliantly illuminated by 300 torches. The altar had only recently been anointed with oil which gave off an appealing aroma. Having been consecrated by angels, the church has never been given any other consecration, and was given the name "Church of the Angels." The location became a popular site for pilgrims on the route to Santiago de Compostella in Spain, and there was no place in France more frequented. Some of pilgrims who visited Puy include St Anthony of Padua, St Dominic, and St Vincent Ferrer, among many others. Emperor St Charlemagne visited the church in the years 772 and 800, and selected it as one of the locations for the gathering of alms to support the Pope, which monies became known as "Peter's Pence." The list of holy and great men who came as pilgrims is as impressive as the numbers of ordinary people. Pope St Leo IX declared that the Mother of God is nowhere given a more special and filial veneration, and that Notre Dame of Puy was the most illustrious shrine in France. The Bishop Adhemar de Montheil, living at Puy, was said to be the first person to take up the Crusader's Cross when Pope Urban II was preaching and encouraging the first Crusade. Acting as the Legate of the Holy See, this bishop went with the famous knight Godfrey de Bouillion on his journey to the Holy Land. Pope Urban II prayed for the success of the crusade at the church of Notre Dame de Puy on the Feast of the Assumption in the year 1095. Shortly before he left, the Bishop Adhemar de Montheil also prayed there for the liberation of the Holy Land, when overcome by a sudden inspiration rose and gave voice to a beautiful new prayer to the Blessed Virgin Mary, singing - "Salve Regina, Mater Misericordiae, vita, dulcedo et spes nostra, salve!" or "Hail, holy Queen, Mother of mercy, hail our life, our sweetness, and our hope!" This prayer used to be known as the Anthem of Puy, and was a much beloved prayer of the knights on the First Crusade addressed to Our Lady in heaven. King St Louis IX of France met with the King of Aragon at Puy in the year 1245, and in 1254 St Louis gifted the cathedral with an ebony image of Mary. The King had brought the statue back from the Holy Land, where it was known to be a statue of great antiquity. It featured the Blessed Virgin seated upon a throne and holding the Infant Jesus on her lap. In the coming years this statue was carried in procession to implore the intervention of the Blessed Virgin Mary during times of hunger, war or pestilence. The statue survived all throughout the Middle Ages, though the original image was burned by the Satanists of the falsely so-called French Revolutin in 1793. The one currently on display is a copy of the original. Le Puy observes a privileged jubilee or holy year whenever Good Friday falls on the feast of the Annunciation; the last time was in 1932. In 1860 a large statue of Our Lady of France was blessed at Le Puy; it is made of the metal of over two hundred pieces of artillery, captured by the French at Sevastopol in the Crimean War. It is about 16 meters tall and weighs about 10 tons. Before the rise of Lourdes, Le Puy, Chartres, and Liesse were the greatest Marian centers of France.

Collective of Martyrs

  1. + The Holy Martyrs Saints Rufinus and Rufinian, brothers.

  2. + The Holy Martyrs of Sabinia Saints Hyacinthus, Alexander, and Tiburtius, at Sabinia, on the outskirts of Rome.

Collective of Saints Not Martyrs

  1. + The Holy Sisters of Seville: Saints Mary of the Resurrection, Mary of Colonna, and Blessed Clemencia of the Holy Trinity, three blood sisters who became Mercedarian nuns at the Monastery of the Assumption in Seville, Spain. They died of natural causes in 1615 AD.

Translations

  1. St. Gorgonius & St. Dorotheus of Nicomedia, part of the Holy Martyrs of Nicomedia, feast Dec 28, today is the translation of their relics to Rome by order of Pope St. Gregory IV.

Individual Saints

  1. + St Audomarus or Omer, bishop of Therouanne.

  2. + St. Basura, bishop of Masil, martyred during the persecutions of Diocletian.

  3. + St Bettelin, also called Bertram & Bethelm; hermit near Croyland Abbey, confessor, disciple of St Guthlac.

  4. + St Ciaran MacAntsaoir or Ciaran the Younger or Kiaran or Kieran, abbot, founder of many monasteries in Ireland. He died in the Lord, September 9, 549.

  5. + St Corbinianus, baptized as Waldekis, after his father, but later his mother called him Corbinianus, after her own name, Corbiniana, abbot of St Germanus at Chartres, one of the Apostles of Bavaria, bishop of Freising, died in the Lord, September 8, 730; his feasts are celebrated Sept. 8, 9, and a translation of his relics on November 20.

  6. + St. Engelram, bishop of Metz.

  7. + St. Gaufrid or Walfred.

  8. + St. Gorgonius of Rome, died as a martyr at the Two Laurels cemetery, Via Labicana, Rome, Italy.

  9. + St. Mary Toribia, wife of St Isidore Labrador, she is known as Santa Maria de la Cabeza.

  10. + St Osmanna, or Osanna, original name probably Argariarga, an Irishwoman, she retired to France to live in a state of virginity. She fixed her residence in Lesser-Brittany, served God there in solitude with great fervour, and died near St Brieuc, about the seventh age. For several centuries her relics were kept in a shrine in a chapel dedicated to God under her patronage in the abbatial church of St Denis near Paris; but part of them was dispersed by the Protestant Satanists in 1567.

  11. + St Peter Claver, Jesuit, confessor, at Cartagena in New Granada, who labored with wonderful self-abnegation and great charity among the African slaves for more than forty years and baptized personally almost thirty thousand of them. He was canonized by Pope Leo XIII.

  12. + St Quiran or Ciaran, abbot of the monastery of Faile, near that of Kilwenin at Cunningham, and not far from Irwin in the county of Clydesdale, Scotland.

  13. + St Severianus the Armenian, martyr, at Sebaste in Armenia, a soldier of the emperor Licinius. For frequently visiting the Forty Martyrs whilst they were in prison, he was suspended in the air with a stone tied to his feet by order of the governor Lysias, and being scourged and torn with whips, yielded up his soul in the midst of torments.

  14. + St Straton, who ended his martyrdom for Christ by being tied to two trees and torn to pieces.

  15. + St. Valentinianus, bishop of Chur in Switzerland.

  16. + St Wilfrida or Wulfritha and Wulfthryth, abbess at Wilton. St Wilfrida was a novice at the convent of Wilton when she caught the eye of King St Edgar the Peaceful, who had been rejected by her cousin, St Wulfhilda. She became his concubine and bore his daughter, St Edith of Wilton, out of wedlock. Shortly after Edith's birth, she returned to Wilton with her child. There she took the veil at the hands of St Ethelwold. As a nun, and later as abbess, Wilfrida did penance and made ample amends for the irregularity of her liaison with Edgar.

  17. + St Wulfhilda, abbess of Barking. St Wulfhilda was raised in the abbey of Wilton. When she was a novice, King St Edgar sought her hand in marriage, but she had a vocation that was irrevocable. Her aunt, Abbess Wenfleda of Wherwell, invited the young novice to become her successor, but it was just a ploy to lure her from Wilton. When she arrived at Wherwell, she found the king waiting for her and her aunt willing to allow him to seduce her. Wulfhilda escaped through the drains despite the chaperons inside and the guards outside the convent. The king pursued her back to Wilton and caught her in the cloister, but she escaped his grasp and took refuge in the sanctuary among the altars and relics. Thereafter Edgar renounced his claim on her and took her cousin St Wilfrida as his mistress instead. Wulfhilda went on to found and serve as the first abbess of the convent of Horton in Dorsetshire. Later she was appointed abbess of the convent of Barking, which had been restored by King Edgar and endowed with several churches in Wessex towns. During this period she was credited with several miracles, including the multiplication of drinks when King Edgar, Saint Ethelwold, and a naval officer from Sandwich visited the abbey. After Edgar's death, his widowed queen, Elfrida (Aelfthryth), conspired with some of Wulfhilda's nuns, to drive her out of Barking. She retired to Horton for the next 20 years until she was recalled to Barking by King Ethelred. For the last seven years of her life, Wulfhilda served as abbess of both Horton and Barking. Goscelin wrote her vita within 60 years of her death. Besides her Dies Natalis today, other feasts celebrated are a Translation for September 2, together with the relics of Saints Hildelith and Ethelburga, as well as on March 7 and September 23 at Barking.

NOT YET BEATIFIED OR CANONIZED

  1. + St. Francis Garate Aranguren was a Spanish Catholic professed religious of the Jesuit order. Aranguren served as an nurse after receiving his qualification in 1877 and became noted for his encouragement and his tender care to the needs of students in his care. Died in the Lord, Sept. 9, 1929.

  2. + St. James Desire Laval, "Apostle of the Island of Mauritius" (Ilhe de Cerne).

  3. + St. Maria Euthymia Üffing, baptized as Emma Üffing (8 April 1914 - 9 September 1955) was a German Catholic professed religious from the Clemens Sisters, official name, Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin and Our Lady of Sorrows. Üffing worked in various German hospitals in her religious career and she also tended to ill people during World War II. She tended to foreigners who were admitted into these hospitals such as Russian and English people and was hailed as an "Angel of Love" due to her affectionate care of the patients under her care.

  4. + St. Peter Bonhomme. Pierre Bonhomme (4 July 1803 – 9 September 1861) was a French Catholic priest who exercised his pastoral mission in Cahors. He went on to establish a new religious congregation known as the Sisters of Our Lady of Calvary of Gramat, with the aim of the education of children and assistance to the poor and the handicapped. He opened schools for children and educated people about the importance of service to the poor and those who required aid. He was remembered after his death as a tireless preacher and evangelizer.

  5. + St. George Douglas, martyred September 9, 1587 in York, England.

DAMNED

  1. Joseph Volotsky — also known as Joseph of Volotsk or Joseph of Volokolamsk; secular name Ivan Sanin; died a heretic, September 9, 1515. The Apostate, Prostitute Roman Protestant sect pretends that Ivan Sanin was Canonized as a Catholic Saint by Pope Gregory XIII, in 1578, which would be in violation of the Council of Florence's Decree Cantate Domino and Pope St. Boniface VIII's Unam Sanctam, etc.; there is absolutely no evidence of this "canonization."

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.

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


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