Fevreir-27-acem Sogglem Santam

Inscriçoes de Menologia para Fevreir 27 (Concannim: Aizcem festam; Portugues: Festa dos santos do dia; English: Feasts of the Saints of the day).

PRIMARY LITURGICAL FEAST OF THE DAY: St. Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows, canonized by Pope Benedict XV, 1920, & St. Leander of Seville.

Our Lady of Liberation, Nossa Senhora do Livramento, Livrant Saibinn, Our Lady of Goa, Nossa Senhora da Goa, Goencem Saibinn, our Gracious Mother, intercede with our Lord God Jesus Christ, for your & our beloved Goa, Rome of the East, overrun by, & trod down under, the jackboots of the Forces of Darkness, & lying prostrated under these visceral Enemies of God & of His beloved Goa, & our larger national homeland, the Concan, deliver us from evil, from our twin benightments, & enslavements, the Occupation, & of the Whore Church, enlarge & liberate us from our spiritual & material captivity, as you had done before, delivering Goa from the Enemies of God & of His beloved Goa, from the Forces of Darkness, the Enacim, Amalecites, Canaanites, Philistines, Ammonites, Moabites, Etc., of our time & place: Paganism, Idalcao, the Dutch, English, Marathas, Mughals, the bandit Tipoo, son of Hyder, the Bonsales & Ranes, etc. Vindicate, & restore Mother Goa, O beloved Mother of God! We make this prayer through the same Lord God Jesus Christ, thy Son, Who is, in unity with God the Father, & God the Holy Ghost, one God, forever & ever, Amen!

V.: "Deliver us from the Shaitans!"*
R.: Amen!
(*Spontaneous prayer of Christians of Ceilão in wake of Mahomettan Infidels' Terror Attacks, Bombings of Churches Easter 2019 A D.)

OUR LADY OF LIGHT: «Early in the 18th century, a Jesuit, Fr John Genovesi, lived in Palermo, Italy. At the beginning of his missionary career, he placed the souls over which he would have charge under the protection of the Blessed Mother, deciding to take with him to each of his missions an image of Mary. Not knowing which image of Our Lady to use, he consulted a pious visionary telling her to ask Our Lady what she desired. One day as this lady knelt in prayer, she beheld approaching her, the Queen of Heaven, surrounded by pomp, majesty and glory, surpassing anything else she had ever beheld in any of her visions. A torrent of light was shed from the body of the Virgin, which was so clear, that in comparison with it, the sun seemed obscure. Yet, these rays were not painful to the sight; but seemed rather directed to the heart, which they instantly penetrated and filled with sweetness. A group of seraphs hovering in the air were suspended over their Empress and held a triple crown. The virginal body was clothed in a flowing robe, whiter than the snow and more brilliant than the sun. A belt inlaid with precious stones encircled Mary’s beautiful form, and from her graceful shoulders hung a mantle of azure hue. Countless angels surrounded their Queen, but what most enchanted the contemplative soul, was the untold sweetness and grace and benignity shown in the motherly face of Mary. She radiated clemency and love. Upon her left arm she carried her Infant Son, whose divine features glowed with affability and love. Our Lady told the pious woman that she wished to be represented as she was now under the title of MOST HOLY MOTHER OF LIGHT, repeating the words three times. The Jesuit hired laborers to begin the work on the picture however, neither the pious lady nor the priest were able to direct it, and the result was that after completion, it did not answer Our Lady’s orders. Our Lady directed the woman to look at the image, and seeing the mistake, she again betook herself to prayer and asked Mary to help her. Mary appeared again, commanding the woman to supervise the work, giving directions, while Mary would aid in an invisible manner. Pleased by the finished work, Mary appeared over it, and blessed it with the sign of the cross. This wonderful treasure is now in the City of Mexico in the Cathedral of Leon, formerly known as the Jesuit Church. The back of the picture bears the authenticity and four signatures, including that of Father Genovesi, S.J. The painting was transferred from Palermo, Sicily, in 1702 A.D. and placed on the altar in Leon in 1732. The people of Leon have an innate devotion and great tenderness toward the Mother of God. In 1849 they solemnly promised before the picture to make Our Lady of Light the patroness of Leon. This promise was confirmed by Pope Pius IX; Leo XIII granted the crowning of the image of Our Lady of Light in 1902.» (From "The Woman in Orbit - A Timeless Marian Treasure," Compiled By Sr. Manetta Lamberty, S.C.C.).

ROMAN MARTYROLOGY 1914:

The Holy Martyrs of Rome, Saints Alexander, Abundius, Antigonus, and Fortunatus.

The Holy Martyrs of Alexandria, Saints Julianus, Chronion Eunus and Besas. Although Julian was so afflicted with the gout that he could neither walk, nor stand, he was taken before the judge with two servants, who carried him in a chair. One of these denied his faith, but the other, named Chronion Eunus, persevered with Julian in confessing Christ. Both were set on camels, led through the whole city, scourged, and burned alive in the presence of the people. Also Besas, a soldier, who was denounced to the judge, because he had reproved those who insulted the martyrs just mentioned. As he continued to proclaim his attachment to the faith, he was beheaded.

At Seville, in Spain, the birthday of St. Leander, bishop of that city, by whose preaching and labors, with the assistance of King Recared, the nation of the Visigoths was converted from the Arian impiety to the Catholic faith. He died in the peace of the Lord, Mar. 13, 601 A.D. but his liturgical feast is set for Feb. 27. The Whore Church of Roman Protestantism, of the Great Modernist Apostasy, which, while masquerading as the "Catholic Church," Apostatized from  Christianity, from Catholicism, Oct. 28, 1958, to teach the Apostate Heresy of Modernism, a subsection of Liberal Protestantism, & which includes within itself the Apostate Heresy of Panreligionism or Omnism, effectively & disciplinarily teaching, "All gods're one, all religions're true, one can attain to heaven through the sincere practice of any belief system," has impotently, unauthorizedly & ineffectually pretended to transfer this liturgical feast to March 13, which cannot be observed without Grave affront to the Divine Majesty, a Mortal Sin! (Link)

At Constantinople, in the time of the emperor Leo, the holy confessors Basil & Procopius, who fought courageously for the worship of holy images (iconodulia). 

At Lyons, St. Baldomer, a man of God, whose tomb is made illustrious by frequent miracles. [St. Baldomer, locksmith, later monk at the monastery of St. Justus in Lyons, France, giving away all his savings when he entered. His body was much venerated due to the many miracles it wrought; it was desecrated & destroyed by Huguenot terrorists, but an arm was rescued and is now enshrined in the Church of Saint Michael in Aiguilhe, in the Auvergne. (Link1 & Link2)]

OTHER SAINTS:

St. Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows, nee Francis Possenti, died Feb. 27, 1862 at Isola del Gran Sasso d'Italia, Teramo, Abruzzo, Italy; canonized May 13, 1920, by Pope Benedict XV. (Link)

The Holy Martyrs of the Roman Imperial province of Africa, now largely the Arab Settler-Colony called "Tunisia," Saints Dionysius & 24 Companions, their history is lost, probably due to the Vandal Arian depredations.

The Holy Martyrs of Tyburn Saints Anne Higham-Line, George Barkworth alias Mark Lambert, & Roger Filcock alias Arthur Nayler, murdered Feb. 27, 1601, at Tyburn, London, England by the traitors & apostates usurping England, for refusing to worship Satan. Not yet canonized by a Catholic Pope.

Saints Asclepius & James, two ascetics of the 5th century who had retired to the Cilician desert to live as hermits, after living as monks, for which, they had themselves immured in their own small homes.

St. Alnoth, Hermit, Martyr. «A pious neatherd (cowherd) at Weedon who bore with great patience the ill-treatment of the bailiff placed over him, & who afterwards became a hermit in a very lonely spot, where he was eventually murdered by two robbers, for which, he is honoured as a martyr; & there was some concourse of pilgrims to his tomb at Stow near Bugbrook in Northamptonshire.» (Link)

St. Archangelus of Treviglio, Franciscan friar and preacher who served over 40 years in the convent of Our Lady of Grace in the vicinity of Milan, Italy. Died in the peace of the Lord, Feb. 27, 1531 A.D.

St. Comgan or Cowan, Abbot in Glenthsen, Ireland.

St. Elisabeth of Baldrone, Camaldolese Benedictine nun at Baldrone, Italy, died Feb. 27, 1280 A.D.

St. Emmanuel of Sescalca, Bishop of Cremona from 1190 to 1195. He was a man of great culture and profound spirituality, a teacher and archdeacon of his city, and in 1290 he was elected bishop of Cremona. During his episcopate, he worked for the reform of the Church and for the promotion of peace and justice. He was loved by the people, but was also opposed by some powerful people of the city, who accused him of being too severe in his discipline, and drove him into exile. He took refuge in the Cistercian Abbey of St. Bernard at Adewerth, in Friesland, modern Netherlands, died in the peace of the Lord, Feb. 27, 1198 A.D.

St. Eucharius II, 19th Bishop of Tongeren. According to tradition, he was a son of the Count of Laon and married to a daughter of the Count of Namur, became Bishop of Tongeren in 521 A.D., as successor to St. Quirillus, although the official seat had already been moved to Maastricht in the province of Limburg before 384, but not officially until 549; the bishopric was later further translated to Liege. Died in the peace of the Lord, Feb. 27, 530 A.D. He was buried in the Basilica of St. Servaas in Maastricht.

St. Henry Willebrorts, Premonstratensian monk, appointed Zirkator (Circariarch or Circumariarch), & parish priest of Waalwijk in North Brabant, from which he was ejected by the Protestants; died in the peace of the Lord, Feb. 27, 1570 A.D.

St. Herefrith of Louth, Bishop of Lindsey in Lincolnshire, England, martyred Feb. 27, 869 A.D., by the pagan Vikings & Danes. With those of other saints his relics were translated by Ethelwold to Thorney; the record of this event describes him as bishop of Lincoln. Lincoln probably here means Lindsey (the county of Lincolnshire). Herefrith may well have been the last bishop of Lindsey before the Danes wintered at Torksey in 872–3, after which the episcopal succession ceased. At Louth there was a church of St. Herefrith mentioned in several records of the 13th–15th centuries. An ivory comb 'that was St. Herefrith's' belonged to its parish church of St James in 1486 A.D. It seems likely but not certain that this church was originally dedicated to Herefrith, but when the cult of James had increased and that of Herefrith been largely forgotten, especially as his relics were at Thorney, the dedication was changed. Feast at Thorney, Deeping, and Bury St Edmunds on Feb. 27; translation, Aug 21.

St. Hippolytus, Abbot & Bishop of a monastery in the Jura Mountains of the Lyonese region of France.

St. Honorina of Graville, martyr in France in the Roman persecutions, her shrine was destroyed by the Vikings, due to which, her history has been lost.

St. James of Valois, Mercedarian friar, joining in Paris, France. With the support of the French crown, he was sent to Algiers to ransom Christians kidnapped by Mahomettan Infidels. He ransomed kidnappees, helped the poor, performed miracles & converted many to Christianity. Died in the peace of the Lord, at the Mercedarian house of Paris, France.

St. John of Gorze or John of Lorraine, Abbot of Gorze, died Mar. 7, 974 A.D., his liturgical feast is set for Feb. 27. (Link)

St. Ladislas Bathory de Csaszar, Pauline monk & hermit in Hungary, died Feb. 27, 1456 A.D. at the Monastery of St Lawrence at Buda, now Budapest, in Hungary.

St. Luke I, Abbot of the Greek Rite Catholic Monastery of the Holy Savior in Messina, died in the peace of the Lord, Feb. 27, 1149 A.D. Luke's monastery on the "Lingua Phari," now the Punta San Ranieri, was confiscated in 1546 by Charles V, who converted it into a fort. An explosion and fire in 1549 destroyed most of the monastic structures; what remained was removed or built over in what even today is a restricted-access military site. (Link)

St. Mary of Jesus, nee Maria Carolina Philomena Deluil-Martiny, murdered, martyred, Feb. 27 1884 in La Servianne, Marseille, Provence, France. Not yet canonized by a Catholic Pope.

St. Onesima was a young Christian woman in Cologne who was arrested in around 360 A.D. & brought before the prefect of the city, accused of being a Christian, in the persecutions of Julian the Apostate. She refused to renounce the faith & was condemned to death, beheaded, & her body thrown into a river. The faithful recovered her body & buried it in Cologne. The site of her martyrdom & burial is still a place of pilgrimage today. She is venerated as the patron saint of Cologne & of virgins.

St. Thalilaeus the Epiclautus or Weeper, a 5th-century hermit for 60 years, sometimes living with no shelter but a barrel, near a pagan temple outside Gabala (Gala) in Cilicia; he witnessed to the pagans worshipping in that temple, and converted many of them to Christianity.

NOT CANONIZED:

Francisca Ana of Our Lady of Sorrows, nee Francisca-Ana Cirer-Carbonell, died Feb. 27, 1855 in Sencelles, on the island of Mallorca, in the Balearic Islands, Spain.

Joseph Tous y Soler, died Feb. 27, 1871 in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.

Mary Charity of the Love of the Holy Spirit, nee Maria Josepha Carolina Brader Zahner, died Feb. 27, 1943 in Pasto, Colombia.

DAMNED:

Gregory of Narek, Monophysite or Jacobite monk in Armenia, "equipollently canonized" by Apostasiarch Karol Wojtyla the Damned. See Council of Florence, Decree "Cantate Domino."

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