Sunday, November 3, 2019

SAINT MEDRALD

St. Medrald
Medrald of Vendome,
Also known as Merald, Meraut
Feast day: February 23
Death: 850
Benedictine abbot, also called Merald and Merault. He was abbot of Vendome, France.

MARTYRS OF SIRMIUM

Martyrs of Sirmium
Died  303.
Feast day: February 23

Two groups of martyrs who suffered at Sirmium, modem Mitrovica, in the Balkans. One group was slain probably in 303 and was seventy in number. The second group was composed of seven virgins probably martyred in 303.

SAINT MARTHA

St. Martha
Martha of Astorga
Feast day: February 23
Died 252.
Virgin martyr of Spain. She was beheaded at Astorga, Spain, and her relics were enshrined in the abbey of Ribas de Sil and at Ters.


 Beautiful Spanish virgin and a true Christian, Saint Martha was beheaded for the faith in Astorga under Decius. Her relics are enshrined in the old Benedictine abbey of Ribas de Sil and at Ters, diocese of Astorga 

SAINT LAZARUS ZOGRAPHOS

St. Lazarus Zographos

Lazarus the Painter
Also known as Lazarus Zographos
Feast day: February 23
Death: 867
Monk and painter of Constantinople. He defended sacred images against the Iconoclasts.

 Saint Lazarus was a monk of Constantinople, and a skilled painter, who in the time of Theophilus (829-842), one of the iconoclast emperors, busied himself in restoring the sacred images defaced by the heretics. For this he was cruelly tormented by the emperor. Later he was restored to honor and sent as ambassador to Rome . In art, Saint Lazarus is shown with his hands burned but still painting for churches and/or restoring damaged paintings

SAINT JURMIN

St. Jurmin

Feast day: February 23
Death: 7th century
Prince of East Anglia, England, and a relative of King Anna . He is honored as a confessor, and his relics were enshrined at Bury St. Edmunds.

 Saint Jurmin was an east Anglian prince either the son or nephew of King Anna. It is more likely that he was a nephew because modern historians doubt the Anna had any sons. He may have been the son of Æthelhere, the brother and successor of Anna. His relics were laid at Blythburgh in Suffolk before being enshrined at Bury Saint Edmunds in 1095. William of Malmesbury mentions his tomb at Bury (with Botulf's) but reports that he could learn nothing more about him than that he was a brother of Saint Etheldreda

SAINT GIUDITTA VANNINI

Saint Giuditta Vannini


Born Giuditta Adelaide Agata Vannini 7 July 1859 Rome

Died 23 February 1911 (aged 51) Rome, Kingdom of Italy
Beatified 16 October 1994, Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City by Pope John Paul II
Canonized 13 October 2019, Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City by Pope Francis
Feast day 23 February


Her childhood name was Giuditta and she was born in Rome in 1859. Both her parents died within three years of one another, and Giuditta and her two siblings were left orphans.


It was at the orphanage run by the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de' Paul that she first experienced the call to religious life. In 1891, Giuditta participated in a spiritual retreat where she met Camillian Father Luigi Tezza. A few months earlier, Fr Tezza had been tasked with restoring the Camillian Tertiaries. He asked Giuditta to assist him, and she agreed.


Giuditta took the religious name of Sister Giuseppina and soon became Superior General of the new religious Congregation known as the Daughters of Saint Camillus. The new institute needed the definitive approval of the ecclesiastical authority, but Pope Leo XIII refused it twice because he had decided not to allow the foundation of new religious communities. The Congregation did receive official approved, however, in 1909.

Mother Giuseppina died in 1911 from heart disease in Rome at the age of 51. By then, the Camillians already had 156 professed religious and 16 religious houses between Europe and America. The main legacy the Foundress left her sisters was the pure and simple physical and spiritual care of the sick, exercised at home as in hospitals, leprosariums and nursing homes, both in European rehabilitation centers, and in mission countries.







The Institute of the Daughters of St. Camillus (DSC) has no other charism than the charism of St. Camillus, as is demonstrated by the first article of the Constitution of the Institute: ‘In direct transmission from St. Camillus de Lellis through the Blessed Founders, the Congregation has received from the Holy Spirit the gift of bearing witness to the always present love of Christ towards the sick, in spiritual and corporal ministry which is also exercised at risk to one’s own life’ (Const., art. 1). In essential terms, this text refers in effect to the charism that the Order of the Ministers of the Sick received as a legacy from its founder St. Camillus in faraway 1591 and which it has stewarded down the centuries and handed on to the various religious Institutes, bodies and associations that make up what we call today the Camillian Charismatic Family (CCF). Article 1 of the Constitution of the Ministers of the Sick reads: ‘The Order of the Ministers of the Sick, a living part of the Church, has received from God, through its Founder St. Camillus de Lellis, the gift of reliving the ever-present merciful love of Christ for the sick and bearing witness to it to the world’. Here it is right to emphasise with Fr. Angelo Brusco that ‘Since the sixteenth century, when St. Camillus was born and lived, until today, the charism of merciful charity towards the sick, which Camillus de Lellis received from God and handed on to the Church, has been enriched through the contributions of many important people each of whom has enriched the original design of the Founder of the Ministers of the Sick, adding to it new original nuances’

In the Camillian Charismatic Family this charism in the various Constitutions is written in golden letters because it is the inspiring source that legitimates in the eyes of the Church’s decision-making bodies their aggregation, with full rights, to the spirituality of St. Camillus. In this, the Institute of the DSC stands out in an excellent way because of its creative faithfulness to the charism of St. Camillus. The beatification of the founders (Mother Vannini, 16 October 1994; Fr. Luigi Tezza, 4 November 2001) and the imminent canonisation of Mother Vannini (13 October 2019) are nothing else but a recognition by the Church of the merits of this religious family in developing the gift that God made to the world through her. Therefore, it is the whole of the work of the founders but in particular of Mother Giuseppina Vannini that is recognised, confirmed and proposed anew to the Church and to the world as a ‘New World of Charity’, to use the happy expression of Pope Benedict XIV (Pope Benedict XIV, 1746). To use the words of Fr. Angelo once again, amongst the founding figures of a branch of Camillian spirituality ‘Giuseppina Vannini occupies a position of special importance: the first red cross of St. Camillus who after him would shine forth in Rome in the light of the Blesseds (and now of the saints), a sign of the value and the continuity of his message on which the sun never sets’. From this perspective, it appears clear that the charism and spirituality of the Blessed Vannini should be understood anew in the light of the charism and the spirituality of St. Camillus, through the mediation offered by the Camillian religious the Blessed Luigi Tezza as well’. To sum up, everything about the life and in the life of our saint proclaims, and breathes in, the charism of St. Camillus.

There is something strange about the foundation of the Institute, namely that Mother Vannini began from the outset with the idea of a foundation because this what Father Tezza wanted. It is not that Mother Vannini had first lived and practised a charism that was then recognised, as was the case with Camillus and very many other founders. But this fact does not take anything away from the heroism of the experience of Mother Vannini. Indeed, it became, in her case, an original way because God wanted it so. From the outset she had the clear idea that this was by now her true way of sanctification and, a member of the school of Fr. Tezza, she never doubted her new call.

The history of our saint provides abundant information to us about her frail state of health which in the end impeded her from giving concrete expression to her vocation in the Congregation of the Daughters of Charity of Sienna. As Sister Emilia Flocchini writes: ‘At the age of twenty-one she obtained her diploma as a nursery school teacher and asked to enter the novitiate of the Daughters of Charity of Sienna. But shortly afterwards she went back to Rome for health reasons and for a period of trial. Next year she returned to Sienna but she was then definitively discharged from the Institute because she was thought to be not suitable’ (cf. Santa Giuseppina – Giuditta Adelaide Vannini – Vergine, fondatrice).

This state of health would become the point of strength of a rich and strong experience in the foundation of her Institute. Mother Vannini became credible like St. Camillus because, like him, she experienced suffering in her own life and in the first person, and suffering in her had many faces: from the physical to the spiritual, passing by way of the moral, the human, and so forth.

She was made an orphan at a young age with the deaths of both her parents (Angelo and Annunziata) and our beloved Giuditta experienced the not very tender life of the orphanage of the Sisters of Charity despite the maternal love of those good sisters. To all of this was added the unexpected end of her experience with the Sisters of Charity, her difficult economic situation, her physical injuries, and later the wickedness that was said about her relationship with Fr. Luigi Tezza. ‘All of her work, the example that she set in caring for the sick, the very foundation of the Sisters of St. Camillus together with Luigi Tezza was accompanied by the chrism of tribulation and pain. Physical pain, a lasting heart condition, but above all else moral pain, accepted and offered with total dedication and generosity’ (from the short work Pensieri edited by Fr. Carlo Colafranceschi).

In the Rome of that epoch, can you imagine how at the age of thirty-two our Giuditta, already without parents, remained rudderless, we might say without prospects or a future? This was no joke; it was the pure and harsh reality of her life. But as Psalm 149 says the Lord protects the foreigner, the orphan and the widow because our beloved Giudetta would soon discover God’s real project for her. The Lord is great and merciful, slow to anger and full of forgiveness.



    In the short biography written by Fr. Colafranceschi we learn as follows about the circumstance that allowed the encounter of Giuditta with Fr. Luigi Tezza: ‘In December 1891 the sisters of Our Lord of the Cenaculum, resident in Via della Stamperia n. 78, every year offered a course of spiritual exercises to ladies and young ladies who spoke French. As their official preacher was suddenly not available they turned to the Camillian Father Luigi Tezza who willingly agreed. Giuditta’s spiritual director told her about this initiative and as she spoke French she joined the group without any hesitation’.

On 17 December 1891, the last day of the retreat of the encounter that Giuditta had sought, two concerns met each other and gave each other a helping hand in the name of the Lord. Fr. Luigi had the difficulty of establishing the Camillian women Tertiaries and Giuditta, with a solid human and spiritual foundation, was searching for a religious experience that could satisfy her aspirations. With the wisdom that comes from the Spirit alone, Giuditta asked for time to think about the matter when Fr. Tezza proposed to her that she should address the re-foundation of the Camillian women Tertiaries and found an Institute of a Camillian character. After praying, she went to Fr. Tezza two days later and said to Fr. Luigi: “Here I am ready to help you in your project. I am not really able to do anything. But I trust in God”. In fact, in the proposal made by Fr. Luigi and in the Camillian charism Giuditta found her pathway, a journey for her own human and Christian fulfilment, the evangelical pearl of charity, for the acquisition of which everything was worthwhile.

Indeed, we may ask ourselves: what was there that was normal in that fortuitous encounter of two souls? God was commanding events we can say only today, seeing with our own eyes the wonders of God in the lives of these two Blesseds. I am greatly moved by this and I am led to sing Psalm 123: ‘What if the Lord had not been on our side? Answer, O Israel! “If the Lord had not been on our side when our enemies attacked us…Our help comes from the Lord, who made heaven and earth”’.


From that moment everything moved swiftly. Without delaying matters, Fr. Luigi informed his superiors and obtained the authorisation of the Cardinal Vicar of Rome to proceed with this initiative. Giuditta began to live the common life with Vittorina Panetta and Emanuela Eliseo who had been prepared for this by Father Tezza. On 2 February 1892, the anniversary of the conversion of St. Camillus, in the room that was a sanctuary where that saint had died, these three women received the scapular with the red cross: this was the act when this new religious family grafted onto the Camillian trunk was born.

The thought of St. Camillus when he recommended his followers to serve the sick as a mother usually does with her sick only child was fully expressed in Vannini, her companions and very many other women. With them, we behold the typically female spirit of the charism of St. Camillus. They interpreted with their female soul the message of tenderness and compassion (cf. the message of Pope Francis to the CCF, Rome, 18 March 2019) that is intrinsic to our charism. ‘St. Camillus, in inviting his religious to serve the sick with the heart of a mother, had the insight that care for the sick must appeal to those qualities and attitudes that are typical of the ‘female soul’: receptivity, readiness to help, tenderness, welcome, a capacity for listening, insight, sensitivity in understanding situations, an aptitude for taking responsibility for other people’s problems, an inclination to offer help’ (Angelo Brusco in Camilliani/s, n. 80 Year VIII – September-October 1994). This Giuditta Vannini, her companions and the Daughters after them would put into practice every day in their care for the sick.

Another trial in the life of our beloved Giuditta was that ‘while the young Institute was developing rapidly, around Tezza malevolent insinuations gathered, with inferences as regards the Daughters of St. Camillus. Then in May 1899 Fr. Luigi Tezza was moved to France and on 3 May 1900 he received the order to leave for Peru. He obeyed with a great freedom of spirit, the freedom of one who felt that he was truly innocent. He stayed in Lima for twenty-three years which ended with him dying at peace in the Lord on 26 September 1923’.

‘The distancing of Father Tezza was a drama for Mother Giuseppina who had to take upon herself alone the burden of the nascent Institute. But she was not downcast: she had received from him what was needed to carry on. Endowed with admirable fortitude and trusting in the help of the Lord, she managed to spread the Institute in various parts of Italy, France, Belgium and Argentina. Despite her frail health, which meant that she often had fainting fits and severe headaches, the Founder did not spare herself: she visited the religious houses every year, strove to help the sisters and accompanied them with love and vigour. On 21 June 1909, after a great deal of resistance, she managed to obtain the decree of diocesan approval for the Daughters of St. Camillus. In 1910, after her final visits to all the religious houses of Italy and France, she repeated to her daughters: “Have courage! Above all else it is God who pushes things forward and not me. And then from heaven I can do more for you than I can staying in this world. When I am no longer here, believe indeed that things will be done better than they are done now”. Further purified by pain, on 23 February 1911 Mother Giuseppina gave up her soul, in peace, to God’ (cf. Emilia Flocchini).

   In essential terms, ‘we owe to Vannini what the Daughters of St. Camillus did in the care and nursing field in Rome, Cremona, Mesagne, Brescia, Rieti, Bonsecours, Monticelli d’Ongina, Caprarola and Buenos Aires. All this was done in a way that met with the satisfaction of the ecclesiastical and civil authorities, overcoming the difficulties that arose because of ideological incompatibilities with a significant number of anti-clerical representatives of the local authorities. Many women religious gave their lives in the exercise of their ministries because of the hard work and the contagion that occurred when helping people sick with typhus or tuberculosis. When browsing the pages of the first list of deaths of the Institute in which are listed many sisters who died at an early age because of their total dedication to caring for the sick, we find the spirit that animated them, the style of service with which they drew near to the sick, obtaining for them through charity great spiritual as well as physical benefits’ (

Mother Vannini established the style of the Institute in clear terms: ‘It is the way of being and acting of a woman Camillian towards the community, towards the stick and towards herself, with the heart of a mother, in any part of the world that we go, that we can be recognized as “Daughters of St. Camillus of Rome”’ (Mother Vannini). Indeed  the decree on her beatification reads as follows: ‘With a motherly heart and with supernatural wisdom she guided the Congregation so that it could be for the glory of God and service to the sick, following in this the example of St. Camillus, the teacher and model of loving and merciful dedication to suffering people…She was a lovingly near and assiduous mother with the sisters of the Congregation, the sick, the poor, sinners…concerned as she was with their spiritual and corporal salvation; and she taught the sisters to behave in the same way with kindness and without sparing themselves’


Mother Vannini before dying in the Lord at the age of only fifty-two consumed her life in this very beautiful work of generous dedication to her neighbor in need (whether sick or otherwise). This gospel message which transpires from her life is captured in a practical sense in the rules of the offices that she created for works of corporal and spiritual mercy 

Saturday, November 2, 2019

SAINT FLORENTIUS

St. Florentius
Florentius of Seville
Feast day: February 23
Death: 485
Saint martyred in Seville, Spain.

SAINT FELIX OF BRESCIA

St. Felix of Brescia

Feast day: February 23
Death: 650

The 20th bishop of Brescia,, Itlay, an ardent opponent of the Lombard Arians. He governed Brescia for more than forty years.

After Dositheus's death, Dorotheus declared that he had surpassed the rest in virtue without the practice of any extraordinary austerity.

SAINT DOSITHEUS

St. Dositheus
Dositheus of Gaza,
Feast day: February 23
Death: 530
Convert and monk at Gaza, Israel. He was a wealthy young man who visited Jerusalem, where he was baptized as a Christian. After becoming a monk, Dositheus cared for the sick until his poor health took its toll.

 Dositheus, who had spent his youth in worldly pursuits and gross ignorance of spiritual matters, went to Jerusalem out of curiosity because he had heard it mentioned so often in discourse. In Jerusalem he became so strongly affected by the sight of a picture representing hell, and by the exposition given to him about it, that he immediately forsook the world and entered a monastery at Gaza.

The abbot Seridon gave him the monastic habit and commended him to the care of a monk named Dorotheus, an experienced director. Dorotheus understood the difficulty of extreme swings of fervor and left Dositheus to his own devices regarding food, but was careful to instill in him the necessity of perfect renunciation of his own will in all things great and small.

Dositheus went from eating six pounds of bread daily to eight ounces. Thus Dorotheus proceeded with his pupil in other monastic duties and by a constant and unreserved denial of his own will, and a perfect submission to his director, he surpassed in virtue the greatest fasters of the monastery. All his actions seemed to have nothing of choice, nothing of his own will in any circumstances; the will of God alone reigned in his heart.

At the end of five years he was entrusted with the care of the sick, an office he discharged with incomparable vigilance, charity, and sweetness. The sick were comforted by the very sight of him. Dositheus himself became sick with a lung disease spitting up blood, possibly consumption, but continued to the end to deny his own will and was extremely vigilant to prevent any of its suggestions taking place in his heart, unlike most of us who when sick think we should be allowed everything.

Dositheus's poor health prevented him from fasting, and moreover he did not work any miracles; these facts scandalized his fellow monks. Nevertheless, his abbot considered him a saint, since he had completely given up his own will. Unable to do anything but pray, he asked continually, and followed, in all his devotions, the directions of his master; and when he could no longer perform his long exercises of prayer, he declared this with his ordinary simplicity to Saint Dorotheus, who said to him, "Be not uneasy, only have Jesus Christ always present in your heart."

Dositheus begged Dorotheus to pray for an early release from his sufferings. Dorotheus answered, "Have a little patience. God's mercy is near." Soon after he said to him, "Depart in peace and appear in joy before the blessed Trinity, and pray for us."

SAINT CERNEUF

St. Cerneuf
Serenus the Gardener
Also known as Cerneuf, Sirenus of Billom
Feast day: February 23
Born in Greece
Died February 23, 303.

Serenus, the Gardener, also known as Cerneuf, according to his probably fictious legend, was born in Greece. He imigrated to Sirmium (Metrovica, Yugoslavia), and was known for his gardening. He went into hiding for a time to escape a persecution of Christians that had just begun, and on his return, rebuked a lady for walking in his garden at an unseemly time. She reported to her husband that he had insulted her, and the husband, a member of the imperial guards, reported the matter to Emperor Maximian. Upon orders from the Emperor the governor investigated the matter, found Serenus innocent of insulting the woman, but while examining him, found that he was a Christian. When Serenus refused to sacrifice to pagan gods, he was beheaded


 The garden represents the continual progress of the Christian on the path of virtue. Plants reach upwards and continue growing until they reach the maturity that God has prescribed for them. All the nourishment they are given should be used to this end, any superfluous growth is a waste and a kind of disease.

So it is for Christians. Everything should carry us toward the perfection that God has ordained for us, the reason for which He made each individual. Every desire of our souls, every action should be a step toward God. When all our energies are directed toward God, we can make great progress.

The saints possessed heroic virtue because all their actions were regulated by the yearning for perfection: their meals, their studies, their conversations and visits, their business and toil. Every action had the love of God as the motive and the accomplishment of His will their only ambition. Our desire for God and tender affection for others in His name allow all our actions to be consecrated to God. A virtuous life is the sweetest, most beautiful flower we can offer to our Lord.

According to his probably fictitious legend, Saint Serenus left his home and friends in Greece to serve God in an ascetic life of celibacy, penance, and prayer. He went to Sirmium in Pannonia (Mitrovica, Yugoslavia), where he bought a garden to cultivate with his own hands. He lived on the fruits and herbs it produced.

When the persecution of Christians began in the area, Serenus hid himself for some months but later returned to his garden. One day a woman and her two daughters took a walk through his garden. When asked what she wanted, the lady replied that she particularly liked visiting it. Thinking that she was up to mischief because the Romans normally rested during this noon hour, he asked her to leave and return at a more proper time.

She took affront and wrote about it to her husband, a guard in the legion of Emperor Maximian. The husband went to the emperor to demand justice, saying, "While we are waiting on your majesty's person, our wives in distant countries are insulted." The emperor gave him a letter to take to the governor of Pannonia to enable him to obtain satisfaction and he set off for Sirmium.

Upon receiving it the governor had Serenus brought before him and questioned about the insult to the wife of an officer. Serenus could remember no insult, then he recalled the woman, "I remember that, some time ago, a lady came into my garden at an unseasonable hour, with a design, as she said, to take a walk: and I own I took the liberty to tell her it was against decency for one of her sex and quality to be abroad at such an hour."

This caused the officer to blush at his wife's action, which was too plain an indication of her wicked purpose, and he dropped his accusation against Serenus. But the governor, understanding by this answer that Serenus was a man of virtue, suspected that he might be a Christian and therefore continued to question him. Serenus admitted that he was a Christian.

"Where have you concealed yourself? And how have you avoided sacrificing to the gods?" Serenus replied, "It has pleased God to reserve me for this present time. It seemed awhile ago as if he rejected me as a stone unfit to enter his building, but he has the goodness to take me now to be placed in it; I am ready to suffer all things for his name, that I may have a part in his kingdom with his saints." For this, Serenus was sentenced to beheading.