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Friday, August 27, 2010

Saint Monica - August 27


Saint Monica
August 27

Saint Monica born to Christian parents around 332, was given in marriage to Patricius, a pagan, from her hometown of Tagaste in North Africa. Patricius was quite immoral and was also said to have a violent temper. He condemned Monica because of her charity and piety. Monica could have succumbed to his difficult nature and lashed back at him, but instead chose to live her life without complaint and pray for her husband’s conversion. Her persistence succeeded in bringing him to baptism. Patricius died in 371, one year after his baptism.

The oldest of Monica’s children Augustine was 17 when his father died. At the time Augustine was a student in Carthage, here he renounced the Christian faith he had been brought up in to follow the Manichean heresy. This along with Augustine’s immoral lifestyle distressed Monica, as she feared for her son’s immortal soul. She spent most of the remainder of her life praying that Augustine would return to the faith.

Wherever Augustine went, Monica followed him. It was in Milan where he went to teach grammar, that he heard the preaching of Bishop Ambose, who along with the faithful prayers of his mother Monica, led him to convert and to be baptized. Augustine went on to be not only a Bishop, but a Doctor of the Church. His feast day "God-incidentally" is the day after his mother’s.


Shortly after Augustine’s baptism, Monica told her son, “Son, nothing in this world now affords me delight. I do not know what there is now left for me to do or why I am still here, all my hopes in this world being now fulfilled.” She died shortly thereafter.

Almost all we know about St. Monica is in the writings of St. Augustine, especially his Confessions. She is the patron Saint of married women and mothers.

Saint Monica Pray for Us


Apostleship of Prayer
Fr. James Kubicki, S.J
Coincidence or "God" Incidence


For items related to the Catholic Church
please visit Lynn's Timeless Treasures .

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art
Saint Monica - Benozzo Gozzoli
Saint Monica - Luis Tristan de Esamilla
Saint Monica - Andrea del Verrocchio

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Our Lady of Knock - August 21


Our Lady of Knock
Feast Day August 21

On a typically dreary rainy evening on the western coast of Ireland, in the village of Knock, County Mayo, August 21, 1879, six days after the Feast of the Assumption, on a gabled wall of the Church of Saint John the Baptist, Our Lady appeared.

     Mary McLoughlin was first to pass the apparition, seeing what looked like figures, she thought Archdeacon Kavanagh had purchased new statues for their church. Later that evening she returned with Mary Bierne to lock up the church, and Mary Bierne noticed that the “statues” were moving, News travels fast in a small hamlet and soon others gathered.

Altogether the accounts of a small group of witnesses gave details of the apparition. The Virgin Mary, her husband St. Joseph and Saint John the Evangelist appeared three dimensional, enveloped in a bright light on the gable of Saint John the Baptist Church.

Behind them to the left of Saint John was an altar. On the altar was a cross with a lamb (a figure that represents the Lamb of God) being adored by angels with wing fluttering. Our Blessed Virgin Mary appeared life size, almost iridescent, she was deep in prayer, her eyes looking toward heaven, her hands raised to her shoulders. She stood elevated two feet off the ground, wearing a white cloak, a veil, a crown that shown brightly with what appeared to be sparkles of glittering crosses. Between her veil and the crown was a golden rose.

Saint Joseph was also wearing a white robe and stood to the Virgin’s right side, he looked aged with gray beard and hair. Saint John the Evangelist was dressed in a long robe, wore a mitre and held an open book in his left hand. All the figures moved slightly during the one apparition which lasted just two hours.  There was no verbal message, and the apparition was witnessed by approximately 15 people between the ages of 5 and 75.

The Church officially investigated Knock in 1879 and then again in 1936 and found that the witnesses were believable and there was nothing contrary to the faith revealed during the apparition. In 1936, Archbishop of Tuam approved the apparition, and since four popes have honored Knock. Pope Pius XII in 1945, Pope John XXIII on Candlemas Day in 1960, Pope Paul VI on June 6, 1974, and Pope John Paul II who made a pilgrimage to the Shrine September 30, 1979 and established the Shrine church as a Basilica.


"Our Lady of Knock, Queen of Ireland, you gave hope to your people in a time of distress and comforted them in sorrow. You have inspired countless pilgrims to pray with confidence to your Son, remembering His promise: "Ask and your shall receive, seek and you shall find." Help me to remember that we are all pilgrims on the road to heaven. Fill me with love and concern for my brothers and sisters in Christ, especially those who live with me. Comfort me when I am sick or lonely or depressed. Teach me how to take part ever more reverently in the holy Mass. Pray for me now, and at the hour of my death. Amen. Our Lady of Knock, pray for us." --Prayer to Our Lady of Knock

For rosaries and items related to Our Lady of Knock please visit Lynn's Timeless Treasures Devotional Gifts of Faith.