Saturday, November 2, 2019

National Family Caregivers Month (November)

Normally we wouldn’t pay much attention to one of these new-style secular designations (which was mentioned on The Hamilton Corner on Friday, https://afr.net/podcasts/the-hamilton-corner/2019/november/peter-rosenberger-host-of-hope-for-the-caregiver-steps-into-the-corner/).  However, it happens to coincide with a pair of great saints celebrated on November 1st, Sts Cosman and Damian, who were themselves caregivers (doctors).  Being honored also as protectors of marriage, we wished to post the life of these saints for those interested in any of these subjects:

      Saints Cosmas and Damian were natives of Asia Minor. Their father, a pagan, died while they were still quite small children. Their mother, Theodotia, raised the brothers in Christian piety. The example of their mother and the reading of holy books preserved them in chasteness of life in accord with the command of the Lord, and Cosmas and Damian grew up into righteous and virtuous men.
      Trained and having become skilled as physicians, they acquired a graced gift of the Holy Spirit – to heal by the power of prayer people's illnesses both of body and soul, and they treated even animals. With fervent love for both God and neighbour, the brothers went forth into social service. For the maladies which the brothers treated they never took payment, and they strictly observed the command of our Lord Jesus Christ: "Freely have ye received, freely in turn give" (Mt. 10: 8). The fame of Saints Cosmas and Damian spread throughout all the surrounding region, and people called them – unmercenaries.
      One time the saints were summoned to a grievously ill woman – whom all the doctors had refused to treat because of her seemingly hopeless condition. Through faith Palladia (thus was her name) and through the fervent prayer of the holy brothers, the Lord healed the deadly disease and she got up from her bed perfectly healthy and giving praise to God. In gratitude for being healed and wanting them to accept a small gift from her, Palladia went quietly to Damian. She presented him with three eggs and said: "Take this small gift in the Name of the Holy LifeCreating Trinity – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit". Hearing the Name of the Holy Trinity, the unmercenary one did not dare to refuse.
      Cosmas, however, when he learned of what had happened, became very sad. He thought that his brother had broken their strict vow. And soon approached the time when Saint Cosmas was to expire to the Lord. Dying, he gave last instructions that his brother should not be buried alongside him. After a short while Saint Damian also died. All were greatly perplexed where Saint Damian's grave should be. But through the will of God a miracle occurred: there came to the people a camel, which the saints had treated for its wildness, and it spoke with an human voice saying – that they should not doubt to put Damian alongside Cosmas – because it was not for the reward that Damian accepted the gift from the woman, but on account of the Name of God. The venerable remains of the holy brothers were buried together at Theremanea (Mesopotamia).
      Many miracles were worked upon the death of the holy unmercenaries. There lived at Theremanea, nearby the church of Cosmas and Damian, a certain man by the name of Malchos. One day in setting off on a distant journey, and leaving behind his wife all alone for what would be a long time – he prayerfully entrusted her to the heavenly protection of the holy brothers. But the enemy of the race of mankind, having taken hold over one of Malchos' friends, planned to destroy the woman. A certain while went by, and this man went to her at home and said that Malchos had sent him, – to take her to him. The woman believed him and went along. He led her to a solitary place and wanted to molest and kill her. The woman – seeing that disaster threatened her – called upon God with deep faith. Two fiercesome men then appeared, and the cunning man let go of the woman, and took to flight: he fell off a cliff! The men led the woman home. At her own home, bowing to them deeply she asked: "What name do they call you? –my rescuers, to whom I shalt be grateful to the end of my days!" "We are the servants of Christ, Cosmas and Damian" – they answered and became invisible. The woman with trembling and with joy told everyone about what had happened with her, and glorifying God she went up with tears to the icon of the holy brothers and offered up prayers of thanks for her deliverance. And from that time the holy brothers were venerated as protectors of the holiness and inviolability of Christian marriage, and as givers of harmony to conjugal life. And from ancient times their veneration spread also to Russia.


We will get a good health care system here in the South and in the other States, not when we find the perfect economic model for it, but to the extent that it is imbued with the same Spirit of which these Orthodox saints partook.

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Mr Walker Wildmon had quite a fit today on Exposing Washington (2 Nov.), calling al-Baghdadi and other Muslims ‘animals’ numerous times.  Two things to keep in mind: 

1  All men are made in the image of God.  It is a great crime for us to deny anyone their essential, God-given humanity by calling them animals.

2  Mr Wildmon and other conservatives are showing hypocrisy in dehumanizing Muslims as they decry their own demonization at the hands of Leftists:



Indeed, how can pro-lifers have any hope of convincing pro-abortionists to respect the humanity of the unborn when the pro-lifers themselves are unwilling to show respect for the humanity of fully grown Muslim men and women?

Words and rhetoric matter.  Hopefully Mr Wildmon will be more careful about how he uses both of them in the future.

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Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!

Friday, November 1, 2019

Happy Feast! - for the Saints of October


Celebrating some of the saints from the South’s Christian inheritance of various lands:

Africa:

4th – St Ammon of Egypt, he helped populate the desert with hundreds of holy monks
Shorter version
Longer version

8th – St Thais (Taisia), a repentant harlot

19th – St Varus, a military commander, and the seven teachers martyred with him in Egypt

22nd – St Lot of Egypt, one of the holy Desert Fathers

24th – St Elesbaan, Emperor of Ethiopia, he helped free the people of Arabia from persecution

24th – St Felix, a bishop who was abused and beheaded because he would not give up the sacred books to the Roman authorities for burning

Belgium/France:

3rd – St Gerard of Brogne, helped revive religious life across Belgium and France

England:

7th – St Osith, queen, nun, and martyr

10th – St Paulinus, Archbishop of York, an enlightener of that part of England and others

11th – St Ethelburg of Barking, a princess who renounced the world, became an abbess, and led many souls to holiness

12th – St Edwin, King of Northumbria and Martyr, one of England’s best kings

12th – St Wilfrid, an evangelizer of Sussex in England
Shorter version
Longer version

19th – St Frideswide, the patroness of Oxford

20th – St Acca, an active bishop of Hexham

26th – St Alfred the Great, the holy king of England, the greatest who has ever sat on that throne; he would make a fine patron saint for Dixie

26th – St Cedd, a missionary amongst the English

England/Belgium:

31st – St Foillan, an enlightener of the English and Belgian lands

England/Germany:

15th – St Thecla, one of several English nuns who helped St Boniface evangelize Germany

France:

1st – St Remigius, a great enlightener of the Franks; his baptism of King Clovis was the birth of what we know as Christian France
Shorter version
Longer version

2nd – St Leger, bishop of Autun and martyr; an exceptional man; revered throughout France

6th – St Faith, a bold and courageous martyr

9th – St Denis, an early bishop of Paris, missionary, and martyr

13th – St Gerald of Aurillac, a nobleman who used all his time and wealth to the glory of God

17th – St Anstrudis, a daughter of saints who helped guide the nuns under her care to saintliness

18th – St Justin, a brave child-martyr

20th – St Sindulf, a hermit who sanctified the French land with his life and prayers

23rd – St Romanus of Rouen, a holy archbishop who drove paganism out of his diocese, worked wonders, and did many good works

28th – St Faro of Meaux, a zealous pastor in the north of France

31st – St Quintin, from a senatorial family of Rome; he renounced his privileges and became a missionary to Amiens and a martyr; God worked many miracles through his holy relics.

France/Germany:

23rd – St Severin, a holy archpastor who was given a revelation of the glory of St Martin of Tours

Greece:

3rd – St Dionysius of Athens, one of St Paul’s converts at the Areopagus in Athens; later a bishop, missionary, and writer of several significant works of theology

4th – St Hierotheos, Bishop of Athens, another of St Paul’s converts at the Areopagus; and a martyr

26th – St Demetrios the Myrrh-Gusher, a Roman commander who became the Great Martyr and Wonderworker of Thessalonica

Ireland:

21st – St Fintan Munnu, a great evangelist in Ireland

27th – St Abban, founder of many monasteries in southern Ireland

29th – St Colman of Kilmacduagh, a beautiful ornament of the Irish Church

Ireland/Austria:

13th – St Colman, an Irishman on pilgrimage to Jerusalem, mistaken for a spy, and unjustly murdered in Stockerau, Austria (near Vienna).  Many miracles occurred through his relics, and he is now honored as one of the patron saints of Austria.

Ireland/Cornwall:
31st – St Erth, an Irishman who labored in the vineyard of Cornwall

Ireland/Scotland:

11th – St Kenneth of Aghaboe, a wonderful ascetic who labored to enlighten both Ireland and Scotland with the Gospel:

13th – St Comgan, St Kentigerna, and St Fillan; a ‘family of saints’ driven from Ireland into Scotland where they preached the Gospel to many and lived holy lives

27th – St Oran (Odhran, Otteran):  An Abbot of Meath in Ireland, he went to Scotland with St Columba and was the first to repose on Iona. His feast is kept in Ireland and he is the main patron of Waterford.

Italy:

7th – St Justina, a highly venerated martyr in Padua

New Rome:

13th – The Holy Fathers of the Seventh Ecumenical Council, which upheld the veneration of the holy icons

23rd – St Macarius the Roman, the son of a senator, he fled marriage and lived the rest of his days as a hermit in a cave

Old Rome:

5th – St Galla, a noble lady who devoted her widowhood to prayer and good works

7th – Sts Sergius and Bacchus, illustrious martyrs

12th – Sts Tarachus, Probus, and Andronicus; the questioning and tortures of these martyrs as recorded by the Roman notaries of those very days have been preserved.  The faith and courage and miracles of the martyrs is amazing to read.

19th – Sts Ptolemy, Lucius, and an Unnamed Companion, martyred for proclaiming themselves Christians

29th – St Anastasia, a nun and a brave martyr

30th – St Marcellus the Centurion and St Cassian the notary, both martyred:  the first for refusing to worship idols, the second for denouncing the death sentence given to St Marcellus

Scotland:

29th – St Kennera, a hermitess who helped sanctify Galloway

Scotland/France/Belgium:

18th - St Monon, a Scottish hermit who lived in the Ardennes in France and was murdered there.  His relics worked many miracles.

Spain:

13th – Sts Faustus, Januarius, and Martialis, three heroic martyrs in Spain; called the ‘Three Crowns of Cordoba’ by the poet Prudentius

22nd – Sts Nunilo and Alodia, martyrs; they were daughters of a Muslim father and a Christian mother during the days of Muslim rule in Spain, but would not renounce their Christian Faith, even in the face of abuse and death

Switzerland:

16th – St Gall, an apostle to the Swiss
Shorter version
Longer version

Wales:

8th – St Keyna, a princess who chose to become an hermitess

Wales/France:
22nd – St Mello, an enlightener of northern France in the area around Rouen

24th – St Maglorius, another great enlightener, in Brittany

Wales/France/Ireland:

19th – St Ethbin, a holy monk of Brittany and Ireland

Wales/Germany:

21st – St Ursula and her martyr companions; greatly venerated in Cologne, Germany.  St Ursula was the inspiration for an order of nuns, the Ursulines, who played a big part in the early life of New Orleans and continue to do so now.

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Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!