Friday, January 24, 2025

The Great Cloud of Witnesses

St. Cunegunda Read more

St. Cunegunda

St. Cunegunda (or Kinga) was daughter of King Bela IV of Hungary and Mary Lascaris, and sister of St. Margaret of Hungary and Bl. Jolenta. Reluctantly married to Boleslas II of Krakow, who was subsequently King of Poland, they both made a commitment of personal continence. Their special concern was for the poor and the sick. After her husband’s death in 1279, Cunegunda sold her personal...
Fr. Lawrence Jagdfeld, O.F.M. 97
St. Walter of Lodi Read more

St. Walter of Lodi

St. Gualtero was the only child of Aliprando and Adelazia, pious parents who were childless so long that they promised God they would devote any child of theirs to the Church. They kept their pledge, giving the boy a good education, and by age fifteen Gualtero was working as a Hospitaller friar in the San Raimondo il Palmerio hospital in Piacenza, Italy, beginning his lifelong devotion to care...
Fr. Lawrence Jagdfeld, O.F.M. 86
St. Praxedes of Rome Read more

St. Praxedes of Rome

St. Praxedes' father was Saint Pudens, a Roman senator who was a Christian convert of St. Peter, mentioned in the New Testament by St. Paul in 2 Timothy 4:21. She was the sister of Saint Pudentiana. Sabine Baring-Gould, in the entry for Saint Novatus, states that Praxedes' brothers were Saint Novatus and Saint Timothy. After her father's conversion to Christianity, Praxedes'...
Fr. Lawrence Jagdfeld, O.F.M. 69
Blessed Ángel Martínez Miquélez Read more

Blessed Ángel Martínez Miquélez

The eldest son of José Martínez Polo and Juana Miquélez, Ángel was baptized at the age of one day; his aunt and godmother, Magdalena Martínez, consecrated him to the Virgin Mary. To get work, the family moved to Argentina when Ángel was five years old, but they were forced to return to Spain two years later when things didn’t work out. The boy‘s mother died when Ángel was seven...
Fr. Lawrence Jagdfeld, O.F.M. 80
St. Epaphras of Colossae Read more

St. Epaphras of Colossae

Today the Church remembers one of the companions of St. Paul, St. Epaphras.  Epaphras was an observer of the Apostle Paul mentioned twice in the New Testament epistle of Colossians and once in the New Testament letter to Philemon. In the first instance he is described as a "fellow servant" (Colossians 1:7) of Paul in his ministry. At the end of the same letter to the Church...
Fr. Lawrence Jagdfeld, O.F.M. 70
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