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Monthly Archives: January 2013

St. Thomas Aquinas – Doctor of the Church

28 Monday Jan 2013

Posted by Brian in Saints

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saints, St. Thomas Aquinas, theology

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Thomas Aquinas is widely regarded as one of the greatest Catholic theologians. Thomas was a student in the 13th century, studying in Cologne where he rarely opened his mouth earning him the nickname “the Dumb Ox.” His teacher was Albert the Great, who realized his great capabilities. He went on to receive his doctorate in Paris and in 1266 began his masterpiece, the Summa Theologiae. Here, Thomas combined the philosophy of Aristotle and the theology of the Christian faith. The project was never finished. During Mass one day he had a mystical experience that caused him to cease writing. When asked what happened, he replied, “All that I have written seems to me like so much straw compared to what have seen and what was revealed to me.” He died three months later on March 7, 1274 at the age of forty nine. His feast day is January 28.
Source: Blessed Among Us

Here are several quotes from St. Thomas Aquinas:

“To convert somebody go and take them by the hand and guide them.”

“Wonder is the desire of knowledge.”

“The things that we love tell us what we are.”

“I would rather feel compassion than know the meaning of it. I would hope to act with compassion without thinking of personal gain.”

“We can’t have full knowledge all at once. We must start by believing; then afterwards we may be led on to master the evidence for ourselves.”
— Thomas Aquinas

Thomas Aquinas handwriting. Looks a little messy...

Thomas Aquinas handwriting. Looks a little messy…

Ask Anything – Poem by St. Thomas

‘Ask anything.’

My Lord said to me.

And my mind and heart thought deeply

for a second,

then replied with just one word,

‘When?’

God’s arms then opened up and I entered Myself.

I entered myself when I entered

Christ.

And having learned compassion

I allowed my soul

to stay.

From ‘Love Poems From God‘ by Daniel Ladinsky.

Favorite Authors of St. Thomas
Citations found in Secunda pars in the Summa Theologiae.

Augustine 1,630
Aristotle 1,546
Gregory the Great 439
Dionysius 202
Cicero 187
Jerome 178
John Damascene 168
Ambrose 151
Isidore of Seville 120
Roman Law 102
Gregory of Nyssa (actually Nemesius of Ephesus) 41
Macrobius 33
Boethius 30
Prosper of Aquitaine 19
Benedict 18
Basil 13
Plato 12
Hilary of Poiteiers 12
Bernard 9
Caesar 8
Ptolemy 1
Thanks to Canterbury Tales blog by Dr. Taylor Marshall.

Free ebooks by and about St. Thomas Aquinas

Free ebooks by and about St. Thomas Aquinas

An interesting St. Thomas Aquinas Novena . . .

St Thomas Aquinas Novena

St. John Neumann and the SJN National Shrine

05 Saturday Jan 2013

Posted by Brian in Saints, Shrines of Philadelphia, St. John Neumann

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

40 Hours Devotion, Buffalo NY, John the Evangelist Church, Philadelphia, Saint, St. John Neumann, St. Peter the Apostle Church

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Memorial of St. John Neumann, Bishop January 5.
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The National Shrine of St. John Neumann, in the spirit of the Redemptorist order, is located at St. Peter the Apostle Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

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In the lower church, under the altar are the remains of St. John Neumann in a glass reliquary. The upper church is where St. John worshiped.

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St. John was ordained in June 1836 at Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral in NYC.

Father Neumann celebrated his First Mass on Sunday, June 26. He wrote home, “Now, my dearest Jesus, I have obtained that for which my soul yearned. What I have always believed so far away, You have now given me.”
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He was assigned to the Buffalo New York region which was a boomtown in the mid and late 1830s with commerce on the Erie Canal and stagecoach routes. Father Neumann made rounds of attend to the sacramental life of about 400 families. A journal entry shows John’s concern for the German immigrants: “They have not received any schooling. They speak German poorly, and English just as poorly. The will soon have to work, and there will be no thought of religious instruction.” This thinking was the start of the Catholic Parochial school system.

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While in Williamsville New York, Father Neumann started the parish of SS’s Peter and Paul, a parish in existance today. He also taught school four hours a day and used his knowledge of botany to make medicines from local herbs.

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The Sisters of Mercy were instrumental in working with Father Neumann while in the Williamsville New York region. Several of the quotes in this article are from the Sisters research. For more info on the buffalo NY connection see http://jruthgang.wordpress.com/article/st-john-neumann-in-western-new-york-35d4f9dma4dbf-194/

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A huge accomplishment for Father Neumann is the starting of the 40 Hours Devotion, practiced worldwide in the Catholic faith.

John became the fourth bishop of Philadelphia in 1852. Bishop Neumann was in attendance for Pope Pius IX’s proclamation of the Dogma of the Immaculate Conception.

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Bishop Neumann took up residence at St. John the Evangelist parish in downtown Philadelphia. Also in the 1850’s a young Katharine Drexel received First Holy Communion at St. Johns Church. She later became founder of the Congregation of the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, and a saint – St. Katharine Drexel.

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Bishop Neumann passed away in Philadelphia while doing errands on January 5, 1860. St. John collapsed and died due to a stroke, a few blocks from Logan Street, where he was building the Basilica of St. Peter and Paul, the regional Church that stands today. He is a patron of immigrants and of sick children.

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“A man must always be ready, for death comes when and where God wills it.” – Saint John Neumann

For more information, see:

http://www.stjohnneumann.org/index.html

St. John Neumann

St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Shrine

04 Friday Jan 2013

Posted by Brian in Parish Shrines, Saints, Shrines of Philadelphia

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Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton, Shrine

building
The National Shrine of Elizabeth Ann Seton is located in Emmitsburg, Maryland, roughly two hours from Philadelphia. Her feast day is January 4th.

Picture of elizabeth ann seton
Elizabeth Ann Seton is the first American born saint, born in New York City on August 28, 1774. She was born to into an Episcopal family, her mother was the daughter of an Episcopal minister. Elizabeth Ann Bayley, (her maiden name) married William Seton and had five children. William died in 1803 leaving Elizabeth a widow. Her home in NYC is now the Shrine of Elizabeth Ann Seton.

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She converted to Catholicism and founded the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph’s, the first Catholic religious order to originate in the United States, which after her death became linked with the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul. As the name suggests the Daughters of Charity follows the rule of the Vincentian religious order. Therefore, you’ll find several miraculous medal icons on the Emmitsburg campus, influenced by the Vincentians in nearby Philadelphia, who manage the Miraculous Medal Shrine.
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There are over 200 stained glass windows at the shrine.
2012 altar cannonization celebration
Above photo from the 37th anniversary of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton’s canonization. (September 14, 1975)
For more information visit,
http://www.setonheritage.org

A forest path and a favorite rock: Our happy discovery of the stomping grounds of a saint


http://acatholicview.blogspot.com/2013/01/st-elizabeth-ann-seton.html#links

St. Basil the Great

02 Wednesday Jan 2013

Posted by Brian in Parish Shrines, Saints

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

saints, St. Basil

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St. Basil the Great, a doctor of the Church. The Georgian iconographer, Niki Chocheli from the former Soviet Republic, enlarged the saints forehead, portraying the expanded mindset of Basil.

“Everybody looks for the good, therefore everyone looks for God.” St. Basil

On this feast day of St. Basil the Great,
the Entrance Antiphon; (Cf. Sirach 44:15, 14)
“Let the peoples recount the wisdom of the Saints,
and let the Church proclaim their praise. Their names will live on and on.”

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The Cover Art

Jan Van Eyck, “The Adoration of the Lamb” 1432 from the Ghent Alterpiece. Detail: The red altar where the lamb stands reads, “Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sins of the world” and “Jesus the way, the truth, and the life”, both quotes from Gospel of John. In this image and in the book of Revelation the Lamb is Jesus. Directly around the Lamb on the altar are angels who are carrying the instruments in the Passion scenes, like the cross and crown of thorns.

gichontree

Unknown's avatarThere's beauty in sacred spaces; from the stories they tell in architecture, stained glass windows and icons; to the rituals and liturgy that arises our soul. Inside a shrine, the angels and saints praise God with us. I hope to relay the message for the kingdom, power and glory of God, now and forever.

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