Junh-29-acem Sogglem Santam
Junho 29, 2021
✓O Caminho dos Santos: Os Santos e festas da Dia 29 de Junho.
✓Feliz Grande Festa do Dies Natalis dos Apóstolos Santos Pedro e Paulo, sob Nero, em Roma, Pedro por Crucificação (ele pediu para ser crucificado de cabeça para baixo porque disse que não era digno de ser crucificado como Nosso Senhor), Paulo por decapitação.
✓Boas festas de Maria, Mãe dos Cristãos, sob os títulos da Nossa Senhora do Buglosa e de Linares em Córdoba!
✓ Happy Great Feast of the Dies Natalis of the Apostles Saints Peter and Paul, under Nero, at Rome, Peter by Crucifixion (he asked to be crucified upside-down as he said he was not worthy to be crucified the same as Our Lord), Paul by decapitation.
✓ Happy Feast of Our Lady of Buglose and of Linares at Cordoba!
✓June 29: Our Lady of Miracles of Buglose, Basilica of Notre-Dame de Buglose, in St Vincent de Paul, formerly Pouy, France.
«Located about 11 km from Acqs in Gascony is a shrine containing the miraculous image of Our Lady of Buglose. During the Wars of Religion, the Damned Satanist Gabriel de Montgomery and his cohorts conducted a war of terrorism against the Christians and destroyed Christian churches, shrines, monasteries, etc. attacking the village of Pouy in 1570. The statue of Our Lady was hidden in a nearby marsh, thus narrowly escaping destruction. Forgotten, she remained there for fifty years, until one day in 1620 when a peasant, who was plowing his fields with his two oxen, saw them stop to lick a rock which turned out to be the statue of the Virgin, sunk in the mud and covered by rushes. The statue was removed and placed on an improvised altar, the present chapel of Notre Dame de Buglose, known as the "chapel of miracles," at the place of its discovery. The statue was transported to the parish church of Pouy, but the oxen responsible for pulling the cart carrying the statue refused to advance further than the remains of the old destroyed church. Seeing this as a sign of the divine will, it was then decided to rebuild the sanctuary. The shrine is since then popular as a place of pilgrimage in France; now it is further renowned as the birthplace of St Vincent de Paul. The house where he was born and where he spent his boyhood is still shown. There have been many miracles at the shrine, as indeed Buglose had become known as a land of miracles. There were 19 miracles recorded in the year 1622 alone. There is a fountain near the chapel marking the place where the statue of Our Lady of Buglose was found buried. In 1623, a man named Bernard Ducassou came to the shrine seeking a cure for the seven boils that covered his left leg. He spent the entire night in prayer, and the next day bathed at the fountain. The ulcers that would not heal were suddenly closed. Due to the large number of miracles at these shrines, she is called Our Lady of Miracles.»
✓ Our Lady of Linares at Cordoba "Santuario de Nuestra Señora de Linares en Córdoba," founded by King St Ferdinand at a Muslim watchtower outside Cordoba at the time of the Liberation of Cordoba from the Muslim Infidels by the help and intercession of Our Lady, 1236. The image of Our Lady of Linares is the one King St Ferdinand carried on his horse when he conquered Cordoba.
ROMAN MARTYROLOGY
✓ At Rome, the birthday of the holy Apostles Peter and Paul, who suffered martyrdom on the same day, under the emperor Nero. Within the city the former was crucified with his dead downwards, and buried in the Vatican, near the Triumphal way, where he is venerated by the whole world. The latter was put to the sword and buried on the Ostian way, where he receives similar honors.
• The Holy Martyrs of Argenton near Bourges, St Marcellus, martyr, beheaded for the faith of Christ together with the soldier St Anastasius, June 29, 274.
• St Benedicta or Beata, virgin, martyr under Aurelian, in the territory of Sens in France. Sister of Saints Augustine of Sens and Sanctian of Sens. During the persecution of Christians in Spain by Aurelian, she fled to Sens, Gaul, which was no friendlier.
• St Cassius, bishop of Narni, of whom St. Gregory relates, that he permitted scarcely any day of his life to pass without offering the victim of propitiation to Almighty God; and he was well worthy to do it, for he distributed in alms all he possessed, and his devotion was such that abundant tears flowed from his eyes during the holy sacrifice. At last, he came to Rome on the birthday of the Apostles, as was his yearly custom, and after having solemnly celebrated Mass and given the Lord's body and the kiss of peace to all, he departed for Heaven, June 29, 558.
• St Mary, the mother of St John surnamed Mark, her Dies Natalis at Cyprus.
• St Syrius, bishop of Genoa.
OTHER SOURCES
• The Holy Martyrs of the Battle of Torvioll, Albania, June 29, 1444, victory of the Christians under King George Scanderbeg against the Muslim Infidels.
• The Holy Martyrs of Xiaoluyi, Shenzhou in Hebei, China Saints John Baptist Wu Mantang, Magdalena Du Fengju, Maria Du Tianshi, Paul Wu Anju and Paul Wu Wanshu, martyred June 29, 1900 in the Boxer Rebellion, which was incited by the Muslim Infidels of China out of envy of the growing influence of Christianity, not yet canonized by a Catholic pope.
• St Aethelwine or Elwin, bishop of Lindsey in England.
• St Ciwg ap Arawn, Ciwg Gyffes or the Confessor, son of Nyfain, the daughter of King St Brychan of Brecknock, cousin to St David of Wales, nephew of St Cadoc, Ciwg's father was Prince Aaron or Arawn ab Cynfarch Gul, the prince of Yscotlont or Prydyn in northern Wales. He established a small 'Clas,' an early monastic settlement, and began to preach throughout the area. A Clas (Welsh pl. Clasau) was a native Christian church in early medieval Wales. Unlike later Norman monasteries, which were made up of a main religious building supported by several smaller buildings, such as cloisters and kitchens, a Clas was normally a single building such as St Ciwg's. The building was normally run by a community of clergy and headed by an abod such as St Ciwg. Clasau were autonomous and were administered locally. Abbot (Abod), meaning father, is an ecclesiastical title given to the male head of a monastery in various traditions, including Christianity. Following the Norman invasion of Wales in the late 11th century, many of the Clasau of South Wales became dependencies of religious houses in England. This resulted in several sites becoming part of the Benedictine or Augustinian orders, or built upon in the following centuries by Norman churches.
• St Cocha or Cocca, nurse of St Ciaran, later abbess of Ros-Bennchuir.
• St Conuan, Bishop, of Tigh Collain, or Tigh Connain, in Cremhthanna, now Stackallan, County of Meath, Ireland.
• St Gero, bishop of Cologne, died in the Lord, June 29, 976.
• St Juliana, virgin and martyr, a daughter of King St Brychan of Brecknock, called Ilud Ferch Brychan in Cymric or Welsh.
• St Maeldoid or Moeldoid i Failbhe, mac Daire (MacDerbhdara).
• St Peter the Elder, of Tarentaise, one of the first Cistercian monks. Friend of Saints Stephen Harding, Robert of Molesme, and Bernard of Clairvaux. Founded the monastery of La Ferte in Burgundy in 1113, served as its first prior and third abbot. Founded a monastery in Tiglieto, Italy in 1120. Founded a monastery in Lucedio, Italy in 1124. Archbishop of Tarentaise, France in 1124, the first Cistercian to become a bishop. Even as bishop, he continued to live the simple life of a Cistercian monk, adding all the prayers and fasts of the Order to that of his diocesan calendar. Part of the Council of Étampes in 1130 in which he declared allegience to Pope Innocent II, rejecting Antipope Anacletus II. Among his many initiatives was that he helped found the famous Cistercian monastery Tamié (mons qui stat medius). The first documents were signed in 1132, when the rulers of the place, the Chevron brothers, gave him the Tamié Valley, which connected the Isère Valley with the valley around Lac d'Annecy. Tamié was located in the county of Savoy and the archdiocese of Tarentaise, but right on the border of the county with the diocese of Geneva. The monastery was built in a narrow pass to serve as shelter for pilgrims and travelers. For the first abbot there, he appointed a monk also named Peter, and he was to become Archbishop Peter's second successor as Saint Peter the Younger of Tarentaise (1142-74).
• St Raymond Llull, martyred by Muslim Infidels, died June 29, 1315, he was beatified by Pope Pius IX in 1847.
• Saints Salome and Judith, nuns at Oberaltaich, Bavaria.
• St William, Count of Sann, husband of St Emma of Gurk. Died June 29, 1015 in a barn in Grabern, Carinthia, while returning home from pilgrimage.
ALSO
• Henry of Ghent (c. 1217 – 29 June 1293), scholastic philosopher, known as Doctor Solemnis (the "Solemn Doctor"), and also as Henricus de Gandavo and Henricus Gandavensis.
• John Milic of Kromeriz, of Czechia, died in the Lord, June 29, 1374
OREMUS
Most Holy Mary, Mother of God, and our Mother, and all you Saints, Fathers, Mothers, Brothers, Sisters, Popes, Archbishops, Bishops, Hermits, Monks, Martyrs, Virgins, Champions and Heroes of Jesus Christ, whose feasts is today, named and unnamed, we pray to you for your intercession and guidance, lead us away from error and evil and into the Grace and Love of God, that with your assistance, we may join you in Eternity with the Living God, we make this prayer through Jesus Christ Our Lord, Who Lives and Reigns, in the Unity of the Godhead, with the Father and the Holy Ghost, one God, forever and ever, Amen.
Lúcío Mascarenhas.
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