What is a Saint?

In the Catholic Church, the saints are ordinary people like you and me who made it to heaven.  They’ve done nothing that you and I cannot do, if we persevere in following Jesus Christ and living our lives according to His teaching.

Catholic devotion to the saints is nothing more than respect and admiration for the memory of the deceased heroes of the Church. We honor them as men and women of heroic virtue who can serve as our role models. They were no more perfect than are we; but, at the end of their lives – and hopefully, ours – they received from Our Lord his words, “Well done, good and faithful servant.”

We also ask the saints to intercede for us.  Have you ever asked anyone to pray for you when you were having a hard time? That is how Catholics “pray to” the saints –  we pray with saints, not to them. As the Letter of James says, “The fervent prayer of a righteous person is very powerful.”

Well-known saints like those below often are remembered in a special way on particular days during the year.

JanuaryFebruaryMarchAprilMayJune
JulyAugustSeptember – OctoberNovemberDecember

This Weeks Saints

November 17
St. Ignatius of Antioch
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November 18
St. Rose Philippine Duchesne

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November 19
St. Pontianus
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November 20
St. Felix of Valois
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November 21
Presentation of Mary
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November 22
St. Cecilia
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November 23
St. Miguel Augustin Pro

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St. Elizabeth of Hungary is a patron of bakers, exiles, nursing homes, widows, lacemakers, and the homeless.

“We are made loveless by our possessions.”

— St. Elizabeth of Hungary

November 17

St. Elizabeth of Hungary

St. Elizabeth of Hungary was a 13th century princess, betrothed in infancy to Ludwig of Thuringia.  Married to him in 1221, she nevertheless led an austere and simple life, building a hospital at the foot of the mountain on which her castle stood, tending to its sick personally.  

She performed all types of charitable acts; she put herself at the service of widows, orphans, the sick, the needy. During a famine she generously distributed all the grain from her stocks, cared for lepers in one of the hospitals she established, kissed their hands and feet. For the benefit of the indigent she provided suitable lodging.

She took food to many of the poorest in the surrounding town, on a daily basis. Once when she was taking food to the poor and sick, Prince Ludwig stopped her and looked under her mantle to see what she was carrying; the food had been miraculously changed to roses. 

Upon Ludwig’s death on crusade in 1227, her husband’s enemies hounded her out of the country, seizing the goods that were her due as a widow,. She was forced into the winter cold with her three children, one a baby. Fear of her enemies kept people from aiding her. She eventually found shelter in a pig sty. In 1228, after the return of Ludwig’s allies, she made arrangements for her children and renounced the throne to become a Third Order Franciscan. She lived in a mud hut and saw to all of her meager needs by spinning. She died at the age of 24.

November 23

Bl. Miguel Pro

Miguel Agustin Pro was born into a prosperous, devout family in Guadalupe de Zacatecas, Mexico in 1891. As a young boy he was, in equal parts, intensely spiritual, charitable, and mischievous. Inspired by the example of his older sister, who joined a cloistered order, he joined the Jesuit order as a novice in Mexico in 1911.

When governmental anti-Catholicism became widespread in 1914, the Mexican novitiate were forced to disband, and he and his fellow seminarians were ordered to flee to the Jesuit house in Los Gatos, California. He was to a seminary in Granada, Spain in 1915, where he resumed his studies. He was sent to Nicaragua to teach for 4 years, and then was sent to Belgium, where he was ordained in 1925.

The next year he was allowed to return to Mexico City by his Order. Shortly after he returned, the Mexican president Calles banned all public worship. Since he was not known as a priest, he used disguises to secretly minister to the people, celebrating Mass, hearing confessions, and helping the poor; even appearing in jail dressed as a police officer to bring Eucharist to condemned Catholics.

In 1927, when a bomb was thrown at President Calles from a car formerly owned by one of his two brothers, all three brothers were arrested. Without a trial, the two older brothers were sentenced to death by a firing squad. Calles made the execution public, hoping to show the brothers dying as cowards. But Padre Pro refused the blindfold and welcomed the bullets with his arms extended in the form of a cross, a crucifix in one hand and a rosary in the other. He forgave his executioners and, before he was shot, cried out, “Viva Cristo Rey!”

After his death, 40,000 Mexicans defied the government by lining the streets as Padre Pro was carried to his gravesite, where 20,000 more witnessed his interment. he was beatified in Rome on September 25, 1988, by Pope John Paul II as a Catholic martyr, killed in odium fidei (in hatred of the faith).

“We ought to speak, shout out against injustices, with confidence and without fear. We proclaim the principles of the Church, the reign of love, without forgetting that it is also a reign of justice. “

– Miguel Agustin Pro

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