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Saint Agatha Feb 5 breski1 | February 05, 2008Saint Agatha of Sicily (died traditionally 251) is a Christian saint. Her memorial is on 5 February. Agatha[4] was born at Catania, Sicily, and she was …More
Saint Agatha Feb 5
breski1 | February 05, 2008Saint Agatha of Sicily (died traditionally 251) is a Christian saint. Her memorial is on 5 February. Agatha[4] was born at Catania, Sicily, and she was martyred in approximately 251. She is one of seven women, excluding the Blessed Virgin Mary, commemorated by name in the Canon of the Mass.[5]
She is the patron saint of Catania, Molise, Malta, San Marino and Zamarramala, Spain. Among other things, she is also the patron of martyrs, wet nurses, fire, earthquakes, and eruptions of Mount Etna.
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Saint Agatha - February 5
We have little reliable information about this martyr, who has been honored since ancient times, and whose name is included in the canon of the Mass. Young, beautiful and rich, Agatha lived a life consecrated to God. When Decius announced the edicts against Christians, the magistrate Quinctianus tried to profit by Agatha’s sanctity; he planned to blackmail her into …More
Saint Agatha - February 5
We have little reliable information about this martyr, who has been honored since ancient times, and whose name is included in the canon of the Mass. Young, beautiful and rich, Agatha lived a life consecrated to God. When Decius announced the edicts against Christians, the magistrate Quinctianus tried to profit by Agatha’s sanctity; he planned to blackmail her into sex in exchange for not charging her. Handed over to a brothel, she refused to accept customers. After rejecting Quinctianus’s advances, she was beaten, imprisoned, tortured, her breasts were crushed and cut off. She told the judge, “Cruel man, have you forgotten your mother and the breast that nourished you, that you dare to mutilate me this way?” One version has it that Saint Peter healed her. She was then imprisoned again, then rolled on live coals; when she was near death, an earthquake stuck. In the destruction that followed, a friend of the magistrate was crushed, and the magistrate fled. Agatha thanked God for an end to her pain, and died.
Legend says that carrying her veil, taken from her tomb in Catania, in procession has averted eruptions of Mount Etna. Her intercession is reported to have saved Malta from Turkish invasion in 1551.
Born
in prison at Catania or Palermo, Sicily (sources vary)
Died
martyred c.250 at Catania, Sicily by being rolled on coals
Canonized
Pre-Congregation
Patronage
against breast cancer
mauro4321
Saint Agatha patron of Catania Sicily is also the patron Saint of Asciano (siena ) Italy> One Sicilian Virgin who perished to save her virginity!
Irapuato
FEBRUARY 5, 2011
DAILY PRAYER WITH REGNUM CHRISTI
[2]
-------------------------
RESTING IN THE LORD
February 5, 2011
Memorial of Saint Agatha, virgin and martyr
Father Alex Yeung, LC
Mark 6:30-34
The apostles gathered together with Jesus and reported all they had
done and taught. He said to them, "Come away by yourselves to a
deserted place and rest a while." People were coming and going in
great …More
FEBRUARY 5, 2011
DAILY PRAYER WITH REGNUM CHRISTI
[2]
-------------------------
RESTING IN THE LORD
February 5, 2011
Memorial of Saint Agatha, virgin and martyr
Father Alex Yeung, LC
Mark 6:30-34
The apostles gathered together with Jesus and reported all they had
done and taught. He said to them, "Come away by yourselves to a
deserted place and rest a while." People were coming and going in
great numbers, and they had no opportunity even to eat. So they went
off in the boat by themselves to a deserted place. People saw them
leaving and many came to know about it. They hastened there on foot
from all the towns and arrived at the place before them. When he
disembarked and saw the vast crowd, his heart was moved with pity for
them, for they were like sheep without a shepherd; and he began to
teach them many things.
Introductory Prayer: Lord, I believe that you are present here. You
know me through and through, and despite my weaknesses, sins and
imperfections you love me. Lord, thank you for your love. Today I
give you my mind, my heart and my will. Mold me and use me as you
wish.
Petition: Mary, obtain for me the grace to understand and live the
Christian meaning of rest.
1. A Needed Rest Jesus knows that his disciples need to rest after
returning from a long stint of missionary work. There is a need to
replenish energies — physical, mental and spiritual. It is
within God's will to put moments of physical rest into our daily
programs. Jesus tells the apostles to get away together and with him.
Physical rest, of course, is not laziness or dissipation. It is not a
place to lose the spiritual tautness of our soul towards God and his
things, or the readiness to do God's will at all times.
2. Thinking About Others Jesus teaches us that being ready to do
God's will in everything means also being always ready to serve
others. How beautiful it is when families can relax together with
each member not just selfishly thinking about myself, how much fun I
can have, or making sure everyone obeys my whims! In a culture where
"vacation" is synonymous with "loafing," Jesus reminds us that for a
Christian, relaxing and having fun are not incompatible with thinking
about and serving others. Jesus' compassionate heart was always
active, and even with rest on his mind, he was moved to give himself
to the people who needed to hear the Word of God. Is my heart like
Christ's? Am I aware of the physical and spiritual needs of my family
and friends even on my "day off"?
3. Thinking About God There is a deeper meaning to "rest": turning
all our activity to glorify God and expressing our loving dependence
on him. He commanded us to set apart one day of the week to "rest" in
him, to direct our hearts and minds to him, to offer him the fruits
of our week's work, and to receive his grace to begin another week.
Sunday must be the highlight of a Christian's week, not just because
he finds respite from his work, but because he offers all his work
-- and himself -- to God the Father during the communal celebration
of Mass, the heart of Sunday. This God-centered focus is extended
throughout the whole Sunday rest, where "daily concerns and tasks can
find their proper perspective: the material things about which we
worry give way to spiritual values; in a moment of encounter and less
pressured exchange, we see the true face of the people with whom we
live. Even the beauties of nature — too often marred by the
desire to exploit, which turns against man himself — can be
rediscovered and enjoyed to the full" (John Paul II, Dies Domini,
67).
Conversation with Christ: Lord Jesus, help me to find my true rest
in you. You are the source of all that is good. Help me to order all
my work and material things towards spiritual values. Help me make
Mass the heart of my Sunday. As well, help me use Sunday to see the
true face of my family, friends, colleagues and clients: they are
souls which you call me to love, serve, and bring closer to you.
Resolution: I will find some concrete way to prepare myself and my
family for the celebration of Sunday Mass: reflecting on the Mass
readings, organizing ourselves to arrive early to visit Jesus in the
Blessed Sacrament, doing some service of charity like visiting the
sick or elderly, etc.
meditation.regnumchristi.org
Irapuato
Saint Agatha of Sicily (died traditionally 251) is a Christian saint. Her memorial is on 5 February. Agatha[4] was born at Catania, Sicily, and she was martyred in approximately 251. She is one of seven women, excluding the Blessed Virgin Mary, commemorated by name in the Canon of the Mass.[5] She is the patron saint of Catania, Molise, Malta, San Marino and Zamarramala, Spain. Among other things,…More
Saint Agatha of Sicily (died traditionally 251) is a Christian saint. Her memorial is on 5 February. Agatha[4] was born at Catania, Sicily, and she was martyred in approximately 251. She is one of seven women, excluding the Blessed Virgin Mary, commemorated by name in the Canon of the Mass.[5] She is the patron saint of Catania, Molise, Malta, San Marino and Zamarramala, Spain. Among other things, she is also the patron of martyrs, wet nurses, fire, earthquakes, and eruptions of Mount Etna. Early cultAgatha is buried at the Badia di Sant'Agata, Catania.[6] Witnesses to her early cult,[7] aside from her mention in the Mass, are her inclusion[8] in the late 6th century Martyrologium Hieronymianum associated with the name of Jerome; the Synaxarion, the calendar of the church of Carthage, ca. 530;[9] and in one of the carmina of Venantius Fortunatus.[10] Two early churches were dedicated to her in Rome,[11] notably the Church of Sant'Agata dei Goti in via Mazzarino, a titular church with apse mosaics of ca. 460 and traces of a fresco cycle,[12] overpainted by Gismondo Cerrini in 1630. In the 6th century the church was adapted to Arian Christianity, hence its name "Saint Agatha of the Goths", and later reconsecrated by Gregory the Great, who confirmed her traditional sainthood. Agatha is also depicted in the mosaics of Sant' Apollinare Nuovo, Ravenna, where she appears, richly dressed, in the procession of female martyrs along the north wall. Her image forms an initial I in the Sacramentary of Gellone, from the end of the 8th century. [edit] Vita Martyrdom of St Agata, by Giovanni Pietro da Cemmo (1492 ca), EsineHer written legend,[13] created to support her existing cultus, comprises "straightforward accounts of interrogation, torture, resistance, and triumph which constitute some of the earliest hagiographic literature",[14] and are reflected in later recensions, the earliest surviving one being an illustrated late 10th-century passio bound into a composite volume[15] in the Bibliothèque National, originating probably in Autun, Burgundy; in its margin illustrations Magdalena Carrasco detected Carolingian or Late Antique iconographic traditions.[16] According to Jacobus de Voragine, Legenda Aurea of ca. 1288,[17] having dedicated her virginity to God,[18] Agatha, rich and noble rejected the amorous advances of the low-born Roman prefect, Quintianus;[19] she was persecuted by him for her Christian faith. She was given to Aphrodisia, the keeper of a brothel, and her nine daughters, but in response to their threats and entreaties to sacrifice to the idols and submit to Quintianus, she responded My courage and my thought be so firmly founded upon the firm stone of Jesus Christ, that for no pain it may not be changed; your words be but wind, your promises be but rain, and your menaces be as rivers that pass, and how well that all these things hurtle at the foundement of my courage, yet for that it shall not move. She attacked the Roman cult images as idols with philosophical arguments that paralleled Arnobius: And S. Agatha answered that they were no gods, but were devils that were in the idols made of marble and of wood, and overgilt. Quintianus said: Choose one of two; or do sacrifice to our gods, or thou shalt suffer pain and torments. S. Agatha said: Thou sayst that they be gods because thy wife was such a one as was Venus, thy goddess, and thou thyself as Jupiter, which was a homicide and evil. Quintianus said: It appeareth well that thou wilt suffer torments, in that thou sayst to me villainy. S. Agatha said: I marvel much that so wise a man is become such a fool, that thou sayest of them to be thy gods, whose life thou ne thy wife will follow. If they be good I would that thy life were like unto theirs; and if thou refusest their life, then art thou of one accord with me. Say then that they be evil and so foul, and forsake their living, and be not of such life as thy gods were. Among the tortures she underwent was the cutting off of her breasts. An apparition of Saint Peter cured her. After further dramatic confrontations with Quintianus, represented in a sequence of dialogues in her passio that document her fortitude and steadfast devotion, her scorned admirer eventually sentenced her to death by being rolled naked on a bed of live coals, "and anon the ground where the holy virgin was rolled on, began to tremble like an earthquake, and a part of the wall fell down upon Silvain, counsellor of Quintianus, and upon Fastion his friend, by whose counsel she had been so tormented."[20] Saint Agatha died in prison, according to the Legenda Aurea in "the year of our Lord two hundred and fifty-three in the time of Decius, the emperor of Rome." Osbern Bokenham, A Legend of Holy Women, written in the 1440s, offers some further detail.[21] Saint Agatha is often depicted iconographically carrying her excised breasts on a platter, as by Bernardino Luini's Saint Agatha (1510-15) in the Galleria Borghese, Rome, in which Agatha sweetly contemplates the breasts on a standing salver held in her hand. The shape of her amputated breasts, especially as depicted in artistic renderings, gave rise to her attribution as the patron saint of bell-founders and as the patron saint of bakers, whose loaves were blessed at her feast day. More recently, she has been venerated as patron saint of breast cancer patients. Saint Peter Healing Agatha, by the Caravaggio-follower Giovanni Lanfranco, ca 1614[edit] PatronageShe is the patron saint of Catania, Molise, and San Marino, and of Malta, because her intercession is reported to have saved Malta from Turkish invasion in 1551. [edit] FestivalsBasques have a tradition of gathering on Saint Agatha's eve (Santa Ageda bezpera in Basque) and going round the village. Homeowners can choose to hear a song about her life, accompanied by the beats of their walking sticks on the floor or a prayer for those deceased in the house. After that, the home-owner donates food to the chorus.[22] This song has varying lyrics according to the local tradition and the Basque language. An exceptional case was that of 1937, during the Spanish Civil War, when a version appeared that in the Spanish language praised the Soviet ship Komsomol, which had sunk while carrying Soviet weapons to the Second Spanish Republic. An annual festival to commemorate the life of Saint Agatha takes place in Catania, Sicily, from February 3 to 5. The festival culminates in a great all-night procession through the city for which hundreds of thousands of the city's residents turn out. [edit] See also Burial of St Agatha, by Giulio Campi, 1537Incorruptibility Santa Gadea, a church of historical importance devoted to Agatha, located in Burgos. [edit] References1.^ Commissioned by Ercole Ragone to celebrate his elevation to the cardinalate; his titular church was Sant'Agata dei Goti. 2.^ Date offered by Santo D'Arrigo, Il Martirio di Santa Agata (Catania) 1985, working back from her death in the Decian persecutions. 3.^ "St. Agatha is the patron saint against fire. Take this day to establish a fire escape plan for the family and to practice a family fire drill" Catholic Culture: living the Catholic Life" 4.^ Latinized form of Greek Αγαθη (Agathe), derived from Greek αγαθος, agathos, "good" (Behind the Name: the etymology and history of first names); Jacobus de Voragine, taking etymology in the Classical tradition, as a text for a creative excursus, made of Agatha one symbolic origin in agios, "sacred" + Theos, "God", and another in a-geos", "without Earth", virginally untainted by earthly desires ([www.fordham.edu/…/GoldenLegend-Vo… "Agatha", III.15). 5.^ Attwater, Donald; John, Catherine Rachel (1993). The Penguin Dictionary of Saints (3rd edition ed.). New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-140-51312-4. 6.^ D'Arrigo 1985, p. 15; the present rebuilding of the ancient foundation is by Giovanni Battista Vaccarini (1767). 7.^ Salvatore Romeo, S. Agata e il suo culto (1922). 8.^ as martyred at Catania, 5 February 251. 9.^ W.H. Frere, Studies in Roman Liturgy: 1. The Kalendar (London, 1930), p 94f. 10.^ Carmen VIII, 4, De Virginitate, noted by Liana De Girolami Cheney, "The Cult of Saint Agatha" Woman's Art Journal 17.1 (Spring - Summer 1996:3-9) p. 3. 11.^ Sant'Agata in via della Lugaretta, Trastevere, and Sant'Agata dei Goti, (Touring Club Italiano, Roma e dintorni [Milan, 1965], pp 444, 315). 12.^ (date in TCI, Roma e dintorni; a letter from Pope Hadrian I (died 795) to Charlemagne remarks that Gregory (died 604) ordered the church adorned with mosaics and frescos (Cheney 1996 note 5). 13.^ The texts relating to Saint Agatha are printed in Acta Sanctorum IV, February vol. I (new ed. Paris, 1863) pp 599-662 14.^ Magdalena Elizabeth Carrasco, "The early illustrated manuscript of the Passion of Saint Agatha (Paris, Bibl. Nat., MS lat. 5594)", Gesta 24 (1985), p. 20. 15.^ The volume comprising texts of various places and dates was probably compiled when it was in the collection of Jean-Baptiste Colbert from which it entered the French royal collection. 16.^ Carrasco 1985, pp 19-32. 17.^ "Agatha", III.15. 18.^ Tertullian, De virginibus velandis ("On the veiling of young women") makes the distinction between virgins of men and virgins of God, consecrated to Christ. 19.^ His name appears in the earliest tradition, represented by B.N. MS lat. 5594 20.^ The two councillors have not previously been mentioned; their appearance seems to be a remainder of Jacobus' more extensive sources. 21.^ Osbern Bokenham, (Sheila Delany, tr.) A Legend of Holy Women (University of Notre Dame) 1992, pp 157-67. 22.^ J. Etxegoien, Orhipean, Gure Herria ezagutzen (Xamar) 1996 [in Basque]. [edit] External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Agatha of Sicily Wikisource has original text related to this article: EB1911:Saint Agatha Patron Saints Index: Saint Agatha Catholic Encyclopedia: St. Agatha "St. Agatha" in Christian Iconography en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agatha_of_Sicily