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Saint Denis (Dionysius) of Paris (October 9)
mantheycalltom on Oct 8, 2009 October 9 is the feast day of Saint Denis (Dionysius) of Paris. This prayer is for the city of Paris.

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OCTOBER 9, 2011
DAILY PRAYER WITH REGNUM CHRISTI
THE BANQUET IS PREPARED!
Matthew 22: 1-14
Once more Jesus spoke to them in parables, saying: "The kingdom of
heaven may be compared to a king who gave a wedding banquet for his
son. He sent his slaves to call those who had been invited to the
wedding banquet, but they would not come. Again he sent other slaves,
saying, 'Tell those who have been invited: Look, I have prepared my
dinner, my oxen and my fat calves have been slaughtered, and
everything is ready; come to the wedding banquet.' But they made
light of it and went away, one to his farm, another to his business,
while the rest seized his slaves, mistreated them, and killed them.
The king was enraged. He sent his troops, destroyed those murderers,
and burned their city. Then he said to his slaves, 'The wedding is
ready, but those invited were not worthy. Go therefore into the main
streets, and invite everyone you find to the wedding banquet.' Those
slaves went out into the streets and gathered all whom they found,
both good and bad; so the wedding hall was filled with guests. But
when the king came in to see the guests, he noticed a man there who
was not wearing a wedding robe, and he said to him, 'Friend, how did
you get in here without a wedding robe?' And he was speechless. Then
the king said to the attendants, 'Bind him hand and foot, and throw
him into the outer darkness, where there will be weeping and
gnashing of teeth.' For many are called, but few are chosen."
Introductory Prayer: Lord, I believe that you are present here as I
turn to you in prayer. I trust and have confidence in your desire to
give me every grace I need to receive today. Thank you for your
love, thank you for your immense generosity toward me. I give you my
life and my love in return.
Petition: Father, help me to prepare to be received into your
heavenly kingdom.
1. A Banquet beyond Belief: In Palestine during Christ's time, few
festive celebrations rivaled any wedding banquet, let alone a royal
one. A wedding was a joyous time, the greatest moment in the lives of
the newlyweds. For a royal wedding, it was the greatest moment in the
life of the whole kingdom. With his parable of the royal wedding
banquet, Christ is giving us a sense of the heaven that he is
preparing for us. He is telling each of us, "There is nothing greater
than what I want to celebrate with you in eternity!" So if any of
our ideas of heaven include something that doesn't seem attractive or
worth-while, we haven't yet understood heaven. We should ask Christ
to give us a glimpse of the joy he wants us to have with him in
heaven.
2. Worthy Is as Worthy Does: The king sent invitations to many
people, but the response was not what he had hoped for. They rejected
his generosity, preferring their own less-than-stellar lives (one
went off to his farm, another to attend to some business) over
accepting the invitation and participating in the king's rejoicing.
Of course, none of them really deserved to be invited: They hadn't
made themselves worthy by some merit of their own. The king invited
them out of his generosity. What made them truly unworthy was their
lack of response to this generosity. Their "worthiness" was a gift
given to them freely, and it was lost only when they refused the
gift. We might ask ourselves, "Am I worthy of heaven?" If we are
honest, we realize that the answer is "No." But in Christ's eyes,
that's not the important question. The real question is, "Am I
responding to and accepting the gifts he has already extended to
me?"
3. Underdressed for the Occasion: It is embarrassing for both host
and guest when a guest arrives at an elegant banquet dressed in
shorts and a t-shirt—thinking he was going to an outdoor pig
roast or because he did not know any better. It is another situation
altogether when the guest intentionally doesn't dress up because he
doesn't care, or is presumptuous. Then the host is offended, not just
embarrassed. In this parable the king is offended because the guest
knew he needed to wear a wedding robe and chose not to. Living in
God's sanctifying grace and friendship is the wedding robe we need to
wear in order to be received into the eternal banquet. Christ is
warning us against the ultimate pride of presumption: showing up at
heaven's gate without the one thing we know we need in order to share
in Christ's joy. If we strive every day to please our Lord and to
live in his grace, we'll have our wedding gown ready for the
banquet.
Conversation with Christ: Lord Jesus, the gift of heaven you have
gained for me is beyond any merit of my own, but it shows me how
great your generosity is. How can I not but thank you? How can I not
but strive each day to respond to and accept with joyful humility all
the graces you want to give me, even when it is most difficult for
me?
Resolution:To respond to God's love today, I will accept willingly
any difficulty or hardship that comes my way.
meditation.regnumchristi.org

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Oct. 9 SAINT DIONYSIUS the AREOPAGITE
First Bishop of Athens and of Paris
and his Companions
Martyrs
(† ca. 117)
Of all the Roman missionaries sent into Gaul, Saint Dionysius or Denys the Areopagite, converted by Saint Paul in Athens, carried the Faith farthest into the west, fixing his see at Paris. France claims him as one of her greatest glories.
He was a highly educated philosopher of Greece, and one of the nine archontes or leaders of the city of Athens, a counselor, as some say, if not the Head of the Athenian senate. He was born in the year 9 of the Christian era, and had traveled to Heliopolis in Egypt to learn mathematics and astrology. There he saw for himself, in his early twenties, the eclipse of the sun contrary to all the laws of nature, which occurred at the death of the Son of God. His teachers could not explain it to him otherwise than as a sign of changes in divine matters. In his letters to Saint Polycarp he says himself that the astrologer he questioned had answered him rather by divine inspiration than by any natural knowledge. And he himself had cried out: “Either the God of nature is suffering, or the entire mechanism of the world is going to be destroyed to return to its ancient state of chaos!” Already he was being prepared for his conversion twenty years later, which is related by Saint Luke in the Acts of the Apostles, chapter seven.
Through Saint Paul, the see of Athens was established with Saint Denys as its first bishop, and this flock, which he extended through the entire region, became one of the most considerable of Greece. He made a number of journeys outside Greece and was present when the Apostles were assembled at the Dormition and glorious Assumption of the Mother of God. He wrote of Her, and he became a friend of Saint John, Her guardian. He corresponded with Saint Timothy, Saint Titus, Saint Polycarp and others of the Apostles’ successors. It appears that it was after a conversation with Saint John the Apostle that Saint Denys, already in his late sixties, determined to go to the Occident to preach to the idolaters of that region. He left Saint Publius as his successor in Athens, and departed for Rome with Eleutherius and Rusticus. Pope Saint Clement of Rome confirmed this enterprise, and added to the group at least ten more priests, all of whom are now listed among the Saints. The authors of the oriental church are steadfast in asserting, with Roman tradition, that it was Saint Denys the Areopagite, converted by Saint Paul, who was sent to Gaul. Others have thought Saint Denys was a fourth century missionary, but this theory cannot be credited, as the Bollandists explain at length.magnificat.ca/cal/engl/10-09.htm
Through him and his disciples, whom he sent to evangelize various districts, the sees of Rouen, Chartres, Evreux, Verdun, and Beauvais were established. With his two original companions, Eleutherius and Rusticus, Saint Denis went to Paris, where he built four oratories. The first baptized Christian, who received them into his house, was decapitated, denounced to a Roman official by his own pagan wife, as an accomplice of their three guests. The three missionaries were imprisoned and chained in such a way as to suffer torture, then flogged while they blessed God. Other torments were devised, but God preserved the bishop, at this time nearly 100 years old. They were finally beheaded on Montmartre; a large group of Christians, who wept on this occasion, as well as others of the city and the entire region, were also massacred. The wife of the first Parisian Christian and martyr was converted and died with the others. Their joint martyrdom occurred about the year 117.
*In a dissertation, Vol. 14.
Source: Les Petits Bollandistes: Vies des Saints, by Msgr. Paul Guérin (Bloud et Barral: Paris, 1882
magnificat.ca/cal/engl/10-09.htm

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October 9
SAINT LOUIS BERTRAND
Dominican Missionary and Preacher
(1526-1581)
magnificat.ca/cal/engl/10-09.htm
Saint Louis Bertrand was born in the year 1526, the oldest of the eight children of his good Christian parents, at Valencia in Spain. He was in every way a model of modesty and obedience, and it was foreseen that God had some particular role for him. He devoted himself to the sick in the hospitals. He desired to enter the Order of Saint Dominic, but for some time could not obtain his parents’ permission. Finally, in 1545, he became professed in the Dominican Order, then was ordained a priest in 1547 when he was only 21 years old, according to the desire of his Superiors. In 1551, at the age of twenty-five, he was made master of novices, and in this post he formed many great servants of God. It is said that despite his strictness, he was so gentle that his chastisements were more agreeable to his novices than the favors of their best friends.
In 1560, when the plague broke out in Valencia, his Superiors, not wanting to lose him, sent him elsewhere for a time; he preached with great success and was endowed with the spirit of prophecy. He continued his preaching when recalled to Valencia. In 1562 he obtained leave to embark for Carthagena in the American mission, and there converted vast multitudes to the Faith. He hoped to obtain the grace of martyrdom there, but God conserved his life. He was favored with the gift of miracles, and, after praying for the gift to be understood without an interpreter, since one of those had disappointed him seriously, he preached in his mother tongue, Spanish, but was understood by all the natives of various tribes.
In his mission at Tubera he himself baptized 10,500 Indians, without counting those his companions baptized, and obliged them to burn their idols and the sites of their detestable sacrifices. Often his gentleness charmed his worst enemies. He preached also at Capicoa and Paluato, having established missions there. He refused all remuneration; he brought down rain after a drought. He was poisoned by some pagans who had suffered a reproach, but the poison did not harm him, and the barbarians were converted by the miracle. He went to many other places, preaching and healing the sick; again he was poisoned without effect. There was no one who did not consider him a Saint, sent for the benefit of the new continent.
After seven years he returned to Spain to plead the cause of the Indians, oppressed and given bad example by his own countrymen. He was not permitted, however, to return and labor among them. He spent his remaining days preaching, laboring for the conversion of different cities, and again forming the novices of the Order at Valencia. He was elected Prior of that convent, and never had a more charitable or more zealous Superior been seen there. At length, after suffering from a long and painful illness, he was carried from the pulpit in the Cathedral at Valencia to the bed from which he never rose. He died on the day he had foretold, October 9, 1581, at the age of 55 years.
Reflection: The Saints fasted, toiled, and wept, not only for love of God, but in fear of damnation. How shall we, with our self-indulgent lives and unexamined consciences, face the judgment-seat of Christ?
Sources: Les Petits Bollandistes: Vies des Saints, by Msgr. Paul Guérin (Bloud et Barral: Paris, 1882), Vol. 12; Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints, a compilation based on Butler’s Lives of the Saints and other sources by John Gilmary Shea (Benziger Brothers: New York, 1894).

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October 9 is the feast day of Saint Denis (Dionysius) of Paris. This prayer is for the city of Paris.