Category: Saint of the Month

May Saint of the Month

Saint Florian!

St. Florian was born around 250 A.D. and was secretly a Christian in a time when the Roman emperors were   trying to eliminate Christianity throughout their realm. He was also a commander in the Roman army serving   under the Emperor Diocletian in present-day Austria. Among his duties was the organization of firefighting brigades. Saint Florian is once said to have saved a town from burning by saying a prayer and then throwing a single bucket or pitcher of water on the blaze. Despite being a firefighter, Florian and his guards were     ordered to burn Christian churches, books, and homes of Christians. Florian refused, and a high-ranking    official, Aquilius, was dispatched to investigate. When Aquilius investigated his refusal to execute Christians, Florian stated, “Tell the Emperor that I am a Christian and will suffer the same fate as the Christians.”    Aquilius then offered him a raise and promotion if he would change his mind, which Florian refused, outraging Aquilius. Florian was initially whipped, as pressure to renounce his faith and offer sacrifice to the Roman gods. He told Aquilius that he had “suffered many wounds for the Emperor” and therefore, why should he “fear a few scratches for his own beliefs?” His courage scared Aquilius, who feared that Florian would lead others to rebel and convert to Christianity.

Word reached the Emperor that he was not enforcing the ban against Christianity in his territory, and under  investigation he was found to be a Christian. The popular method of disposing of Christians in that day was to burn them to death, and it was suggested that Florian suffer the same fate. He, however, stated his intention to “climb to Heaven on the flames” of the funeral pyre being prepared for him. The soldiers decided at that point to dispose of him another way so he was tortured, then a large stone was tied around his neck and he was thrown into the Ennis River to drown. He was martyred around the year 304 A.D.

A faithful lady recovered and buried his body, which was later moved to the Augustinian Abbey of St. Florian, near current-day Linz, Austria. In 1138 some of St. Florian’s relics were given to King Casimir of Poland and the Bishop of Cracow. Since his relics arrived in Poland, he has been regarded as the patron saint of that country. Numerous miraculous occurrences have been reported both in the presence of his relics, and at the confluence of the Enns and Danube Rivers, where his martyrdom occurred.

Because of his association with fire, St. Florian is the patron saint of firefighters and chimney sweeps and has been invoked for protection from both fire and water. St. Florian…pray for us!

We celebrate Pentecost on May 20th. Here is a short little video about the sending of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. May we call on the Holy Spirit every day so that we have the courage and wisdom to say YES LORD!


SOM Club April Member Spotlight

Meet Sara!

 Sara has been part of the Club from the beginning! Her knowledge and devotion to the Saints is a real inspiration to me. Sara’s family does an amazing job in encouraging her and they spend time together researching different Saints and growing together in their knowledge and devotion of our friends in Heaven.  If there was a trivia game show about the Saints…Sara would be a champ!

Let’s meet 9 year old Sara!

Favorite Saint and why: St.Agnes of Assisi is my favorite saint because she is pretty in the saint cards I have.  I have a short book called  ‘A Story Of Saint Agnes of Assisi’ by Brother Flavius, C.S.C. that I got on the feast of Saint Nicholas.

Favorite thing about the Saint of the Month Club: My favorite thing about the Saint of the Month Club is learning about the saints. I like learning about how they died or were martyred.  I also like your paintings of the saints.

Favorite family activity? My favorite family activity is playing outside with my family, because we get to play together. We like playing Frisbee together. 

 Please join me this month in praying for Sara and her family. May they continue to be open to the gift of grace and a lifelong friendship with the Saints.  May the Holy Spirit guide us all in a greater knowledge of the Saints and help us to remember to call on them in our times of struggle. -Amen!

Saint Agnes of Assisi, Saint Catherine of Siena…pray for us!


How to plant a St. Catherine of Siena Devotional Garden

 

Part 1/ Planting the Seeds of Faith

Talking with a friend last spring she mentioned that she was working a her ‘Mary Garden’ and explained that this was a devotional garden which used certain plants to represent different virtues of Mary and prayers you may need. WHAT! Why had I not heard of this? Oh wait, Im still a baby Catholic, only 9years young. Well this baby Catholic went to Pinterest and I was instantly hooked!

So this spring I wanted to do my own devotional garden, and I thought this would be a fun project to do with my Saint of the Month friends. Since Saint Catherine of Siena happens to be one of my favorite Saints, this was the perfect way for me to honor her and grow in virtue… get it? GROW in virtue!

I have never started plants from seeds, but have always wanted to try it. I reflected on St. Catherine’s life and remembered the mustard seed parable in the bible.

Matthew 13:31-32Another parable he put before them, saying, “The kingdom of heaven is like a grain of mustard seed which a man took and sowed in his field;  it is the smallest of all seeds, but when it has grown it is the greatest of shrubs and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and make nests in its branches.”

 Due to our baptism, God has planted this “seed” of faith in all of us. How and when will our faith grow? Will our faith extend outside of ourselves and grow as big a tree? Can our faith offer refuge to others? YES! This seed of faith is a great gift from God and it can’t help but grow as long as we nurture this gift. St. Catherine of Siena nurtured this seed of faith by spending time in prayer and growing in friendship with Jesus. Much like the seeds I will plant for her devotional garden, they need the Son.

I choose 4 different plants for Saint Catherine’s garden. Each flower represents a part of Saint Catherine’s life and how she cooperated with God’s grace, this gift of faith.

  • Heavenly Blue= represents her Mystical Marriage to Jesus. How Jesus came to her with the blessed Mother at His side and placed a ring, brought down from Heaven, onto St. Catherine’s finger.
  • Cosmos= represents the Divine Intervention she received by her  mystical visions of Saints. She was visited by Jesus, the Blessed Mother, Mary Magdalene (her spiritual mother), Saint Dominic ( who convinced her to join the Sisters of Penitence of Saint Dominic’s Third Order and also one of her favorite Saints), Saint Peter, Saint Paul, Saint John, St. David, .
  • Marigold= represents St. Catherine’s love and devotion to Jesus and the Blessed Mother.
  • Forget-Me-Not= represents St. Catherine as Doctor of the Church. Her zeal for God, the Church and her teachings converted many people, including political leaders. She is only 1 of 4 female Doctors of the Church, which is why I only choose 4 different plant varieties.

Excited to get this project going, I wanted to support Saint of the Month members in their seed growing efforts and devotion of St. Catherine by offering them a Devotional Garden Kit in their April Saint of the Month Box.

(click on photos 2 x to see larger view)

Some extra supplies you may want on hand to make the most out of your Devotional Garden Kit.

craft paint, scissors, tacky or white school glue, paint brush and cup of water for the paint.

 

Take some time to get your craft on and decorate your plant markers.

Before planting a seed, we must prepare the soil. Kinda like how God prepares our soul for the seed of faith through baptism.

Soak the soil pods in water for 10 minutes.

Be sure to offer your seeds all that they need to grow. Proper sun light, temperature above 50 degrees and water ( but don’t drown your seed, just keep it moist).

Part 2 of growing a St Catherine of Siena devotional garden coming soon. Patience is a virtue…see it’s already helping me to grow!


SOM Club March Member Spotlight

Meet the Teipen FamilyThis amazing family is shining in our March Spotlight!

Let’s meet em’!

Faustina is 9yrs old and her favorite Saint is Mary! Why? Because she is the Mother of God of course:) Faustina enjoys making the activities that comes in the Saint of the Month box each month.

Augustine is up next and he is 11yrs old. His favorite thing about the SOM Club was the activities sent during the Christmas months because our family worked on it together.  Augustine’s favorite Saint is   St Therese because she was called the Little Flower. She did a lot of little things that helped others.

Ave Maria  is 7 years old and her favorite Saint is also St. Therese of Lisieux because she was a nun. Ave Maria enjoys the Saint Story each month, along with the coloring page.

Ignatius is the little guy, and he is 3 yrs old and wanted in the picture also. He is a sweet saint in the making!

Finally meet John Paul…any guesses who his favorite Saint is?! You got it! Saint JP the Great!

Please join me this month by adding the entire Teipen family and their intentions to your prayer list. May the love of Christ continue to inspire them as they answer the call to service and sainthood, just like their namesakes.

Blessed Mother, St. Faustina, St. Augustine, St. Ignatius,

St. Therese and St. John Paul…

pray for them! 


March Saint of the Month

Saint Thomas Aquinas!

Thomas was the son of the Count of Aquino and was born in the family castle in Lombardy near Naples, Italy.    Thomas was one of nine children and was very intelligent, but he never boasted about it. He knew that his mind was a gift from God. His parents hoped that he would become a Benedictine abbot some day. Thomas was sent to the abbey for schooling when he was five and he was educated by the Benedictine monks there. When he was eighteen, he went to the University of Naples to finish his studies. There he met a new group of religious men called the Order of Preachers. Their founder, St. Dominic, was still living. Thomas knew he wanted to become a priest and felt that he was called to join these men. So he secretly joined the Dominican order in 1244. His parents were angry with him. When he was on his way to Paris to study, his brothers kidnapped him and kept him a prisoner in one of their castles for over a year. During that time, they did all they could to make him change his mind.

One of his sisters, too, came to convince him to give up his vocation. But Thomas spoke so beautifully about the joy of serving God that she changed her mind. She decided to give her life to God as a nun. After fifteen months, when Thomas’ mother realized she could not sway her son, she tried to preserve the family name by arranging for his escape through a window. She believed a secret escape was better than appearing to accept his decision. Thomas was finally allowed to openly follow his call to the priesthood.

St. Thomas wrote so well about God that people all over the world have used his books for hundreds of years. His explanations about God and the faith came from Thomas’ great love for God. He writings touched the hearts of people because he was not trying to impress anyone. He just wanted with all his heart to offer the gift of his life to Jesus and the Church. One day, Thomas was praying before the Crucifix in the early morning in the chapel of St Nicholas in Naples, Domenico da Caserta, the church sacristan, overheard a conversation. Thomas was anxiously asking whether what he had written on the mysteries of the Christian faith was correct. And the Crucified One answered him: “You have spoken well of me, Thomas. What is your reward to be?”. And the answer Thomas gave him was what we too, friends and disciples of Jesus, always want to tell him: “Nothing but Yourself, Lord!”

St. Thomas is one of the greatest Doctors of the Church and is considered the universal patron of universities, colleges, and schools. Around the end of 1273, Pope Gregory X asked Thomas to be part of an important Church meeting called the Council of Lyons. While traveling to the meeting, Thomas became ill. He had to stop at a monastery at Fossanova, Italy, where he died after receiving Last Rites. It was March 7, 1274. He was only forty-nine. His original feast day was March 7, the day of his death, but because the date often falls within Lent, in 1969, a revision of the Roman Calendar changed his feast day to January 28, the date his relics were moved to Toulouse.  St Thomas…pray for us!

Learn more about this holy Saint by watching this short story…

 


SOM Club February Member Spotlight

Meet Emarie!

This sweet girl is our February Member Spotlight!

Emarie is 6 years old and has been apart of the Saint of the Month Club since the beginning, in fact, it was her uber creative mom, who inspired me to start this little Saint Club.

As you can see from the photo, Emarie is DAR-LING! And judging by her favorite Saint, Saint Kateri, she’s got a little spunk in her too. She likes St. Kateri because she is brave.

Emarie’s favorite part of the SOM Club are the crafts and coloring pages she gets each month, so I would guess she’s a creative soul. Kinda, one of my favorite parts of the Club too! AND, speaking of creative, her favorite animal is a unicorn!!! Love that!

I pray for you all each and every month, especially as I pack up your individual boxes. My prayers for you usually go something like this…

” Saint Agatha, fill the home of Emarie with your love of Jesus. Intercede on their behalf at the feet of Our Lord. Help her family grow in their love of the Eucharist and one another. All God’s Angels and Saints, pray for them.  Amen.”

Please pray for Emarie and her family this month, especially that the would have a fruitful Lent.

Thank you!


Activities for Lent

 

Lent is right around the corner and through the years, I have truly come to enjoy this penitential season. Lent offers us an opportunity to enter into the suffering of Jesus and help us to prepare a way for Him in our hearts at Easter. Above you will find a few ideas on how to enter into this season. I hope your family has already made some of these activities a part of your Lenten season traditions! If not, feel free to incorporate them into your own Lenten traditions.

Write down your own family’s Lent traditions…Lent activities

Planning on attending Stations of the Cross? Print of this certificate to encourage your children in their participation and prayer… stations of the cross cert.

Praying for each one of you…mama to mama, that you and your family have a fruitful and blessed Lent!


February Saint of the Month

Saint Agatha

 

Feast Day is February 5th

Virgin and Early Martyr of the Church

Patron Saint of Sicily, Bell Founders,  breast cancer, earthquakes, Nurses, and against fires.

Saint Story:

Agatha lived in Sicily and was a Christian born to a rich noble family around the year 231. From her very early years, the notably beautiful Agatha dedicated her life to God. The governor heard of Agatha’s beauty and brought her to his palace. He wanted to make her commit sins, but she was brave and would not give in. “My Lord Jesus Christ,” she prayed, “you see my heart and you know my desire. I am all yours. Save me from this evil man. Make me worthy of winning out over the devil.”

The governor, named Quintianus, sent Agatha to the house of a wicked woman and hoped she would become bad too. But Agatha had great trust in God and prayed all the time. She kept herself pure. She would not listen to the evil ideas of the woman and her daughters. Agatha never lost her confidence in God, even though she suffered a month of assaults and efforts to get her to abandon her vow to God and go against her virtue.

After a month, she was brought back to the governor and Quintianus tried again to win her. “You are a noblewoman,” he said kindly. “Why have you lowered yourself to be a humble Christian?” “Even though I am a noble,” answered Agatha, “I am a slave of Jesus Christ.” “Then what does it really mean to be noble?” the governor asked. Agatha answered, “It means to serve God.”

When Quintianus realized that Agatha would not sin, he sentenced her to be burnt at the stake, but an earthquake saved her from that fate; instead, she was sent to prison. In prison she was tortured, badly beaten, and given no food or medical care. But the Lord gave her all the care she needed. He was her Sacred Physician and protector.  Agatha had a vision of the apostle, St. Peter, who comforted her and healed her wounds through his prayers. After four days, Quintianus ignored the miraculous cure of her wounds and he had her tortured once again. When she was returned to prison, Agatha prayed, “Lord, my Creator, you have ever protected me from the cradle; you have taken me from the love of the world, and given me patience to suffer: receive now my soul.” Agatha soon died a martyr at Catania, Sicily, in the year 251.

St. Agatha, also known as Agatha of Sicily, is one of the most highly venerated virgin martyrs of the Catholic Church.

Another Saint who’s feast day we celebrate in February is St. Blaise! Maybe you received a blessing of your throat at mass last weekend? Learn more about Saint Blaise and watch this short video!

 


January Saint of the Month

Saint Francis de Sales

Feast Day is January 24

Bishop and Doctor of the Church

Patron Saint of Journalist, writers, Catholic press, confessors and deafness.

Francis was born at the de Sales castle called Chateau of Thorens in Savoy, France. His wealthy family provided him with an excellent education. He studied at La Roche, Annecy, Clermont College in Paris, and did law at the University of Padua. By the age of twenty-four, Francis was a Doctor of Law. He returned home, and led a hard-working life as Senate advocate. He was not really interested in important positions or a social life.

In his heart, Francis was listening to a call that kept coming back like an echo. It seemed to be an invitation from the Lord telling him to “Leave all and follow Me.” Francis finally tried to explain his struggle to his family.

All the time, he never lost his passion for God. He studied theology and practiced mental prayers, but kept quiet about his devotion. To please his father, he also studied fencing and riding.

God made his will clear to Francis one day while he was riding. Francis fell from his horse three times that day. Every time he fell, the sword came out of the scabbard, and every time it came out, the sword and scabbard came to rest on the ground in the shape of the Christian cross.

His father was very disappointed. He wanted Francis to be a great man of the world. But Francis spent lots of time in prayer, finally his gentle ways won over the family and Francis became a priest on December 18, 1593.

In those times Christians were bitterly divided. Father Francis offered to go to a dangerous area of France to win back Catholics who had become Protestants. His father tried to stop him. He said it was bad enough that he had allowed Francis to become a priest; he was not going to let him die as a martyr as well.

But Francis knew that the Lord would protect him. He and his cousin, Father Louis de Sales, began their long walk to the Duchy of Chablais. The two priests soon learned how to live with insults and physical discomforts and their lives were often in danger.

Francis explained the teachings of the Catholic faith in very simple and clear language. And his gentle way with everyone, slowly brought many back to the Roman Catholic Church. He even made up a sign language so that he could explain catholic teaching to a deaf person.

When he was thirty-five years old, Francis became the bishop of Geneva, Switzerland. He travelled and preached throughout the Duchy of Savoy, working with children whenever he could.

He was a good friend of Saint Vincent de Paul. With the help of St. Jane de Chantal, he started a religious order of sisters in 1610. These women are called the Order of the Visitation.

Francis wrote wonderful books about the spiritual life and the way to become holy. The books, “Treatise on the Love of God” and “Introduction to the Devout Life”, are still available in book stores today. They are considered spiritual “classics.”

Saint Francis had a devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and wrote the following prayer…

May thy heart dwell always in our hearts!
May thy blood ever flow in the veins of our souls!
O sun of our hearts, thou givest life to all things by the rays of thy goodness!
I will not go until thy heart has strengthened me, O Lord Jesus!
May the heart of Jesus be the king of my heart!
Blessed be God.
Amen.

Bishop de Sales died at Lyons on December 28, 1622, at the age of fifty-six. Because of his good work that brought many people back to God and the Church, he was given the special title “Doctor of the Church.”

source sited: holyspiritinteractive.net/catholic.org

Check out this video about the life of St. Francis de Sales:

 

 

 

 


Sts. Perpetua and Felicity

prayer card lg front final w watermark

Today is the feast day of Martyrs Sts. Perpetua and Felicity!  These two Saints were persecuted and died because of their faith and love of Jesus. And last month, I had the honor of painting a mixed media painting for The Happy Catholic Box.

As you may have already read on my website, I have had a long, and often times, stubborn dialog with Jesus when it comes to painting The Saints. I feel like my artwork has always had a faith based tone to it, but I was never all in with my art…meaning that I didn’t really surrender this part of myself to God. Honestly, I kept it for myself because I really didn’t think I was good enough or worthy of painting a Saint. I guess I felt like God didn’t want that part of me. Truth is, I’m not worthy or good enough and this is a good thing, He has to do the work for me! So, needless to say, this has been a long process of surrender and allowing God’s love to ” convince” me he can handle it.  Oh how He pursues us! Thank you Jesus!

Admittedly, I knew very little about St. Perpetua and Felicity when I began the process of the painting. I rarely know which Saint will come through in my paintings until the end, so setting out to paint a particular Saint is rare for me. Getting to know these two Saints before and during the painting was exciting because this intimacy always comes after I have completed a painting and God has revealed which Saint was brought out through the painting.

First thing that I uncovered in my research was that they were from Africa, therefore, they had dark skin…and although many artists portray them as white, they are black. “Ok God, I’ve never painted a black person…how do you think I will do that?” May seem simple to many, but to me, this is unchartered territory. If you are an artist, you know that skin tones have a lot of colors in them and if you don’t add the right colors or enough colors, you can get flat, one dimensional results. Once again, He keeps me needing Him.

Next thing I learned about these beautiful women was that they were imprisoned together, along with 3 others, for refusing to renounce their Christian faith.   St. Perpetua had to leave her baby for a period of time until she was finally granted permission to have her infant stay with her in the prison. In her diary, she writes…“What a day of horror! Terrible heat, owing to the crowds! Rough treatment by the soldiers! To crown all, I was tormented with anxiety for my baby…. Such anxieties I suffered for many days, but I obtained leave for my baby to remain in the prison with me, and being relieved of my trouble and anxiety for him, I at once recovered my health, and my prison became a palace to me and I would rather have been there than anywhere else.”

St. Felicity was 8 months pregnant and set to be executed along side St Perpetua, but at the time, it was illegal to shed the innocent blood of an unborn baby. St. Felicity prayed that she would give birth before the set date of the execution so that she could die alongside Perpetua, rather than dying alone. It is written “The guards made fun of her, insulting her by saying, “If you think you suffer now, how will you stand it when you face the wild beasts?” Felicity answered them calmly, “Now I’m the one who is suffering, but in the arena Another will be in me suffering for me because I will be suffering for him.” Two days before the execution, she gave birth to a healthy baby girl who was adopted by a Christian woman.

So parents, imagine for a moment, that you had to choose between God and your faith or your innocent child. Both these Saints knew and trusted God enough to leave their children and die for Him. This is suffering from the deepest place, this is how The Blessed Mother suffered when she watched Jesus die on the cross.  I started to feel the unworthiness set in again…”God, these women were fearless in their love for you, how do I paint fearless love?”  His answer, “you can’t, but I can.”

A story about St. Perpetua that really touched my heart was her response to her pagan father when he tried to get her to renounce her Christianity. Pointing to a water jug, she asked her father, “See that pot lying there? Can you call it by any other name than what it is? “Her father answered, “Of course not.” Perpetua responded, “Neither can I call myself by any other name than what I am a Christian.” I love this Holy Spirit confidence! She knows what she is up against and she calls it like it is, very simply, I am a Christian. This is why, in the painting, I had to paint that water jug, which also symbolizes that she was newly baptized.  You can learn more about these Saints here.

I was spending some time in prayer about a week after I completed the painting and felt God’s voice tell me to be still. I sat and my eyes settled upon the painting of these Saints and I notice for the first time their halos, and how they intertwined. Why had I painted that, I asked. God’s response, and I’m so not kidding, ” Google it.” Going to my computer I discover that this symbol was called Vesica Pisces or Jesus fish and in present time is used to promote Christianity but in the original meaning it was used to depict the womb of Mary and the coming together of heaven and earth though Jesus. As I am reading this, tears fill my eyes. How amazing it feels to be used by God! The richness of His love is unchanging and it moves people to love fearlessly.

I have Holy Cards available of St. Perpetua and Felicity and on the back of the card, a prayer I wrote:

prayer card back lg final

Here are some photos that show how my painting process happens.

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