

Holy Days in
August
(taken
from Common Worship)
Jean-Baptiste
Vianney (4th August)
French
parish priest, popularly known as the Cure d'Ars, born Dardilly, near Lyons. He
came of poor, peasant stock and received scant education until, as a youth, he
struggled
through the seminary. As a young curate he was sent to the little village of
Ars. Vianney
found that the people there had lost their faith, and he vowed to make the
community
"the property of God." He beautified the church, lived like the
poorest of the poor,
and fasted and prayed for the people. His skill as a confessor drew people from
outside
his parish, and neighbouring priests complained and sought to have him
removed.
Vianney himself signed their petitions. He began an orphanage for girls
that served as a
model throughout France. Many miracles were attributed to him during his
lifetime,
and in his last years thousands from all over France came annually to his
confessional.
He was canonized in 1925. In 1929 he was made universal patron of parish
priests.
Oswald
(5th August)
Born
in 604, Oswald was the son of Ethelfrith King of Northumbria. His father,
however, was
deposed and killed by his uncle, Edwin, in 616. Oswald then fled to Scotland.
Whilst there
he was converted to Christianity at St Columba's great Celtic monastery on the
Scottish
island of Iona. Following the death of Edwin in battle in 633, Oswald returned
to Northumbria
and was crowned king of Northumbria. In 635, he defeated and killed
Cadwallon, King of the
Welsh, at the battle of Heavenfield just north of Hexham. Oswald persuaded
St Aidan,
one of St Columba's disciples, to move down from Iona in order to found a
monastery at
Lindisfarne - an island off the coast of Northumbria. From this new base, St
Aidan set
about converting Oswald's subjects to Christianity with the king's blessing.
Oswald is not
just notable for his religious influence, however. St. Bede, in his great
chronicle the
Ecclesiastical History of the English Nation, claimed that Oswald
established himself as
overlord of the almost the whole of England during his reign. In 642,
Oswald was killed at the
battle of Maserfeld near Oswestry by the pagan King Penda of Mercia who then
ordered the body
of his adversary to be dismembered. Oswald's head, however, was recovered and
sent to the
monastery at Lindisfarne where it became a holy relic. During the Viking
raids of 875, the
monks of Lindisfarne fled for safety. They carried with them St Oswald's head
together the
monastery's other great treasures such as the body of St Cuthbert and the
Lindisfarne Gospels.
Eventually, the descendants of the Lindisfarne monks founded a great new
monastery at Durham
where the head of St Oswald, buried in St Cuthbert's tomb, remains to this
day. Oswald was
canonised some fifty years after his death.
The
Transfiguration of Our Lord (6th August)
John
Mason Neale (7th August)
John Mason
Neale was born in London in 1818, studied at Cambridge, and was ordained to
the priesthood in 1842. He was offered a parish, but chronic ill health,
which was to
continue throughout his life, prevented him from taking it. In 1846 he was made
warden of
Sackville College, a position he held for the rest of his life. Sackville
College was not an
educational institution, but an almshouse, a charitable residence for the poor.
In 1854
Neale co-founded the Sisterhood of St Margaret, an order of women in the
Anglican
Church dedicated to nursing the sick. Many Anglicans in his day, however, were
very
suspicious of anything suggestive of Roman Catholicism. Only nine years earlier,
John H. Newman had encouraged Romish practices in the Anglican Church, and had
ended
up joining the Romanists himself. This encouraged the suspicion that
anyone like Neale was
an agent of the Vatican, assigned to destroy the Anglican Church by subverting
it from
within. Once Neale was attacked and mauled at a funeral of one of the
Sisters. From time to
time unruly crowds threatened to stone him or to burn his house. He
received no honour or
preferment in England, and his doctorate was bestowed by an American college
(Trinity
College, Hartford, Connecticut). However, his basic goodness eventually won the
confidence of many who had fiercely opposed him, and the Sisterhood of St
Margaret
survived and prospered. Neale translated the Eastern liturgies into English, and
wrote a
mystical and
devotional commentary on the Psalms. However, he is best known as a
hymn writer and translator.
Dominic
(8th August)
Born
of wealthy Spanish nobility. His mother was Blessed Joan of Aza who, when
pregnant,
had a vision that her unborn child was a dog who would set the world on fire
with a torch it
carried in its mouth; a dog bearing a torch in its mouth became a symbol for the
Dominicans.
At his baptism, his mother saw a star shining from his chest. Studied theology
at Palencia.
Canon of the church of Osma. Priest. Augustinian. Lifelong apostolate among
heretics,
especially Albigensians, and especially in France; worked with Blessed Peter of
Castelnau.
Founded the Order of Friars Preachers (Dominicans) in 1215, a group who
live a simple,
austere life, and an order of nuns dedicated to the care of young girls.
Visionary.
Friend of Saint Amata of Assisi.
At
one point Dominic became discouraged at the progress of
his
mission;
the heresies remained. He received a vision
who showed him a wreath of
roses, and told him to say the rosary daily, and teach it to all who would
listen. Eventually the
true faith won out. Dominic is often credited with the invention of the
rosary, but it predates him.
He is also reported to have raised four people from the dead.
Legend says that Dominic received
a vision of a beggar who, like Dominic, would do great things for the Faith.
Dominic met the
beggar the next day. He embraced him and said, "You are my companion and
must walk with
me. If we hold together, no earthly power can withstand us." The
beggar was Saint Francis
of Assisi.
Mary
Sumner (9th August)
Born
Mary Heywood in 1828 near Manchester, Mary Sumner grew up in the beautiful
surroundings of Hope End, in Herefordshire. The Christian atmosphere of her
family
home meant daily scripture and prayers formed the basis for her life in service
to others.
She met and fell in love with George Sumner, the youngest son of the bishop of
Winchester when they met in Rome where she was completing her musical education
and they married in July 1848. In 1876, when she became a grandmother, she
decided that
a new organisation was needed in the parish and the first branch of the
Mothers’
Union was begun. She believed that motherhood involved more than providing
for the
physical needs of children. The primary responsibility of mothers was to raise
their
children in the love of God with their lives firmly rooted in prayer. A
historic decision
was made by Bishop Ernest Wilberforce of Newcastle in 1885 when he called
on Mary
to speak at the Portsmouth Church Congress. The meeting responded to her
passion
and conviction with a rousing ovation and so was born the diocesan organisation
we
know today.
Laurence
(10th August)
Laurence (or Lawrence) was chief of the seven deacons
of the congregation at Rome. The
seven men who were in charge of administering the church budget,
particularly with regard
to the care of the poor. In 257, the Emperor Valerian began a persecution aimed
chiefly at
the clergy and the laity of the upper classes. All Church property was
confiscated and
meetings of Christians were forbidden. The bishop of Rome, Sixtus II, and most
of his clergy
were executed on 7 August 258, and Laurence on the 10th.
The accounts recorded about a
century later by Ambrose and the poet Prudentius report that the Roman prefect,
knowing that
Laurence was the principal financial officer, promised to set him free if
he would surrender
the wealth of the Church. Laurence agreed, but said that it would take him three
days to
gather it. During those three days, he placed all the money at his disposal in
the hands of
trustworthy stewards, and then assembled the sick, the aged, and the poor,
the widows and
orphans of the congregation, presented them to the prefect, and said,
"These are the treasures
of the Church." The enraged prefect ordered him to be roasted alive on a
gridiron. Laurence bore
the torture with great calmness, saying to his executioners at one time,
"You may turn me over;
I am done on this side." The spectacle of his courage made a great
impression on the people of
Rome, and made many converts. Laurence's emblem in art is (naturally) a
gridiron.
Clare
(11th August)
Daughters
of a count and countess. Her father died young. After hearing Saint Francis of
Assisi preach in the streets, she confided to him her desire to live for God,
the two became
close friends. On Palm Sunday 1212 the bishop presented her with a palm, which
she
apparently took as a sign. Clare and her cousin Pacifica ran away from her
mother's palace
during the night. She eventually took the veil of religious profession from
Francis at the
Church of Our Lady of the Angels in Assisi. Founded the Order of Poor Ladies
(Poor Clares)
at San Damiano, and led it for 40 years. Everywhere the Franciscans established
themselves
throughout Europe, there also went the Poor Clares, depending solely on
alms, forced to have
complete faith on God to provide through people; a lack of land-based
revenues was a new
idea at the time. Clare's mother and sisters later joined the order, and there
are still thousands
of members living lives of prayer in silence. Clare loved music and
well-composed sermons. She
was humble, merciful, charming, optimistic, and chivalrous. She would get up
late at night
to tuck in her sisters who'd kicked off their covers. She daily meditated
on the Passion.
When she learned of the Franciscan martyrs in Morocco in 1221, she tried to go
there to give
her own life for God, but was restrained. Once when her convent
was about to be attacked,
she displayed the Sacrament in a monstrance at the convent gates, and prayed
before it; the
attackers left. Toward the end of her life, when the was too ill to attend Mass,
an image of the
service would display on the wall of her cell; thus her patronage of
television. She was ever
the close friend and spiritual student of Francis, who apparently led her soul
into the light.
John
Henry Newman (11th August)
John
Henry Newman was born in London, February 21, 1801. Going up to Oxford at
sixteen,
he gained a scholarship at Trinity College, and after graduation became fellow
and tutor at Oriel,
then the most alive, intellectually, of the Oxford colleges. He took orders, and
in 1828 was
appointed vicar of St. Mary's, the university church. In 1832 he had to resign
his tutorship
on account of a difference of opinion with the head of the college as to his
duties and
responsibilities, Newman regarding his function as one of a "substantially
religious nature."
Returning to Oxford the next year from a journey on the Continent, he began, in
co-operation
with R. H. Froude and others, the publication of the "Tracts for the Times," a
series of
pamphlets which gave a name to the "Tractarian" or
"Oxford" movement for the defence of
the "doctrine of apostolic succession and the integrity of the Prayer Book." After several
years of agitation, during which Newman came to exercise an extraordinary
influence in
Oxford, the movement and its leader fell under the official ban of the
university and of the
Anglican bishops, and Newman withdrew from Oxford, feeling that the Anglican
Church had
herself destroyed the defences which he had sought to build for her. In
October, 1845, he
was received into the Roman Church.
The
next year he went to Rome, and on his return
introduced into England the institute of the Oratory. In 1854 he went to Dublin
for four years
as rector of the new Catholic university, and while there wrote his volume on
"The Idea
of a University," in which he expounds with wonderful clearness of thought
and beauty of
language his view of the aim of education. In 1879 he was created cardinal
in recognition
of his services to the cause of religion in England, and in 1890 he died.
Jeremy
Taylor (13th August)
Jeremy
Taylor, a native of Cambridge, was educated at the Perse School and the College
of
Gonville and Caius. He caught the attention of Archbishop Laud, who presented
him to
the living of Uppingham in 1637. Today, Jeremy Taylor is known throughout
the Anglican
world, famous for his
devotional
writings and especially for the two works Holy Living and
Holy Dying, which quickly established themselves as classics of Anglican
spirituality as
well as being amongst
the finest examples of English prose. Indeed, Jeremy Taylor is known
as the 'English Chrysostom'. At Uppingham Taylor married and settled down
to the work
of a country priest; but such was his reputation as a spiritual guide and
director that people
came to him from far a
field for advice and counsel. Whilst in Rutland, Taylor completed
his work 'Episcopy Asserted', for which Charles I awarded him a doctorate of
divinity 'by
royal command'. He left Uppingham to join the King as a Chaplain the Crown, an
act which
resulted in his property being forfeit, his wife and children ejected from the
Rectory and
the church plate being sequestered and the living forfeited with the defeat of
the King. On the
death of the King, Taylor retreated to Golden Grove, the country estate of
the Earl of
Carberry in West Wales where he stayed until moving to Ireland to become chaplain
to Lord
Conway and, at the Restoration, Bishop of Dromore.
Florence
Nightingale (13th August)
Florence
Nightingale is most remembered as a pioneer of nursing and a reformer of
hospital
sanitation methods. For most of her ninety years Nightingale pushed for reform
of the
British military health-care system and with that the profession of nursing
started to gain the
respect it deserved. Unknown to many, however, was her use of new techniques of
statistical
analysis, such as during the Crimean War when she plotted the incidence of
preventable
deaths in the military. She developed the "polar-area diagram"
to dramatize the needless
deaths caused by unsanitary conditions and the need for reform. She was
an innovator
in the collection, tabulation, interpretation, and graphical display of
descriptive statistics.
Florence Nightingale's two greatest life achievements - pioneering of
nursing and the
reform of hospitals - were amazing considering that most Victorian women of her
age group
did not attend universities or pursue professional careers. It was her father,
William,
who believed women, especially his children, should get an education. So
Nightingale and her
sister learned Italian, Latin, Greek, history, and mathematics. She in
particular received
excellent early preparation in mathematics from her father and aunt, and
was also tutored in
mathematics by James Sylvester. In 1854, after a year as an unpaid
superintendent of a
London "establishment for gentlewomen during illness," the Secretary
of War, Sidney Herbert,
recruited Nightingale and 38 nurses for service in Scutari during the Crimean
War. During
Nightingale's time at Scutari, she collected data and systematized
record-keeping practices.
Nightingale was able to use the data as a tool for improving city and
military hospitals.
Nightingale's calculations of the mortality rate showed that with an improvement
of sanitary
methods, deaths would decrease. In February 1855, the mortality rate at
the hospital was
42.7 percent of the cases treated. When Nightingale's sanitary reform was
implemented,
the mortality rate declined. Nightingale took her statistical data and
represented them
graphically.
Octavia
Hill (13th August)
In 1864
Octavia Hill was able to interest John Ruskin (artist and art critic) in her
schemes to
improve dwellings for the poor. One of her very first schemes, started in 1864
at the age of
26, was the collection of rents in Paradise Place which was one of
London's most notorious
slums. John Ruskin also advised Octavia Hill that if she could run her
schemes on a
business footing providing a rate of return of 5 per cent on Capital, then she
should never be
short of funds. This proved to be the case and she was never short of funds for
expansion. She
proved that it was possible to provide adequate living conditions for the
disadvantaged poor
whilst maintaining a reasonable rate of return to the owners of the property, a
situation
that was advantageous to everyone. The Ovtavia Hill Trust's current operation
can be traced back
to 1899 when Octavia Hill was invited by a vicar in Notting Hill to take
over five houses in
St Katherine's Road in what was then the notorious neighbourhood known as
the Notting
Dale Special Area. By the year of her death, 1912, Octavia Hill was managing
about 100
houses in Notting Hill. This number proved to be sufficient to allow the
organisation to survive
and over the years the total number of properties owned has grown until now the
Octavia Hill
Housing Trust now manages about 1,500 properties
Maximilian
Kolbe (14th August)
St.
Maximilian was born Raymond Kolbe in Poland, January 8, 1894. In 1910, he
entered the
Franciscan Order. He was sent to study in Rome where he was ordained a priest in
1918.
Father Maximilian returned to Poland in 1919 and began spreading his Militia of
the Immaculata
movement of Marian consecration, which he founded on October 16, 1917. In 1927,
he established an evangelisation centre near Warsaw called Niepokalanow,
the "City of
the Immaculata." By 1939, the City had expanded from eighteen friars
to an incredible
650, making it the largest Catholic religious house in the world.
To better "win the world for
the Immaculata," the friars utilized the most modern printing and
administrative
techniques. This enabled them to publish countless catechetical and devotional
tracts, a
daily newspaper with a circulation of 230,000 and a monthly magazine with a
circulation
of over one million. Maximilian started a short-wave radio station and planned
to build a
motion picture studio - he was a true "apostle of the mass media." He
established a
City of the Immaculata in Nagasaki, Japan, in 1930, and envisioned missionary
centres worldwide.
Maximilian was a ground
breaking theologian.
In 1941, the Nazis
imprisoned Father Maximilian in the Auschwitz death camp. There he offered his
life for
another prisoner and was condemned to slow death in a starvation bunker.
On August 14,
1941, his impatient captors ended his life with a fatal injection. Pope John
Paul II canonized
Maximilian as a "martyr of charity" in 1982. St. Maximilian Kolbe is
considered a patron of
journalists, families, prisoners, the pro-life movement and the chemically
addicted.
The
Blessed Virgin Mary (15th August)
Bernard
(20th August)
French nobility. At age
22, fearing the ways of the world, he, four of his brothers, and 25 friends
joined the abbey of Citeaux; his father and another brother joined soon after.
Benedictine.
Founded and led the monastery at Clairvaux which soon had over 700 monks and 160
daughter houses. Revised and reformed the Cistercians. Advisor to, and
admonisher of,
King Louis the Fat and King Louis the Young. Attended Second Lateran Council.
Fought Albigensianism. Helped end the schism of anti-Pope Anacletus II.
Preached in France,
Italy and Germany. Helped organize the Second Crusade. Friend and biographer of
Saint Malachy O'More. Spirtual advisor to Pope Eugenius III, who had originally
been
one of his monks. First Cistercian monk placed on the calendar of saints.
Proclaimed a
Doctor of the Church by Pope Pius VIII.
William
and Catherine Booth (20th August)
William
and Catherine Booth, founders of the Salvation Army, devoted their lives to
serving
the industrial urban poor of London. In 1864, William began a mission in
one of
London's worst districts which became a tightly knit, selfless, zealous military
organization. Their unconventional methods - open air meetings held in the
streets
with drums and musical instruments - encountered violent opposition.
Members were
often arrested for "disturbing the peace." Catherine, a powerful
public speaker, was
effective in reaching and caring for women. Reading Song of Songs 6:4,
"Thou art
beautiful, O my love, as Tirzah, comely as Jerusalem, terrible as an army
with banners,"
Catherine Booth realized that it was the Church's destiny to be an army of
reformers. Her
brilliant preaching and writing affected hundreds of thousands. Her temperance
tracts,
written under an assumed name, were widely distributed throughout Europe.
William Booth
published 'In Darkest England and the Way Out' in 1890 describing the
economic, social and
moral problems of London. The book prescribed rescue homes for prostitutes, a
farm colony,
suburban villages, a poor man's bank and preventative homes for girls. The
book was a
blueprint for the rehabilitation of an entire nation, a grand social
reconstruction plan a
century ahead of its time. The works of Christian social compassion and
practical
concern launched by this holy army are legendary. Almost every type of outreach
and care
for the poor and downtrodden imaginable were both attempted and usually
successfully implemented by this radical band.
Bartholomew
the Apostle (24th August)
Monica
(27th August)
Mother
of Saint Augustine of Hippo, whose writings about her are the primary source of
our
information. A Christian from birth, she was given in marriage to a
bad-tempered,
adulterous pagan named Patricius. Prayed constantly for the conversion of
her husband
(who converted on his death bed), and of her son (who converted after a wild
life).
Spiritual student of Saint Ambrose of Milan.
Augustine
(28th August)
His
father was a pagan who converted on his death bed; his mother was Saint Monica,
a
devout Christian. Trained in Christianity, he lost his faith in youth and
led a wild
life. Lived with a Carthaginian woman from the age of 15 until he was 30. Fathered a
son
whom he named Adeotadus, which means 'the gift of God'. Taught rhetoric at
Carthage
and Milan. After investigating and experimenting with several philosophies, he
became a
Manichaean for several years; this taught of a great struggle between good and
evil, and featured
a lax moral code. A summation of his thinking at the time comes from his
Confessions:
"God, give me chastity and continence - but not just now."
Augustine finally broke with the Manichaeans and was converted by the prayers of
his
mother and the help of Saint Ambrose of Milan, who baptized him. On the death of
his
mother he returned to Africa, sold his property, gave the proceeds to the poor,
and
founded a monastery. Monk, Priest and Preacher. Bishop of Hippo in 396. Founded
religious
communities. Fought Manichaeism, Donatism, Pelagianism and other heresies.
Oversaw his
church and his see during the fall of the Roman Empire to the Vandals.
Doctor of the Church.
The
Beheading of John the Baptist (29th August)
John
Bunyan (30th August)
Bunyan
was born in 1628 near Bedford, in the agricultural midlands of England. He was
the son of a tinker (a maker and mender of metal pots). He had little
schooling.
During the English Civil War, he served in the Parliamentary Army. He
underwent a
period of acute spiritual anxiety, and finally found peace in a Baptist
congregation. He
became a lay preacher, while earning his living as a tinker. After the
Restoration in 1660,
Bunyan
(under
suspicion for having fought on the anti-Anglican side) was ordered to
preach no more, and, since he refused to desist, he was several times
sentenced to jail,
where he spent his time studying, preaching to his fellow prisoners, and
writing.
His first substantial work was an autobiography, 'Grace Abounding To the Chief of
Sinners'.
This was followed by other works, of which by far the most read and most
loved is his
'The Pilgrim's Progress From This World To That Which Is To Come', usually called
'Pilgrim's Progress'. The work recounts in allegorical form the experience of a
person
(called Christian), from his first awareness of his sinfulness and
spiritual need, to
his personal conversion to Christ, to his walk as a believer. He is shown
as a pilgrim in
this world on his way to the "Celestial City," which will be his
true home forever.
The work was an immediate sensation, and its popularity endured. For a century
and
more thereafter, there were many English-speaking Christians who were thoroughly
familiar with only two books, The Bible and Pilgrim's Progress.
Aiden
(31st August)
Monk at Iona,
Ireland. Studied under Saint Senan at Inish Cathay. Bishop of Clogher
by Ware and Lynch. Resigned the see to became a monk at Iona c.630.
Evangelizing
bishop in Northumbria at the behest of his friend the king, Saint Oswald of
Northumbria.
Once when pagans attacked Oswald's forces at Bambrough, they piled wood around
the
city walls to burn it; Saint Aidan prayed for help, and a change in wind
blew the smoke
and flames over the pagan army. Known for his knowledge of the Bible, his
eloquent
preaching, his personal holiness, simple life, scholarship, and charity.
Miracle worker.
Trained Saint Boswell. Founded the Lindesfarne monastery that became not only
a
religious standard bearer, but a great storehouse of European literature and
learning
during the dark ages. The Venerable Bede is lavish in his praise of the episcopal
rule
of Aidan.

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