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METHOD:PUBLISH
X-WR-CALNAME:Maryland Catholic Women&#039;s Conference
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Maryland Catholic Women&#039;s Conference
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BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/New_York
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20200308T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20201101T060000
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END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200406
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200407
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165936Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165936Z
UID:1546-1586131200-1586217599@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:(f) Monday of Holy Week–V (I)
DESCRIPTION:Almighty God\, may the merits of the passion of Your only-begotten Son give us new strength\, for our own weakness brings nothing but failure in the face of so many difficulties; who lives and rules with You . . .
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/f-monday-of-holy-week-v-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200407
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200408
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165936Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165936Z
UID:1547-1586217600-1586303999@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:(f) Tuesday of Holy Week–V (I)
DESCRIPTION:Almighty and Eternal God\, grant that we may celebrate the sacred rites of our Lord’s passion in such a manner that we may be worthy of Your pardon. Through the same Jesus Christ\, our Lord . . .
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/f-tuesday-of-holy-week-v-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200408
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200409
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165937Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165937Z
UID:1548-1586304000-1586390399@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:(f) Wednesday of Holy Week–V (I)
DESCRIPTION:Almighty God\, deliver us\, who are continually afflicted by sin because of our self-indulgence\, through the passion of Your only-begotten Son; who lives and rules with You . . .
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/f-wednesday-of-holy-week-v-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200409
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200410
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165937Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165937Z
UID:1549-1586390400-1586476799@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:(f) HOLY THURSDAY–W (I)
DESCRIPTION:Brethren: When you come therefore together into one place\, it is not now to eat the Lord’s supper. For every one taketh before his own supper to eat. And one indeed is hungry and another is drunk. What\, have you no houses to eat and to drink in? Or despise ye the church of God and put them to shame that have not? What shall I say to you? Do I praise you? In this I praise you not.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/f-holy-thursday-w-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200410
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200411
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165938Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165938Z
UID:1550-1586476800-1586563199@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:(Day of fast and abstinence) GOOD FRIDAY–Black (I)
DESCRIPTION:Father\, forgive them\, they know not what they do.” Lk. 23: 34 Pater\, dimitte illis\, quia nesciunt\, quid faciunt.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/day-of-fast-and-abstinence-good-friday-black-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200411
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200412
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165938Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165938Z
UID:1551-1586563200-1586649599@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:(f) HOLY SATURDAY - VIGIL OF EASTER–V/W (I)
DESCRIPTION:Let us pray O God\, Who hast bestowed on the faithful the fire of Thy brightness by Thy Son\, Who is the Cornerstone\, hallow this new fire produced from a flint that it may be profitable to us: and grant that during this Paschal festival we may be so inflamed with heavenly desires\, that with pure minds we may come to the solemnity of perpetual light. Through the same Christ our Lord.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/f-holy-saturday-vigil-of-easter-v-w-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200412
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200413
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165938Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165938Z
UID:1552-1586649600-1586735999@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:EASTER SUNDAY–W (I)
DESCRIPTION:For He is the true Lamb that hath taken away the sins of the world. Who by dying hath overcome our death\, and by rising again hath restored our life. And therefore with angles and archangels\, with thrones and dominations\, and with all the heavenly hosts\, we sing a hymn to Thy glory
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/easter-sunday-w-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200413
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200414
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165938Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165938Z
UID:1553-1586736000-1586822399@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Monday in Octave of Easter–W (I)
DESCRIPTION:The disciples on the way to Emmaus wanted to believe exclusively in a glorious Christ. They were shocked by His seeming defeat and baffled by His seeming disappearance. Like so many\, they misunderstood what God had told them through the prophets. Their hopes were too earthly\, but their desire for Jesus was love seeking light. When these apostles were joined by Jesus\, they believed strongly enough for grace to set their hearts burning as He explained what God had done through hundreds of years to prepare His people to believe in just the kind of Savior He was: that is\, spiritual\, suffering\, risen to glory\, for all mankind. The two disciples\, all unaware\, loved Jesus in a stranger by urging the unknown traveler to spend the night with them. Their faith and charity issued in a revelation and a stronger bond with Jesus.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/monday-in-octave-of-easter-w-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200414
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200415
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165939Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165939Z
UID:1554-1586822400-1586908799@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Tuesday in Octave of Easter–W (I)
DESCRIPTION:By blood-sealed covenant\, by prophetic utterances and figures\, and by prescriptions for sacrificial worship\, God tried to prepare His people to expect a Redeemer who would have to bleed and die. But they wanted only a glorious conqueror with a universal and endless reign. Even when Jesus appeared to the Eleven\, who had received two and one-half years of special training and instruction\, He found them confused and wondering. As a doctrine\, Christ crucified is central to Christian life. In practice\, is there not much insistence on a comfortable Christ\, a Christ without wounds?
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/tuesday-in-octave-of-easter-w-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200415
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200416
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165940Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165940Z
UID:1555-1586908800-1586995199@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Wednesday in Octave of Easter–W (I)
DESCRIPTION:It was partially through ignorance of the true meaning of God’s prophecies that rulers and people misunderstood Christ and put Him to death. They did not know Him; they did not accept Him as the author of all life\, or as the author of the new Christian life that He came to live and to perpetuate among all men to the end of time. As tenderly as Jesus provided a big catch and a cooked meal for His disappointed and hungry Apostles\, so tenderly does He still pursue souls with His insistent appeal: “Repent and be converted\, that your sins may be blotted out.”
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/wednesday-in-octave-of-easter-w-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200416
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200417
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165940Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165940Z
UID:1556-1586995200-1587081599@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Thursday in Octave of Easter–W (I)
DESCRIPTION:Jesus in His passion chose to be silent and meek before His enemies and to surrender His life in order to purchase forgiveness and heaven for men of every nation. Jesus in His glorified state\, seemingly absent yet dynamically near\, touches with purchased grace the souls of the eager and loving. In every generation and hour\, He continues sending apostles into every neighborhood and to every land\, with the mission of awakening all peoples to belief and love.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/thursday-in-octave-of-easter-w-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200417
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200418
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165940Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165940Z
UID:1557-1587081600-1587167999@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Friday in Octave of Easter–W (I)
DESCRIPTION:The blessings of Christ’s resurrection extend to all times and all places\, through the missionary work of all Christ’s members who bring men of every class and race to the Sacrament of Baptism. Baptism is man’s first resurrection from the death of sin to the grace-quickened life of the soul. The grace of Baptism\, so long as it is preserved\, is the indwelling pledge of the Christian’s final resurrection. In its essential missionary ministry\, the Church is assured of Christ’s continued presence and is therefore guaranteed the final victory\, which is resurrection to eternal life._
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/friday-in-octave-of-easter-w-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200418
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200419
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165940Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165940Z
UID:1558-1587168000-1587254399@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Saturday in Octave of Easter–W (I)
DESCRIPTION:Let us drink\, as do the neophytes\, the spiritual and pure milk of true doctrine; the Church asks it\, by the mouth of St. Peter\, her head. St. Peter and St. John\, informed by Mary of Magdala\, go to the sepulcher\, and are witnesses of the Resurrection to the whole Church.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/saturday-in-octave-of-easter-w-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200419
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200420
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165940Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165940Z
UID:1559-1587254400-1587340799@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Low Sunday–W (I)
DESCRIPTION:This Sunday is called from the first words of the Introit\, the Sunday of Quasimodo\, or Sunday in Albis (deponéndis) because the neophytes on that day put aside their white garments. In English the term Low Sunday is in contrast with Easter or High Sunday. Another Latin name Pascha clausum is preserved in the French Pâques closes and in the Dutch or Flemish Beloken Pasen: close of Easter\, this Sunday ending the Octave.—Let us proclaim our faith in the risen Lord\, and in His divine Presence in the Holy Eucharist.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/low-sunday-w-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200420
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200421
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165942Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165942Z
UID:1560-1587340800-1587427199@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Ferial–W (IV)
DESCRIPTION:ST. MARCELLINUS was born in Africa\, of a noble family; accompanied by Vincent and Domninus\, he went over into Gaul\, and there preached the Gospel\, with great success\, in the neighborhood of the Alps. He afterwards settled at Embrun\, where he built a chapel in which he passed his nights in prayer\, after laboring all the day in the exercise of his sacred calling. By his pious example as well as by his earnest words\, he converted many of the heathens among whom he lived. He was afterwards made bishop of the people whom he had won over to Christ\, but the date of his consecration is not positively known. Burning with zeal for the glory of God\, he sent Vincent and Domninus to preach the faith in those parts which he could not visit in person. He died at Embrun about the year 374\, and was there interred. St. Gregory of Tours\, who speaks of Marcellinus in terms of highest praise\, mentions many miracles as happening at his tomb.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/ferial-w-iv-6/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200421
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200422
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165942Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165942Z
UID:1561-1587427200-1587513599@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:St. Anselm\, Bishop\, Confessor\, Doctor–W (III)
DESCRIPTION:ANSELM was a native of Piedmont. When a boy of fifteen\, being forbidden to enter religion\, he for a while lost his fervor\, left his home\, and went to various schools in France. At length his vocation revived\, and he became a monk at Bec in Normandy. The fame of his sanctity in this cloister led William Rufus\, when dangerously ill\, to take him for his confessor\, and to name him to the vacant see of Canterbury. Now began the strife of Anselm’s life. With new health the king relapsed into his former sins\, plundered the Church lands\, scorned the archbishop’s rebukes\, and forbade him to go to Rome for the pallium. Anselm went\, and returned only to enter into a more bitter strife with William’s successor\, Henry I. This sovereign claimed the right of investing prelates with the ring and crozier\, symbols of the spiritual jurisdiction which belongs to the Church alone. The worldly prelates did not scruple to call St. Anselm a traitor for his defense of the Pope’s supremacy; on which the Saint rose\, and with calm dignity exclaimed\, “If any man pretends that I violate my faith to my king because I will not reject the authority of the Holy See of Rome\, let him stand forth\, and in the name of God I will answer him as I ought” No one took up the challenge; and to the disappointment of the king\, the barons sided with the Saint\, for they respected his courage\, and saw that his cause was their own. Sooner than yield\, the archbishop went again into exile\, till at last the king was obliged to submit to the feeble but inflexible old man. In the midst of his harassing cares\, St. Anselm found time for writings which have made him celebrated as the father of scholastic theology; while in metaphysics and in science he had few equals. He is yet more famous for his devotion to our blessed Lady\, whose Feast of the Immaculate Conception he was the first to establish in the West. He died in 1109.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/st-anselm-bishop-confessor-doctor-w-iii/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200422
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200423
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165942Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165942Z
UID:1562-1587513600-1587599999@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Sts. Soter and Caius\, Popes\, Martyrs–R (III)
DESCRIPTION:ST. SOTER was raised to the papacy upon the death of St. Anicetus\, in 173. By the sweetness of his discourses he comforted all persons with the tenderness of a father\, and assisted the indigent with liberal alms\, especially those who suffered for the faith. He liberally extended his charities\, according to the custom of his predecessors\, to remote churches\, particularly to that of Corinth\, to which he addressed an excellent letter\, as St. Dionysius of Corinth testifies in his letter of thanks\, who adds that his letter was found worthy to be read for their edification on Sundays at their assemblies to celebrate the divine mysteries\, together with the letter of St. Clement\, pope. St. Soter vigorously opposed the heresy of Montanus\, and governed the Church to the year 177. ST. CAIUS was put to death in 296.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/sts-soter-and-caius-popes-martyrs-r-iii/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200423
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200424
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165942Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165942Z
UID:1563-1587600000-1587686399@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Ferial–W (IV) - St. George\, Martyr–R (Comm.)
DESCRIPTION:ST. GEORGE was born in Cappadocia\, at the close of the third century\, of Christian parents. In early youth he chose a soldier’s life\, and soon obtained the favor of Diocletian\, who advanced him to the grade of tribune. When\, however\, the emperor began to persecute the Christians\, George rebuked him at once sternly and openly for his cruelty\, and threw up his commission. He was in consequence subjected to a lengthened series of torments\, and finally beheaded. There was something so inspiriting in the defiant cheerfulness of the young soldier\, that every Christian felt a personal share in this triumph of Christian fortitude; and as years rolled on St. George became a type of successful combat against evil\, the slayer of the dragon\, the darling theme of camp song and story\, until “so thick a shade his very glory round him made” that his real lineaments became hard to trace. Even beyond the circle of Christendom he was held in honor\, and invading Saracens taught themselves to except from desecration the image of him they hailed as the “White-horsed Knight.” The devotion to St. George is one of the most ancient and widely spread in the Church. In the East\, a church of St. George is ascribed to Constantine\, and his name is invoked in the most ancient liturgies; whilst in the West\, Malta\, Barcelona\, Valencia\, Arragon\, Genoa\, and England have chosen him as their patron.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/ferial-w-iv-st-george-martyr-r-comm/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200424
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200425
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165943Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165943Z
UID:1564-1587686400-1587772799@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:St. Fidelis of Sigmaringen\, Martyr–R (III)
DESCRIPTION:FIDELIS was born at Sigmaringen in 1577\, of noble parents. In his youth he frequently approached the sacraments\, visited the sick and the poor\, and spent moreover many hours before the altar. For a time he followed the legal profession\, and was remarkable for his advocacy of the poor and his respectful language towards his opponents. Finding it difficult to become both a rich lawyer and a good Christian\, Fidelis entered the Capuchin. Order\, and embraced a life of austerity and prayer. Hair shirts\, iron-pointed girdles\, and disciplines were penances too light for his fervor; and being filled with a desire of martyrdom\, he rejoiced at being sent to Switzerland by the newly-founded Congregation of Propaganda\, and braved every peril to rescue souls from the diabolical heresy of Calvin. When preaching at Sevis he was fired at by a Calvinist\, but the fear of death could not deter him from proclaiming divine truth. After his sermon he was waylaid by a body of Protestants headed by a minister\, who attacked him and tried to force him to embrace their so-called. reform. But he said\, “I came to refute your errors\, not to embrace them; I will never renounce Catholic doctrine\, which is the truth of all ages\, and I fear not death.” On this they fell upon him with their poignards\, and the first martyr of Propaganda went to receive his palm.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/st-fidelis-of-sigmaringen-martyr-r-iii/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200425
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200426
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165944Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165944Z
UID:1565-1587772800-1587859199@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Greater Litanies–V (Procession only) - St. Mark\, The Evangelist–R (II)
DESCRIPTION:ST. MARK was converted to the Faith by the Prince of the Apostles\, whom he afterwards accompanied to Rome\, acting there as his secretary or interpreter. When St. Peter was writing his first epistle to the churches of Asia\, he affectionately joins with his own salutation that of his faithful companion\, whom he calls “my son Mark.” The Roman people entreated St. Mark to put in writing for them the substance of St. Peter’s frequent discourses on Our Lord’s life. This the Evangelist did under the eye and with the express sanction of the apostle\, and every page of his brief but graphic gospel so bore the impress of St. Peter’s character\, that the Fathers used to name it “Peter’s Gospel” St. Mark was now sent to Egypt to found the Church of Alexandria. Here his disciples became the wonder of the world for their piety and asceticism\, so that St. Jerome speaks of St. Mark as the father of the anchorites\, who at a later time thronged the Egyptian deserts. Here\, too\, he set up the first Christian school\, the fruitful mother of many illustrious doctors and bishops. After governing his see for many years\, St. Mark was one day seized by the heathen\, dragged by ropes over stones\, and thrown into prison. On the morrow the torture was repeated\, and having been consoled by a vision of angels and the voice of Jesus\, St. Mark went to his reward. It is to St. Mark that we owe the many slight touches which often give such vivid coloring to the Gospel scenes\, and help us to picture to ourselves the very gestures and looks of our blessed Lord. It is he alone who notes that in the temptation Jesus was “with the beasts;” that He slept in the boat “on a pillow;” that He “embraced” the little children. He alone preserves for us the commanding words “Peace\, be still!” by which the storm was quelled; or even the very sounds of His voice\, the “Ephpheta” and “Talitha cumi\,” by which the dumb were made to speak and the dead to rise. So\, too\, the “looking round about with anger\,” and the “sighing deeply\,” long treasured in the memory of the penitent apostle\, who was himself converted by his Saviour’s look\, are here recorded by his faithful interpreter.\nReflection.—Learn from St. Mark to keep the image of the Son of man ever before your mind\, and to ponder every syllable which fell from His lips.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/greater-litanies-v-procession-only-st-mark-the-evangelist-r-ii/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200426
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200427
DTSTAMP:20260404T090905
CREATED:20200130T165944Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165944Z
UID:1566-1587859200-1587945599@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Second Sunday after Easter–W (II) - Sts. Cletus and Marcellinus\, Popes\, Martyrs
DESCRIPTION:ST. CLETUS was the third Bishop of Rome\, and succeeded St. Linus\, which circumstance alone shows his eminent virtue among the first disciples of St. Peter in the West. He sat twelve years\, from 76 to 89. The canon of the Roman Mass\, Bede\, and other martyrologists\, style him a martyr. He was buried near St. Linus\, in the Vatican\, and his relics still remain in that church. ST. MARCELLINUS succeeded St. Coins in the bishopric of Rome in 296\, about the time that Diocletian set himself up for a deity\, and impiously claimed divine honors. In those stormy times of persecution Marcellinus acquired great glory. He sat in St. Peter’s chair eight years\, three months\, and twenty-five days\, dying in 304\, a year after the cruel persecution broke out\, in which he gained much honor. He has been styled a martyr\, though his blood was not shed in the cause of religion.\nReflection.—It is a fundamental maxim of the Christian morality\, and a truth which Christ has established in the clearest terms and in innumerable passages of the Gospel\, that the cross or sufferings and mortification are the road to eternal bliss. They\, therefore\, who lead not here a crucified and mortified life are unworthy ever to possess the unspeakable joys of His kingdom. Our Lord Himself\, our model and our head\, walked in this path\, and His great Apostle puts us in mind that He entered into bliss only by His blood and by the cross.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/second-sunday-after-easter-w-ii-sts-cletus-and-marcellinus-popes-martyrs/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200427
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200428
DTSTAMP:20260404T090906
CREATED:20200130T165945Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165945Z
UID:1567-1587945600-1588031999@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:St. Peter Canisius\, Confessor\, Doctor–W (III)
DESCRIPTION:Peter Canisius (1521-97) was drawn to the Society of Jesus by the preaching of Bl. Peter Faber\, the first disciple of St. Ignatius. Peter Canisius realized that in the Germany where Luther had recently been preaching heresy\, many Catholics had no clear knowledge of their religion. He wrote a catechism that was of incomparable value to the heroic missioners of the Catholic Counter Reformation. He was a pioneer of the Catholic press\, and founder of many Catholic colleges in Germany\, Austria\, and Bohemia. According to the Catechism of Petrus Canisius\, ‘the veneration of the Virgin Mary\, is the best way to Jesus Christ and His Church.’
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/st-peter-canisius-confessor-doctor-w-iii/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200428
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200429
DTSTAMP:20260404T090906
CREATED:20200130T165945Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165945Z
UID:1568-1588032000-1588118399@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:St. Paul of the Cross\, Confessor–W (III)
DESCRIPTION:THE eighty-one years of this Saint’s life were modelled on the Passion of Jesus Christ. In his childhood\, when praying in church\, a heavy bench fell on his foot\, but the boy took no notice of the bleeding wound\, and spoke of it as “a rose sent from God.” A few years later\, the vision of a scourge with “love” written on its lashes assured him that his thirst for penance would be satisfied. In the hope of dying for the faith\, he enlisted in a crusade against the Turks; but a voice from the Tabernacle warned him that he was to serve Christ alone\, and that he should found a congregation in His honor. At the command of his bishop he began while a layman to preach the Passion\, and a series of crosses tried the reality of his vocation. All his first companions\, save his brother\, deserted him; the Sovereign Pontiff refused him an audience; and it was only after a delay of seventeen years that the Papal approbation was obtained\, and the first house of the Passionists was opened on Monte Argentario\, the spot which Our Lady had pointed out. St. Paul chose as the badge of his Order a heart with three nails\, in memory of the sufferings of Jesus\, but for himself he invented a more secret and durable sign. Moved by the same holy impulse as Blessed Henry Suso\, St. Jane Frances\, and other Saints\, he branded on his side the Holy Name\, and its characters were found there after death. His heart beat with a supernatural palpitation\, which was especially vehement on Fridays\, and the heat at times was so intense as to scorch his shirt in the region of his heart. Through fifty years of incessant bodily pain\, and amidst all his trials\, Paul read the love of Jesus everywhere\, and would cry out to the flowers and grass\, “Oh! be quiet\, be quiet\,” as if they were reproaching him with ingratitude. He died whilst the Passion was being read to him\, and so passed with Jesus from the cross to glory.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/st-paul-of-the-cross-confessor-w-iii/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200429
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200430
DTSTAMP:20260404T090906
CREATED:20200130T165945Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165945Z
UID:1569-1588118400-1588204799@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:St. Peter of Verona\, Martyr–R (III)
DESCRIPTION:Also known as Saint Peter Martyr\, was a 13th-century Italian Catholic priest. He was a Dominican friar and a celebrated preacher. He served as Inquisitor in Lombardy\, was killed by an assassin\, and was canonized as a Catholic saint 11 months after his death\, making this the fastest canonization in history.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/st-peter-of-verona-martyr-r-iii/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200430
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200501
DTSTAMP:20260404T090906
CREATED:20200130T165947Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165947Z
UID:1570-1588204800-1588291199@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:St. Catherine of Siena\, Virgin–W (III)
DESCRIPTION:The seraphic St. Catherine willingly sacrificed the delights of contemplation to labor for the Church and the Apostolic See. How deeply do the troubles of the Church and the consequent loss of souls afflict us? How often do we pray for the Church and the Pope?
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/st-catherine-of-siena-virgin-w-iii/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200501
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200502
DTSTAMP:20260404T090906
CREATED:20200130T165947Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165947Z
UID:1571-1588291200-1588377599@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:First Friday - ST. JOSEPH the Worker\, Confessor–W (I)
DESCRIPTION:Apparently in response to the “May Day” celebrations for workers sponsored by Communists\, Pius XII instituted the feast of St. Joseph the Worker in 1955. But the relationship between Joseph and the cause of workers has a much longer history. In a constantly necessary effort to keep Jesus from being removed from ordinary human life\, the Church has from the beginning proudly emphasized that Jesus was a carpenter\, obviously trained by Joseph in both the satisfactions and the drudgery of that vocation. Humanity is like God not only in thinking and loving\, but also in creating. Whether we make a table or a cathedral\, we are called to bear fruit with our hands and mind\, ultimately for the building up of the Body of Christ.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/first-friday-st-joseph-the-worker-confessor-w-i/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200502
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200503
DTSTAMP:20260404T090906
CREATED:20200130T165947Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165947Z
UID:1572-1588377600-1588463999@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:First Saturday - St. Athanasius\, Bishop\, Confessor\, Doctor–W (III)
DESCRIPTION:While he was still a deacon\, Athanasius of Alexandria (c. 298-373) was present at the Council of Nicaea\, during which the true doctrine of the Church concerning the divinity of Christ was defined; and the rest of his life was a heroic testimony to the profession of the Nicene Fathers. After Athanasius had become bishop of Alexandria\, he resisted during long years the pressure put upon him to compromise in essentials of the Faith. Five times he endured exile\, and in consequence composed most of his great writings from his see city.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/first-saturday-st-athanasius-bishop-confessor-doctor-w-iii/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200503
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200504
DTSTAMP:20260404T090906
CREATED:20200130T165948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165948Z
UID:1573-1588464000-1588550399@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:Third Sunday after Easter–W (II) - St. Alexander I\, Eventius & Theodulus\, Martyrs\, and Juvenal\, Confessor\, Bishop
DESCRIPTION:POPE ALEXANDER I. His pontificate is variously dated by critics\, e.g. 106-115 (Duchesne) or 109-116 (Lightfoot). In Christian antiquity he was credited with a pontificate of about ten years (Eusebius\, Church History IV.1) and there is no reason to doubt that he was on the “catalogue of bishops” drawn up at Rome by Hegesippus (Eusebius\, IV\, xxii\, 3) before the death of Pope Eleutherius (c. 189). According to a tradition extant in the Roman Church at the end of the fifth century\, and recorded in the Liber Pontificalis he suffered a martyr’s death by decapitation on the Via Nomentana in Rome\, 3 May.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/third-sunday-after-easter-w-ii-st-alexander-i-eventius-theodulus-martyrs-and-juvenal-confessor-bishop/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200504
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200505
DTSTAMP:20260404T090906
CREATED:20200130T165948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165948Z
UID:1574-1588550400-1588636799@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:St. Monica\, Widow–W (III)
DESCRIPTION:MONICA\, the mother of St. Augustine\, was born in 332. A\, a girlhood of singular innocence and piety\, she was given in marriage to Patritius\, a pagan. She at once devoted herself to his conversion\, praying for him always\, and winning his reverence and love by the holiness of her life and her affectionate forbearance. She was rewarded by seeing him baptized a year before his death. When her son Augustine went astray in faith and manners her prayers and tears were incessant. She was once very urgent with a learned bishop that he would talk to her son in order to bring him to a better mind\, but he declined\, despairing of success with one at once so able and so headstrong. However\, on witnessing her prayers and tears\, he bade her be of good courage; for it might not be that the child of those tears should perish. By going to Italy\, Augustine could for a time free himself from his mother’s importunities; but he could not escape from her prayers\, which encompassed him like the providence of God. She followed him to Italy\, and there by his marvelous conversion her sorrow was turned into joy. At Ostia\, on their homeward journey\, as Augustine and his mother sat at a window conversing of the life of the blessed\, she turned to him and said\, “Son\, there is nothing now I care for in this life. What I shall now do or why I am here\, I know not. The one reason I had for wishing to linger in this life a little longer was that I might see you a Catholic Christian before I died. This has God granted me superabundantly in seeing you reject earthly happiness to become His servant. What do I here?” A few days afterwards she had an attack of fever\, and died in the year 387.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/st-monica-widow-w-iii/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200505
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200506
DTSTAMP:20260404T090906
CREATED:20200130T165949Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200130T165949Z
UID:1575-1588636800-1588723199@marylandcatholicwomen.com
SUMMARY:St. Pius V\, Pope\, Confessor–W (III)
DESCRIPTION:A DOMINICAN friar from his fifteenth year\, Michael Ghislieri\, as a simple religious\, as inquisitor\, as bishop\, and as cardinal\, was famous for his intrepid defense of the Church’s faith and discipline\, and for the spotless purity of his own life. His first care as Pope was to reform the Roman court and capital by the strict example of his household and the severe punishment of all offenders. He next endeavored to obtain from the Catholic powers the recognition of the Tridentine decrees\, two of which he urgently enforced–the residence of bishops\, and the establishment of diocesan seminaries. He revised the Missal and Breviary\, and reformed the ecclesiastical music. Nor was he less active in protecting the Church without. We see him at the same time supporting the Catholic King of France against the Huguenot rebels\, encouraging Mary Queen of Scots\, in the bitterness of her captivity\, and excommunicating her rival the usurper Elizabeth\, when the best blood of England had flowed upon the scaffold\, and the measure of her crimes was full. But it was at Lepanto that the Saint’s power was most manifest; there\, in October\, 1571\, by the holy league which he had formed\, but still more by his prayers to the great Mother of God\, the aged Pontiff crushed the Ottoman forces\, and saved Christendom from the Turk. Six months later\, St. Pius died\, having reigned but six years. St. Pius was accustomed to kiss the feet of his crucifix on leaving or entering his room. One day the feet moved away from his lips. Sorrow filled his heart\, and he made acts of contrition\, fearing that he must have committed some secret offence\, but still he could not kiss the feet. It was afterwards found that they had been poisoned by an enemy.
URL:https://marylandcatholicwomen.com/event/st-pius-v-pope-confessor-w-iii/
CATEGORIES:Church Calendar
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR