(658-739) Willibrord was the son of the hermit St. Wilgis, who sent him to the Benedictine monastery of Ripon, England, under Abbot St. Wilfrid of York. After Wilfrid was deposed and exiled in 677/678, Willibrord also went into exile, spending 12 years in Ireland, where he became a disciple of St. Egbert. He was ordained […]
SAINT OF THE DAY
NOV. 8: BLESSED JOHN DUNS SCOTUS
(1266-1308) Today’s saint was born in Duns, county of Berwick, Scotland. The “Scotus” in his name is a derivation of “Scotia,” the Latin name for his native land. John received the habit of the Friars Minor at Dumfries, where his uncle Elias Duns was superior. After novitiate, John studied at Oxford and Paris and was […]
NOV. 9: ST. THEODORE
(Died 304 AD) St. Theodore was born a heathen and as a young man went into the army. By associating with Christian soldiers, he became familiar with that faith and eventually embraced it. Following the example of many others at that time, he did not profess openly his beliefs. When his heathen comrades used to […]
NOV. 10: ST. LEO THE GREAT
(400-461 AD) Leo’s pontificate took place in the middle of the fifth century (440-461) and was marked by a number of firsts: he was the first pope named Leo, and the first pope to be remembered as “the Great” (later, Gregory I and Nicholas I would also be accorded the honor). Leo is also the […]
NOV. 11: ST. MARTIN, BISHOP OF TOURS
(316-397) St. Martin was born in what is now Hungary, the son of a military tribune and grew up in Pavia, Italy. Although his parents were pagan, Martin was interested in Christianity. When an imperial edict arrived, he was commanded to take up the sword and putting an end, so it seemed, to his desire […]
NOV. 12: ST. JOSAPHAT
(1580-1623) In 1964, the embrace of Pope Paul VI and Athenagoras I, Orthodox Patriarch of Constantinople made all the papers and was hailed as a step toward healing the 900-year-old rift between Rome and the Eastern Church. Today’s saint strove for similar goals 369 years before that momentous embrace. The Orthodox bishop of Brest-Litovsk (in […]
NOV. 13: ST. FRANCES XAVIER CABRINI
(1850-1917) Maria Cabrini was born in Sant’Angelo Lodigiano, in northern Italy, the youngest of 13 children, only four of whom survived to adulthood. She was determined from her childhood to make religious work her life’s vocation. When Frances was 18, she applied for admission to the religious congregation of the Daughters of the Sacred Heart […]
NOV. 14: ST. SERAPION
(1178-1240) Serapion Scott was born at the turn of the year 1178 in the British Isles and was a relative of the Scottish monarch. Still a child, he was at the side of King Richard the Lionhearted on the Third Crusade, fighting for the faith and for the liberation of the Holy Land. Even then, […]
NOV. 15: ST. ALBERT THE GREAT
(1206-1280) Albert was made the Prior of a Dominican Province in Germany, was a personal theologian and canonist to the pope, preached a Crusade in Germany and was appointed the Bishop of Regensburg for fewer than two years before resigning. Neither ruthless nor politically minded, the complex web of elites who had interests in his […]
NOV. 16: ST. MARGARET OF SCOTLAND
(1045-1093) Margaret of Scotland, or Margaret of Wessex, was an English princess born in Hungary to Princess Agatha of Hungary and English Prince Edward the Exile around 1045. Her siblings, Cristina and Edgar the Atheling were also born in Hungary around this time. The family returned to England when she was 10 years old and […]