Viewing all items in Resource Category: Holy Days
Featuring the Saints whose feast-day is this month
- Like Peter, Paul (d. c. 65) also started life with another name: Saul. This great apostle to the Gentiles was a Jew born in Tarsus and brought up by Gamaliel as a Pharisee. So keen was he to defend the god of his fathers that he became a persecutor of Christianity, and even took part...29th June St Paul, apostle to the Gentiles
- Editor: As the Church’s year does not change, much of this material has appeared before. The item on Comgall is new. 1 May Day 1 Philip the Apostle/James the Less 2 Athanasius 8 Julian of Norwich 9 Pachomius New*10 Comgall 14 Matthias the Apostle – called by lots 16 Caroline Chisholm 19 Dunstan...High Days and Holy Days (all) for May 2019
- May is the month when the ancient pagans used to get up to ‘all sorts’! The Romans held their festival to honour the mother-goddess Maia, goddess of nature and growth. (May is named after her.) The early Celts celebrated the feast of Beltane, in honour of the sun god, Beli. For centuries in ‘Olde England’...1st May – May Day: unbridled merriment
- Is there someone in church whom you respect for their spirituality and common sense combined – someone you feel easy about approaching to ask questions? That person’s patron saint should be Philip. Philip came from Bethsaida, and was a disciple of Jesus from early on. He knew how to lead others to Jesus – he...1st May – Philip, the apostle with common sense
- One thing for sure: the apostles were not self-obsessed. In fact, many a church historian has wished that they had left us just a few more personal details about themselves in the New Testament. James the Less is an excellent example. This is the name we give to James the son of Alphaeus, but –...1st May – James the Less: quiet son of Alphaeus
- This is the name behind the Athanasian Creed. Athanasius (296-373) was born into a prosperous family in Alexandria in Egypt, studied in the Christian school there and entered the ministry. He was twenty-nine years old when he accompanied Alexander, the bishop of Alexandria, to the Church’s first ecumenical Council, at Nicaea in 325. Although Athanasius...2nd May – Athanasius: the theologian who gave us the Nicene Creed
- by Canon David Winter Many years ago, studying English literature at university, I was intrigued to be introduced to the work of Julian of Norwich. She was writing at the end of the 14th century, when our modern English language was slowly emerging from its origins in Anglo-Saxon and Middle English. Our lecturer was mainly...8th May – Julian of Norwich: a voice from a distant cell
- Have you ever worked for a disorganised organisation? You know the scene: your boss lives in a mild panic, your goals and deadlines keep being changed, your colleagues whisper darkly in corners, emails contradict each other, meetings lead to more confusion… and you go home each night with a headache. And so it is that...9th May – Pachomius: the patron saint of administrators
- Here is a great saint for all teachers, head teachers and principals of educational institutions, and indeed anyone whose vocation is to train and equip others. For Comgall (c 516 – c 601) was founder and first abbot of Bangor, which became the largest monastery in Ireland. And large means LARGE – for including several...New*10th May – Comgall
- Have you ever happened to be in the right place at the right time, with certain qualifications, and suddenly realise that God is singling you out for a special task? If so, Matthias is a good patron saint for you! In Acts 1 (15 – 26) the apostles had a task to do: Judas had...15th May – Matthias the Apostle: called by lots
- If you’re saying to yourself, ‘Who?’ you’ll be in good company. May 15th is the feast day of St Matthias the Apostle, and in describing him thus we have said just about all there is to know about him. He gets just one mention in the Bible, in the first chapter of Acts, immediately...15th May – St Matthias: the replacement apostle
- If you want an example of someone who can show you their faith through their works, Caroline Chisholm is a saint for you. This doughty little 19th century English woman had such a compassionate heart that she helped tens of thousands of people, from India to Australia. Caroline was born in Northamptonshire in May, 1808. ...16th May – Caroline Chisholm: helping the emigrants to Australia