Catholic Culture Trusted Commentary
Catholic Culture Trusted Commentary
Move to: Previous Day | Next Day

Ordinary Time: January 19th

Wednesday of the Second Week of Ordinary Time

Other Commemorations: Sts. Marius, Martha, Audifax, and Abachum, Martyrs (RM)

MASS READINGS

January 19, 2011 (Readings on USCCB website)

COLLECT PRAYER

All-powerful and ever-living God, direct your love that is within us, that our efforts in the name of your Son may bring mankind to unity and peace. We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Recipes (0)

show

Activities (2)

show

Prayers (2)

Library (0)

Blog & Podcasts (0)

» Enjoy our Liturgical Seasons series of e-books!

According to the 1962 Missal of Bl. John XXIII the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite, today is the feast of Sts. Marius, Martha, Audivax and Abachum, a group of Roman martyrs of the third century. St. Canute was king of Denmark; he was put to death out of hatred of his faith and his zeal in working for its extension in his kingdom. He was killed in St. Alban's Church in Odense.

The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity


Meditation: Patience and Union with God
Being convinced that it is only in so far as my works are united with the merits of Jesus Christ that they are satisfactory and meritorious, it follows that my great aim should be to unite myself as closely as possible with Jesus Christ and His sufferings in all my actions, and thus it would matter little what I am engaged at.

But how is this union to be effected?

St. Benedict tells us "We share in the sufferings of Christ by patience." This little sentence gave me a great light. The life of a saint must be one of great and mysterious sufferings. Patientia=Sufferentia.

"If anyone will come after Me, let him deny himself," says Jesus. This shows that it is suffering which draws us near to Jesus. "He who dos not take up his cross daily and follow Me, cannot be My disciple." Therefore all other methods which do not include this are founded on error.
—Blessed Abbot Columbia Marmion, A Master of the Spiritual Life, p. 71.


St. Marius and Family
Their feast does not appear in the Roman calendar until the twelfth century. The Acts of these martyrs are wholly legendary. They give the following details: Marius was a Persian of noble extraction. With his wife, who was also noble-born, and his two sons, Audifax and Abachus, he came to Rome during the reign of Emperor Claudius II (268-270) to venerate the graves of the martyrs. They visited the Christians in prison, encouraged them by word and deed, and shared with them their goods. And like Tobias of old, they buried the bodies of the saints.

It was not long before they themselves were arrested; and when neither threats nor allurements could make them offer sacrifice to the idols, they were savagely flogged. Martha was the first to die, but not before she had fervently exhorted her husband and sons to endure steadfastly whatever tortures might be inflicted for the faith. All were beheaded in the same place and their bodies thrown into the fire. Felicitas, a saintly Roman woman, succeeded in recovering the half-burnt bodies and buried them on her estate.

Highlights and Things To Do: