+A.M.D.G.+

The Quiet Constant Voice of Roman Catholicism for 61 Years

Founded in 1965, the Bellarmine Forum (Wanderer Forum Foundation) is a public charity dedicated to helping you find the true Catholic faith, enjoy it, and prosper in your life with God, His angels, and His saints.

JUNE 2026 โ€” MONTH OF THE SACRED HEART

There Is No Devotion More Urgently Recommended
Than Devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

You've heard the phrase "Sacred Heart devotion" a thousand times. You've probably even said it. But if you're honest, and especially now, when the headlines make faith feel like a contact sport and the people who are supposed to be guiding you seem to be arguing about which way is north, you have no idea what it actually means or why it would change anything about your Tuesday. 

That's the gap. Not ignorance. Fatigue. And the antidote isn't another debate. It's twelve concrete promises from Christ Himself, each one a door into a love that is personal, conditional, and real. 

For the entire month of June, the Bellarmine Forum turns to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, the love of God, symbolized in the physical heart of the Son of God who became man out of love for us. Seven days of deep teaching from Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J., from the theological foundations to the Twelve Promises, from kenosis to the Apostleship of Prayer.


Why June?

For 61 years, June has been when the Bellarmine Forum turns its full attention to the Sacred Heart. But this year, we're not just posting daily readings. We're building a guided journey โ€” seven deep lessons from Fr. Hardon that trace the arc of the devotion from theological foundations to daily practice, with a quick-reference page for the Twelve Promises and a quiz to test what you know.

 

The Twelve Promises of the Sacred Heart

1
All graces
State of life
2
Peace in homes
Family
3
Comfort in afflictions
Trials
4
Secure refuge
Life & death
5
Blessing on works
Career
6
Ocean of mercy
Repentance
7
Tepid โ†’ fervent
Conversion
8
Quick perfection
Saints
9
Bless images
Devotion
10
Hardened hearts
Apostolate
11
Names in My Heart
Promotion
12
Final perseverance
Death
A man dressed in historical religious attire stands in a cathedral, gesturing with his hands. He wears a halo and is near an ornate tomb or altar. The scene features intricate architectural details, including arches and stone carvings with a cross symbol.

JUNE 27, 2026 – ST. LADISLAS, KING.


  • Our Lady of Perpetual Help (1280). (Historical)
  • St. Cyril of Alexandria (444). Bishop, Doctor of the Church. (Current)
  • St. Ladislaus (1095). (Historical) King of Hungary

LADISLAS the First, son of Bela, King of Hungary, was born in 1041. By the pertinacious importunity of the people he was compelled, much against his own inclination, to ascend the throne, in 1080. He restored the good laws and discipline which St. Stephen had established, and which seem to have been obliterated by the confusion of the times. Chastity, meekness, gravity, charity, and piety were from his infancy the distinguishing parts of his character; avarice and ambition were his sovereign aversion, so perfectly had the maxims of the Gospel extinguished in him all propensity to those base passions. His life in the palace was most austere; he was frugal and abstemious, but most liberal to the Church and the poor. Vanity, pleasure, or idle amusements had no share in his actions or time, because all his moments were consecrated to the exercises of religion and the duties of his station, in which he had only the divine will in view, and sought only Godโ€™s greater honor. He watched over a strict and impartial administration of justice, was generous and merciful to his enemies, and vigorous in the defense of his country and the Church. He drove the Huns out of his territories, and vanquished the Poles, Russians, and Tartars. He was preparing to command, as general-in-chief, the great expedition of the Christians against the Saracens for the recovery of the Holy Land, when God called him to Himself, on the 30th of July, 1095.

Bf saints 06 27 blog

REFLECTION: The Saints filled all their moments with good works and great actions; and, whilst they labored for an immortal crown, the greatest share of worldly happiness of which this life is capable fell in their way without being even looked for by them. In their afflictions themselves, virtue afforded them the most solid comfort, pointed out the remedy, and converted their tribulations into the greatest advantages.


WORD OF THE DAY

ANTINOMIANISM. The doctrine that claims that a person’s faith in God and in the person of Christ frees him from the moral obligations of the law, whether natural or positive, biblical or ecclesiastical. It is a logical consequence of any theory that so stresses the work of the Holy Spirit as to exclude the need for co-operation with divine grace. The most authoritative condemnation of Antinomianism was by the Council of Trent, which saw in the Reformation principle of faith without good works the source of Antinomian conclusions. Hence among other anathemas of Trent was the censure of anyone who says that "God has given Jesus Christ to men as a redeemer in whom they are to trust, but not as a lawgiver whom they are to obey" (Denzinger 1571). (Etym. Greek anti, against + nomos, law.)

Modern Catholic Dictionary, Fr. John Hardon SJ (Get the real one at Eternal Life — don’t accept an abridged or edited version of this masterpiece!)

June, Month of the Sacred Heart of Jesus

The Sacred Heart of Jesus – Short Meditations for June. June 27 โ€” The Sacred Heart in Heaven.


Read More

Then & Now

"We realize we're in a critical age. I suppose most of you are concerned or know of the so-called crisis of identity. Who am I?"
โ€” Fr. James McInerney, Wanderer Forum National Conference, June 1970

Nearly sixty years ago, the Wanderer Forum asked the same question that haunts the modern world. The answer, then and now, is the same: you are a soul made in the image of God, created to love Him.

Recent Blog Posts

The Sacred Heart: The Antidote to a World That Has Forgotten How to Love
In a world that has confused love with feeling, consent, and self-expression, the Sacred Heart of Jesus is the emergency antidote we desperately need. Drawing from Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J., this essay reveals what love actually is โ€” and what we owe in return.
From May to June, from Heart to Heart
May ends with Mary. But Mary's Immaculate Heart points to Jesus' Sacred Heart. Fr. Hardon on Fatima, reparation, and the weapons she gave us.
The One Catholic Truth Magnifica Humanitas Never Said
Magnifica Humanitas put a robot right next to man and called it dignity. It never once said the only line that actually matters: Man has an immortal soul. AI does not. Thatโ€™s not clarity. Thatโ€™s surrender.
MEGA: Make Encyclicals Great Again
How the Churchโ€™s Magisterial Document on How Language Corrodes Thought Became a Case Study in Language Corroding Thought I. The[...]

+B.V.M.H.+

TO KNOW, LOVE, AND SERVE GOD

IMPRESSUM

The Bellarmine Forum

Founded in 1965 as The Wanderer Forum Foundation 

P.O. Box 542
Hudson, WI  54016-0542
651-276-1429

bellarmineforum.org
A Wisconsin Nonprofit Corporation
and Section 501(c)3 Public Charity

Copyright MMXXI Bellarmine Forum (Wanderer Forum Foundation, Inc.).

Enter your text here...

>