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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 — 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 — 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 → 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 black and white illustration of a Catholic priest preaching from a pulpit to a congregation in a church. The priest is gesturing with his right hand, and the audience appears attentive. The scene depicts a traditional religious sermon setting.

JUNE 12, 2026 – ST. JOHN OF ST. FACUNDUS.


  • MOST SACRED HEART OF JESUS. (Current, Traditional)
  • St. Guy Vignotelli of Corona (303). Priest. (Historical)
  • St. John of St. Fernando (1479). Patron or Patroness. Patron of Salamanca, Spain. (Traditional) hermit
  • Sts. Basilides, Cyrinus, Nabor, and Nazarius (270). Martyr. (Traditional)

ST. JOHN was born at St. Fagondez, in Spain. At an early age he held several benefices in the diocese of Burgos, till the reproaches of his conscience forced him to resign them all except one chapel, where he said Mass daily, preached and catechized. After this he studied theology at Salamanca, and then labored for some time as a most devoted missionary priest. Ultimately he became a hermit of the Augustinian Order, in the same city. There his life was marked by a singular devotion to the Holy Mass. Each night after Matins he remained in prayer till the hour of celebration, when he offered the Adorable Sacrifice with the most tender piety, often enjoying the sight of Jesus in glory, and holding sweet colloquies with Him. The power of his personal holiness was seen in his preaching, which produced a complete reformation in Salamanca. He had a special gift of reconciling differences, and was enabled to put an end to the quarrels and feuds among noblemen, at that period very common and fatal. The boldness shown by St. John in reproving vice endangered his life.. A powerful noble, having been corrected by the Saint for oppressing his vassals, sent two assassins to slay him. The holiness of the Saint’s aspect, however, caused by that peace which continually reigned in his soul, struck such awe into their minds that they could not execute their purpose, but humbly besought his forgiveness. And the nobleman himself, falling sick, was brought to repentance, and recovered his health by the prayers of the Saint whom he had endeavored to murder. He was also most zealous in denouncing those hideous vices which are a fruitful source of strife, and it was in defense of holy purity that he met his death. A lady of noble birth but evil life, whose companion in sin St. John had converted, contrived to administer a fatal poison to the Saint. After several months of terrible suffering, borne with unvarying patience, St. John went to his reward on June 11th, 1479.

REFLECTION: All men desire peace, but those alone enjoy it who, like St. John, are completely dead to themselves, and love to bear all things for Christ.


WORD OF THE DAY

FRIDAY. Name derived from the Old English frigedaeg, day of Frig’, the goddess wife of Odin, supreme Norse deity. It is the sixth day of the week that since early Christian times was specially dedicated to a commemoration of the Savior’s Passion. Every Friday calls for some act of penance when abstinence from meat is not observed. This is a matter of obligation as decreed by Pope Paul VI in 1966 in the apostolic constitution Paenitemini (Norm II, 2).

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 12 — The Sanctity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.


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?"
— 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 — 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. That’s not clarity. That’s surrender.
MEGA: Make Encyclicals Great Again
How the Church’s Magisterial Document on How Language Corrodes Thought Became a Case Study in Language Corroding Thought I. The[...]

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