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The Quiet Constant Voice of Roman Catholicism for 59 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.


DAILY MEDITATIONS ON THE MARY'S LIFE

Discover the timeless beauty of Maria Magnificata: Short Meditations for May, the Month on Our Lady’s Life on the Bellarmine Forum. These daily reflections, rooted in Scripture and tradition, invite you to journey through the key moments of Mary’s life—from her Immaculate Conception to her glorious Coronation as Queen of Heaven. Perfect for May or October devotions, or alongside the Thirty Days’ Prayer, each meditation offers three practical points to inspire your faith and deepen your love for Our Lady. Whether you seek quiet meditation or a quick, heartfelt read, these concise reflections honor Mary’s role as our spiritual mother and guide. Let her example of obedience, charity, and trust lead you closer to Christ. Visit the Bellarmine Forum to explore these daily meditations and enrich your spiritual life with Mary’s grace.


Embrace this opportunity to grow in devotion and discover why Mary’s life continues to inspire and help Catholics become saints

 

A black and white illustration of Jesus healing a blind man, surrounded by several men in ancient attire. One man points towards the city gates in the background. The scene depicts a biblical event, likely from the New Testament.

FEBRUARY 15, 2026 – STS. FAUSTINUS AND JOVITA, MARTYRS.


  • St. Claude de la Colombiere (1862). Priest. (Current) St. Margaret Mary Alacoque’s confessor.
  • Sts. Faustinus & Jovita (121). Martyr. (Traditional) brothers

QUINQUAGESIMA SUNDAY & THE FORTY HOURS’ DEVOTION.

QUINQUAGESIMA SUNDAY is the third day preceding Ash Wednesday. That holy season is approaching when the Church denies herself her songs of joy in order the more forcibly to remind us, her children, that we are living in a Babylon of spiritual danger, and to excite us to regain that genuine Christian spirit which every thing in the world around us is striving to undermine. If we are obliged to take part in the amusements of the few days before Lent, let it be with a heart deeply imbued with the maxims of the Gospel. But, as a substitute for frivolous amusements and dangerous pleasures, the Church offers a feast surpassing all earthly enjoyments, and a means whereby we can make some amends to God for the insults offered to His divine majesty. The Lamb that taketh away the sins of the world is exposed upon our altars. On this His throne of mercy He receives the homage of those who come to adore Him and acknowledge Him for their King; He accepts the repentance of those who come to tell Him how grieved they are at having followed any other Master; and He offers Himself again to His Eternal Father as a propitiation for those sinners who yet treat His favors with indifference. It was the pious Cardinal Gabriel Paleotti, Archbishop of Bologna, who, in the sixteenth century, first originated the admirable devotion of the Forty Hours. His object in this solemn exposition of the Most Blessed Sacrament was to offer to the Divine Majesty some compensation for the sins of man, and, at the very time when the world was busiest in deserving His anger, to appease it by the sight of His own Son, the Mediator between heaven and earth. Pope Benedict XIV granted many indulgences to all the faithful of the Papal States who, during these days, should visit Our Lord in this mystery of His love, and should pray for the pardon of sinners. This favor, at first so restricted, afterward was extended by Pope Clement XIII to the Universal Church. Thus the Forty Hours’ Devotion has spread throughout the whole world and become one of the most solemn expressions of Catholic piety.

Bf saints quinquagesima sunday blog

REFLECTION: Let us then go apart, for at least one short hour, from the dissipation of earthly enjoyments, and, kneeling in the presence of our Jesus, merit the grace to keep our hearts innocent and detached.

ed. note:  This doesn’t seem to be happening anymore right before Lent as proposed (at least by surveying parishes generally), but the reader is invited to see what was going on in Mother Church at the end of the 19th century and turn of the 20th century. 


ST. MESMIN. STS. FAUSTINUS AND JOVITA, MARTYRS.

FAUSTINUS and Jovita were brothers, nobly born, and zealous professors of the Christian religion, which they preached without fear in their city of Brescia, while the bishop of that place lay concealed during the persecution. Their remarkable zeal excited the fury of the heathens against them, and procured them a glorious death for their faith at Brescia, in Lombardy, under the Emperor Adrian. Julian, a heathen lord, apprehended them; and the emperor himself, passing through Brescia, when neither threats nor torments could shake their constancy, commanded them to be beheaded. They seem to have suffered about the year 121. The city of Brescia honors them as its chief patrons, possesses their relics, and a very ancient church in that city bears their names.

Bf saints 02 15 blog

REFLECTION: The spirit of Christ is a spirit of martyrdom—at least of mortification and penance. It is always the spirit of the cross. The more we share in the suffering life of Christ, the greater share we inherit in His spirit, and in the fruit of His death. To souls mortified to their senses and disengaged from earthly things, God gives frequent foretastes of the sweetness of eternal life, and the most ardent desires of possessing Him in His glory. This is the spirit of martyrdom, which entitles a Christian to a happy resurrection and to the bliss of the life to come.


WORD OF THE DAY

REPARATION. The act or fact of making amends. It implies an attempt to restore things to their normal or sound conditions, as they were before something wrong was done. It applies mainly to recompense for the losses sustained or the harm caused by some morally bad action. With respect to God, it means making up

with greater love for the failure in love through sin; it means restoring what was unjustly taken and compensating with generosity for the selfishness that caused the jury. (Etym. Latin reparare, to prepare anew, restore.)

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!)

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