FEBRUARY 6, 2024 – ST. DOROTHY, VIRGIN, MARTYR.


  • St. Titus (96). Bishop. Patron of United States Army Chaplain Corps. (Traditional) The same Titus to whom St. Paul wrote that Epistle.
  • St. Paul Miki & Companions (1597). Martyr, Priest. (Current) Japanese martyrs, they were crucified
  • St. Dorothy (303). Martyr, Virgin. Patroness of Florists. (Traditional)

ST. DOROTHY was a young virgin, celebrated at Cæsarea, where she lived, for her angelic virtue. Her parents seem to have been martyred before her in the Diocletian persecution, and when the Governor Sapricius came to Cæsarea, he called her before him, and sent this child of martyrs to the home where they were waiting for her. She was stretched upon the rack, and offered marriage if she would consent to sacrifice, or death if she refused. But she replied, that “Christ was her only Spouse, and death her desire.” She was then placed in charge of two women who had fallen away from the Faith, in the hope that they might pervert her; but the fire of her own heart rekindled the flame in theirs, and led them back to Christ. When she was set once more on the rack, Sapricius himself was amazed at the heavenly look she wore, and asked her the cause of her joy. “Because,” she said, “I have brought back two souls to Christ, and because I shall soon be in heaven rejoicing with the angels.” Her joy grew as she was buffeted in the face, and her sides burnt with plates of red-hot iron. “Blessed be Thou,” she cried, when she was sentenced to be beheaded, “blessed be Thou, O Thou Lover of souls! who dost call me to Paradise, and invitest me to Thy nuptial chamber.”

St. Dorothy suffered in the dead of winter, and it is said that on the road to her passion a lawyer called Theophilus, who had been used to calumniate and persecute the Christians, asked her, in mockery, to send him “apples or roses from the garden of her Spouse.” The Saint promised to grant his request, and, just before she died, a little child stood by her side bearing three apples and three roses. She bade him take them to Theophilus, and tell him this was the present which he sought from the garden of her Spouse. St. Dorothy had gone to heaven, and Theophilus was still making merry over his challenge to the Saint, when the child entered his room. He saw that the child was an angel in disguise, and the fruit and flowers of no earthly growth. He was converted to the faith, and then shared in the martyrdom of St. Dorothy.

Bf saints 02 06 blog

REFLECTION: Do you wish to be safe in the pleasures and happy in the troubles of the world? Pray for heavenly desires, and say with St. Philip, “Paradise, Paradise!”


WORD OF THE DAY

INCOMPREHENSIBLE. That which cannot be fully understood. In one sense nothing is totally comprehensible by humans since they are not the first cause of anything. But, properly speaking, only God is said to be incomprehensible because only he is infinitely perfect and no finite mind can exhaustively understand the infinite. The Church teaches that God is incomprehensible (Denzinger 800). However, there is a difference between his incomprehensibility on earth and in heaven. On earth God is incomprehensible because he known only by faith; in heaven he is still incomprehensible because he is infinite, even though in the beatific vision we shall see him in his essence as he is. Although not comprehensible, God is not unintelligible. He can be known, here by faith and hereafter by sight. But neither on earth nor in heaven can he be totally known in the fullness of his own comprehensive knowledge of himself. “God whose Being is infinite, is infinitely knowable. No created understanding can, however, know God in an infinite manner” (St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, I, 12, 7).

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!)


This article, FEBRUARY 6, 2024 – ST. DOROTHY, VIRGIN, MARTYR. is a post from The Bellarmine Forum.
https://bellarmineforum.org/february-6-2024-st-dorothy-virgin-martyr/
Do not repost the entire article without written permission. Reasonable excerpts may be reposted so long as it is linked to this page.

John B. Manos

John B. Manos, Esq. is an attorney and chemical engineer. He has a dog, Fyo, and likes photography, astronomy, and dusty old books published by Benziger Brothers. He is the President of the Bellarmine Forum.

Get VIP Notice

Have new blog posts delivered right to your inbox!
Enter your email: