Jubilee Holy Year 2025: Pilgrims of Hope
September is the month dedicated to the Seven Sorrows of Mary
Be holy, for I am holy.
MARY, QUEEN OF ALL SAINTS,
MARY, JOY OF ALL SAINTS,
PRAY FOR US.
Dear faithful readers, welcome to a special edition of newsy news on this Twenty-Third Sunday of Ordinary Time, a time of the year that is anything but ordinary. This day, then, we are all about saints, one of my favorite subjects. For all the Saints, young ones, not so young ones, and all those who were and are just the age they were and are, give God the praise!
United in faith and prayer, we have much to celebrate. On this day, September 7, 2025, the day before we celebrate the Feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, we recall something Pope Francis (1936-2025) wrote about in his Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Christus vivit, addressed to young people and the entire people of God. In paragraphs 49-63, Pope Francis called to mind young saints. As he wrote, "The heart of the Church is also full of young saints who devoted their lives to Christ, many of them dying even to a martyr's death. They were precious reflections of the young Christ; their radiant witness encourages us and awakens us from our lethargy" (49). Amen to that. Among some of the young saints Pope Francis highlighted were Saint Sebastian (51), Saint Francis of Assisi (52), Saint Joan of Arc (53), Blessed Andrew Phu Yen (54), Saint Kateri Tekakwitha (55), Saint Dominic Savio (56), Saint Therese of the Child Jesus "The Little Flower" (57), Blessed Ceferino Namuncura (58), Blessed Isidore Bakanja (59), Blessed Marcel Callo (61), and Blessed Chiara Badano (62). And there are so many more, including another young saint Pope Francis highlighted (60), and another he highlighted later in the document (104-106), both of whom stand out especially on this extraordinary day.
Alert the media entire people of God, Pope Leo XIV canonized two extraordinary young people today, Italian Pier Giorgio Frassati (1901-1925), and British by birth, Italian Carlo Acutis (1991-2000), the first millennial saint. Auguri! Stand up and shout, "For all the saints who from their labors rest!"
And not only do we mark two canonizations of young people, but we also mark the 50th Anniversary of the Canonization of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton (1774-1821), affectionately called "Mother Seton," the first native-born American saint, the one who the late Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, called "wholly American," and who was canonized by Pope Saint Paul VI on September 14, 1975. Mother Seton, a saint who was just the age she was, a ripe 46 when she died. 46? Mother Seton is a young saint too. ☺
As you might imagine, I could go on and on, something that is never too difficult for me, more especially something that is not so difficult given the excitement of all the saints, newly canonized, not so newly canonized, and all the saints "next door," those who are never beatified or canonized, but who witness to the faith quietly and courageously. Those who Pope Francis wrote about in his 2018 Apostolic Exhortation Gaudete et Exsultate (7):
I like to contemplate the holiness present in the patience of God's people: in those parents who raise their children with immense love, in those women and men who work hard to support their families, in the sick, in the elderly religious who never lose their smile. In their daily perseverance I see the holiness I see the holiness of the Church militant. Very often it is the holiness found in our next-door neighbors, those who, living in our midst, reflect God's presence. We might call them "the middle-class of holiness.
To temporarily "fix" my tendency to overdo things, I will limit the voices to a few. Kind of. lol. First, we hear from our highlighted saints, from oldest to youngest. So, two quotations from each one. Given that there are so many in my collection of quotations, this is not so easy. ☺
Keep your hearts at rest. Never can you find a surer way of obtaining all your desires than that of leaving all to God, Who delights to grant the wishes even for this life if you are full of confidence.
(Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton)
God will provide. That is all my comfort.
(Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton)
There is no need to pay attention to gossip, much less get ill by giving in to those who perhaps have never known what truth is.
(Saint Pier Giorgio Frassati)
Given today's Gospel passage (Luke 14:25-43), Anyone who does not renounce all his possessions cannot be my disciple (Luke 14:43), this one is fitting.
We must sacrifice everything for everything: our ambitions, indeed our entire selves, for the cause of the Faith.
(Saint Pier Giorgio Frassati)
Here is one my favorites. Just say no to the herd mentality, for settling for mediocrity.
Everyone is born original, but most end up dying as photocopies.
(Saint Carlo Acutis)
Jesus, make yourself at home!
Live within me as if it were your own dwelling.
(Saint Carlo Acutis)
For further encouragement,
The saints in each generation, joined to those who have gone before, and filled like them with light, become a golden chain in which each saint is a separate link, united to the next by faith, works and love.
(Saint Symeon the New Theologian, 949-1022)
Holiness is for everyone in every circumstance in life. We are all called to be saints. And we become saints by loving God and others with our whole being in whatever situation we find ourselves.
(Danielle Bean, "Mothers First: Saint Bridget and Mother Seton Remind Us That We are all Called to Holiness," in Seton Reflections, July 23, 2023)
Last, and certainly not least, we remember a call from the Second Vatican Council, one addressed to each and every one of us, that is, the entire people of God. No exceptions. Open your ears and listen with the ear of your heart. Put another way, be encouraged, arise and awake from your lethargy! Christus vivit! Christ is alive! Oremus pro invicem!
,
Strengthened by so many and such great means of salvation, all the faithful, whatever their condition or state, are called by the Lord - each in his or her own way - to that perfect holiness by which the Father Himself is perfect.
(Lumen Gentium, 11)
Today's photo: One from the archives that reaches to heaven ... for all the saints in glory cheering us on.
Gertrude Feick 2025

