Solemnities, Feasts, Obligatory and Optional Memorials, and Traditional Dates of Commemoration
- Frances of Rome, religious
- Pacian, bishop
- Gregory of Nyssa, bishop
- Bosa, bishop
- Catherine of Bologna, virgin
- Dominic Savio [1]
The feast of St. Frances of Rome is commemorated today as an Optional Memorial.
St. Frances of Rome (1384-1440 A.D.) was married and also worked to minister to the poor of Rome. When her husband's mother died, she was required to assume the duties of the household of her husband. Despite this responsibility, Frances continued with her work with the poor, even helping those who suffered from a plague in the early 1400s A.D., and also with those who suffered in another pestilence which struck Rome around 1413 A.D. It is from these works with the poor that Frances was able to form a society of women, one without vows and living in the world. The members of the society pledged their lives to God and to the service of the poor. They became known as the Oblates of Tor de' Speechi. St. Frances of Rome died in the spring of 1440 A.D. She was canonized in the year 1608 A.D. [2] [3].
St. Gregory of Nyssa (ca. 330-395 A.D.) was the brother of St. Basil the Great. He was named bishop of Nyssa in 372 A.D. St. Gregory was active in 381 A.D. in the General Council of Constantinople, which fought against Arianism. He accomplished a lot of written works:
- numerous theological treatises, such as
- his Catechetical Discourse
- treatises against Eunomius and Apollinaris
- a book on virginity
- commentaries on Scripture [4]
In the Catholic Church, he is commemorated on this day, March 9, but in the East, in the Byzantine Calendar, he is commemorated every 10th of January.
Saints in the Byzantine Calendar [March 9]
- Sts. Forty Martyrs at Sebaste in Armenia [2]
The Forty Martyrs of Sebaste were Roman soldiers who were forced to stand naked on a frozen lake because they refused to abandon their Christian faith. They died from exposure to the cold. Sebaste, now in modern-day Turkey, was part of Lesser Armenia in the year 320 A.D. - the traditional date of the 40 Martyrs death [5].
References: Books, Websites & AI Search Results
- [1] Pocket Catholic Dictionary, John A. Hardon
- [2] Saints for Our Time, by Ed Ransom
- [3] Lives of the Saints, Richard P. McBrien
- [4] Dictionary of Saints, John J. Delaney
- [5] AI Overview for the search query "forty martyrs of sebaste in armenia", Google.com