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To: Robert Drobot; Lady In Blue; Salvation; narses; SMEDLEYBUTLER; redhead; Notwithstanding; ...
All Saints is a Holy Day of Obligation. The principal activity for every Catholic family today is to go to Mass


Many of those especially holy people whose names and stories were known, the church later canonized and made Saints.

This is the perfect thread on which to post the history of some of the lesser known saints and hopefully inspire others to learn more about them.




St. Maroun

Saint Maroun, born in the middle of the 4th century was a priest who latter became a hermit, retiring to a mountain of Taurus near Antioch. His holiness and miracles attracted many followers, and drew attention throughout the empire. St John of Chrysostom sent him a letter around 405 AD expressing his great love and respect asking St Maroun to pray for him.

The Maronite Movement

St Maroun is considered the Father of the spiritual and monastic movement now called the Maronite Church. This movement had a profound influence on Northern Syria and Lebanon. Saint Maroun spent all of his life on a mountain in the region of Cyrrhus in Syria. It is believed that the place was called "Kefar-Nabo" on the mountain of Ol-Yambos, making it the cradle of the Maronite movement.

The Maronite movement reached Lebanon when St Maroun's first disciple Abraham of Cyrrhus who was called the Apostle of Lebanon, realised that paganism was thriving in Lebanon, so he set out to convert the pagans to Christians by introducing them to the way of St Maroun. The followers of St Maroun, both monks and laity, always remained faithful to the teachings of the Catholic Church.

Spirituality

St Maroun's way was deeply monastic with emphasis on the spiritual and ascetic aspects of living. For Saint Maroun, all was connected to God and God was connected to all. He did not separate the physical and spiritual world and actually used the physical world to deepen his faith and spiritual experience with God.

St Maroun embraced the quiet solitude of the mountain life. He lived his life in open air exposed to the forces of nature such as sun, rain, hail and snow. His extraordinary desire to come to know Gods presence in all things, allowed St Maroun to transcend such forces and discover that intimate union with God. He was able to free himself from the physical world by his passion and fervour for prayer and enter into a mystical relationship of love with God.

Mission

St Maroun was a mystic who started this new ascetic-spiritual method that attracted many people in Syria and Lebanon to become his disciples. Accompanying his deeply spiritual and ascetic life, he was a zealous missionary with a passion to spread the message of Christ by preaching it to all he met. He sought not only to cure the physical ailments that people suffered, but had a great quest for nurturing and healing the "lost souls" of both pagans and Christians of his time.

This missionary work came to fruition when in the mountains of Syria, St Maroun was able to convert a pagan temple into a Christian Church. This was to be the beginning of the conversion of Paganism to Christianity in Syria which would then influence and spread to Lebanon. After his death in the year 410 AD, his spirit and teachings lived on through his disciples.

St. Maron, pray for us!

3 posted on 11/01/2006 8:28:18 AM PST by NYer (Apart from the cross, there is no other ladder by which we may get to Heaven. St. Rose of Lima)
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To: NYer
My patron Saints are typically more well-known, but I'll post them here anyways:
4 posted on 11/01/2006 8:52:13 AM PST by CT-Freeper (Said the perpetually dejected Mets fan.)
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To: NYer
Today, November 1, is also the feast of Bl. Theodore Romzha of Murkachevo, Bishop and Martyr. He was poisoned by the Communists in 1947. He is the patron of our new little mission parish.


8 posted on 11/01/2006 11:49:39 AM PST by redhead (Some days, it's just not worth chewing through the restraints. -- Disgruntled Veteran)
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To: NYer

ICON of ALL SAINTS


9 posted on 11/01/2006 3:25:12 PM PST by Kolokotronis (Christ is Risen, and you, o death, are annihilated!)
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