Saint of the Day for 9 August | Their story, miracles, and faith

Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path

Saint of the Day for 9 August

Saint of the Day for 9 August | Their story, miracles, and faith

Saint of the Day 9 August: Celebrating the Lives of the Church’s Saints

 

Every day, the Catholic Church honors a saint or blessed who stood out for their faith, dedication, and love for God. The Saint of the Day is an opportunity for the faithful to learn more about the history of the Church and be inspired by the witness of these men and women who lived according to Christ’s teachings.

 

The Meaning of the Saint of the Day

 

The celebration of the Saint of the Day is a Church tradition that helps us remember those who were examples of faith and holiness. Saints may have been martyrs who gave their lives defending their faith, missionaries who spread the Gospel, or ordinary people who lived in deep communion with God through simplicity.

Learning about each saint’s story inspires us to live with more love, patience, and hope. It also reminds us that we are all called to holiness.

 

Why Do We Celebrate the Saints?

 

Saints serve as models of Christian life. Their stories show us that, despite challenges, it is possible to live according to God’s will. Moreover, the faithful often seek the intercession of saints, believing that they are close to God and can pray for our needs.

Following the Saint of the Day is a way to strengthen our spiritual journey and learn from those who dedicated their lives to serving God. May we follow their examples and strive each day to live with greater love, faith, and hope!

 

🙏 May today’s Saint of the Day intercede for us and inspire us to live according to God’s will!

St. Theresa Benedicta of the Cross (Edith Stein), Carmelite, Virgin  and Martyr, Patron of Europe

“Life in a Jewish family”

Born in 1891 into a loving, observant German Jewish family on the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, the Day of Atonement, Edith Stein was an extraordinary student. Later she would publish an account of her family’s life, Life in a Jewish Family, as a testimony of Jewish humanity for those who had been “brought up in racial hatred from their youth.” But by the age of 14, this brilliant young woman had come to a conclusion. There was no God. And if he didn’t exist, there was no point in speaking to him. “I consciously decided, of my own volition, to give up praying,” she wrote.
After a brief period as a nurse in a World War I field hospital, Edith began to study philosophy. Her abilities and passionate pursuit of the truth soon attracted the attention of some outstanding German thinkers, among them her mentor, Edmund Husserl, one of the greatest philosophers of the day. Edith herself wanted to be a philosophy professor, but in the Germany of Edith’s time, this was impossible for a woman and a Jew.

The power of the Cross

During her studies, Edith encountered a friend whose husband had just died. Edith, the atheist who tirelessly sought the truth about the world and man, was struck by the “divine power” in this grieving woman, a power the cross “imparts to those who bear it…. It was the moment when my unbelief collapsed, and Christ began to shine his light on me – Christ in the mystery of his cross.”
Several years later, this “collapse” of her unbelief was sealed when she read St. Teresa of Avila’s autobiography. Edith was baptized in 1922, an event she experienced as both the confirmation and the fulfillment of her Jewish identity. She continued to write philosophical works and to lecture, learning that she could pursue “scholarship as a service to God.”
While Edith was discovering that the truth she so passionately sought was a Person to whom she wished to give everything in love, some of her countrymen were preparing a colossal rejection of God and of human dignity. Edith wrote, “I had heard of severe measures against Jews before. But now it dawned on me that … the destiny of these people would also be mine.”

“…the necessity of my own holocaust.”

As the situation in her country worsened, Edith understood that she had to give her life for her beloved people, who were also God’s people. What she had once said in the years before World War II, referring to her intellectual work, would become literal truth: “Every time I feel my powerlessness … to influence people directly, I become more keenly aware of the necessity of my own holocaust.”
Edith made herself a “holocaust,” the Old Testament term for a sacrificial offering destined entirely for God. She entered the Carmelite convent in Cologne as Sister Teresa Benedicta of the Cross. The beginnings of the systematic extermination of the Jews in Germany soon obliged her to escape to a convent in Echt, Holland. She wrote, “I never knew people could be like this, neither did I know that my brothers and sisters would have to suffer like this….”
Edith prepared a will, which read: “I ask the Lord to accept my life and my death … so that his kingdom may come in glory,” for the sake of the suffering Jewish people, and “for the peace of the world.” When the Nazis invaded Holland, the soldiers finally came for her and her sister Rosa, who had also converted. Taking Rosa by the hand, Edith said simply, “Come, we are going for our people.”
Edith Stein, St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, died in the gas chambers of Auschwitz on August 9, 1942. Her identification with both her people and her crucified Lord were so complete that Pope John Paul II could say at her beatification in 1987: “We bow down before the testimony of the life and death of Edith Stein … a personality who united within her rich life a dramatic synthesis of our century. It was the synthesis of a history full of deep wounds … and also the synthesis of the full truth about man.”

Liturgical Calendar

9 August: Saturday of the Eighteenth Week in Ordinary Time

Today's Readings and Gospel

Reading 1 : Deuteronomy 6:4-13
Responsorial Psalm : Psalm 18:2-3a, 3bc-4, 47 and 51
Alleluia : See 2 Timothy 1:10
Gospel : Matthew 17:14-20

Liturgical vestments: Green

  • “With the faithful trust in God’s word, we shall be well able to command a great mountain of tribulation to void from the place where it stood in our heart; whereas with a very feeble faith and a faint, we shall be scant able to remove a little hillock.” (Saint Thomas More)

  • “Each one of us in our own daily lives can testify to Christ by the power of God, the power of faith. And how do we draw from this strength? We draw it from God in prayer. Prayer is the breath of faith.” (Francis)

  • “Now, however, ‘we walk by faith, not by sight’ (2 Cor 5:7) (…). Faith can be put to the test. The world we live in often seems very far from the one promised us by faith (...).” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, Nº 164)

  • Daily Readings
    Saint
    Liturgical Calendar