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Sixth Sunday after Pentecost
J.M.J.

St. Anne
Mother of the Blessed Virgin

JULY 26

THE Hebrew word Anne signifies gracious.

St. Joachim and St. Anne, the parents of the

Blessed Virgin Mary, are justly honored in the church,

and their virtue is highly extolled by St. John Damascene.
The emperor Justinian I built a church at

Constantinople in honor of St. Anne, about

the year 550. Codinus mentions another built by Justinian II, in 705.

Her body was brought from Palestine

to Constantinople in 710, whence some

portions of her relics have been dispersed

in the West. F. Cuper the Bollandist has

collected a great number of miracles

wrought through her intercession.

God has been pleased by sensible effects to

testify how much he is honored by the

devotion of the faithful to this saint, who was the great model of virtue to

all engaged in the married state, and charged with

the education of children. It was a sublime dignity and a great honor

for this saint to give to a lost world the

advocate of mercy and to be parent of the Mother of God. But it was

a far greater happiness to be, under God,

the greatest instrument of her virtue and to be spiritually her mother

by a holy education in perfect innocence

and sanctity St. Anne, being herself a vessel of grace--not by name only,

but by the possession of that rich

treasure--was chosen by God to form

his most beloved spouse to perfect virtue;

and her pious care of this illustrious daughter

was the greatest means of her own sanctification and her glory in the

church of God to the end of ages. It is a

lesson to all parents whose principal duty is the holy education of their

children. By this they glorify their Creator,

perpetuate his honor on earth to future ages, and sanctify their

own souls. St. Paul says that it is by

the education of their children that parents are to be saved.
Nor will he allow any one who has

had children, ever to be admitted to serve the

altar, whose sons do not, by their holy conduct, give proofs of a

virtuous education. Nevertheless, we see parents solicitous about the corporal qualifications of their children, and

earnest to procure them an establishment in the world; yet supinely careless in purchasing them virtue,

in which alone their true happiness consists.
This reflection drew tears from

Crates, a heathen philosopher who desired to

mount on the highest place in his city, and cry out, with all his strength,

"Citizens, what is it you think of?

You employ all your time in heaping up

riches to leave to your children; yet

take no care to cultivate their souls with virtue, as if an estate were more precious than themselves."

From "Butler's Lives of the Saints" on CD ROM (Harmony Media Inc.)

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Our Lady of the Rosary Library
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