Saints celebrated on the 26th of May
Prayer to the Angels and the Saints
Heavenly Father, in praising Your Angels and Saints we praise Your glory, for by honouring them we honour You, their Creator. Their splendour shows us Your greatness, which infinitely surpasses that of all creation.
In Your loving providence, You saw fit to send Your Angels to watch over us. Grant that we may always be under their protection and one day enjoy their company in heaven.
Heavenly Father, You are glorified in Your Saints, for their glory is the crowning of Your gifts. You provide an example for us by their lives on earth, You give us their friendship by our communion with them, You grant us strength and protection through their prayer for the Church, and You spur us on to victory over evil and the prize of eternal glory by this great company of witnesses.
Grant that we who aspire to take part in their joy may be filled with the Spirit that blessed their lives, so that, after sharing their faith on earth, we may also experience their peace in heaven. Amen.
ST QUADRATUS, BISHOP OF ATHENS, CONFESSOR
Saint Quadratus was a disciple of the apostles, inherited their spirit and gifts, and by his miracles and labours exceedingly propagated the faith, as Eusebius testified; who calls him a divine man, and assures us that he was endued with an eminent gift of prophecy, and was one of those by whom the Holy Ghost continued to work the same miracles as by the apostles.
A GREAT ORNAMENT OF ATHENS
St Publius, the immediate successor of St Dionysius the Areopagite, being crowned with martyrdom under Adrian in the year 125, St Quadratus was placed in that episcopal chair. By his qualifications in polite literature, he was esteemed by the heathens as a great ornament to their city, then the seat of the muses; and by his zeal and piety he assembled the faithful together, whom the terrors of the persecution had scattered, and rekindled the fire of their faith, which had begun in many to be extinguished, says St Jerome.
THE SUPERSTITIOUS FESTIVAL
The Emperor Adrian passed the winter at Athens in 124, and was initiated in the mysteries of the goddess Eleusina. The persecution which then raged grew much sharper on the occasion of this superstitious festival. St Quadratus thirsting after martyrdom, wrote an apology for our holy faith, which he presented to that emperor some time after the martyrdom of St Publius, and his own exaltation to the episcopal dignity, consequently in 126.
A VERY PROFITABLE BOOK
St Jerome testifies, that this performance procured him the highest applause, even among the heathens, and that it extinguished a violent persecution. He calls it, a very profitable book, and worthy the apostolical doctrine, etc. Eusebius tells us, that it was an excellent monument of the talents and apostolical faith of the author. On which account its loss is much to be regretted. In a fragment of this work, preserved us by Eusebius, St Quadratus shows the difference between the impostures of magicians, and the true miracles of Christ, and that the former were false, but the latter real, because they were permanent. “But as to the miracles of our Saviour,” says he, “they always remained, because they were real and true. The sick cured, and the dead by him raised did not only appear restored, but they remained so both whilst Christ was on earth and long after he was departed, so that some of them have come down to our time.”
(From Fr Butler's Lives of the Saints)
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