Skip to main content

TODAY'S NEW SAINTS


WELCOME!

TODAY'S NEW SAINTS 

Pope Leo XVI today canonised seven new saints, three women and four men, in a celebration that drew tens of thousands to St Peter’s Square.

The canonisations were formally announced earlier this year and confirmed by decrees approved by the late Pope Francis. The group includes two martyrs, three laypeople, and two founders of religious congregations. Among them are the first saint from Papua New Guinea and the first two from Venezuela, marking a historic moment for the Church’s growing presence outside Europe.

The Holy See’s Congregation for the Causes of Saints verified the required miracles and martyrdoms, paving the way for their canonisation after decades of devotion in their home countries.

The ceremony followed the rite of canonisation, with the solemn declaration of sainthood made in Latin before a packed Saint Peter’s Square.

Among them is Bartolo Longo, the Italian lawyer whose dramatic conversion from atheism and the occult to deep Marian devotion became one of the most remarkable stories of modern sanctity. Raised in a pious family, he left the Church and began to practise Satanism. Becoming severely depressed and tormented by diabolic visions, he turned to a friend who encouraged him to seek spiritual counsel from the Dominican friar Fr Alberto Radente. He soon renounced his Satanism and returned to the Catholic faith.

Keen to make reparation for his sinful past, he remembered the words of St Dominic that “he who propagates my rosary will be saved”. He restored a run-down church and began to organise festivals in honour of Our Lady of the Rosary.

After being gifted a painting of Our Lady of the Rosary, miracles began to be reported in connection with the shrine that St Bartolo had founded. Encouraged by his bishop, he began to build a much larger church, which was consecrated in 1891 by Cardinal La Valletta and in 1939 was enlarged to a basilica, known today as the Shrine of the Virgin of the Rosary of Pompeii.

During his mission to serve the poor of Pompei he met Countess Mariana di Fusco. At the suggestion of Pope Leo XIII, Saint Bartolo and the countess married in a chaste union. Longo continued his good work until his death in 1926 and was beatified by Pope Saint John Paul II in 1980, who called him the “Apostle of the Rosary”.

From the Middle East comes Archbishop Ignatius Choukrallah Maloyan, the Armenian Catholic prelate of Mardin, martyred during the horrors of the 1915 genocide. Refusing to renounce Christianity, he suffered imprisonment, torture, and execution, offering words of courage to his flock until his final breath. His canonisation honours the steadfast witness of the Eastern Churches and the countless martyrs who died for their faith.

Far from Europe, in Papua New Guinea, the lay catechist Peter To Rot stood as a defender of Christianity during the Japanese occupation of the Second World War. When priests were interned, he continued to lead his people in secret prayer and teaching, defying laws that banned Christian worship. His martyrdom by lethal injection in 1945 marked him as a man of quiet but unshakable faith, now the first saint of his nation.

In Venezuela, Jose Gregorio Hernandez Cisneros, remembered as “the doctor of the poor”, brought both scientific excellence and deep faith to his medical vocation. A devout layman and Third Order Franciscan, he offered free treatment to the sick and devoted his life to the dignity of every patient he encountered. Struck by a car while helping the poor, he became a beloved figure across Latin America, now canonised as a model of holiness in everyday life.

The missionary spirit is reflected in Maria Troncatti, a Salesian Sister from Italy who spent more than four decades among the Shuar people of Ecuador’s Amazon rainforest. Known affectionately as Madrecita, she healed bodies and souls alike, combining her medical skill and catechesis in humble service until her death in a plane crash in 1969.

Equally moving is the life of Maria Carmen Rendiles Martinez, a Venezuelan nun born without her left arm who served with remarkable cheerfulness and strength. Foundress of the Servants of Jesus in Caracas, she led her congregation in Eucharistic devotion and care for the poor, embodying the joy of one who bore her suffering as grace

Completing the group is Vincenza Maria Poloni of Verona, whose compassion for the poor during the 19th-century cholera epidemic led her to found the Sisters of Mercy of Verona. Her community’s enduring motto, “Serving Christ in the Poor”, continues her mission on three continents today.

During Sunday’s Mass, Pope Leo XIV read the solemn formula of canonisation, invoking the authority of the Church to declare each of them a saint. Their relics were presented for veneration, and their names inscribed in the canon of the faithful. 

Source: The Catholic Herald, October 19, 2025


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

WELCOME

  Please pick your saints: January - Saints by date  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9    10    11    12    13    14    15    16    17   18    19    20    21    22    23    24    25    26    27    28    29    30    31   February - Saints by date  1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9    10    11    12    13    14    15    16    17 18    19    20    21    22    23    24    25    26    27    28    29 ...

FATIMA APPARITION - 13 AUGUST

  ALL SAINTS CELEBRATED IN AUGUST Saints celebrated on the 13th of August Marian Feast Days WELCOME! FATIMA APPARITION - AUGUST 13 The Fatima Children “BUT IN THE END MY IMMACULATE HEART WILL TRIUMPH.” But in the end my Immaculate Heart will triumph. The Holy Father will consecrate Russia to me; it will be converted, and a certain period of peace will be granted to the world. THE AUGUST 13 EVENTS On August 13, the children were in jail at Ourem. The civil administrator threatened to boil them in oil if they did not tell the Lady’s secret. Though badly frightened, they could not think of disobeying our Lady. In disgust, the administrator finally freed them. A large number of people, not knowing that the children had been kidnapped, went to the Cova for the scheduled appearance of the Lady. At noon, there was a loud clap of thunder. Then, according to an eyewitness: “Right after the thunder came a flash, and immediately we all noticed a little cloud, very white, beautiful and bright,...

ST JOHN BERCHMANS, RELIGIOUS - 13 AUGUST

  ALL SAINTS CELEBRATED IN AUGUST Saints celebrated on the 13th of August WELCOME! SAINT JOHN BERCHMANS, RELIGIOUS   (Patron Saint of Altar Servers.) The eldest boy of a poor cordwainer, in a small Belgian town, John was ever a dutiful, prayerful, and studious child. Our Lord called him when but young to leave his father and his father’s house, to serve Him in the Society of Jesus.  And because he was so good a son, it cost his father much to give him up to God; but he was too good a Christian to refuse outright.  HE WAS SENT TO ROME John had hardly taken his religious vows when he was sent to the centre of Christendom, the holy city of Rome. His modesty, his purity, shone out as great virtue always does; and the young laymen who attended the lectures would come to gaze upon his beautiful and holy face, and go away the better for the sight. GREAT VIRTUE Three short years, and his last sickness found him sighing for heaven, and three days before the great feast of Mar...