Archive for the ‘May 15’ Category

Above: Sts. Junia and Andronicus with St. Athanasius of Christianoupolis
Image in the Public Domain
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SAINTS JUNIA AND ANDRONICUS (FIRST CENTURY C.E.)
Missionaries and Martyrs
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Greet Andronicus and Junia, my relatives who were in prison with me; they are prominent among the apostles, and they were in Christ before I was.
–Romans 16:7, The New Revised Standard Version (1989)
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Chrysostom, preaching on this passage, saw no difficulty in a woman-apostle; nor need we.
–C. H. Dodd, The Epistle of Paul to the Romans (1932; paperback, 1959), page 241
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Romans 16:7 is the only Biblical reference to these saints.
“Junia” is a female Latin name present in more than 250 inscriptions found in Rome. Some ancient manuscripts give the name as “Julia” instead. The main alternative to “Junia,” however, is “Junias,” which is masculine.
I consulted my library of Biblical translations. The following versions had “Junias”:
- American Standard Version,
- An American Translation,
- Confraternity Version,
- Douay-Rheims Version,
- The Jerusalem Bible,
- The Living Bible,
- The New American Bible (1970),
- New American Standard Bible,
- New American Standard Bible–Updated Edition,
- The New English Bible,
- The New Jerusalem Bible,
- The New Testament in Modern English (J. B. Phillips),
- The New Testament in Modern English–Revised Edition (J. B. Phillips),
- Nouvelle Version Segond Révisée,
- Revised Standard Version,
- Revised Standard Version–Catholic Edition,
- Revised Standard Version–Second Catholic Edition, and
- Revised Standard Version–Second Edition.
The following translations had “Junia”:
- Authorised Version/King James Version,
- The New American Bible (1986),
- The New American Bible–Revised Edition (2011),
- New King James Version,
- The New Revised Standard Version,
- The New Revised Standard Version–Catholic Edition, and
- The Revised English Bible.
Recognition of St. Junia as female has been part of Christian tradition for a long time. Origen, St. Jerome, and St. John Chrysostom described the apostle (traveling evangelist) as female. Since the 600s the Orthodox Church has recognized Sts. Junia and Andronicus (likely married) as missionaries and martyrs who traveled widely. Some sources have speculated that the two might have been siblings, not spouses. Nevertheless, St. Paul the Apostle worked with the married couple Sts. Priscilla and Aquila (Acts 28:18, 26 and Romans 16:3).
The probability that Sts. Junia and Andronicus were a married couple is high. One might conclude that the origin of “Junias” is sexism to a degree that even certain patriarchal ecclesiastical institutions do not stoop.
As of A Great Cloud of Witnesses: A Calendar of Commemorations (2016) this feast is new to The Episcopal Church. The feast is a fine addition to the official calendar and to this, my Ecumenical Calendar of Saints’ Days and Holy Days.
Tony Hendra, in Father Joe: The Man Who Saved My Soul (2004), wrote that Father Joe said that Holy Mother Church had not canonized enough married couples. That was a valid criticism.
May we then agree with St. Joseph the Hymnographer (d. 886), who wrote in praise of Sts. Junia and Andronicus:
With piety we will honor the Bright stars and holy
Apostles Junia and the God-inspired Andronicus.
The Blessed Paul proclaims you both as truly distinguished
Among the Apostles, and blessed in the Church.
–Quoted in A Great Cloud of Witnesses (2016)
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
SEPTEMBER 17, 2017 COMMON ERA
PROPER 19: THE FIFTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST, YEAR A
THE FEAST OF HENRY LASCALLES JENNER, ANGLICAN BISHOP OF DUNEDIN, NEW ZEALAND
THE FEAST OF HILDEGARD OF BINGEN, ROMAN CATHOLIC ABBESS AND COMPOSER
THE FEAST OF WILLIAM DALRYMPLE MACLAGAN, ARCHBISHOP OF YORK AND HYMN WRITER
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Almighty God, whose Son, the risen Christ, sent forth your apostles
Andronicus and Junia to proclaim the gospel and extend your reign:
send us forth in your Holy Spirit, that women and men may
minister as one faithful witness to the Gospel of Jesus Christ;
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
in perfect unity, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
1 Samuel 3:1-10
Psalm 63:1-8
Ephesians 4:11-16
Matthew 9:35-38
—A Great Cloud of Witnesses: A Calendar of Commemorations (2016)
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Rosa Chinensis
Image Source = Sakurai Midori
1 (PHILIP AND JAMES, APOSTLES AND MARTYRS)
2 (Alexander of Alexandria, Patriarch; and Athanasius of Alexandria, Patriarch and “Father of Orthodoxy”)
- Charles Silvester Horne, English Congregationalist Minister and Hymn Writer
- Christian Friedrich Hasse, German-British Moravian Composer and Educator
- Elias Boudinot, IV, U.S. Stateman, Philanthropist, and Witness for Social Justice
- Julia Bulkley Cady Cory, U.S. Presbyterian Hymn Writer
- Sigismund of Burgundy, King; Clotilda, Frankish Queen; and Clodoald, Frankish Prince and Abbot
3 (Caroline Chisholm, English Humanitarian and Social Reformer)
- Marie-Léonie Paradis, Founder of the Little Sisters of the Holy Family
- Maura and Timothy of Antinoe, Martyrs, 286
- Tomasso Acerbis, Capuchin Friar
4 (Ceferino Jimenez Malla, Spanish Romani Martyr, 1936)
- Angus Dun, Episcopal Bishop of Washington, and Ecumenist
- Basil Martysz, Polish Orthodox Priest and Martyr, 1945
- Jean-Martin Moyë, Roman Catholic Priest, Missionary in China, and Founder of the Sisters of Divine Providence and the Christian Virgins
- John Houghton, Robert Lawrence, Augustine Webster, Humphrey Middlemore, William Exmew, and Sebastian Newdigate, Roman Catholic Martyrs, 1535
5 (Charles William Schaeffer, U.S. Lutheran Minister, Historian, Theologian, and Liturgist)
- Caterina Cittadini, Founder of the Ursuline Sisters of Somasco
- Edmund Ignatius Rice, Founder of the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools of Ireland and the Congregation of Presentation Brothers
- Friedrich von Hügel, Roman Catholic Independent Scholar and Philosopher
- Honoratus of Arles and Hilary of Arles, Roman Catholic Bishops; and Venantius of Modon and Caprasius of Lerins, Roman Catholic Hermits
6 (Anna Rosa Gattorno, Founder of the Institute of the Daughters of Saint Anne, Mother of Mary Immaculate)
- Clarence Dickinson, U.S. Presbyterian Organist and Composer
- Maria Catalina Troiani, Founder of the Franciscan Missionaries of the Immaculate Heart of Mary
- Willibald of Eichstatt and Lullus of Mainz, Roman Catholic Bishops; Walburga of Heidenhelm, Roman Catholic Abbess; Petronax of Monte Cassino, Winnebald of Heidenhelm, Wigbert of Fritzlar, and Sturmius of Fulda, Roman Catholic Abbots; and Sebaldus of Vincenza, Roman Catholic Hermit and Missionary
7 (Domitian of Huy, Roman Catholic Archbishop)
- Alexis Toth, Russian Orthodox Priest and Defender of Orthodoxy in America
- Harriet Starr Cannon, Founder of the Community of Saint Mary
- Joseph Armitage Robinson, Anglican Dean, Scholar, and Hymn Writer
- Rosa Venerini, Founder of the Venerini Sisters; and her protégé, of Lucia Filippini, Founder of the Religious Teachers Filippini
- Tobias Clausnitzer, German Lutheran Minister and Hymn Writer
8 (Juliana of Norwich, Mystic and Spiritual Writer)
- Acacius of Byzantium, Martyr, 303
- Henri Dumont, Roman Catholic Composer and Organist
- Magdalena of Canossa, Founder of the Daughters of Charity and the Sons of Charity
- Peter of Tarentaise, Roman Catholic Archbishop
9 (Stefan Grelewski and his brother, Kazimierz Grelewski, Polish Roman Catholic Priests and Martyrs, 1941 and 1942)
- Dietrich Buxtehude, Lutheran Organist and Composer
- Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, Co-Founders of the Catholic Worker Movement
- Maria del Carmen Rendiles Martinez, Founder of the Servants of Jesus of Caracas
- Thomas Toke Lynch, English Congregationalist Minister and Hymn Writer
10 (Enrico Rebuschini, Roman Catholic Priest and Servant of the Sick; and his mentor, Luigi Guanella, Founder of the Daughters of Saint Mary of Providence, the Servants of Charity, and the Confraternity of Saint Joseph)
- Anna Laetitia Waring, Humanitarian and Hymn Writer; and her uncle, Samuel Miller Waring, Hymn Writer
- Ivan Merz, Croatian Roman Catholic Intellectual
- John Goss, Anglican Church Composer and Organist; and William Mercer, Anglican Priest and Hymn Translator
- Vasile Aftenie, Romanian Roman Catholic Bishop and Martyr, 1950
11 (Henry Knox Sherrill, Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church)
- Barbara Andrews, First Female Minister in The American Lutheran Church, 1970
- John James Moment, U.S. Presbyterian Minister and Hymn Writer
- Matteo Ricci, Roman Catholic Missionary
- Matthêô Lê Van Gam, Vietnamese Roman Catholic Martyr, 1847
12 (Germanus I of Constantinople, Patriarch of Constantinople, and Defender of Icons)
- Gregory of Ostia, Roman Catholic Abbot, Cardinal, and Legate; and Dominic of the Causeway, Roman Catholic Hermit
- Paul Mazakute, First Sioux Episcopal Priest
- Roger Schütz, Founder of the Taizé Community
- Sylvester II, Bishop of Rome
13 (Henri Dominique Lacordaire, French Roman Catholic Priest, Dominican, and Advocate for the Separation of Church and State)
- Frances Perkins, United States Secretary of Labor
- Gemma of Goriano Sicoli, Italian Roman Catholic Anchoress
- Glyceria of Heraclea, Martyr, Circa 177
- Unita Blackwell, African-American Civil Rights Activist, Rural Community Development Specialist, and Mayor of Mayersville, Mississippi
14 (Francis Makemie, Father of American Presbyterianism and Advocate for Religious Toleration)
- Carthage the Younger, Irish Abbot-Bishop
- Maria Dominica Mazzarello, Co-Founder of the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians
- Theodore I, Bishop of Rome
- Victor the Martyr and Corona of Damascus, Martyrs in Syria, 165
15 (JUNIA AND ANDRONICUS, CO-WORKERS OF SAINT PAUL THE APOSTLE)
16 (Andrew Fournet and Elizabeth Bichier, Co-Founders of the Daughters of the Cross; and Michael Garicoits, Founder of the Priests of the Sacred Heart of Betharram)
- John Nepomucene, Bohemian Roman Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1393
- Martyrs of the Sudan, 1983-2005
- Ubaldo Baldassini, Roman Catholic Bishop of Gubbio
- Vladimir Ghika, Romanian Roman Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1954
17 (Thomas Bradbury Chandler, Anglican Priest; his son-in-law, John Henry Hobart, Episcopal Bishop of New York; and his grandson, William Hobart Hare, Apostle to the Sioux and Episcopal Missionary Bishop of Niobrara then South Dakota)
- Caterina Volpicelli, Founder of the Servants of the Sacred Heart; Ludovico da Casoria, Founder of the Gray Friars of Charity and Co-Founder of the Gray Sisters of Saint Elizabeth; and Giulia Salzano, Founder of the Congregation of the Catechetical Sisters of the Sacred Heart
- Charles Hamilton Houston and Thurgood Marshall, Attorneys and Civil Rights Activists
- Donald Coggan, Archbishop of Canterbury
- Ivan Ziatyk, Polish Ukrainian Greek Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1952
18 (Maltbie Davenport Babcock, U.S. Presbyterian Minister, Humanitarian, and Hymn Writer)
- Felix of Cantalice, Italian Roman Catholic Friar
- John I, Bishop of Rome
- Mary McLeod Bethune, African-American Educator and Social Activist
- Stanislaw Kubski, Polish Roman Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1945
19 (Jacques Ellul, French Reformed Theologian and Sociologist)
- Celestine V, Bishop of Rome
- Dunstan of Canterbury, Abbot of Glastonbury and Archbishop of Canterbury
- Georg Gottfried Muller, German-American Moravian Minister and Composer
- Ivo of Kermartin, Roman Catholic Attorney, Priest, and Advocate for the Poor
20 (Alcuin of York, Abbot of Tours)
- Columba of Rieti and Osanna Andreasi, Dominican Mystics
- John Eliot, “The Apostle to the Indians”
- Mariá Angélica Pérez, Roman Catholic Nun
- Rose Hawthorne Lathrop, Founder of the Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne
21 (Christian de Chergé and His Companions, Martyrs of Tibhirine, Algeria, 1996)
- Eugene de Mazenod, Bishop of Marseilles, and Founder of the Congregation of the Missionaries, Oblates of Mary Immaculate
- Franz Jägerstätter, Austrian Roman Catholic Conscientious Objector and Martyr, 1943
- Joseph Addison and Alexander Pope, English Poets
- Manuel Gómez González, Spanish-Brazilian Roman Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1924; and Adilo Daronch, Brazilian Roman Catholic Altar Boy and Martyr, 1924
22 (Frederick Hermann Knubel, President of the United Lutheran Church in America)
- Humility, Italian Roman Catholic Hermitess and Abbess
- John Forest and Thomas Abel, English Roman Catholic Priests and Martyrs, 1538 and 1540
- Julia of Corsica, Martyr at Corsica, 620
- Maria Rita Lópes Pontes de Souza Brito, Brazilian Roman Catholic Nun
23 (Ivo of Chartres, Roman Catholic Bishop)
- Frederick Augustus Bennett, First Maori Anglican Bishop in Aotearoa/New Zealand
- Józef Kurgawa and Wincenty Matuszewski, Polish Roman Catholic Priests and Martyrs, 1940
- William of Perth, English Roman Catholic Baker and Martyr, 1201
24 (Nicolaus Selnecker, German Lutheran Minister, Theologian, and Hymn Writer)
- Benjamin Carr, Anglo-American Composer and Organist
- Jackson Kemper, Episcopal Missionary Bishop
- Edith Mary Mellish (a.k.a. Mother Edith), Founder of the Community of the Sacred Name
- Maria Gargani, Founder of the Sisters Apostles of the Sacred Heart
- Mary Madeleva Wolff, U.S. Roman Catholic Nun, Poet, Scholar, and President of Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame, Indiana
25 (Bede of Jarrow, Roman Catholic Abbot and Father of English History)
- Aldhelm of Sherborne, Poet, Literary Scholar, Abbot of Malmesbury, and Bishop of Sherborne
- Cristobal Magollanes Jara and Agustin Caloca Cortés, Mexican Roman Catholic Priests and Martyrs, 1927
- Madeleine-Sophie Barat, Founder of the Society of the Sacred Heart; and Rose Philippine Duchesne, Roman Catholic Nun and Missionary
- Mykola Tsehelskyi, Ukrainian Greek Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1951
26 (Augustine of Canterbury, Archbishop)
- Lambert Péloguin of Vence, Roman Catholic Monk and Bishop
- Philip Neri, the Apostle of Rome and the Founder of the Congregation of the Oratory
- Quadratus the Apologist, Early Christian Apologist
27 (Paul Gerhardt, German Lutheran Minister and Hymn Writer)
- Alfred Rooker, English Congregationalist Philanthropist and Hymn Writer; and his sister, Elizabeth Rooker Parson, English Congregationalist Hymn Writer
- Amelia Bloomer, U.S. Suffragette
- John Charles Roper, Anglican Archbishop of Ottawa
- Lojze Grozde, Slovenian Roman Catholic Martyr, 1943
28 (John H. W. Stuckenberg, German-American Lutheran Minister and Academic)
- Bernard of Menthon, Roman Catholic Priest and Archdeacon of Aosta
- Edwin Pond Parker, U.S. Congregationalist Minister and Hymn Writer
- Hardwicke Drummond Rawnsley, Anglican Priest and Hymn Writer
- Jeremias Dencke, Silesian-American Moravian Composer and Organist; and Simon Peter and Johann Friedrich Peter, German-American Composers, Educators, Musicians, and Ministers
- Robert McAfee Brown, U.S. Presbyterian Minister, Theologian, Activist, and Ecumenist
29 (Percy Dearmer, Anglican Canon and Translator and Author of Hymns)
- Bona of Pisa, Roman Catholic Mystic and Pilgrim
- Jiri Tranovsky, Luther of the Slavs and Father of Slovak Hymnody
- Mary Theresa Ledóchowska, Founder of the Missionary Sisters of Saint Peter Claver, and “Mother of the African Missions;” and her sister, Ursula Ledóchowska, Founder of the Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus (Gray Ursulines)
- Ruby Middleton Forsythe, African-American Episcopal Educator
30 (Joan of Arc, Roman Catholic Visionary and Martyr, 1430)
- Apolo Kivebulaya, Apostle to the Pygmies
- Joachim Neander, German Reformed Minister and Hymn Writer
- Josephine Butler, English Feminist and Social Reformer
- Luke Kirby, Thomas Cottam, William Filby, and Laurence Richardson, Roman Catholic Priests and Martyrs, 1582
31 (VISITATION OF MARY TO ELIZABETH)
Floating
- Ascension
- First Book of Common Prayer, 1549
Lowercase boldface on a date with two or more commemorations indicates a primary feast.
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