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  • Writer's pictureMorning Star Renewal Center

St. Martin de Porres
St. Martin de Porres-First Black American Saint.

Feastday: November 3

Patron: of Mixed Race, Barbers, Public Health Workers, Innkeepers

Death: 1639

Beatified: in 1837 by Pope Gregory XVI

Canonized: in 1962 by Pope John XXIII


St. Martin de Porres was born in Lima, Peru on December 9, 1579. Martin was the illegitimate son to a Spanish gentlemen and a freed slave from Panama, of African or possibly Native American descent. At a young age, Martin's father abandoned him, his mother and his younger sister, leaving Martin to grow up in deep poverty. After spending just two years in primary school, Martin was placed with a barber/surgeon where he would learn to cut hair and the medical arts.


As Martin grew older, he experienced a great deal of ridicule for being of mixed-race. In Peru, by law, all descendants of African or Indians were not allowed to become full members of religious orders. Martin, who spent long hours in prayer, found his only way into the community he longed for was to ask the Dominicans of Holy Rosary Priory in Lima to accept him as a volunteer who performed the most menial tasks in the monastery. In return, he would be allowed to wear the habit and live within the religious community. When Martin was 15, he asked for admission into the Dominican Convent of the Rosary in Lima and was received as a servant boy and eventually was moved up to the church officer in charge of distributing money to deserving poor.


During his time in the Convent, Martin took on his old trades of barbering and healing. He also worked in the kitchen, did laundry and cleaned. After eight more years with the Holy Rosary, Martin was granted the privilege to take his vows as a member of the Third Order of Saint Dominic by the prior Juan de Lorenzana who decided to disregard the law restricting Martin based on race.


However, not all of the members in the Holy Rosary were as open-minded as Lorenzana; Martin was

called horrible names and mocked for being illegitimate and descending from slaves.





Martin grew to become a Dominican lay brother in 1603 at the age of 24. Ten years later, after he had been presented with the religious habit of a lay brother, Martin was assigned to the infirmary where he would remain in charge until his death. He became known for encompassing the virtues need to carefully and patiently care for the sick, even in the most difficult situations.


Martin was praised for his unconditional care of all people, regardless of race or wealth. He took care of everyone from the Spanish nobles to the African slaves. Martin didn't care if the person was diseased or dirty, he would welcome them into his own home.


Martin's life reflected his great love for God and all of God's gifts. It is said he had many extraordinary abilities, including aerial flights, bilocation, instant cures, miraculous knowledge, spiritual knowledge and an excellent relationship with animals. Martin also founded an orphanage for abandoned children and slaves and is known for raising dowry for young girls in short amounts of time.



Prayer prompts - St. Martin de Porres
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During an epidemic in Lima, many of the friars in the Convent of the Rosary became very ill. Locked away in a distant section of the convent, they were kept away from the professed. However, on more than one occasion, Martin passed through the locked doors to care for the sick. However, he became disciplined for not following the rules of the Convent, but after replying, "Forgive my error, and please instruct me, for I did not know that the precept of obedience took precedence over that of charity," he was given full liberty to follow his heart in mercy.


Martin was great friends with both St. Juan Macías, a fellow Dominican lay brother, and St. Rose of Lima, a lay Dominican.


In January of 1639, when Martin was 60-years-old, he became very ill with chills, fevers and tremors causing him agonizing pain. He would experience almost a year full of illness until he passed away on November 3, 1639.



St
. Martin de Porres Background & Resou
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Text Source- Catholic.org

https://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=306






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  • Writer's pictureMorning Star Renewal Center

Updated: Jul 26, 2020


Patron of the Environment and Ecology
St. Kateri Tekakwitha

Facts

Feast Day: July 14

Patron: of the environment and ecology

Birth: 1656

Death: April 17, 1680 Beatified: Pope John Paul II Canonized: On 10/21/2012 by Pope Benedict XVI Author and Publisher - Catholic Online


St. Kateri Tekakwitha is the first Native American to be recognized as a saint by the Catholic

Church. She was born in 1656, in the Mohawk village of Ossernenon. Her mother was a catholic Algonquin. She was captured by the Mohawks and took a Mohawk chief for her husband.


Kateri contracted smallpox as a four-year-old child which scarred her skin and impaired her vision. The scars were a source of humiliation in her youth. She was commonly seen wearing a blanket to hide her face. Worse, her entire family died during the outbreak. Kateri Tekakwitha was subsequently raised by her uncle, who was the chief of a Mohawk clan. Kateri was known as a skilled worker, who was diligent and patient. However, she refused to marry. When her adoptive parents proposed a suitor to her, she refused to entertain the proposal. They punished her by giving her more work to do, but she did not give in. Instead, she remained quiet and diligent. Eventually they were forced to relent and accept that she had no interest in marriage.


At age 19, Kateri Tekakwitha converted to Catholicism, taking a vow of chastity and pledging to marry only Jesus Christ. Her decision was very unpopular with her adoptive parents and their neighbors. Some of her neighbors started rumors of sorcery. To avoid persecution, she traveled to a Christian native community south of Montreal.



According to legend, Kateri was very devout and would put thorns on her sleeping mat. She often prayed for the conversion of her fellow Mohawks. According to the Jesuit missionaries that served the community where Kateri lived, she often fasted and when she would eat, she would taint her food to diminish its flavor. On at least one occasion, she burned herself. Such self-mortification was common among the Mohawk.

Prayer Prompts St. Kateri Tekakwitha
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Kateri was very devout and was known for her steadfast devotion. She was also very sickly. Her

practices of self-mortification and denial may not have helped her health. Sadly, just five years after her conversion to Catholicism, she became ill and passed away at age 24, on April 17, 1680. Upon her death, witnesses said that minutes later her scars vanished and her face appeared radiant and beautiful. Known for her virtue of chastity and mortification of the flesh, as well as being shunned by some of her tribe for her religious conversion to Catholicism, she is the fourth Native American to be venerated in the Catholic Church and the first to be canonized.


Her name, Kateri, is the Mohawk form of Catherine, which she took from St. Catherine of Siena.

St. Kateri Tekakwitha was canonized by Pope Benedict XVI on Oct. 21, 2012. She is the patroness

of ecology and the environment, people in exile and Native Americans.


Saint Kateri Prayer


O Saint Kateri, Lily of the Mohawks,

Your love for Jesus,

so strong, so steadfast,

pray that we may become like you.

Your short and painful life

showed us your strength and humility.

Pray that we may become

forever humble like you.

Like the bright and shining stars at night,

we pray that your light

may forever shine down upon us,

giving light, hope, peacefulness

and serenity in our darkest moments.

Fill our hearts, Saint Kateri Tekakwitha

with your same love for Jesus

and pray that we may have the strength and courage

to become one like you in Heaven.

Through Christ our Lord. Amen.


By: Harold Caldwell



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  • Writer's pictureMorning Star Renewal Center

Updated: Jun 22, 2020



We are happy to introduce our new program Walking With The Saints. Each week, we will learn about a saint and walk praying an intention that supports that Saint’s patronage.


The Saint will be introduced on Sundays.

The walkers will be able to pray to that saint and for their patronage.


We will have a ZOOM gathering every month to talk about our individual experiences while walking the prayer.


You will receive an email or a text, or you can join our Facebook group. The prayer will also be published on our site blog.


DATE TBA


Sign up for the club to get the information every week and bring your walk to prayer!










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