05 June 2026

Aquinas & AI: How Do You Define Human Nature and Person?

With Fr James Brent, OP, PhD, STL, Asst Professor of Philosophy, Pontifical Faculty of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, DC.

When is the Feast of Corpus Christi celebrated?

It was celebrated yesterday, as a Holy Day of Obligation, in the Province of Omaha and four other Provinces. In the rest of the US, it's on Sunday.


From 
Aleteia

By Philip Kosloski

The feast of Corpus Christi, a holy day of obligation in many places, is celebrated either on the Thursday or Sunday following Trinity Sunday.

In the Church's calendar there are several holy days of obligation, on which the faithful are invited to attend Mass to celebrate a specific aspect of the Catholic faith.

The feast of Corpus Christi (also known as the feast of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ), has been for many centuries a holy day of obligation.

Initially this feast was celebrated on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday, in accord with the requests of Juliana of Liege, a 13th-century religious woman who promoted this devotion.

The purpose behind this feast was to place more emphasis on the mystery of the Holy Eucharist and how Jesus is present under the appearances of bread and wine.

Corpus Christi Thursday

Pope John Paul II explains in a homily the symbolism of celebrating the feast on a Thursday.

On the Solemnity of Corpus Christi, we return to that "Thursday" which we call "Holy," on which the Redeemer celebrated his last Passover with the disciples:  it was the Last Supper, fulfilling the Jewish Passover supper and inaugurating the Eucharistic rite.

For this reason, for centuries the Church has chosen Thursday for the Solemnity of Corpus Christi, feast of adoration, contemplation and exaltation. On the feast the People of God draw close to the most precious treasure left by Christ, the Sacrament of his own Presence, and they praise, celebrate and carry it in procession through the streets of our cities.

Corpus Christi Sunday

It eventually became a holy day of obligation, which meant Catholics had to stop their work week to attend Mass.

In the 20th century this became increasingly difficult in countries where there did not exist a dominant Catholic culture, and the demands of work prevented most people from attending the celebration.

As a result, the feast was moved in many places to the Sunday following Trinity Sunday to make it possible for more of the faithful to participate in the Mass of Corpus Christi.

Regardless of when it is celebrated, the feast honors the great gift of the Eucharist and how Jesus is still present in our midst.

Be sure to consult your local diocese to determine the precise date that Corpus Christi is celebrated in your area. This depends on your local bishop and the various traditions in your region of the world.

The Judas Complex: Malachi Martin's Warning About The Horrors Of Infinite Human Dignity

Controversial Priest Calls For Prayer And Fasting In June Ahead Of The SSPX Consecrations


Dom Alcuin Reid, who was "illicitly" ordained a priest (against the wishes of his own bishop) by an unnamed Cardinal in good standing has a serious call to action for Catholics concerned with the growing tensions between the SSPX and the Vatican.

What Was Pottage? The Medieval Stew Peasants Lived On for Generations

From Medieval Way


Medieval Way explores the mechanics of pottage, a persistent staple of European life for over a millennium. By examining the system of the one-pot method, this investigation reveals how a single hearth could sustain families across all social classes while minimizing waste and maximizing nutritional efficiency through constant, slow-simmered reuse.

Picture a single iron pot, hanging over a low fire in a one-room English cottage, sometime around the year 1300. It has been there since before dawn. It will still be there at midnight. And it is almost never scraped empty. Whatever is inside it has a name. Pottage. That one pot was breakfast, dinner, and supper for an entire family. It cooked on almost no fuel. It needed almost no skill. It wasted almost nothing. And it stayed the everyday staple of ordinary European life for the better part of a thousand years. Now look at how you eat. The average American family throws away around 1,500 dollars of food a year, bought and never eaten. And more than half the calories in the average American diet, 55 percent of them, now come from ultra-processed products. We have refrigerators, supermarkets, and a kitchen full of appliances, and we still waste more food and eat worse than a medieval peasant working a single pot over an open fire. They had a food system. We have a food industry. And almost everything the history books tell you about that pot is wrong. It was not joyless gray gruel. It was one of the most efficient, adaptable, and genuinely nourishing food systems ever built. Today, we are going to dig it back up, and show you exactly how it worked, in four parts.

Traditional Catholic Morning Prayers in English | June


Traditional Catholic morning prayers to help start your day in a godly way! The month of June is dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. May our devotion to the mystery of the Sacred Heart of Jesus increase more and more each day. We've included the Memorare of the Sacred Heart and litany of the Sacred Heart. Begin your June with daily morning prayer. This video is a compilation of many traditional morning prayers Catholics say, and should not be considered a replacement for those who have an obligation to pray the Divine Office morning prayers.

The Secret Link Between Kaaba and Guadalupe!

From Totus Catholica


The image of Our Lady of Guadalupe carries the fingerprints of three civilizations: ancient Israel, medieval Spain under Islamic rule, and Aztec Mexico. The woman clothed with the sun in Revelation 12:1 was written 600 years before Islam existed, yet her image appeared on a peasant's cloak in 1531 matching that description point for point, including 46 stars across her mantle in the exact pattern of the night sky over Mexico City on the dawn of December 12th, 1531. The connection runs deeper than imagery. The name Guadalupe comes from the Spanish shrine in Extremadura, and the leading etymologies trace it to the Arabic word wad, meaning river, a linguistic fossil of centuries of Moorish presence in Iberia. The crescent beneath Mary's feet carried biblical resonance from Revelation 12, while for a Spain that had just expelled the Moors in 1492, it carried historical weight as well. The Kaaba enshrines a stone from heaven. The ark enshrined the Word. Mary enshrined the Word made flesh. CHAPTERS: 0:00 The Tilma and the Three Civilizations 2:24 Genesis 3;15 and the Proto-Evangelium 3:29 The Daughter of Zion in the Hebrew Prophets 3:50 Mary as the New Ark in Luke and 2 Samuel 6 4:50 Revelation 12:1 and the Woman Clothed with the Sun 5:34 Fulfillment, Typology, and Syncretism 6:44 The Stars on the Tilma and the Mexican Sky 7:18 The Crescent, the Ottomans, and Spain 8:23 Guadalupe: Arabic, Not Aztec 9:53 Protestant Objection: Goddess Worship? 10:49 Jewish Objection: Appropriation of Hebrew Symbols 🌍 Website: https://totuscatholica.org/ Rosary Guide: https://totuscatholica.org/rosary ✉️ Contact: https://totuscatholica.org/contact 🔍 Examination of Conscience: https://catholicexaminationofconscien... 📚 Free eBooks: https://buymeacoffee.com/totuscatholi... 👥 Become a Totus Insider: https://buymeacoffee.com/totuscatholi...

Why St Boniface Is Called the Apostle of the Germans

Today is the Feast of St Boniface, Archbishop of Mainz. He was martyred by the people he was trying to convert, but his efforts were successful in the long run.


From 
Aleteia

By Philip Kosloski

St. Boniface played an essential role in the spread of Christianity in Central Europe, especially in what is now called Germany.

Each region in the world has a particular saint who has been called its "apostle." This is typically a saint who either brought Christianity to the region or who helped renew the practice of Christianity.

When it comes to Central Europe, St. Boniface is widely known as the "Apostle of the Germans."

Pope Benedict XVI, who was from Germany, spoke at length about St. Boniface in a general audience in 2009:

Today, we shall reflect on a great 8th-century missionary who spread Christianity in Central Europe, indeed also in my own country: St. Boniface, who has gone down in history as "the Apostle of the Germans"...He was ordained a priest at the age of about 30 and felt called to an apostolate among the pagans on the continent. His country, Great Britain, which had been evangelized barely 100 years earlier by Benedictines led by St Augustine, at the time showed such sound faith and ardent charity that it could send missionaries to Central Europe to proclaim the Gospel there.

A new name and mission

What's interesting is that St. Boniface was baptised with the name Winfrid, and only received the name Boniface when the pope sent him to Central Europe:

Having returned home, he did not lose heart and two years later travelled to Rome to speak to Pope Gregory ii and receive his instructions. One biographer recounts that the Pope welcomed him "with a smile and a look full of kindliness," and had "important conversations" with him in the following days, and lastly, after conferring upon him the new name of Boniface, assigned to him, in official letters, the mission of preaching the Gospel among the German peoples.

Bishop of all Germany

At the time there were no bishops in Central Europe and St. Boniface quickly became its first and only bishop:

The Supreme Pontiff himself consecrated Boniface "Regional Bishop," that is, for the whole of Germany...The Successors of Pope Gregory II also held him in the highest esteem. Gregory III appointed him Archbishop of all the Germanic tribes, sent him the pallium and granted him the faculties to organize the ecclesiastical hierarchy in those regions.

St. Boniface is essentially responsible for building the Church in Germany from the ground-up, ordaining priests, assigning bishops and establishing dioceses.

All Christians of German descent can trace their spiritual lineage back to St. Boniface, who firmly established the Church in that region.