19 June 2026

The Bravery of the Martyrs and Those Who Lived Their Lives for Faith

Two of them are Ss Gervase and Protase, whose Feast is today. They are the patron saints of Milan and of haymakers and are invoked for the discovery of thieves.


From 
Aleteia

By Joseph Bottum

The feasts of monastics and martyrs dominate June 19—today, a day perhaps to think about the endurance of faith. It’s tempting to imagine martyrdom as a sudden flash, an immediate choosing of sides, an affirmation of belief in the moment of rapidly descending death. It’s tempting to think of martyrdom as quick.

And so, in one of her most famous lines, Flannery O’Connor has her character The Misfit explain of a vain, silly grandmother, “She would have been a good woman . . . if it had been somebody there to shoot her every minute of her life.” Given the instantaneous choice to affirm God when threatened, to be good in the face of death, to be a saint at the moment of murder, more people than you might think will take the brave path of martyrdom. We believe, and if the cost of that is dying, then so be it—a greater reward waits for us.

There’s a second and more difficulty bravery shown by many of the martyrs, however, and it comes from the fact that death in martyrdom is rarely quick. Rarely quick at all. St. Benildus watched the beheading of the priest Anastasius by the Spanish Muslims in 853 and decided she could not live without her own affirmation. So she marched off to declare her faith and was killed the next day. But for many martyrs—maybe most martyrs—the delay is long and involves both slow torture and promises of rewards for renounced faith.

The feasts of June 19 include two groups of martyrs: those killed by the Romans, and those killed by the English. We know little of St. Gervase and St. Protase, nearly forgotten victims of the early Roman persecutions. But St. Ambrose rediscovered their bodies in 386 and had them brought with great ceremony to the basilica in Milan. The twin sons of martyred parents, they were beaten and then beheaded. And then there are feasts today for St. Ursicinus of Ravenna, killed in the first century. St. Zosimus of Spoleto, taken in the second century. Gaudentius and Culmatius, martyrs of the fourth century. All tortured and imprisoned before their deaths.

Meanwhile, June 19 commemorates four deaths at the hands of the English crown: the Blessed Humphrey Middlemore, Blessed Sebastian Newdigate, and Blessed William Exmew, together with the Blessed Thomas Woodhouse. The first three—Middlemore, Newdigate, and Exmew—were arrested for failure to take the Oath of Supremacy, setting Henry VIII as head of the Church. Leaders of the Carthusians’ charterhouse in London, they were chained to posts for two weeks and then offered again the opportunity to take the oath. Refusing, they were hanged, with their bodies then drawn and quartered, on June 19, 1535.

Blessed Thomas Woodhouse came a generation later, a priest who denied the religious supremacy of Elizabeth I. Arrested in 1561 while saying Mass, he was imprisoned for over a decade, until on June 19, 1573, he was disemboweled alive for his refusal to embrace English Protestantism. “Too long a sacrifice,” as the poet William Butler Yeats once warned, “can make a stone of the heart.” The first bravery of the martyrs comes at the moment of sacrifice, when faith is chosen despite death. The second bravery of the martyrs comes in the long moments before, when faith is chosen despite imprisonment and horrendous pain.

As it happens, June 19 is also the feast day of a number of the builders of religious institutions—and one way to think about their work is to consider the ways that they asked not how to die but how to live. The endurance of faith is still the topic, but now raised away from the context of immediate death and suffering. Now raised without The Misfit’s gun pointed at our heads. The gun that remains is awareness that eventually we will die, must die, and a judgment waits. In the end, as Leon Bloy famously wrote, the only great tragedy is not have been a saint.

And so St. Deodatus, the seventh-century bishop of Nevers, lived in one monastery, established the larger Jointures monastery in what is now the French town of Saint-Dié (named after him), and renounced his bishopric in 664 to live as a hermit. The ninth-century bishop St. Hildegrin left his French diocese in northeastern Châlons-sur-Marne to finish his life as a monk in Werden in northwestern Germany.

Sharing the feast of June 19 are the two major saints of the day: St. Romuald and St. Juliana Falconieri. Studies of their lives and works can be found easily. Romuald is particularly significant as the tenth-century figure who sought to reconcile and make appropriate space for both the two key lines of monastic thought and practice: the isolation of the hermits’ cells (the ermetical tradition) and the shared life and work of the communal monastery (the cenobitic tradition). St. Juliana Falconieri was the fourteenth-century nun who founded the first convent of the Servite Tertiaries, seeking a new form of convent life for the active sisters of the mendicant order of Servites. On her death bed, as a famous story tells, she was unable to swallow the consecrated Host, and so she asked the priest to lay it on her breast, where it was miraculously absorbed—leaving the sign of the Cross on her flesh.

The quickly martyred express their faith in the sudden, deep bravery of the moment. The ones slowly tortured before their deaths express their faith in the bravery of their extended suffering and enduring resolution. The hermits, monks, and nuns show yet another kind of bravery—keeping faith not just in death but in a flowering of life. 

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Jesus Left His Cross Imprinted on the Heart of This Saint of the Eucharist

 Today is the Feast of St Juliana Falconieri, niece of St Alexis Falconieri, one of the Seven Founders of the Order of Servants of Mary.

From Aleteia

By Larry Peterson

Juliana Falconieri left behind the life of nobility in order to serve her sisters and Our Lady of Sorrows.

Her parents were of the esteemed house of Falconieri and highly regarded. They had waited and prayed a long time for a child, and finally, in 1270, their prayers were answered. They were blessed with a daughter and named her Juliana. 

Juliana displayed unusual spiritual tendencies very early in life. When just a toddler, she began speaking the names of Jesus and Mary. It was looked upon by many as a sign of the child’s future holiness. 

Juliana’s uncle, Alexis Falconieri, was one of the seven founders of the Servite Order. He was her instructor and mentor and had told Juliana’s mom that she had not given birth to a mortal maiden, but an angel. Under his influence, Juliana decided at a young age to follow the consecrated life. 

After her father’s death, she received the habit of the Third Order of Servites from Philip Benizi, who was Prior General of the Order. She was only 15, so she remained at home following the Rule that Prior Benizi had given her. The amended Rule stated that Juliana would stay there until her mother’s death. 

In 1305, after her mom died, Juliana and several companions moved into a house of their own. It was located in the Grifoni Palace in Florence, and this was the first convent of the Sisters of the Third Order of ServitesThe main devotion of the Servites was to Our Lady of Sorrows and the main activity was caring for the sickJuliana was made Mother Superior and would serve in that position for the rest of her life.

Juliana, who suffered from chronic gastric problems, always was a servant to her Sisters. Although in pain most of the time, Juliana worked tirelessly to convert sinners, reconcile enemies, and heal the sick. She was often seen deeply caught up in ecstasy, and sometimes the rapture would last all day. 

While inside the convent, she would perform the most menial tasks, such as scrubbing floors, mending clothes, and preparing food. She was a shining example to her followers, practicing the virtues of charity, chastity, mortification, and penance at all times.

Legend says she was so spiritually uplifted that she never gazed into a mirror, trembled when sin was mentioned, and frequently fainted when hearing scandalous gossip. Although very hard on herself, she was always gentle and caring to others. Other young women of Florence heard of this holy nun and began joining the community. The order grew rapidly.

Mother Juliana was so filled with faith and love, especially for Christ in the Holy Eucharist, that she let the hard wooden floor be her bed and only slept for two to three hours a night. The rest of the night was spent in prayer. She fasted every Saturday on bread and water. Two days a week, she took just a bit of water because she was going to receive Holy Communion. The other days she did take some food, but very little and only the most basic available—anything else she refused to touch. 

Mother Juliana’s life-long personal fasting and sacrifice took their toll. She was so sick that while she lay on her death bed, she could not receive Holy Communion. She asked the priest if he would spread a corporal upon her chest and lay the Host on it. Soon after, the Host vanished, and Juliana died. 

When the sisters came to wash her body, they discovered the imprint of the cross on her heart; it was the same as it was on the Host. The date was June 19, 1341. Her unmatched devotion to Christ in the Eucharist earned her the title of Saint of the Holy Eucharist.

She is not to be confused, however, with another Juliana, who was instrumental in promoting the feast of Corpus Christi: Juliana of Liege.

Juliana was honored as a saint immediately after her death. She was officially canonized by Pope Clement XII on June 16, 1737. Her order has houses in Europe, and England, the USA, and Canada. The sisters are involved in parish ministry, hospital and prison chaplaincies, the care of cancer patients and AIDS patients. 

St. Juliana Falconieri’s feast day is June 19, and we ask her to pray for us.