11 February 2026

St Severinus of Agaunum: Butler's Lives of the Saints

Vespers for the Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes

From the Canons Regular of the New Jerusalem. You may follow the Office at Divinum Officium.

Can a Catholic Be a Capitalist? | Catholic Social Teaching and the Moral Limits of the Free Market

From The Helpful Christian


This video explores Capitalism through the lens of Catholic Social Teaching (CST) — examining whether Catholics can embrace a market economy while remaining faithful to Gospel values. From papal encyclicals such as Rerum Novarum, Quadragesimo Anno, Centesimus Annus, and Caritas in Veritate, the Church affirms that capitalism is not condemned in itself, but must be guided by moral principles that uphold human dignity, justice, and the common good. We break down: ✅ What the Church means by "Capitalism" and a "Market Economy" ✅ Why the Church rejects Socialism but conditionally affirms Capitalism ✅ The moral dangers of greed, exploitation, and consumerism ✅ How free markets can serve the Common Good when aligned with CST ✅ The Christian duty to pursue justice, peace, and responsible stewardship Catholicism does not present an economic model — instead, it offers a moral framework ensuring that economic freedom always serves the human person, never the other way around. 📚 Sources: Rerum Novarum (Leo XIII, 1891) Quadragesimo Anno (Pius XI, 1931) Mater et Magistra (John XXIII, 1961) Populorum Progressio (Paul VI, 1967) Centesimus Annus (John Paul II, 1991) Caritas in Veritate (Benedict XVI, 2009) Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church (Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, 2004) Catechism of the Catholic Church, §§2401–2463

The Holy Rosary

Wednesday, the Glorious Mysteries, in Latin with Cardinal Burke.

The Life of His Majesty the King Alfonso XIII of Spain ~ (1886–1941)

From The Romanian Monarchist


Alfonso XIII (Spanish: Alfonso León Fernando María Jaime Isidro Pascual Antonio de Borbón y Habsburgo-Lorena; French: Alphonse Léon Ferdinand Marie Jacques Isidore Pascal Antoine de Bourbon; 17 May 1886 – 28 February 1941), also known as El Africano or the African for his Africanist views, was King of Spain from his birth until 14 April 1931, when the Second Spanish Republic was proclaimed. He became a monarch at birth as his father, Alfonso XII, had died the previous year. Alfonso's mother, Maria Christina of Austria, served as regent until he assumed full powers on his sixteenth birthday in 1902. Alfonso XIII's upbringing and public image were closely linked to the military estate; he often presented himself as a soldier-king. His effective reign started four years after the Spanish–American War, when various social milieus projected their expectations of national regeneration onto him. Like other European monarchs of his time he played a political role, entailing a controversial use of his constitutional executive powers. His wedding to Princess Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg in 1906 was marred by an attempt at regicide; he was unharmed. With public opinion divided over World War I, and moreover a split between pro-German and pro-Entente sympathizers, Alfonso XIII used his relations with other European royal families to help preserve a stance of neutrality, as espoused by his government; however, several factors weakened the monarch's constitutional legitimacy: the rupture of the turno system, the deepening of the Restoration system crisis in the 1910s, a trio of crises in 1917, the spiral of violence in Morocco, and especially the lead-up to the 1923 installment of the dictatorship of Miguel Primo de Rivera, an event that succeeded by means of both military coup d'état and the king's acquiescence. Over the course of his reign, the monarch ended up favouring an authoritarian solution rather than constitutional liberalism. Upon the political failure of the dictatorship, Alfonso XIII removed support from Primo de Rivera (who was thereby forced to resign in 1930) and favoured (during the dictablanda) an attempted return to the pre-1923 state of affairs. Nevertheless, he had lost most of his political capital along the way. He left Spain voluntarily after the municipal elections of April 1931 – which was understood as a plebiscite on maintaining the monarchy or declaring a republic – the result of which led to the proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic on 14 April 1931. For his efforts with the European War Office during World War I, he earned a nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1917, which was ultimately won by the Red Cross. To date, he remains the only monarch known to have been nominated for a Nobel Prize.

Introduction to Moral Theology: 2. Natural Law

With John Haas, PhD, STL, MDiv, John Cardinal Krol Professor of Moral Theology, St Charles Borromeo Seminary.

Lourdes Miracle Reveals Merciful God

The International Medical Committee of Lourdes, which determines if a healing is miraculous, is open to all doctors, including atheists.


From Aleteia

By Ary Waldir Ramos Diaz

Healing, faith and forgiveness all come through blessed watersPope Francis has said that “prayer makes miracles,” and there really is proof.

The 69th miracle to be certified at Lourdes was recognized by the beneficiaries’ local bishop in 2013. It was a miracle that involved bodily healing but also growth in faith and forgiveness, and is thus a miracle that reminds us again of God’s readiness to pour out his mercy.

In 1980, at the age of 34, Danila Castelli began suffering from spontaneous and severe blood pressure hypertensive crisis.

The wife of an Iranian gynecologist living in Italy and the mother of four, Castelli had previously enjoyed an entirely normal life.

But by 1989, her sickness had reached a point that she felt she couldn’t stand anymore.

She’d already undergone seven years of surgeries and treatments, and there were plans to see more doctors in the United States, but then her husband decided to take her to Lourdes.

The thought crossed her mind that this could be her last trip with him; “Mom and Dad have left,” they told their children, who were unaware of their father’s plans, when they were already on the way.

From the time that she was an adolescent, Castelli had wanted to visit Lourdes. Her husband, however — despite having converted to Catholicism — thought the idea absurd. That’s why she sees his faith as a second miracle of the Lourdes waters.

“We are called to Lourdes, as Bernadette was called there,” Castelli reflects in a moving video testimony. “It seems that we come out of curiosity. But it is she (Our Lady) who calls us.”

Castelli recounted that the trip was very difficult but that on the fourth day, “I was healed.”

Her weak and deformed body felt an inexplicable relief when she came out of the baths where she had been submerged: “In the baths, I was healed,” she says.

Her husband, awaiting her outside the baths, sensed the same and assured her that everything was now behind them, and, affirming her faith in God, he said, “You were right.”

After so many years of painful illness, some months later she returned to Lourdes for exams. The process of verification lasted over various decades.

The Lourdes Office of Medical Observations (Bureau des Constatations Médicales de Lourdes) certified the healing with a unanimous vote after five meetings — in 1989, 1992, 1994, 1997 and 2010.

Bishop Giovanni Giudici of Pavia, Italy, the diocese where Danila Castelli lives, declared the miraculous character of the event on June 20, 2013.

In addition to her own bodily healing, and her husband’s gift of faith, Castelli sees another miracle that came at Lourdes: the gift of forgiveness within her own family.

Now, Castelli reflects that Jesus is asking something different of her: “For 13 years I loved Jesus on the cross. Now he asks me to love him with health.”

Being the beneficiary of a miracle hasn’t taken away her humanity, her “miseries and weaknesses,” Castelli confirms. “I still commit sins. The miracle has given me normalcy. … Holiness will come at the end.”

For more information, including a video from the doctor who leads the Lourdes Office of Medical Observations, visit http://en.lourdes-france.org/deepen/cures-and-miracles/danila-castelli.

Pictured: One of the baths at Lourdes, fed by the miraculous spring

Heretic Bishops Offer A Harry Potter Mass

Pope Leo Promoted A Bishop For Protecting Monsters And Punishing Good Priests


St Luke's Hospital has been used by bishops who are spiritual kinsmen of James Martin to punish conservative priests who defend Catholic morality, and Pope Leo XIV promoted a bishop who did exactly that to the archdiocese of Denver.

Medieval Europe Feared Cats ... Here's Why

From MedievalMadness


In medieval Europe, felines had a bad reputation. Often linked to witches and heretical cults, it was even thought that Satan could transform himself into a black cat. But just why did this negative perception of cats come about? Let’s travel back to the Middle Ages and take a look at crossroads, Cistercian conjurors and cat’s bottoms. Welcome to Medieval Madness. 0:00 Introduction 1:22 Look What the Cat Dragged In 3:47 Playing Cat and Mouse 7:06 The Cat Among the Pigeons 9:37 There Are Many Ways To Skin A Cat

Traditional Catholic Morning Prayers in English | February


Traditional Catholic morning prayers -- an excellent way to start your day off strong! The month of February is devoted to the Holy Family -- Jesus, Mary, and St. Joseph. It is my hope that these prayers increase your devotion to Our Lord and His Holy Family. Begin each day with 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.

Protestant Historian Set a 107 AD Trap... It Backfired

From Totus Catholica


The 107 AD Letter That's IMPOSSIBLE for Protestants to Explain A reformed historian set out to prove the Reformation recovered true Christianity, but the evidence forced him to become Catholic. Dr David Anders found bishops, baptismal regeneration, and the Real Presence in documents written 70 years after the Resurrection. John Calvin himself dismissed certain early writings as forgeries precisely because they sounded too Catholic - modern scholarship has vindicated those texts. If the Catholic Church really corrupted Christianity, we should see a dramatic shift somewhere in history. But the opposite is true: the closer you get to the apostles, the more Catholic it looks. 📌 The Point: The earliest Christian writings outside Scripture - penned by men who knew the apostles personally - sound undeniably Catholic in their core convictions about authority, sacraments, and salvation. 📖 Core Sources Ignatius of Antioch (martyred c. 107 AD): Third bishop of Antioch, succeeding St. Peter; direct disciple of Apostle John; wrote seven letters while travelling to Rome for execution (authenticity acknowledged even by Protestant scholars after centuries of debate) Letter to the Smyrnaeans - First recorded use of phrase "Catholic Church" in Christian literature (barely 70 years after Christ's resurrection): "Wherever the bishop appears, there let the people be... wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church" No one should baptise or celebrate Eucharist without the bishop's approval; those who deny "the Eucharist is the flesh of our Saviour Jesus Christ, which suffered for our sins" incur death in their disputes.
Described the three-tiered church structure (bishops, presbyters, deacons) as essential to authentic Christianity - not inventing novelties, but passing on what he received from the apostles John Calvin's response - Declared these letters forgeries because they contradicted his Presbyterian ecclesiology and Eucharist theology; modern scholarship vindicated their authenticity, exposing Calvin's dismissal as wishful thinking Irenaeus of Lyons (c. 180 AD): Work: Against Heresies - "Truth is found nowhere else but in the Catholic Church, the sole depository of apostolic doctrine" Emphasised Apostolic Succession - heresies refuted by examining the perpetual succession of bishops in churches founded by apostles Explicitly connected saving faith to the Church and sacraments, not faith alone Augustine of Hippo (354-430 AD): Even Protestant reformers claimed him as a theological ancestor, but Dr Anders discovered that Augustine articulated "nothing less than the Roman Catholic doctrine of justification" Grace transforms the believer; baptism regenerates; Eucharist nourishes unto eternal life; faith works through charity Embraced devotion to saints - scholar Peter Brown demonstrated this was integral to ancient Christianity, not pagan corruption Catholic Teaching: CCC 1992 - Justification is not merely a legal declaration, but a true transformation of the soul; conferred in Baptism, the sacrament of faith; conforms us to God's righteousness, making us inwardly just Early Church understood Romans as excluding works of Mosaic law before faith in Christ, not all works; faith as entrance to life of Church, sacraments, and Spirit - means of grace, not a substitute Seven sacraments rooted in apostolic tradition; baptism of infants to cleanse original sin; absolute belief in the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist; episcopal organisation through apostolic succession Scripture: Matt 16:18 - Christ's promise that "the gates of hell would not prevail against his Church" - if the entire Church apostatised within decades and remained in error 1500 years until Luther, this becomes a failed prophecy 📺 Chapters 0:00 - Reformed Historian Forced to Become Catholic by the Evidence 2:37 - Ignatius of Antioch (107 AD): Disciple of John, First Use of "Catholic Church" 4:13 - Irenaeus of Lyons (180 AD): Apostolic Succession & Catholic Church as Sole Depository 4:41 - Augustine of Hippo: Even Protestants' "Ancestor" Taught Catholic Doctrine 5:27 - What This Means for Salvation and the Church (CCC 1992) 7:38 - Objections: "They Were Fallible," "Diversity Existed," "Later Corruption" 9:38 - Conclusion: Three Truths That Emerge from this investigation 🌐 Connect 📿 https://totuscatholica.org/rosary 🌍 https://totuscatholica.org/ ✉️ https://totuscatholica.org/contact 🔍 https://catholicexaminationofconscien...

The Lourdes Miracle That Brought a Nobel Prize-Winning Doctor to Faith

Today is the Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes. By the power of God, she performs miracles not only of healing but also of conversion, as shown in this true story.



From Aleteia

By Lindsay Rudegeair

Dr Carrell was standing behind Marie Bailly when three pitchers of the blessed water were poured over her abdomen …

From the time of the Blessed Mother’s first apparition to Bernadette Soubirous, the water from the Lourdes Grotto has been a source of miraculous healings, both for those who have visited the Grotto and for those who used the water in remote places. Since the time of Bernadette, more than 7,000 miraculous cures have been reported to the Lourdes Medical Bureau by pilgrims who have visited Lourdes (which does not include miracles that have taken place outside of Lourdes).

There were so many purported cures associated with the water and Grotto of Lourdes that the Catholic Church decided to set up the Lourdes Medical Bureau to be constituted by and under the leadership of physicians and scientists alone. The objective of the Bureau is to render a judgment that a particular cure was near instantaneous, efficacious throughout the remainder of life, and in all other ways, scientifically inexplicable. The Bureau is constituted of 20 physicians and scientists. Its records are open to any physician or scientist who wants to make their own investigation or challenge to any particular case recognized as “miraculous.”

Since 1883, only 69 cases have been recognized as “miraculous” according to the strict standards of the Bureau. But this does not mean that the 7,000 other cures were not miraculous by other standards. These cases simply cannot be shown to be completely scientifically inexplicable – though their occurrence could be truly extraordinary and possibly, or even probably, miraculous.

The 69 cases approved by the Lourdes Medical Bureau have been inspected by large numbers of physicians and scientists, and the vast majority of them have been shown to be permanent and inexplicable cures. A list of cures can be found here.

One of the most significant cases was the healing of Marie Bailly. Her case was witnessed by Dr Alexis Carrell, and it eventually brought about his conversion.

The miracle of Marie Bailly

In 1902 a physician friend of Dr. Carrell invited him to help take care of sick patients being transported on a train from Lyons to Lourdes. Carrell, at that time, was an agnostic who did not believe in miracles, but consented to help out, not only because of friendship, but also an interest in what natural causes might be allowing such quick healings as those taking place at Lourdes.

On the train, he encountered Marie Bailly, who was suffering from acute tuberculous peritonitis; her abdomen was considerably distended with large, hard masses. Though Marie Bailly was half-conscious, Carrell believed that she would pass away quite quickly after arriving at Lourdes – if not before. Other physicians on the train agreed with this diagnosis.

When the train arrived at Lourdes, Marie was taken to the Grotto, where three pitchers of water were poured over her distended abdomen. After the first pour, she felt a searing pain, but after the second pour, it was lessened, and after the third pour, she experienced a pleasant sensation. Her stomach began to flatten and her pulse returned to normal.

Carrel was standing behind Marie (along with other physicians) taking notes as the water was poured over her abdomen, and wrote: “The enormously distended and very hard abdomen began to flatten and within 30 minutes it had completely disappeared. No discharge whatsoever was observed from the body.”

Marie then sat up in bed, had dinner (without vomiting), and got out of bed on her own and dressed herself the next day. She then boarded the train, riding on the hard benches, and arrived in Lyons refreshed. Carrel was still interested in her psychological and physical condition, and so asked that she be monitored by a psychiatrist and a physician for four months.

After that, Marie joined the Sisters of Charity – to work with the sick and the poor in a very strenuous life – and died in 1937 at the age of 58.

Carrel’s conversion

When Carrel witnessed this exceedingly rapid and medically inexplicable event, he believed he had seen something like a miracle, but it was difficult for him to part with his former sceptical agnosticism – so he did not yet return to the Catholic faith of his childhood.

Furthermore, he wanted to avoid being a medical witness to a miraculous event because he knew that if it became public it would ruin his career at the medical faculty at Lyons.

Nevertheless, Marie Bailly’s cure seemed so evidently miraculous (being so rapid, complete, and inexplicable) that it became public in the news media in France and throughout the world. Reporters indicated that Carrel did not think the cure was a miracle, which forced Carrel to write a public reply stating that one side (made up of some believers) was jumping to a miraculous conclusion too rapidly and the other side (the medical community) had unjustifiably refused to look at facts that appeared to be miraculous.

As Carrel feared, his advocacy of the possibility of Bailly’s miraculous cure led to an end of his career at the medical faculty of Lyons, which ironically had a very good effect on his future – because it led him to the University of Chicago and then to the Rockefeller University. In 1912, he received the Nobel Prize for his work in vascular anastomosis.

Carrel returned to Lourdes many times, and on one occasion, witnessed a second miracle – the instantaneous cure of an 18-month-old blind boy.

Despite these two miracles, Carrel could not bring himself to conclusively affirm the reality of miracles until 1942, when Carrel announced that he believed in God, the immortality of the soul, and the teachings of the Catholic Church.


Pictured: Alexis Carrel, Nobel Prize Laureate in Physiology or Medicine