Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Saint (and companions) of the Day for Thursday

 

Sts. Augustine Zhao Rong, priest and Companions, Chinese Martyrs



           The gospel first arrived in the vast and powerful “Middle Kingdom,” or China, in the 6th century via Syria, with different emperors in turn permitting and suppressing the small community of faith planted there. Evangelization in the modern age began in earnest in the 16th century with the arrival of European missionaries such as the Jesuit Matteo Ricci, who painstakingly learned the language and customs of these immensely cultured people. By the 17th century, not a few Chinese had embraced the Lord Jesus Christ and his gospel. Over the next several centuries, they would testify to their commitment to him with their blood.

The protomartyr of China

            The first Chinese martyr was in fact a Spanish Dominican friar, Fr. Francisco Fernandez de Capillas, who was captured in 1647 in Fu’an, in a wave of anti-Christian persecution. From prison, he wrote, “I am here with other prisoners and we have developed a fellowship. They ask me about the gospel of the Lord…. I live here in great joy … knowing that I am here because of the Lord Jesus Christ. The pearls I have found here these days are not always easy to find.” Those “pearls” were open hearts, people hungry for God. When, in 1648, Fr. de Capillas was beheaded, sealing the transformation of the Spanish priest into a Chinese saint, his spiritual children would show their worth. They followed him: 120 martyrs between 1648 and 1930, of which 87 were native-born Chinese Christians and 33 were foreign-born missionaries from various religious communities.

The soldier turned priest

            In the late 1700’s, after the death of a number of Chinese lay catechists who refused to renounce the faith even under torture, a Chinese soldier experienced a turn of events that transformed him into the name and the face of a vast company of his fellow countrymen who had encountered the Lord. It happened that Zhao Rong was assigned to the company of guards sent to escort the French missionary, Bishop John Gabriel Taurin Dufresse, on the long journey to his execution in Beijing. There was something about this foreigner’s bearing, his patience in the face of suffering and imminent death, that struck the soldier. He began to listen to this leader of an outlawed faith. Soon, the soldier asked for baptism, taking the name Augustine. The foreign-born priest was killed, but he had a spiritual son: Augustine Zhao Rong asked for holy orders, becoming the first Chinese-born diocesan priest. In 1815, Fr. Augustine followed his spiritual father to torture and martyrdom.

“I am a Christian”

If the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church, as Tertullian stated in antiquity, the Church was taking deep root in this ancient land. Waves of persecution followed, each of which brought with it new martyrs, up through the anti-imperialist and anti-Christian Boxer Rebellion of the beginning of the 20th century. The foreign-born martyrs sealed their embrace of this land and people with their blood so completely that, like Fr. de Capillas, they are counted among the Chinese saints. The 87 Chinese-born martyrs were men, women and children – the youngest was 9 years old and the oldest was 79 – from all walks of life. They were Chinese priests who rose up in Fr. Augustine Zhao Rong’s footsteps, lay catechists, merchants, cooks, farmers, and an adolescent boy who, at the threat of being flayed alive, exclaimed, “Every piece of my flesh… will tell you that I am a Christian.” Many were offered freedom if they would apostatize, and refused.

There could be no greater proof that the Church was alive in China, or that the Lord had Chinese-born servants filled with courage and love. “Where I am, there will my servant be” (Jn 12:26), he had promised. This vast company of Chinese martyrs were with him, loving their Lord, their land and their culture unto the shedding of blood. Pope John Paul II beatified them together in the year 2000.

Pope Leo XIV will have lunch with 200 people who are poor

 

Lunch with poor people in Borgo Laudato Si in 2025Lunch with poor people in Borgo Laudato Si in 2025  (@Vatican Media)

Pope to have lunch with 200 poor people from Rome in Castel Gandolfo

Pope Leo is due to share a meal with around 200 poor people from the Diocese of Rome at Borgo Laudato si' in Castel Gandolfo on Saturday.

Vatican News

On Saturday, 11 July, Pope Leo will have lunch with around 200 poor people at Borgo Laudato si', located within the Pontifical Gardens of Castel Gandolfo. 

The initiative, called Lunch with the Pope, will begin with the celebration of the Eucharist using the Liturgy for the Care of Creation, followed by a moment of welcome and refreshments, a guided visit through Borgo Laudato si', and a shared meal with the Holy Father.

The gathering builds on an initiative first launched in August 2025, when Pope Leo shared lunch with poor people from the Diocese of Albano, in Italy. That encounter has since become an annual event promoted by the Laudato si' Centre for Higher Education, which oversees the development of the Borgo Laudato si' project.

Each year, a different diocese will be invited to bring together poor people, refugees, migrants, and others experiencing difficiluties, offering them a day immersed in the beauty of creation and an opportunity to meet the Pope.

This year's event is being organised jointly by the Laudato si' Centre for Higher Education, the Dicastery for the Service of Charity, and the Diocese of Rome, bringing together the Church institutions and organisations that accompany vulnerable people across the Italian capital.

One mission

Cardinal Fabio Baggio, Director General of the Laudato si' Centre for Higher Education, said Borgo Laudato si' was created to demonstrate that "the care of creation and the care of the human person are one and the same mission."

He described the initiative as another step in Pope Leo's outreach to those living on the social peripheries, noting that the encounter reaffirms the Church's vocation to be present wherever human dignity calls for "listening, closeness, and hope."

Echoing that message, Archbishop Luis Marín de San Martín, Prefect of the Dicastery for the Service of Charity, said the Pope's choice highlights that authentic charity is expressed through "closeness, encounter, and sharing."

"When the Church places the most vulnerable people at the centre," he said, "it makes the Gospel visible and bears witness that no one is on the margins of God's heart."

Cardinal Baldassare Reina, the Pope's Vicar General for the Diocese of Rome, explained that those invited are people who are accompanied daily by parishes, Caritas, and numerous ecclesial and social organisations throughout the city.

"The encounter with the Holy Father restores centrality to those who too often remain on the margins," he said, adding that it is also a call for the entire Christian community to embrace the responsibility of welcome.

The organisers said the initiative reflects the mission of Borgo Laudato si', where care for creation, human development and Christian formation come together through concrete experiences of encounter, participation and faith.

The event has also been made possible through the support of numerous Catholic charities, parish communities and volunteer organisations serving people experiencing vulnerability across Rome, together with local businesses that have donated breakfast and lunch for the occasion.

Iraqi youth gather to celebrate their Christian faith

 

Pope to Iraqi youth: Be Christ's light and hope in a wounded world

Pope Leo XIV encourages young Iraqi Christians gathered in Ankawa to become missionaries of faith, love and hope, urging them to be Christ's light and peacemakers in a land marked by conflict and instability.

Vatican News

As young people from across Iraq gather in Ankawa, in the Archeparchy of Erbil, for their annual Youth Meeting from 8 to 11 July, Pope Leo XIV is encouraging them to embrace their vocation as missionaries of hope, urging them to become "Christ's light" in a country that continues to experience the consequences of war and instability.

In a video message to the gathering, dedicated this year to the theme Mission, the Pope reminds participants that they have an indispensable role in the life of the Church today.

"The Church has a vital mission to serve the world by sharing the light of Christ," he says, encouraging the young people to help "shape the Church — and the world — in the years to come."

Recalling a conviction he has expressed previously, Pope Leo emphasizes that "young people are not only the future of the Church, but also the present." And recognizing the difficult reality many Iraqi Christians continue to face, the Pope acknowledges that witnessing to the Gospel is often demanding.

"It is not always easy to be a light in the world," he says. "You are called to radiate this light in a situation that has often been marked by war and instability."

Do not be afraid

Even so, he urges them not to lose heart.

"Do not be afraid! And do not think that you are alone in this task. I am with you; the Church is with you. Place your trust in Jesus," Pope Leo says.

Using the image of light as the guiding thread of his reflection, he highlights three qualities that should shape every Christian disciple: faith, love and hope.

First, he explains, light enables us to see. Faith, therefore, is not simply a response to life's hardships but "the recognition of reality and living in the truth," allowing believers to see the world, others and themselves through God's eyes. He encourages the young people to bear witness through the way they live so that others, too, may discover the truth and meaning they seek.

The Pope then reflects on light as warmth, a sign of God's love. Authentic mission, he says, begins not with activity but with a personal encounter with Christ nurtured through daily prayer and the sacraments, especially Reconciliation and the Eucharist.

Ground your roots in God's love

"Ground your hearts in the solid foundation of God's love for you," he urges. "Discover the heart of Christ, and do not be afraid to build your lives upon him."

Only by remaining rooted in that love, he explains, will they be able to share "the warmth of God's love and the reconciling power of his grace" with those around them.

Finally, Pope Leo XIV presents light as a symbol of growth and hope. In a region longing for reconciliation, he says, young Christians are called to become builders of peace.

"You are particularly called to be peacemakers, to unite those around you, and to instil in others the hope of a future marked by lasting peace."

Although they cannot always control the circumstances in which they live, he reminds them, they can always choose to allow "the peace of Christ to rule" in their hearts, becoming signs of the hope that comes from the Risen Lord.

Concluding his message, Pope Leo entrusts the young people to the maternal care of Mary, Mother of the Church, encouraging them to trust in God's loving plan for their lives.

"Never doubt the goodness of God," he says. "Do not be afraid of the plan the Lord has for each of your lives," recalling the promise of the prophet Jeremiah that God desires "to give you a future with hope."

Yesterday, July 7th, was the feast day of an entire family, a father & mother, their children and their unborn baby - The Ulma Family

 

Ulma family’s liturgical feast day is July 7


Victoria Ulma with her six children (ca. 1943).


Philip Kosloski 

While the Ulma family were martyred on March 24, their feast day is observed on July 7, the parents' wedding anniversary.

The entire Catholic Church rejoiced at the beatification of the Ulma family on September 10, 2023. It was the first time an entire family was beatified at a single celebration, as well as the only time in the history of the Church that an unborn child was beatified

Jozef and Wiktoria Ulma and their seven children — including a baby who lost his life at birth — were executed on March 24, 1944, along with the Goldmanns, the Jewish family of eight they had been sheltering for a year and a half.

Generally speaking, saints and beatified persons are honored in the liturgical calendar on their date of death. Since saints are confirmed to already be in Heaven, the date of a saint’s death would be considered their “heavenly birthday,” or the day of their “entrance into Heaven.”

fot. BP KEP / EpiskopatNews | Flickr | CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

Exceptions

However, this is not always possible or desirable, for a variety of reasons, including if the saint's death date may coincide with either another major feast, or the penitential season of Lent. In these two cases, their liturgical feast would always be replaced by the other feast/season and wouldn't be celebrated.

A perfect example of this situation is the feast of St. John Paul II. He died on April 2, 2005, which often falls during Lent or the first week of Easter. As a result, the Church assigned October 22 to be his feast, which is the anniversary of his elevation to the papacy.

Married couples

In the case of the few married couples who have been recognized as blessed or saints, their wedding anniversary is often chosen, such as Sts. Louis and Zelie Martin, whose liturgical feast is July 12.

The Ulma family's feast day follows a similar pattern, as March 24 always falls during Lent and would make it difficult to have a joyous celebration.

The Church instead has chosen July 7 as their liturgical feast, as Jozef and Wiktoria were married on July 7, 1935. The postulator of their cause confirmed this date.

Initially this feast will only be celebrated in Poland. Local bishops would have to approve this feast to be included on their calendar, or the current pope could extend it to the universal Church after their future canonization.

Individuals can still celebrate this feast in their own family devotions, even though it may not be on their local liturgical calendar.