It’s Quinquagesima Sunday, 2nd class, with the color of violet. In this episode: The meditation: “Foretelling of the Passion,” today’s news from the Church: “Twenty Years in Prison for Jimmy Lai: A Death Sentence in Disguise,” and today’s thought from the Archbishop.
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Their preaching quickly drew the attention of local authorities. Summoned before Roman officials, they were ordered to sacrifice to the gods as a sign of loyalty to the empire. The brothers refused calmly, insisting that their allegiance belonged first to Christ. What followed was a series of tortures meant to intimidate them into submission. Ancient accounts describe beatings, imprisonment, and even exposure to wild beasts. In each episode, they remained unshaken. Stories circulated that the beasts would not attack them and that flames refused to consume them, details meant to underscore divine protection rather than spectacle. The essential truth was their constancy. Neither threats nor suffering persuaded them to deny their faith.
Eventually, the authorities condemned them to death. They were beheaded outside the city, likely around the year 120, though the precise date remains uncertain. Their martyrdom became a turning point for the Christian community of Brescia. Instead of weakening the faithful, it strengthened them. The courage of Faustinus and Jovita became a public witness that Christ was worth more than life itself. Their names were preserved in local memory and inscribed into liturgical calendars, ensuring that their sacrifice would not fade into anonymity.
Devotion to the two saints grew steadily in Brescia and the surrounding region. They became the city’s patron saints, invoked for protection in times of war and plague. Their feast on February 15 was marked with solemn processions and public prayers, uniting civic and religious identity. Churches were dedicated in their honor, and relics associated with them became treasured signs of continuity with the early Church.
Saint Faustinus and Saint Jovita remind the Church that the Gospel was carried forward not only by apostles and bishops of renown, but by brothers who stood together in faith. Their witness shows that unity in suffering can become a source of strength for generations.
Saints...