Friday, 29 July 2022

Saints Felix, Simplicius, Faustinus, Beatrice. Martyrs. Feast Day 29 July.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless otherwise stated.

Saints Felix, Simplicius, Faustinus and Beatrice.
   Martyrs.
   Feast Day 29 July.

Simple.

Red Vestments.


The statue of Saint Beatrice (on the Right)
is part of a group of twenty-four statues
installed above the Colonnade entrance
above the Basilica of Saint Peter's, Rome.



English: Martyrdom of Saint Simplicius and Saint Faustinus.
Français: Martyre de saint Simplice et de saint Faustin.
Date: 14th-Century.
Author: Richard de Montbaston et collaborateurs.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Holy Pontiff, Felix II, is a Pope of the 4th-Century A.D. He was Martyred in Tuscany, Italy, in the time of The Arians, 365 A.D. [Editor: See The Breviary Notes (below), reference the dispute about Felix.]

Saints Simplicius and Faustinus, denounced as Christians to the persecutors, were put to death at Rome under Emperor Diocletian in 304 A.D. Saint Beatrice, their sister, was arrested and strangled in prison. Pope Leo II placed the Relics of these three Martyrs in a Church at Rome Dedicated in their names.

Mass: Sapiéntiam.


BREVIARIUM ROMANUM.

THE ROMAN BREVIARY.

LE BRÉVIAIRE.



English: A French Prayer Book of 1905
containing extracts from The Roman Missal,
and The Roman Breviary of the time, with French translations.
Français: Nouveau Paroissien Romain contenant en latin et en français les Offices et Messes de tous les dimanches et de toutes les fêtes de l'année ecclésiastique.
File: File:Nouveau Paroissien Romain (1905).jpg
Uploaded: 6 May 2009.
Author: Perky
(Wikimedia Commons)


Illustration: RORATE CÆLI


The following Text is from:

The Pre-1911 Roman Breviary
Volume II.
Summer.

Translated out of Latin into English by John, Marquess of Bute, K.T.

Date: 1879.

The Holy Martyrs, Felix, Simplicius, Faustinus, and Beatrix (Beatrice).
   Feast Day 29 July.

Simple.

The Martyrology says that Simplicius, Faustinus, and Beatrix (Beatrice) were two brothers and a sister, who suffered at Rome under Diocletian.

Concerning Felix, there has been much dispute. The Missal and Breviary, by suppressing the Title of Pope or Bishop (always given in such cases) seem to confirm the view, now generally adopted by historians, viz., that he was an African Martyr, who suffered on 10 November, and whose Relics were brought to Rome on 29 July, but the Martyrology retains another theory, now generally rejected, which identifies this Saint with one Felix, intruded into the See of Rome by Constantius during the Pontificate of Liberius, and now commonly regarded as an Anti-Pope of very dubious orthodoxy.

No comments:

Post a Comment