It’s the Ember Saturday in Advent, 2nd Class, with the color of Violet. In this episode: the meditation: “The O Antiphons: O Clavis David, Jesus and His Percursor”, today’s news from the Church: “Proposed Canadian Law Could Condemn the Bible as “Hate Speech””, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.
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Sources Used Today:
- “The O Antiphons: O Clavis David” (FSSPX.news)
- “Magnificat” – From Advent to Epiphany
- “Proposed Canadian Law Could Condemn the Bible as “Hate Speech”” (FSSPX.news)
- The Spiritual Life – Archbishop Lefebvre (Angelus Press)
Saint Philogonius of Antioch is remembered as a bishop who rose from the world of law into the service of the Church at a moment of grave danger. He lived in the early fourth century, during the height of the Arian crisis, when confusion about the identity of Christ threatened to fracture Christian unity. Philogonius was not formed in monasteries or schools of theology. He was a married man, a lawyer by profession, known in Antioch for his integrity, clarity of thought, and fairness in judgment. When his wife died, he embraced a life of continence and deeper prayer, and the Christian community, recognizing his wisdom, chose him as their bishop around the year 318.
His episcopate coincided with one of the most aggressive phases of Arian influence in the East. Powerful bishops and imperial officials promoted the teaching that Christ was not truly God, but a created being. Philogonius resisted firmly. Though not a prolific writer, his preaching was direct and uncompromising. He insisted on the full divinity of Christ and the truth handed down from the apostles, even as political pressure mounted against him. Saint John Chrysostom, who later preached a homily in his honor, praised Philogonius for defending the faith without bitterness, standing immovable while others wavered.
Philogonius suffered exile and harassment for his refusal to accept compromise. Ancient sources suggest he was driven from Antioch and endured great hardship, possibly imprisonment, though details are sparse. What endured was his reputation for calm endurance and pastoral charity. He governed not as an ideologue, but as a shepherd who understood that false teaching wounds souls. His death came around 323, shortly before the Council of Nicaea would formally condemn Arianism. He did not live to see the victory of orthodoxy, but he helped make it possible by his steadfast witness.
Devotion to Saint Philogonius remained strongest in the East. His feast on December 20 was kept especially in Antioch and Constantinople, where preachers recalled him as a model bishop who defended truth without ambition. He became an example for Christian lawyers and judges who sought to unite professional life with fidelity to the faith, and for widowers called to new forms of service in the Church.
Saint Philogonius reminds us that holiness is not limited to those formed from youth in sacred settings. God raises shepherds from every walk of life, and in times of confusion, He often chooses steady voices who know how to speak truth with courage and restraint.
Saint Philogonius, bishop and confessor, pray for us!
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