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Calendar Class of February 2, 2025

Writer's picture: Andrea Kirk AssafAndrea Kirk Assaf

A Carpe Diem Snapshot:

Welcome, February! Today the girls and I celebrated the new month with freshly squeezed lemonade (it's still citrus season here) and some readings about the return of the light (see the quote of the day below). Happy Candlemas and Groundhog Day!
Welcome, February! Today the girls and I celebrated the new month with freshly squeezed lemonade (it's still citrus season here) and some readings about the return of the light (see the quote of the day below). Happy Candlemas and Groundhog Day!

Liturgical: Today the Church celebrates the Feast of the Presentation of the Lord which occurs forty days after the birth of Jesus and is also known as Candlemas Day, since the blessing and procession of candles is included in today's liturgy.

Founded by Pope St. John Paul II in 1997, today is the World Day of Prayer for Consecrated Life. He attached it to "Candlemas Day" because the consecrated men and women are to be the light in the world, imitating Jesus, the Light of the World.



Bishop Barron's Sunday Sermon: God Returns to His Temple


Fr. Plant's Homily: Redemption of the Firstborn


Sanctoral: The Roman Martyrology commemorates St. Catherine de Ricci (1522-1590), a native of Florence, Italy, who became a Dominican tertiary in 1535 and eventually filled the offices of novice-mistress and prioress. She was famous for her ecstasies in which she beheld and enacted the scenes of our Lord's passion. It is said that she met St. Philip Neri, in a vision who was still alive in Rome. Three future popes were among the thousands who flocked to her convent to ask her prayers.


It’s no accident that Groundhog Day and Candlemas are celebrated together, for both signify the triumph of light over darkness, spring over winter.

Candlemas was originally a Celtic festival marking the “cross-quarter day,” or midpoint of the season. The Sun is halfway on its advance from the winter solstice to the spring equinox. The Christian church expanded this festival of light to commemorate the purification of the Virgin Mary and her presentation of the infant Jesus in the Temple. Candlelit processions accompanied the feast day. Since the traditional Candlemas celebration anticipated the planting of crops, a central focus of the festivities was the forecasting of either an early spring or a lingering winter. Sunshine on Candlemas was said to indicate the return of winter. Similarly, “When the wind’s in the east on Candlemas Day / There it will stick till the second of May.” A bear brought the forecast to the people of France and England, while those in Germany looked to a badger for a sign. In the 1800s, German immigrants to Pennsylvania brought their Candlemas legends with them. Finding no badgers but lots of groundhogs, or woodchucks, there, they adapted the New World species to fit the lore. Today that lore has grown into a full-blown festival, with Punxsutawney Phil presiding.


The surprisingly Catholic origins of Groundhog Day


The Writer's Almanac edition today.


Natural: Did Phil see his shadow? For all things, groundhog, visit the folks at Punxsutawney and see what Phil is predicting this year.


Italian: Prendere la palla al balzo (to seize the opportunity / moment)



 
 
 

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