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Jan 27 – S John Chrysostom / Céleste du Verdier
Description
It’s the Feast of St. John Chrysostom, 3rd Class, with the color of White. In this episode: the meditation: “The Leprosy of Sin”, today’s news from the Church: “In Terms of Religious Practice, Islam Surpasses Christianity in Russia”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.
Have feedback or questions about the DD or our other shows? podcast@sspx.orgSources Used Today:
- “The Leprosy of Sin” – From Epiphany to Lent
- “In Terms of Religious Practice, Islam Surpasses Christianity in Russia” (FSSPX.news)
- The Spiritual Life – Archbishop Lefebvre (Angelus Press)
Saint John Chrysostom reminds the Church that the Word of God is meant to be heard, not merely admired. Born in Antioch around 349, he was trained in rhetoric and law before turning decisively toward Christ. That training never left him. As a priest and later as bishop of Constantinople, John preached with such clarity and force that he earned the name Chrysostom, meaning golden mouthed. Yet his eloquence was never ornamental. He spoke to convert hearts. He denounced greed, corruption, and indifference to the poor with fearless precision, insisting that reverence at the altar was empty if Christ was ignored in the suffering neighbor. His preaching made him beloved by the faithful and deeply resented by the powerful. When he was eventually exiled for refusing to soften the Gospel, he accepted it as the cost of truth. His life shows that love for God must always overflow into love for justice, even when it leads to loss and suffering.
If Saint John Chrysostom shows us holiness lived in public light, Saint Céleste du Verdier de la Sorinière shows us holiness formed almost entirely in shadow. Born in seventeenth century France, Céleste lived far from pulpits and councils. Her sanctity unfolded in obscurity, shaped by disappointment, fragile health, and a vocation that never fit neatly into visible structures. She desired religious life but was unable to enter a convent, and instead embraced a hidden consecration lived quietly in the world. This refusal to abandon her calling, even when it brought no recognition, became the foundation of her holiness.
Céleste’s interior life was marked by prolonged spiritual darkness and physical suffering. She experienced no dramatic consolations and sought none. Her prayer centered on the Passion of Christ, and she understood her own suffering as a participation in His hidden agony. Rather than explaining or escaping it, she offered it silently