June 18

June 18

Saturday of the 15th Week in Ordinary Time

In USA: Optional Memorial of St. Camillus de Lellis, priest. (†1614 Rome). Of distinguished birth, he followed a military career and led a dissolute life. After his conversion, he founded the Order of Clerics Regular, Servants of the Sick, now known as the Camillians. Patron of hospitals. (Commemorated July 14 in the General calendar).

Mass Readings

First Reading – Micah 2:1-5

Woe to those who plan iniquity, and work out evil on their couches; In the morning light they accomplish it when it lies within their power. They covet fields, and seize them; houses, and they take them; They cheat an owner of his house, a man of his inheritance. Therefore thus says the LORD: Behold, I am planning against this race an evil from which you shall not withdraw your necks; Nor shall you walk with head high, for it will be a time of evil. On that day a satire shall be sung over you, and there shall be a plaintive chant: “Our ruin is complete, our fields are portioned out among our captors, The fields of my people are measured out, and no one can get them back!” Thus you shall have no one to mark out boundaries by lot in the assembly of the LORD.

Responsorial Psalm – Ps 10:1-2, 3-4, 7-8, 14(R.12b)
R. Do not forget the poor, O Lord!

Why, O LORD, do you stand aloof?
Why hide in times of distress?
Proudly the wicked harass the afflicted,
who are caught in the devices the wicked have contrived. R

For the wicked man glories in his greed,
and the covetous blasphemes, sets the LORD at nought.
The wicked man boasts, “He will not avenge it”;
“There is no God,” sums up his thoughts. R

His mouth is full of cursing, guile and deceit;
under his tongue are mischief and iniquity.
He lurks in ambush near the villages;
in hiding he murders the innocent;
his eyes spy upon the unfortunate. R

You do see, for you behold misery and sorrow,
taking them in your hands.
On you the unfortunate man depends;
of the fatherless you are the helper.R

Gospel – Mt 12:14-21

The Pharisees went out and took counsel against Jesus to put him to death. When Jesus realized this, he withdrew from that place. Many people followed him, and he cured them all, but he warned them not to make him known. This was to fulfill what had been spoken through Isaiah the prophet: Behold, my servant whom I have chosen, my beloved in whom I delight; I shall place my Spirit upon him, and he will proclaim justice to the Gentiles. He will not contend or cry out, nor will anyone hear his voice in the streets. A bruised reed he will not break, a smoldering wick he will not quench, until he brings justice to victory. And in his name the Gentiles will hope.


Featured Saints

St. Arnulf, bishop (†640). Appointed Bishop of Metz, he became a counsellor to the King of Austrasia, Dagobert I, who ordered the construction of Saint-Denis Basilica. He later renounced his episcopal office to embrace a hermetic life.

St. Theodosia, religious and martyr (†eighth century). Martyred in Constantinople for opposing the destruction of an ancient statue of Christ that Emperor Leo III the Isaurian had ordered removed from the bronze door of his palace.

St. Frederick, bishop, martyr (+838). Bishop of Utrecht, Holland. A master of Sacred Scripture, he evangelized among the Frisians.

Blessed Simon of Lipnica, priest (†1482). Franciscan religious; outstanding preacher and ardent devotee of the Holy Name of Jesus. He died during a plague epidemic in Krakow, after contracting the disease while ministering to victims.

St. Bruno, bishop (†1123). Persecuted for his tireless efforts for Church reform; obliged to leave his diocese in Segni, Italy, he took refuge in the Monastery of Monte Cassino, where he became abbot.

St. Philastrius, bishop (†circa 397). Bishop of Brescia, he joined St. Ambrose and St. Augustine in the fight against Arianism.

Blessed Jean-Baptiste of Brussels, priest and martyr (†1794). Priest of the diocese of Limoges, imprisoned in a sordid galley in Rochefort during the French Revolution where he died of starvation and disease.

In USA: Optional Memorial of St. Camillus de Lellis, priest. (†1614 Rome). Of distinguished birth, he followed a military career and led a dissolute life. After his conversion, he founded the Order of Clerics Regular, Servants of the Sick, now known as the Camillians. Patron of hospitals. (Commemorated July 14 in the General calendar).


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