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| San Giovanni Battista e Madonna del Perpetuo Soccorso, orate pro nobis |
Early in the month, the Church honors the Feast of the Madonna della Lettera, Our Lady of the Sacred Letter, on June 3rd, a devotion rooted in Messina, Sicily, and the ancient belief that the Virgin herself offered protection and blessing to the city. The feast preserves the conviction that heavenly patronage is not abstract, but tied to place, memory, and inheritance.
On June 13th comes the Feast of St. Anthony of Padua, preacher, theologian, and wonderworker. Though remembered widely as the finder of lost things, St. Anthony—the Hammer of Heretics—represents something greater: the recovery of what has been forgotten in the soul itself.
Then comes the Vigil of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist on June 23rd, marked across Europe by bonfires lit against the gathering darkness. These fires, standing at the edge of midsummer, belong to one of the oldest instincts of Christendom: that light must be guarded precisely when it seems strongest.
St. John, the voice crying in the wilderness, stands between worlds—the last of the prophets and the herald of Christ. His feast arrives near the summer solstice, when the days begin, almost imperceptibly, to shorten again. “He must increase, but I must decrease.”
Near the month’s close, June 27th brings the Feast of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, whose icon has long been carried in homes, chapels, and processions as a sign of maternal protection amid uncertainty and hardship.
June does not possess the awakening quality of April or the crowned fullness of May. It stands instead at a luminous frontier: a season of fire, vigilance, and sacred memory beneath the lengthening sun.
~ By Giovanni di Napoli, May 31st, Feast of the Queenship of Mary


