Dec 10 – Feria / S Melchiades
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À propos de cet audio
It’s Feria, Comm St. Melchiades, 3rd Class, with the color of Violet. In this episode: the meditation: “Jesus the Wonderworker”, today’s news from the Church: “Leo XIV in Turkey: Nicaea at the Service of Ecumenism”, a preview of the Sermon: “the Spirit of Evolutionism”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.
Have feedback or questions about the DD or our other shows? podcast@sspx.org Sources Used Today:- “Jesus the Wonderworker” – From Advent to Epiphany
- https://angeluspress.org/products/from-advent-to-epiphany
- “Leo XIV in Turkey: Nicaea at the Service of Ecumenism” (FSSPX.news)
- https://fsspx.news/en/news/leo-xiv-turkey-nicaea-service-ecumenism-55820
- “the Spirit of Evolutionism” (SSPX Sermons)
- SSPX YouTube: Sermons Playlist
- Listen & Subscribe: SSPX Sermons Podcast
- The Spiritual Life – Archbishop Lefebvre (Angelus Press)
- https://angeluspress.org/products/spiritual-life-archbishop
Saint Melchiades, also known as Miltiades, was a pope who guided the Church through one of the most dramatic turning points in Christian history. He was born in North Africa and came to Rome sometime in the late third century, entering a community that had endured wave after wave of persecution. When he was elected pope in 311, the Church was still reeling from the violence of Diocletian’s edicts. Many Christians had been imprisoned, tortured, or driven into hiding. Some had faltered under pressure, and the wounds of division ran deep. Melchiades stepped into this moment not as a strategist or a politician, but as a father intent on healing.
Within a year of his election, everything changed. Emperor Constantine issued the Edict of Milan in 313, granting full legal freedom to Christians for the first time in Roman history. Melchiades became the first pope to shepherd the Church out of persecution and into public life. The transition was not simple. Property had to be restored, clergy had to be reconciled, and long-standing disputes needed careful handling. Melchiades approached these challenges with remarkable gentleness. He restored unity where harshness might have deepened wounds and worked closely with Constantine to stabilize Christian life in Rome.
He presided over the Lateran Palace, which Constantine had recently given to the Church, marking the beginning of the Lateran’s long history as the episcopal seat of the bishops of Rome.