Sacred Calendar
The Roman year ordered for memory, penance, feasts, saints, and the daily pilgrimage of the faithful.
Calendar standard
Pre-1955 Roman usage
The calendar follows the universal Roman year under the rubrics of Pope St. Pius X, with the Roman Martyrology preserved as a distinct daily witness.
The day is presented for prayer, recollection, study, and perseverance in the City.
Daily observance
Today in the City of God
The Church keeps this day in holy time. The Pilgrim's Companion gathers the feast, daily quote, Martyrology, meditation, prayer, and related chapters into one daily path through the City.
Choose a date
Daily observance
St. Romanus, Abbot
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Season: Lent
The day is set within the Roman year so its feast, Martyrology, daily quote, prayer, and reading path may be received together without blurring their proper sources.
Today's pilgrimage
St. Romanus, Abbot
Rank: Simple
Color: white
Feria: Lenten Ember Day.
Quote for the day
Pope St. Pius X
“Many suffer everlasting calamity because of ignorance of those mysteries of faith which must be known and believed.”
Acerbo Nimis, n. 2
Roman Martyrology
Roman Martyrology - February 28
At Rome, the birthday of the holy martyrs Maca rius, Rufinus, Justus, and Theophilus. — At Alex andria, the passion of the Saints Cserealis, Pupulus, Caius, and Serapion. — In the same city, in the reign of the emperor Valerian, the commemoration of the holy priests, deacons, and other Christians in great number, who encountered death most willingly by nursing the victims of a most deadly pestilence then raging. They have been generally revered as martyrs by the pious faithful. — In the territory of Lyons, on Mount Jura, the demise of St. Romanus, abbot, who was the first to lead the eremitical life there. His reputation for virtues and miracles brought under his guidance numerous monks. — At Pavia, the translation, from the island of Sardinia, of the bod of St. Augustine, bishop, by Luitprand, king of the Lombards.
Highlighted saint
St. Romanus
Abbot and father of monastic discipline.
St. Romanus is honored as an abbot, a father of monastic life formed by solitude, prayer, discipline, and perseverance.
His feast teaches that a soul is not made free by following every impulse. Holy rule, silence, labor, and obedience make room for God.
The monastic witness is not remote from ordinary homes. Every Catholic needs some rule of life, some custody of speech, some restraint of appetite, and some faithful return to prayer.
Virtue to practice
Stable discipline under God.
Error to resist
The restless self-rule that calls every discipline narrow and every impulse freedom.
For the pilgrim in exile
Ask St. Romanus for steadiness. Even outside the cloister, the soul needs rule enough to belong to God with peace.
Imitate today
- Renew one simple rule of daily prayer.
- Keep custody over speech or appetite.
- Make one hidden act of obedience.
Sources
- St. Andrew Daily Missal, February 28.
- Roman Martyrology, 1916 Baltimore edition, February 28.
Breviary Witness
Fasting with the Church for the Church.
Matins - Lenten Ember Day
Breviary witness
- The Lenten Ember Days join the penitential season to the Church's prayer for sacred ministers and the sanctification of the Christian people.
- Their witness teaches that fasting is ecclesial. The faithful do penance not as isolated souls, but as members of the Mystical Body pleading for purity and holy order.
For the pilgrim in exile
Offer penance for the Church, her ministers, and those who hunger for valid sacraments.
Sources
- Roman Breviary, Lenten Ember Days.
- St. Andrew Daily Missal, Lenten Ember Days.
Meditation
The Cross in Exile
The day teaches the soul that humiliation, contradiction, and penance do not mean God has lost His rule. The Cross is the form by which fidelity is purified. The Church in exile must learn to suffer without surrendering truth and to repent without losing hope.
Related paths
Walk the day through the City.
Today's chapters
Read with the feast.
Prayer
The day should become prayer.
O Lord, bring this day to judgment before Thy mercy. Show me where I obeyed, where I resisted, where I loved, and where I must begin again.
Thought for the pilgrim
The day must end beneath truth.
Practice
The day should become obedience.
End the day with thanksgiving, examination, contrition, and a firm purpose for tomorrow.
Source notes
Universal Roman Calendar under the rubrics of Pope St. Pius X
Fasting and abstinence according to the laws observed in 1952
Daily quotations and pilgrimage excerpts should come from Scripture, Fathers, Doctors, saints, traditional popes before 1958, traditional catechisms, approved devotional works, or received liturgical texts.
The Roman Martyrology, Baltimore, 1916, published by John Murphy Company; the local 1916 text is displayed and traceable to its source lines.
- St. Andrew Daily Missal, Liturgical Calendar, pp. xvii–xxviii.
- St. Andrew Daily Missal, Liturgical Calendar, pp. xiii and xv: Ember Days occur in Advent, Lent, Whitsuntide, and after September 14.
- St. Andrew Daily Missal, Division of the Ecclesiastical Year, p. x: Ember Days are non-privileged ferias; their commemoration remains distinct from the feast and from the separate 1952 fasting layer.