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
Feria of Lent
Monday, March 16, 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
Feria of Lent
Rank: Feria
Color: violet
Quote for the day
Thomas a Kempis
“Nothing, how little so ever it be, if it is suffered for God's sake, can pass without merit in the sight of God.”
Roman Martyrology
Roman Martyrology - March 16
At Rome, the martyrdom of the deacon St. Cyriacus, who, after a long imprisonment, was covered with melted pitch and stretched on the rack, to have his limbs distended with ropes, was beaten with clubs, and finally beheaded with Largus, Smaragdus, and twenty others, by order of Maximian. Their feast, however, is kept on the 8th of August, the day on which their bodies were taken up by the blessed pope Marcellus and reverently entombed. — At Aquileia, in the time of the emperor Numerian and the governor Beronius, the birthday of the holy bishop Hilary, and the deacon Tatian, who terminated their martyrdom with Felix, Largus, and Denis, after being subjected to the rack and other tortures. — In Lycaonia, the holy martyr Papas, who was scourged for the Christian faith, torn with iron hooks, then compelled to walk with shoes pierced with nails, and finally bound to a barren tree. In leaving this world to go to God, he rendered the tree fruitful. — At Anazarbum, in Cilicia, under the governor Marcian, the martyr St. Julian, who was a long time tortured, then put into a sack with serpents, and cast into the sea. — At Ravenna, St. Agapitus, bishop and confessor. — At Cologne, St. Heribert, a bishop, celebrated for sanctity. — At Clermont, in Auvergne, the demise of St. Patrick, bishop. — In Syria, St. Abraham, hermit, whose life has been written by the blessed deacon Ephrem.
Highlighted saint
The Lenten Feria
The Church's daily school of penance.
The Lenten feria is not empty time between Sundays. In the Roman rite, Lent gives proper Masses to the ferias, forming the faithful by daily penance, prayer, almsgiving, and conversion.
These weekdays teach that penance is not a mood but a discipline. The Church trains the whole man: appetite, speech, memory, habits, and the will turned back to God.
A soul should not wait for a strong feeling before beginning. Lent is often kept by small, repeated acts: eating less, speaking less, praying more honestly, and returning to duty when the will is tired.
Virtue to practice
Daily penance and conversion.
Error to resist
The idea that Lent is only a Sunday theme or a private seasonal preference.
For the pilgrim in exile
Do not despise the ordinary Lenten weekday. Small faithful penance is one of the roads by which exile becomes pilgrimage.
Imitate today
- Keep one concrete Lenten sacrifice faithfully.
- Add a small act of prayer or almsgiving.
- Make an examination of conscience before night.
- Return quietly after failure instead of abandoning the fast.
Sources
- St. Andrew Daily Missal, Division of the Ecclesiastical Year: Lent has a proper Mass for each feria.
- Matthew 9:15, Douay-Rheims.
Breviary Witness
The daily discipline of the forty days.
Matins - Feria of Lent
Breviary witness
- The Lenten ferias form the faithful through the Church's daily school of penance, in which conversion is practiced rather than merely admired.
- Their witness is steady and practical: fasting, prayer, compunction, almsgiving, and obedience bring the soul back beneath the rule of Christ.
For the pilgrim in exile
Let the weekday become a cell of conversion. A soul is often rebuilt by repeated small fidelities.
Sources
- Roman Breviary, ferial Matins in Lent.
- St. Andrew Daily Missal, Lenten ferias.
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, make me patient in household division, firm without cruelty, and charitable without compromise. Let peace be made beneath truth, not against it.
Thought for the pilgrim
Family peace cannot be purchased by surrendering the Faith.
Practice
The day should become obedience.
Pray for one family member or friend. Love them sincerely, but do not pretend the truth is less serious just to keep peace.
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, Division of the Ecclesiastical Year, p. x: Lent has a proper Mass for each feria; other ferias without a proper Mass use the Mass of the Sunday.
- This is a temporal fallback only; it does not assert a saint, a fast, or an unentered proper Mass.