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
3rd Sunday after the Epiphany
Sunday, February 3, 2030
Season: Time after Epiphany
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
3rd Sunday after the Epiphany
Rank: Semi-Double Sunday
Color: green
Impeded feast: St. Blaise, Bishop and Martyr. The temporal observance has precedence. The precise commemoration rule remains tied to the relevant proper and rubric.
Quote for the day
St. John Vianney
“Nothing makes us more like Our Lord than carrying His Cross.”
Roman Martyrology
Roman Martyrology - February 3
At Sebaste, in Armenia, in the time of the governor Agricolaus, the passion of St. Blasius, bishop and martyr, who after working many miracles, was scourged a long time, and suspended on a tree where he was lacerated with iron combs. He was then imprisoned in a dark dungeon, thrown into a lake from which he came out safe, and finally, by order of the same judge, he and two boys were beheaded. Before him, seven women who were gathering the drops of his blood during his torture, were recognized as Christians, and after undergoing severe torments, were put to death by the sword. — In Africa, St. Celerinus, deacon, who was kept nineteen days in prison loaded with fetters, and confessed Christ gloriously in the midst of afflictions. By overcoming the enemy with invincible constancy, he showed to others the road to victory. — Also, the holy martyrs, Laurentinus, and Ignatius, his uncles, and Celerina, his grandmother, who had been previously crowned with martyrdom. They are highly praised in an epistle of St. Cyprian. — In the same country, the holy martyrs Felix, Symphronius, Hippolytus and their companions. — In the town of Gap, the holy bishops Tigides and Remedius. — At Lyons, the Saints Lupicinus and Felix, also bishops. — The same day, St. Anscharius, bishop of Bremen, who converted the Swedes and the Danes to the faith of Christ.
Gospel of the day
Why are you fearful, O ye of little faith?
Sunday after the Epiphany cycle - Matthew 8:23-27
“The winds and the sea obey him.”
What Our Lord teaches
- Christ is Lord over the storm, even when He permits His disciples to feel their weakness.
- Fear becomes dangerous when it forgets Who is in the boat.
Virtue to practice
Practice trust during disturbance before demanding visible calm.
Error to resist
The panic that treats trial as proof that Christ has abandoned His Church.
For the pilgrim in exile
Do not be ashamed to wake Our Lord by prayer. But after praying, stay with Him in the boat, and let faith grow steadier than the weather.
Sources
- Matthew 8:23-27, Douay-Rheims.
- Traditional Roman Gospel in the Epiphany Sunday cycle.
Meditation
The Coming of the King
The mystery of the coming of Christ teaches the pilgrim to wait without surrender, to recognize divine humility, and to adore the King where He truly appears. Sacred time trains hope, but hope must remain disciplined by doctrine and worship.
Related paths
Walk the day through the City.
Today's chapters
Read with the feast.
Prayer
The day should become prayer.
O Lord, pardon my faults, raise my heart from discouragement, and teach me to begin again under Thy mercy.
Thought for the pilgrim
The pilgrim is formed by returning to God again and again.
Practice
The day should become obedience.
Make a brief examination of conscience before sleep and end the day with an act of contrition.
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, p. xiv: Sundays after the Epiphany are semi-doubles.
- St. Andrew Daily Missal, Division of the Ecclesiastical Year, p. ix: ordinary Sundays yield to feasts of the first and second class and feasts of Our Lord, but supersede doubles and semi-doubles.
- St. Andrew Daily Missal, Liturgical Calendar, pp. xvii–xxviii.