Courageous Saints: Saint Cecilia

“Christ alone can save from death, and deliver the guilty from Eternal Fire”Today is the feast of Saint Cecilia, patron of musicians and an early church martyr. When I think of her, I hear my daughter’s beautiful singing voice: Saint Cecilia was her Confirmation Saint.

Saint Cecilia’s story is about as badass as you get — her martyrdom was gruesome and cruel — as all of those stories go. Born into aristocracy in the 2nd century, Cecilia was forced into marriage even though she had devoted her life to God. Her husband was moved by her conviction — Cecilia sang the psalms at her wedding party, not wanting to participate in the revelry — and he respected her vow of virginity. In fact, because of her example he soon converted and was baptized, along with his brother.

When the men were discovered burying Christian martyrs, they, too, were executed. Cecilia secretly buried them, and she was eventually found out to be a Christian and ordered to be suffocated to death. The attempt failed, and another soldier was sent to behead her. Three blows to her head and neck left her near death, but she survived that assault for three days until she finally succumbed from the wounds.

In the early 1500s her tomb was opened to reveal her incorrupt body. I always think that is startling!

 

Trick or Treat, All Saints, and a tasty beer

beer

So many things this weekend — a hilarious time with the saint quiz, a  lot of fun with the littles in the neighborhood trick-or-treating, and finally, a lovely Sunday celebrating All Saints Day, and hanging out with some of the kiddos.

A favorite moment was a delicious meal — homemade jaeger schnitzel with spaetzle, and a real treat, some Erdinger weissbier. Mmmmmmmmm.

 

Writing Prompt: Write about something that scared you

This week’s writing prompt with my class makes me a little more vulnerable than I’d like, but I suppose that’s what I’ve challenged my students to do, so it follows I should shake in my boots a little, too. We’ve been discussing our goals and dreams, events that have challenged us or frightened us before delving into action. Adrenaline was at the forefront, warning us that something was going to happen quickly, honing our senses into a hyper-alert and hypersensitive state.

Write about something that scared you.

It took me forever to press the send button on an email to my editor at Ave Maria Press containing the manuscript for my first book. Sometime in the fourth grade I decided I wanted to be a writer, and it took all those decades for it to happen in a traditional medium.  Oh, I’ve flirted around with writing on this blog, and other places, even self-published a bunch of things, but this time, the stakes seemed a little higher for me. What if the publisher hates it? What if nobody wants to buy it?

What if the whole universe conspires against my book and deems it the worst thing ever! 

I was consoled with the knowledge that no matter how bad it could be, it’s not likely to generate an online contest for terrible opening lines, like the Bulwer-Lytton Prize, so I hit send. It was an action 42 years in the making, since that very first essay I wrote in the fourth grade.

Nothing exploded. Nobody fired me.

I got a little bit of indigestion later, when I found out what the title was. Oh, it’s sure to be a classic, at least in my family. Are you ready?

My Badass Book of Saints

There’s an awesome subtitle, but I want you to pay attention to it and you’re still obsessing over Badass in the title of a Catholic Saints book. That’s OK. Me, too. Let’s recover together.

My Badass Book of Saints: Courageous Women Who Showed Me How to Live.

I like it. It suits me. I mean, I’m writing about some really extraordinary women, some saints, some not quite saints, and a few that, well, might be saints in heaven, but weren’t exactly Saints on earth. I’m in there, too, telling my story, my mom’s story, my grandma’s story.

It’s a pretty good book. A badass book.

And I’m still scared.

My Badass Book of Saints: Courageous Women Who Showed Me How to Live
by Maria Morera Johnson
Ave Maria Press

Pin It on Pinterest