Saints Martha, Mary and Lazarus
Selected Mass Reading
Responsorial Psalm — Psalm 59:2-3, 4, 10-11, 17, 18
Feast Days
Saint Lupus of Troyes was born around 383 in Toul, in Gaul, to a noble family. Orphaned as an infant, he was raised by his uncle and trained as a lawyer, living amid comfort and responsibility. After six years of marriage, he and his wife, by mutual agreement, embraced a life of separation for God’s sake. Lupus sold his estates, gave the proceeds to the poor, and entered the monastery of Lérins, where his desire for holiness deepened in prayer and discipline. Though he longed for hiddenness, he was called to serve the Church. Appointed bishop of Troyes, he accepted the burden with reluctance and then with steadfast love, shepherding his people for more than five decades. In 429 he traveled with Saint Germanus of Auxerre to Britain to help defend the faith against Pelagianism, and he is remembered in Welsh tradition as Bleiddian. Tradition also credits his prayerful courage with Troyes being spared during Attila’s invasion, a deliverance his people received as God’s mercy through their bishop’s intercession. His feast day is July 29.
Saint Olaf II of Norway was born around 995, likely in Ringerike, Norway, the son of Harald Grenske and Åsta Gudbrandsdatter. As a young man he lived the hard life of a Viking warrior, sailing through the Baltic and to England, where later tradition remembers his courage in battle. Yet God was drawing him to a greater kingship: while abroad he encountered the Christian faith more deeply and was baptized at Rouen in Normandy. Returning to Norway in 1015, Olaf claimed the throne and worked to unite the land under one king. His reign from 1015 to 1028 became closely linked with the strengthening of Christianity among the Norse people, and after his death his witness helped hasten the wider conversion of Scandinavia. Olaf fell in battle at Stiklestad on 29 July 1030. One year later Bishop Grimketel proclaimed him a saint at Nidaros (Trondheim), where his relics were enshrined and devotion spread. Honored as Norway’s “eternal king,” he is venerated as patron of Norway. His feast day is July 29.