Super Saints Podcast
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God created us to become Super Saints.
This podcast is about our Journey to Sainthood in these times.
Journeys of Faith Ministry, founded by Bob and Penny Lord is about Evangelization through communications, spreading the Good News of the Gospel especially the Eucharistic Miracles, Marian Apparitions and Lives of the Super Saints.
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We are all called to become Saints, and each of us has been created uniquely with special features and gifts by God.
Our goal is to spend eternity in union with Our God in Heaven.
We will focus on the Lives of the Saints, Prayer and testimonies from daily life that will show us how to live as a Christian here and now and become a Super Saint in Heaven
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Super Saints Podcast
Perpetua And Felicity Courage at Catharge
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We trace the lives of Saints Perpetua and Felicity from bustling Carthage to the arena, showing how friendship, motherhood, and the Eucharist forged courage stronger than empire. Their diary, visions, and final witness challenge us to make communion our lifeline.
• Early life and faith in Roman Carthage
• Political pressure under Septimius Severus
• Arrest, prison conditions, and secret liturgies
• Perpetua’s diary, ladder vision, and spiritual combat
• Felicity’s childbirth and maternal sacrifice
• Eucharist as strength, viaticum, and joy
• Martyrdom scenes and final acts of mercy
• Sources, Augustine’s preaching, and Roman Canon
• Ongoing veneration and presence in modern media
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- The Eucharist is the Source and Summit of our Faith." Catechism 132 Click Here
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Why Perpetua And Felicity Matter
Early Life In Roman Carthage
Politics Under Septimius Severus
Arrests, Prison, And Hidden Communion
Perpetua’s Visions And Diary
Felicity’s Childbirth And Motherhood
Eucharist As Strength And Viaticum
Martyrdom In The Amphitheater
Sources, Fathers, And Liturgy
Veneration And Global Legacy
Saints In Modern Catholic Media
Closing Reflections And Invitation
SPEAKER_00Hello, family. Welcome to Journeys of Faith Super Saints Podcast. It's Brother Joseph Ryaldenhoven here at your service. Be sure to look at the description for special information of interest to you and Saints Perpetua and Felicity. Courageous witnesses of Eucharistic love. In the tapestry of our Catholic faith, woven with stories of sacrifice, renewal, and unshakable devotion, few figures shine as brilliantly as Saints Perpetua and Felicity. Their names echo through the ages as powerful exemplars of Eucharistic love, a love so compelling it propelled them against all odds to surrender their lives for Christ. At Journeys of Faith we cherish and celebrate these heroic women whose witness embodies our belief that the Eucharist is the source and summit of our faith. For Catholics drawn to the stories of the saints, the miraculous, and the life-changing power of pilgrimage, saints perpetua and felicity offer more than inspiration. They provide a living testament to the courage that comes from total abandonment to God. Their tale, reverently preserved in the ancient traditions of the church, continues to illuminate the path for modern Christians seeking deeper communion with Jesus, especially through the mystery of the Eucharist. Let us journey together with these courageous witnesses, exploring the depth of their faith and the radiant Eucharistic love that carried them from the prisons of Carthage to eternal glory. As we do, may our hearts be set ablaze just as theirs were, with the love of Christ truly present in the blessed sacrament. Early life in Carthage in the bustling Roman city of Carthage, sometime in the late second century, two women whose names would echo through the millennia began their journey of faith. Perpetua, a noble woman, and Felicity, a young slave. Carthage was one of the empire's glittering jewels, a center of commerce, learning, and culture, but also a place pulsing with pagan devotion and suspicion toward this strange, growing sect that followed Christ. Perpetua was young, educated, and already a mother. By all earthly accounts, her life was mapped out for comfort, yet the voice of the gospel drew her soul beyond the comforts of Roman privilege. Felicity, in contrast, lived a life of hiddenness and service, overshadowed by the realities of slavery in a Roman household, but with a fervent faith that equaled and perhaps even surpassed that of her noble sister in Christ. The Christian community in Carthage was thriving but ever wary. Persecution lurked in every shadowed street and forum. To claim the Eucharist, to dare to attend secret liturgies in the dead of night was an act of audacious hope. It is this context of risk, clandestine prayer, and longing for the bread of life that shaped the faith of perpetua and felicity. Both women found themselves caught up not only in the drama of salvation history, but also in the daily struggles and discrimination early Christians faced. Their friendship, forged in faith, would soon be tested to its limits, becoming a luminous example of Christ's love and the profound unity that flows from the Eucharist, the source and summit of our faith. Embark on your own faith journey with journeys of faith. Saints Perpetua and Felicity showed us what courageous, unwavering faith looks like, anchored in the love of Christ and nourished by the Holy Eucharist. At Journeys of Faith, we are passionate about bringing you closer to the saints and ever deeper into the Eucharistic heart of our Catholic tradition, ready to grow in faith and encounter Christ through his holy witnesses. Explore our pilgrimages. Travel in the footsteps of the saints with us. Every journey is a spiritual pilgrimage designed to bring you into living contact with our heroes of faith like Perpetua and Felicity. Discover Catholic media, enjoy books, documentaries, and teachings from acclaimed experts on Catholic saints, Bob and Penny Lord, lovingly curated to fuel your spiritual growth. Visit Holy Family Mission Grounds, experience our shrines, beautiful grounds, and faith-filled gift shop where Eucharistic Love comes alive. Shop the Catholic Shopify Network, support Catholic artisans around the world, and access hundreds of faithful shops through our mega search engine. Stay connected. Join our community for stories of saints, Eucharistic miracles, Marian apparitions, retreats, and exclusive offers all centered on the Eucharist, our faith source and summit. Let your heart be inspired and your faith reignited. The journey begins here. Walk with the saints at journeys of faith. Political climate under Emperor Septimius Severus. At the dawn of the third century, North Africa found itself in the vice of a turbulent Roman Empire ruled with iron resolve by Emperor Septimius Severus. Severus Rome was a world both sophisticated and suffocating, spectacular in its engineering, proud of its civic achievements, yet wary of anything that could disrupt its tightly woven order. For Christians like Saints Perpetua and Felicity, the era's promises of Roman peace and prosperity, concealed a lethal intolerance, and Severus had risen to power through military might, cultivating a complicated legacy. He didn't invent Christian persecution, but under his administration, imperial suspicion of the young, rapidly growing Christian movement escalated to deadly new heights. Christians refused to offer sacrifices to the emperor or acknowledge the pagan gods, a defiant stance viewed as both subversive and dangerous. Their allegiance to Christ and their refusal to uh simply be absorbed into the empire's religious syncretism made them in them targets. The edict attributed to Severus forbade conversions to Christianity and Judaism, heightening the pressure on the faithful. Christians faced arrest, imprisonment, and for the bold public execution. Perpetua, a noblewoman, and felicity, a slave, were both swept up in these crackdowns. Their journey from private faith to public martyrdom played out against a background of anxiety and suspicion, a society trembling before Rome's power, yet unable to comprehend the profound strength these young women drew from the Eucharist and the promise of eternal life. Despite the threat of violence, the Christian community in Carthage refused to hide. Within dimly lit household gatherings and whispered prayers, their witness blossomed. It was in this climate of official condemnation and underground courage that perpetua and felicity story unfolded, their steadfast love of Christ, a lighthouse against the stormy backdrop of Severus's imperium. The arrest and imprisonment narrative. Saints perpetua and felicity, resolute in their faith, faced the unthinkable public denunciation and arrest for simply living as followers of Christ. Their courage wasn't cloaked in grandeur, it was raw, maternal. Perpetua, a young noblewoman and new mother, was still nursing her infant son when soldiers stormed her home. Felicity, a slave and expectant mother, shared in her suffering. Their shared trials transcended social barriers, uniting them in a sisterhood of faith. Their imprisonment was brutal, damp, overcrowded cells seethed with disease and hopelessness, filth and darkness became companions, yet flickers of Eucharistic love sustained them, fellow Christians risked their own safety to visit, bringing consolation and clandestine communion in perpetua's own vivid diary. She documents dreams and mystical insights that illuminate their mystic resolve. Her faith outshone the suffocating gloom of the dungeon. As felicity neared childbirth, her anguish deepened, yet she feared missing martyrdom more than her own pain. Here, amidst Roman indifference, the grace of the Eucharist transformed misery into meaning. Their chains became a witness, not just to steadfastness, but to an otherworldly love that endures above all. Through suffering, perpetua and felicity became living icons of what it means to offer one's life in union with the suffering Christ, bearing witness before man and God alike. Visions and dreams recorded in Perpetua's diary. Thanks to a rare treasure, Perpetua's own written words. Her diary is one of the earliest firsthand accounts by a Christian martyr, and within its pages, her inner life is laid bare, a soul burning with Eucharistic love, courage, and mystical grace. In the days leading up to her martyrdom, Perpetua described a series of visions and dreams that both guided and comforted her through trial. One night Perpetua beheld a ladder reaching up to heaven, bristling with swords and weapons. At its summit, a radiant shepherd invited her to drink fresh milk, an unmistakable symbol of the Eucharist nourishment and Christ's promise of eternal life. This vision fortified her spirit, confirming that suffering for Christ was a sure path to communion with him. Another dream unfolded like a spiritual drama. She found herself battling a savage Egyptian, instead of succumbing to fear, perpet perpetua transformed, wielding new strength and claim victory in the name of Christ. She woke with peace, certain that her struggle in the arena would end in triumph through faith. Perpetua's diary does more than record miraculous dreams. It reveals a young mother trembling yet heroic, whose supernatural consolation flowed directly from her relationship with Christ in the Eucharist. These visions are not mere personal comfort, they are timeless reminders that God sustains his faithful with hope, vision, and the promise of glory, even in the shadows of suffering. Through perpetuous eyes we see how the Eucharist emboldens the soul for the ultimate witness. Maternal sacrifice, nursing Felicity's child in prison. Inside the stark, suffocating darkness of Carthage's prison, Felicity embodied a different kind of courage, a devotion not only to Christ, but to her child. Pregnant when she was arrested, Felicity's faith was tested not only by the threat of martyrdom, but also by the whispering cries of the infant within her. This was not theoretical suffering, it was raw, bodily, immediate. Historical accounts recount that mere days before her execution, Felicity went into labor in her cell. Fellow prisoners, guards, and even her persecutors watched as she gave birth amid the chains, the filth, and the fear of what lay ahead. This extraordinary act, bringing life into the world even as she faced imminent death, cemented a bond between Felicity and the Eucharistic sacrifice she so loved. In her agony she became a living icon of self-giving love, mirroring Christ's sacrificial gift in the Eucharist. But the story didn't end with childbirth. Felicity's motherhood took on a poignant dimension as she nursed her newborn in those fleeting final days. Every feeding was laced with urgency with the knowledge that soon she would have to entrust her child to the care of fellow believers after her martyrdom. Felicity's sacrifice was not only the surrender of her own life for Christ, but also of her motherly heart, handing over her beloved child and trust, offering this last most precious gift at the altar of faith. Her example echoes through the centuries as a witness to heroic charity, showing that authentic Eucharistic love is willing to pour itself out completely for God and for others. The role of the Eucharist in sustaining their courage, Saints Perpetua and Felicity faced agonizing choices and unspeakable dangers, torn between the demands of a hostile Roman world and the breakthrough power of their newfound Christian faith. What kept these humble women unyielding in the face of prison, separation from family, and the threat of violent death? The answer echoes throughout the ages their steadfast love for Christ, truly present in the Holy Eucharist. In the dark confines of Carthaginian prisons where hope was hard to come by, perpetua and felicity drew supernatural strength from the Eucharist. The early church recognized the body and blood of Christ as not just a symbol, but the living source of courage for all believers facing persecution. Testimonies from their time reveal Christians risking arrest just to attend clandestine mass. For perpetua and felicity, to receive the Eucharist or even to contemplate its mystery was to taste victory over fear, despair, and even death itself. Their diaries and the ancient acts of their martyrdom describe visions and spiritual consolations that often corresponded with the reception of the Eucharist. Perpetua in particular recounts a heavenly vision of a lush garden and bread offered by Jesus himself. For these bold martyrs, the Eucharist truly became the food for the journey, Viaticum, empowering them to endure torture and walk joyfully into the arena, singing psalms and filled with hope. These brave saints remind Catholics today that participation in the Mass is not merely obligation but a lifeline. It was the very source and summit of their faith, nurturing a love so powerful that neither dungeon chains nor the roar of beasts could extinguish it. Their witness is a call across centuries to rediscover the transforming grace available in holy communion, especially when the trials of life seem overwhelming. The day of martyrdom in the amphitheater, the morning sun pierced the North African sky as Saints Perpetua and Felicity, shackled yet undaunted, were led into the packed amphitheater of Carthage. The air was thick with anticipation, as much for the spectacle as for the steadfast faith these two women embodied in the face of death. Surrounded by wild beasts, jeering crowds, and the oppressive gaze of Roman authorities, Perpetua and Felicity's final hours were both harrowing and profoundly holy. History echoes with the details preserved in the prison diary of Perpetua herself, though trembling with human fear, she stood firm in her supernatural hope, praying and encouraging her companions with words fueled by love for Christ in the Eucharist. Felicity, who had just given birth days earlier, joined her friend, her courage no less radiant despite her exhaustion and pain. Their hearts were resolute, drawn toward what Perpetua called the banquet or deco indium dec of our Lord. An allusion to the eternal feast, the perfect communion beyond this world, the persecution reached its climax as the two saints were thrust into the arena. Wild animals were unleashed, yet when Perpetua was knocked down, she composed herself, humbly gathering her tunic lest her modesty be offended. Felicity, battered but unbroken, helped one another up, a gesture echoing the very unity of the body of Christ. Finally, the sword was drawn. As final blows fell, perpetua guided the trembling hand of the young executioner to her throat, a testimony to her peace, her faith, and her triumphant witness. In that amphitheater, surrounded by pagan brutality, perpetua infelicity transformed suffering into sacrifice, their martyrdom becoming a living testimony to the overwhelming power of Eucharistic love, a love that chooses Christ above all, even unto death. Canonical writings and historical sources. The heroic testimony of saints perpetua and felicity bursts forth from one of the earliest and most gripping Christian documents, the passion of saints perpetua and felicity. Unlike any other martyrdom narrative, these fo these first person accounts blend unfiltered courage with the sacred language of mysteries lived and embraced. Perpetua herself chronicles her interior journey, each word charged with love for Christ and an unyielding faith in his real presence. The manuscript preserves not only Perpetua's voice, but also moving details of Felicity's sacrifice, a young expectant mother willing to endure martyrdom rather than deny her relationship with Christ in the Eucharist. The text, written around the year 203 AD, captivates church historians for its authenticity and immediacy, drawing from the Roman prison diaries plus eyewitness accounts from their companions, the narrative weaves together prophetic dreams, parental struggle, and the trembling awe of standing at the threshold of heaven, a testament to the Eucharist as the ultimate sustenance. Early church fathers, including Saint Augustine, thundered with praise at their unwavering devotion, referencing their bravery and passionate homilies that stoked the embers of faith throughout North Africa and beyond. Inscriptions, ancient calendars, and the recorded acts of the martyrs from Carthage further reinforced their commemoration. Their memory was so precious that centuries later scholars and pilgrims alike would seek the cell where their Eucharist fueled courage blossomed. The church's liturgical prayers preserve their names as a perpetual reminder that the banquet of martyrdom flows from the same table as the bread of angels, the Eucharist. Through these revered uh records, Saints Perpetua and Felicity remain even now luminous witnesses pointing all the faithful to the source and summit of Christian love and devotion and veneration through the centuries. Over the centuries, the veneration of Saints Perpetua and Felicity has echoed powerfully throughout Catholic history. From the moment their harrowing but triumphant story was first transcribed in their own words and those of contemporary witnesses, the church recognized their steadfast faith as a beacon and a challenge. Their names have been enshrined in the Roman canon, the Eucharistic Prayer One, making them some of the earliest women to be officially celebrated at the heart of the Mass. This is no small honor, but rather a testament to the enduring impact of their witness in the shadow of the Colosseum. Pilgrims flocked to the site of their martyrdom in Carthage, turning their simple tombs into places of miracles and prayer. Local devotion fanned into a wildfire of faith spreading across continents as their story inspired uh inspired Christians facing persecution and doubt. Their annual feast on March 7th became a rallying point for the faithful, especially women, mothers, and those longing for spiritual courage who saw in perpetua and felicity not only heroines of faith, but sisters in Christ whose love transcended fear. Throughout the ages, artists, theologians, and mystics portrayed these saints as icons of Eucharistic love. Their willingness to give up everything, even life itself, echoes Christ's sacrifice on the altar, drawing a straight line from their cell in ancient Carthage to every tabernacle and monstrance across the world. Their devotion inspires a radical love for the Eucharist, a love that does not calculate the cost but simply answers the call. As their legacy continues in prayers, art and the liturgy, perpetua and felicity remind us that true devotion always points us back to the source and summit of our faith. Perpetua and felicity in popular Catholic media. The stories of Saints Perpetua and Felicity have captivated Catholic audiences for centuries, echoing powerfully in today's popular Catholic media. Their witness of unwavering faith, even amidst unimaginable trial, transcends time and place, inspiring generations not just through ancient texts but through modern retellings, documentaries, and devotionals. From early Christian writings like The Passion of Saints Perpetua and Felicity, believed to be partially written by Perpetua herself, their firsthand testimonies have invited readers into the raw, visceral experience of choosing Christ above all. In recent decades, these narratives have found new life in films, stage plays, and audio dramas, each aiming to draw Catholics deeper into the timeless drama of martyrdom for the sake of Eucharistic love. Catholic television channels and streaming services regularly feature films and docusaries dedicated to the lives of these heroic women. Their courage is embraced as an example for young Catholics with children's books and animated features introducing perpetua and felicity as role models for faith and virtue. Retreat leaders and catechists often point to their friendship, a bond forged in prayer and sacramental hope as a luminous example of Christian sisterhood and accompaniment on the journey to sainthood. It is not uncommon to find perpetua and felicity celebrated in music, artwork, and even podcasts, where theologians and Catholic influencers unpack the depth of their witness and the centrality of the Eucharist in their final hours. Their legacy, immortalized and continually reimagined across these platforms, keeps their message fresh and galvanizing, urging the contemporary church to approach the source and summit of our faith with the same fearless devotion. Conclusion, echoes of courage and Eucharistic love. The legacy of Saints Perpetua and Felicity reverberates across the centuries as a testament to unwavering faith and Eucharistic devotion. Their martyrdom reminds us at journeys of faith that the ultimate witness to Christ often demands total surrender, even unto death. Perpetua and felicity's courage was not born from earthly strength, but from a reality far greater, the living presence of Jesus in the Eucharist. It was this divine food, this source and summit of our faith that fortified their souls and sustained their hope. As Catholics seeking holiness, the example set by these two women challenges us to regard the Eucharist not just as a ritual, but as the very heartbeat of our spiritual journey. Saints perpetua and felicity inspire us to approach every mass, every pilgrimage, every act of devotion with the same fire that filled their hearts. Their lives urge us to evangelize boldly and embrace each sacrifice as an offering of love to God. May their heroic witness renew our commitment to the Eucharist and embolden us to become modern day apostles, carrying Christ's love into the world. One step, one story, one act of faith at a time. Family, there is more to this post, so please see the link in the description for the rest of the article. Be sure to click the link in the description for special news item. And since there is more to this article, finish reading and check out the special offer. Visit journeysoffaith.com website today.
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