Super Saints Podcast

Saint Anthony Zaccaria And The Forty Hours Devotion

Brother Joseph Freyaldenhoven

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A doctor with steady hands discovers that the deepest wounds in his city are not physical, they’re spiritual. Saint Anthony Zacaria begins as a promising physician in Cremona, but his hunger to serve Christ pulls him into the priesthood and into the heart of Catholic renewal in 16th century Italy. We walk through the defining moments of his life, from early formation and charity to the radical decision to trade prestige for the Gospel.

We also explore the world that shaped his mission: a Renaissance culture full of brilliance and upheaval, where many believers feel worn down by routine and scandal. Anthony’s answer is strikingly personal. He calls for repentance, deeper prayer, and a return to the sacraments, not as a program but as a way of life. That vision becomes concrete through the Barnabites, the Angelic Sisters of Saint Paul, and committed lay partners who bring evangelization into streets, homes, and hospitals, showing that holiness belongs to everyone.

Everything culminates in his enduring Eucharistic legacy: the Forty Hours Devotion and a renewed love for the Blessed Sacrament. We unpack what the devotion is, why forty hours matters, and how Eucharistic adoration can move a parish from spiritual fatigue to real conversion. If you’re longing for a clearer prayer life, a stronger Catholic identity, or a practical path to renewal, this story gives you one. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

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Meet Saint Anthony Zacaria

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St. Anthony Zacaria, Apostle of Renewal and the Forty Hours Devotion. There are moments in the story of the Church when the Holy Spirit raises up a soul burning with zeal. One who becomes a beacon, drawing others past darkness, doubt, and discouragement toward the radiant heart of Jesus. In the midst of the religious upheavals and spiritual confusion of the 16th century, such a light shone in the person of St. Anthony Zacaria. He was not a general or king, nor did he command vast armies or wield earthly power. Rather, he was a humble physician and priest, whose hidden longing was to see Christ reign once more, in hearts grown cold, and the cross lifted high above the tumult of the world. At Journeys of Faith, we have spent decades traveling dusty roads, kneeling in echoing churches, and pouring over the lives of the saints, drawing close to these men and women who, through their stories, help bridge the chasm between heaven and earth. Today, we invite you on a pilgrimage of the heart to encounter Saint Anthony Zakaria, apostle of renewal, whose passion for the Eucharist and the sacred heart blazed forth in a world desperate for hope. Through his foundation of the Barnabites, and perhaps most notably, his role in spreading the beautiful 40 hours devotion, Saint Anthony rekindled faith among his people and offered the Church a legacy of adoration that continues to inspire Catholics everywhere. Let us walk together in the footsteps of this remarkable saint, rediscovering not only his hidden acts of love, but taking up again the devotions he cherished. May his story, echoing through the centuries, enkindle in us that same flame of renewal and lead us ever deeper into the embrace of Jesus Christ, truly present and waiting for us in the blessed sacrament. Early life and formation in faith. The story of Saint Anthony Zacaria begins in the bustling city of Cremona, Italy, in 1502. Orphaned by

Early Life And Medical Vocation

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his father while still in his infancy, Anthony was raised by his deeply devout mother, Antonia, whose faith would become the guiding light of his early years. She taught him, not only by word but by example, how to love Jesus and the church with a whole heart, nurturing a prayerful spirit and a fervor for charity in her young son. As a boy, Anthony was drawn to prayer and service, frequenting the parish church and caring for the poor with a generosity beyond his years. His childhood, shaped by domestic piety and community involvement, laid a foundation for the gracence and zeal that would mark his entire life. The seeds of his extraordinary dedication were planted in the ordinary rhythms of home and parish life. Anthony's keen intellect and hunger for learning soon led him to the University of Padua, where he pursued studies in medicine. Yet, his heart remained restless for something more: a deeper service to God and neighbor. Medicine served as both a profession and a mission. Anthony saw physical healing as a pathway to spiritual renewal. Even as he excelled academically, he tended to the sick not just with remedies, but with compassion and prayer, treating wounds of the soul as much as the body. These formative years, rich in scholarship and service, became the crucible of Anthony's future apostolic endeavors. Prayer, study, and action were woven together in the fabric of his vocation. It was this profound integration of faith and charity, learned at his mother's knee, and forged in university halls and hospital wards, that would soon propel St. Anthony Zacaria into the heart of the Catholic reform and renewal of the 16th century. Take the next step in your faith journey with St. Anthony Zacaria.

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Anthony Zacaria's life lights a path for anyone longing for renewal and a deeper relationship

An Invitation To Go Deeper

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with Jesus in the Eucharist. At Journeys of Faith, we're passionate about helping you grow closer to Christ by connecting you with stories like his. Stories of courage, prayer, and transformation. Explore his witness. Make the 40 hours devotion part of your own life, and invite the spirit of renewal into your home or parish. We invite you to. Discover more. Dive deeper into the lives of the saints and the treasures of our Catholic faith with our books, videos, and podcasts. All faithfully Catholic and story-driven. Bring home devotions. Find traditional Catholic sacramentals, prayer cards, and artwork centered around the Eucharist and inspiring saints like Saint Anthony Zakaria in our online store. Stay connected. Join our community by signing up for newsletters, digital resources, and updates on upcoming series and events. So your journey of faith is always growing. Share the fire. Be a part of our mission by sharing what inspires you with your family, friends, or parish ministry team. Let us walk with you on your journey. Visit Journeys of Faith and keep the flame of Catholic faith burning bright. One story, one devotion, one step at a time, from physician to priest, a call to radical conversion. Born amid the bustling Renaissance city of Cremona in 1502,

From Physician To Priest

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Anthony Zacaria was set on a promising medical career. He immersed himself in the art and science of healing, dedicating long hours to the care of the sick and forgotten. But beyond the flicker of candlelight in his patients' rooms, God was quietly preparing his heart for something. Even greater. Despite his success as a physician, Anthony felt a tug that no earthly accomplishment could satisfy, a hunger to heal deeper wounds, those of the soul. The Italy of Anthony's day was a place of contrasts. Magnificent in art, music, and intellect, but also beset by spiritual weariness and moral confusion. The church herself cried out for reform and a return to fervor. It was precisely in this world that Anthony began to sense the gentle but insistent invitation from Christ. Leave everything and follow me. With courage and humility, Anthony answered. He exchanged his doctor's coat for the humble cassock of a priest, renouncing comfort and prestige for the radical adventure of the gospel. Ordained in 1528, Anthony devoted himself entirely to God's mission, a choice that would not only transform his own life, but would set into motion a ripple effect of spiritual renewal across Italy. Anthony's ministry was rooted in personal conversion, both his own and that of others. He lived what he preached: continual self-giving, deep prayer before the blessed sacrament, and a fierce compassion for the spiritually hungry. No sacrifice was too great, no soul too lost. In him, the healing hands of the physician became the gentle heart of the good shepherd, calling all back to the heart of Christ, the spiritual climate of 16th century Italy. 16th century Italy was a nation at a spiritual crossroads, a landscape marbled with grandeur, creativity, crisis, and longing. Ravaged

Italy’s Spiritual Crossroads

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by decades of war and political upheaval, the once mighty Italian city-states often lived in the shadow of foreign influence. With these external pressures came internal challenges as well. The church herself faced mounting calls for reform, haunted by stories of worldliness among her clergy and a growing spiritual fatigue among her people. Yet the hunger for the sacred was far from extinguished. The streets of cities like Milan, Venice, and Rome echoed with the sound of devotional processions, and echoed within their churches with the prayers of the persistent faithful. In many corners, however, true fervor seemed to flicker rather than burn. A coolness that worried those who still cherished the fiery faith of earlier generations. It was a time when reformers, mystics, and visionaries stepped forward, yearning to reignite the embers of devotion. Prayers for renewal rose like incense from convents, monasteries, and humble homes. Yet, superstition often jostled for space with genuine piety. New ideas and ancient traditions collided amidst the swirl of the Renaissance, sparking both confusion and hope. For ordinary believers, Eucharistic adoration sometimes felt like a distant promise. The church, bruised by scandal and shaken by the rumblings of Protestant reform, desperately needed apostles on fire with Christ's love. Shepherds and shepherdesses who could both challenge and console. The call in that era was not simply for theological clarity, but for transformed hearts, not just for external reform, but for a deep interior renewal. It was in this dramatic backdrop, one filled with longing, turmoil, and hope, that St. Anthony Zacaria emerged, bearing a light that would help rekindle faith and love for Christ in his generation, a heart set on renewal in the church.

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Anthony Zacaria's journey began with a restless longing, a yearning not for personal glory, but for a sweeping renewal in the heart of the church. In 16th century

A Plan For Church Renewal

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Italy, the soil of faith felt parched and weary. Many souls wandered, their hearts heavy with the burdens of routine and worldliness. Into this landscape stepped Anthony, a young doctor who would soon become a physician of souls. He understood that true transformation had to begin at the core, with an encounter with Christ. Inspired by the wisdom of St. Paul and the fervor of the early Apostolic Church, Anthony boldly called people to repentance, deeper prayer, and a return to the gospel's freshness. He was convinced that holiness was not reserved for monasteries or cloisters. It belonged in the bustling streets of Milan, in the marketplace, and around the family hearth. Anthony's answer to spiritual mediocrity was to revive the fire of divine love. He gathered around him men and women who burned with the same desire, forming communities like the Barnabites and the Angelic Sisters of St. Paul. Together, they sought renewal not just through words, but through living witness, caring for the sick, teaching catechism, and interceding for the world in Eucharistic adoration. It was Anthony's heart for renewal that gave birth to the cherished forty hours devotion, a time set apart for continuous prayer before the most blessed sacrament. He believed that before the Eucharistic Lord, hearts would be melted, coldness would blossom into devotion, and faith would be rekindled in all who approached. His life was a living invitation. Come, rediscover the love of Christ, and let this love ignite a new springtime in the church, founding the Barnabites. Clerics, regular of Saint Paul. Imagine Renaissance Milan, streets buzzing with commerce, faith, and the shadow of ecclesial stagnation. Into this

Founding The Barnabites

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world stepped Saint Anthony Zacaria, not with grand displays, but with a burning desire for spiritual renewal. The church was in need of a new Pentecost, and Anthony, inspired and ignited by God, answered that call. It was in 1530, in humble rooms far from the thrones of power, that Anthony gathered a handful of men who longed for holiness and reform. Together, these early companions laid the cornerstone for a new community. The clerics regular of St. Paul, who came to be known as the Barnabites, named after St. Barnabas, the son of encouragement. The Barnabites would become pioneers of the Catholic renewal. Their mission was radical but profoundly simple: foster interior conversion, spread Eucharistic devotion, and revive the gospel's transformative fire within parishes across northern Italy and beyond. Dressed in simple black habits, they walked the city streets, preaching, teaching, and reconciling sinners. The clergy they encountered, trapped by routine and sometimes lax in zeal, found in Anthony and his brothers a stirring example of apostolic life. Humble, penitential, fueled by charity, and ever close to the tabernacle. What made the Barnabites different? At the heart of their identity was a relentless love for Christ crucified in the Eucharist, a devotion that spilled beyond their chapels. They instituted perpetual adoration and promoted the forty hours devotion, offering reparation and intercession before the blessed sacrament. Everywhere they went, they called both laity and clergy to deeper prayer, more earnest preaching, and genuine conversion of heart.

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Anthony Zachary's founding vision echoes through centuries. Reform does not come by condemnation but by holy example, sacrificial love, and a return to the sources of grace. In the Barnabites, the seed he planted blossomed into a living testimony. A brotherhood fired by the Spirit and wholly dedicated to renewing the face of the Church, one soul at a time. The Angelic Sisters and lay collaboration in reform. Saint Anthony Zach Caria understood that spiritual renewal is rarely a solitary journey. It flourishes best in

Angelic Sisters And Lay Partners

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community. As he encountered the deep needs of Milan and Cremona, his vision extended beyond his own priesthood. Inspired by the early church, he saw the value of men and women, clergy and laity. Working together for the gospel, rooted in prayer, his mission blossomed into action. At the heart of this renewal were the Angelic Sisters of Saint Paul, founded with the courageous Ludovica Terelli. These women dedicated themselves wholly to Christ while living out their call in the midst of the world. They became visible signs of charity and humility, caring for the sick, teaching the faith, and offering a witness of spiritual simplicity. Unlike cloistered communities, the angelic sisters were often seen on the streets, dressed simply, their hearts set on serving those forgotten and abandoned. But Saint Anthony's vision didn't stop with religious women. He rallied skilled, hard-working laypeople, especially from the ranks of Milanese nobility, into what would become the laity of St. Paul. These men and women pledged themselves to works of mercy and evangelization. They met in homes, prayed and studied together, then went out into hospitals, poorhouses, and the bustling daily life of their cities, carrying the light of renewal wherever God led them. This model of collaboration, a priest with his angelic sisters and dedicated lay partners, was a profound anticipation of what the Second Vatican Council would later call the universal call to holiness. Long before such language entered church documents, Saint Anthony Zacaria was living it, forming communities where every person, in their own state of life, joined in the church's mission to bring Christ's healing and grace to a weary world, zeal for souls, his mission of evangelization. Saint Anthony Zacaria's love for Christ was anything but lukewarm. It was a burning fire, compelling him to reach souls in need of renewal. In the shadow of Renaissance Italy's

A Pastoral Style That Converts

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glittering but spiritually weary society, Anthony saw not just the artistry and intellect, but also a deep hunger for truth, reverence, and authentic faith. His answer to this call was revolutionary in its simplicity. Bring Christ back to the center of daily life. He spent countless hours in prayer, yet he was never cloistered from the world. Anthony walked the city streets of Cremona and Milan, meeting men and women in their homes, praying with them, teaching children the catechism, and reconciling estranged families. He urged his followers never to settle for a superficial faith, but to live out the gospel boldly. Hearts ablaze for God, hands ready to serve. Anthony founded the Barnabite Order, a community of priests committed to preaching, Eucharistic adoration, and tireless ministry among the people. Inspired by the zeal of Saint Paul, Anthony and his companions would often process through the streets, carrying the crucifix, singing hymns, and inviting the faithful to conversion. It wasn't spectacle, it was mercy in motion. Through missions, retreats, and heartfelt preaching, he awakened in many a longing for holiness, the desire to know Jesus above all things. His methods were personal and pastoral, gentle corrections for those far from the sacraments, encouragement for the weary, and passionate appeals to return to confession and the Eucharist. Anthony spoke with conviction and humility. He knew the value of each soul, purchased by the blood of Christ. Every encounter was shaped by his simple, disarming question: Do you want to be a friend of God? By bringing the love of Christ into homes, parishes, and hearts, St. Anthony Zacaria became a lantern in the darkness, reminding the world that God's mercy is always near, and the journey of faith is an adventure open to all who seek him. The 40 Hours Devotion: Origins and Purpose. Picture the smoky glow of candlelight in a quiet church, hour after hour, as the faithful keep vigil before the mysteries

The Forty Hours Devotion Explained

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of the altar. This is the heart of the 40 hours devotion, a tradition born of a simple burning desire to adore Jesus Christ, truly's presence in the Holy Eucharist, in reparation and thanksgiving. The origins of the 40 hours devotion are deeply rooted in the spiritual renewal movements of 16th century Italy. It was Saint Anthony Zicaria, a flame with apostolic zeal, who helped bring this devotion to life. As society reeled from religious upheaval and cultural change, he recognized the need for a remedy deeper than words or discussion. The need for encounter and adoration before our Eucharistic Lord. Forty is a sacred number throughout salvation history. It recalls the days Jesus fasted in the desert, the years Israel journeyed in the wilderness, and the hours Christ lay in the tomb before the resurrection. In the forty hours devotion, these scriptural echoes invite us to journey with Christ in prayerful watchfulness. For forty consecutive hours, the blessed sacrament is exposed on the altar, and the faithful come in shifts, pouring out their hearts in love, repentance, and petition. But this devotion is not merely about endurance, it's about transformation. As hearts soften before the real presence, graces flow, healing divisions, strengthening communities, and rekindling personal conversion. In an age often forgetful of God, the forty hours serve as a gentle but powerful call. Remain here and watch with me. Matthew 26, 38. It is an invitation that continues to reverberate in Catholic parishes and hearts around the world, drawing all souls back to the source and summit of our faith. Eucharistic renewal and love for the Blessed Sacrament. Saint Anthony Zakaria lived during an age when faith had grown cold, and the glory of Christ's presence

Eucharistic Love That Renews Communities

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in the Eucharist was veiled by routine and distraction. His heart ached to see the faithful once more fall in love with the living bread. It was out of this burning desire that he became a passionate apostle of Eucharistic renewal, a preacher who didn't just speak of Christ's real presence, but drew others into tangible encounters with it. He understood that adoration of the Blessed Sacrament was no mere formality. It was a lifeline that could bring souls back from the brink. Inspired by the Holy Spirit, Saint Anthony promoted practices that would awaken slumbering hearts to the reality that Jesus waits for his children in the tabernacle. His most enduring legacy in this work was the 40 hours devotion. A solemn period of continuous prayer before the Eucharist, inviting communities to keep vigil and to open themselves to Christ's transforming love. This devotion rekindled a spirit of reverence and awe. Churches that once stood empty between masses came alive with flickering candles, whispered prayers, and the silent gaze of believers. Individuals, families, and entire congregations, kneeling before the blessed sacrament, in the stillness, many discovered anew the peace only Jesus could give. Saint Anthony's vision was simple but profound. Return to Christ in the Eucharist, and in that encounter, experience the renewal of your soul and your community. His example urges us not to let the marvel of the Eucharist become ordinary, but to rediscover, again and again, the sheer miracle that God is truly there body, blood, soul, and divinity calling us home.

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