Saturday, June 22 : Saint Athanasius
After his parents’ death (…) when Antony was about eighteen or even twenty years old (…), he went into the church when it happened that the Gospel was being read, and he heard the Lord saying to the rich man: “If you would be perfect, go, sell what you possess and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven.” It was as if the passage were read on his account. Immediately Antony went out from the Lord’s house and gave to the townspeople the possessions he had from his forebears. And selling all the rest that was portable, when he collected sufficient money, he donated it to the poor, keeping a few things for his sister. But when, entering the Lord’s house once more, he heard in the Gospel the Lord saying, “Do not be anxious about tomorrow” (Mt 6:34), he could not remain any longer, but going out he gave those remaining possessions also to the needy. Placing his sister in the charge of respected and trusted virgins, and giving her over to the convent for rearing, he devoted himself from then on to the discipline rather than the household, giving heed to himself and patiently training himself (…). He worked with his hands, though, having heard that “he who is idle, let him not eat” (2 Thess 3:10). And he spent what he made partly for bread, and partly on those in need. He prayed constantly, since he learned that it is necessary to “pray unceasingly” (Lk 21:36) in private. For he paid such close attention to what was read that nothing from Scripture did he fail to take in; rather, he grasped everything, and in him the memory took the place of books. (… All those, then, who were from his village and those good people with whom he associated, seeing him living thus, used to call him ‘God-loved’, and some hailed him as ‘son’, some as ‘brother’.
Roman Extraordinary (Tridentine) Daily Readings – rosary,team