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It’s the Feast of The Holy Name / S Titus, 2nd Class, with the color of White. In this episode: the meditation: “Jesus, Sovereign Priest”, today’s news from the Church: “1.4 Billion Catholics and Still Fewer Priests”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.
Saint Titus belongs to that first generation of Church leaders whose quiet fidelity helped carry the Gospel from the age of the apostles into lasting structure. He was a Gentile convert, probably from Greece, and one of Saint Paul’s closest collaborators. Paul trusted Titus deeply, relying on him not only as a messenger, but as a problem solver and a pastor capable of handling difficult situations with firmness and charity.
We meet Titus most clearly in Paul’s letters. He was sent to Corinth at a moment of intense conflict, where factions and moral confusion threatened to tear the community apart. Titus returned with news that repentance had taken hold, bringing Paul immense consolation. Later, Paul entrusted him with an even heavier responsibility: organizing and stabilizing the young Church on the island of Crete. Crete had a reputation for disorder and instability, and Paul did not sugarcoat the challenge. Yet he believed Titus had the steadiness and discernment needed to appoint presbyters, correct abuses, and teach sound doctrine without harshness.
The Letter to Titus reveals much about his character. Paul urges him to model integrity, self control, and good works, not as abstract ideals, but as lived examples that others could follow. Titus was to be firm against false teaching, yet patient with weakness. He was to govern not by domination, but by credibility. Tradition holds that he became the first bishop of Crete and remained there until his death, shepherding a Church born in difficulty and sustained through perseverance.
What makes Titus compelling is how ordinary his sanctity appears. He performed no recorded miracles and suffered no dramatic martyrdom. His holiness lay in reliability. He was the man Paul could send when things were messy, tense, or fragile. In that sense, Titus represents a kind of sanctity often overlooked: the grace of being trustworthy, of holding communities together through clarity and calm endurance.
Traditions surrounding Saint Titus remained strongest in Crete, where he is honored as the island’s apostle and protector. His feast on January 4 was marked with prayers for bishops and pastors charged with guiding communities through moral and doctrinal confusion. In the Roman tradition, he became a patron for administrators, peacemakers, and those tasked with restoring order without crushing charity.
Saint Titus reminds us that the Church is built not only by visionaries and martyrs, but by faithful shepherds who quietly keep the flock together.
Saint Titus, companion of the apostles and faithful bishop, pray for us!
By SSPX US District, Angelus Press5
66 ratings
It’s the Feast of The Holy Name / S Titus, 2nd Class, with the color of White. In this episode: the meditation: “Jesus, Sovereign Priest”, today’s news from the Church: “1.4 Billion Catholics and Still Fewer Priests”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.
Saint Titus belongs to that first generation of Church leaders whose quiet fidelity helped carry the Gospel from the age of the apostles into lasting structure. He was a Gentile convert, probably from Greece, and one of Saint Paul’s closest collaborators. Paul trusted Titus deeply, relying on him not only as a messenger, but as a problem solver and a pastor capable of handling difficult situations with firmness and charity.
We meet Titus most clearly in Paul’s letters. He was sent to Corinth at a moment of intense conflict, where factions and moral confusion threatened to tear the community apart. Titus returned with news that repentance had taken hold, bringing Paul immense consolation. Later, Paul entrusted him with an even heavier responsibility: organizing and stabilizing the young Church on the island of Crete. Crete had a reputation for disorder and instability, and Paul did not sugarcoat the challenge. Yet he believed Titus had the steadiness and discernment needed to appoint presbyters, correct abuses, and teach sound doctrine without harshness.
The Letter to Titus reveals much about his character. Paul urges him to model integrity, self control, and good works, not as abstract ideals, but as lived examples that others could follow. Titus was to be firm against false teaching, yet patient with weakness. He was to govern not by domination, but by credibility. Tradition holds that he became the first bishop of Crete and remained there until his death, shepherding a Church born in difficulty and sustained through perseverance.
What makes Titus compelling is how ordinary his sanctity appears. He performed no recorded miracles and suffered no dramatic martyrdom. His holiness lay in reliability. He was the man Paul could send when things were messy, tense, or fragile. In that sense, Titus represents a kind of sanctity often overlooked: the grace of being trustworthy, of holding communities together through clarity and calm endurance.
Traditions surrounding Saint Titus remained strongest in Crete, where he is honored as the island’s apostle and protector. His feast on January 4 was marked with prayers for bishops and pastors charged with guiding communities through moral and doctrinal confusion. In the Roman tradition, he became a patron for administrators, peacemakers, and those tasked with restoring order without crushing charity.
Saint Titus reminds us that the Church is built not only by visionaries and martyrs, but by faithful shepherds who quietly keep the flock together.
Saint Titus, companion of the apostles and faithful bishop, pray for us!

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