"He was lifted up while they looked on, and a cloud took him from their sight." — Acts 1:9
✠ THE CHARACTER OF THE MONTH
May belongs to Our Lady. It has done so for centuries — long before any formal papal decree, the instinct of the faithful turned to Mary in the month when the earth blossoms, when the cold retreats, and when the beauty of created things speaks most visibly of the One who made them. The Church did not impose this devotion; she received it, refined it, and gave it doctrinal weight. May is the month in which the Catholic world offers its flowers to the Mother of God — not as a sentimental gesture, but as an act of faith. What blossoms are to May, Mary is to the history of salvation: the first fruit of redemption, the one in whom grace bore its fullest creaturely flower.
But May 2026 is not only Marian. It is also the month in which Eastertide reaches its most soaring heights. The liturgical arc of May moves from the continued celebration of the Resurrection — still wearing the white and gold of the Easter season — through the Ascension of the Lord and then the ten-day vigil of prayer and expectation that the disciples kept between the Ascension and Pentecost. The month ends, as it always does in years arranged by the Roman Calendar, on the threshold of the great fire.
These three mysteries — Mary, the Ascension, Pentecost — are inseparable in May 2026. Mary was present in the Upper Room when the Spirit descended at Pentecost. She who had received the Spirit at the Annunciation — "The Holy Spirit will come upon you" (Luke 1:35) — was present when the Spirit came upon all flesh. The Church that prays the Rosary in May is the same Church that keeps a ten-day novena between Ascension and Pentecost. The two devotions are the same prayer, offered in two forms: one with beads, one with the waiting of the Upper Room.
The Holy Father's Intention for May 2026 — For Families:
Let us pray for Christian families, that they may grow in love and fidelity, and be places where faith is transmitted from generation to generation, with Mary as their model and protector.
✠ THE LITURGICAL CALENDAR FOR MAY 2026
Liturgical colour: White and Gold throughout (Eastertide), Red on Pentecost Sunday.
| DATE | FEAST |
|---|
| Friday 1 May | St. Joseph the Worker (Optional Memorial) |
| Saturday 2 May | St. Athanasius, Bishop & Doctor (Memorial) |
| Sunday 3 May | Fifth Sunday of Easter |
| Monday 4 May | Ss. Philip & James, Apostles (Feast) |
| Sunday 10 May | Sixth Sunday of Easter |
| Thursday 14 May | St. Matthias, Apostle (Feast) |
| Sunday 17 May | The Ascension of the Lord (Solemnity — transferred in some regions to Sunday) |
| Monday 18 May | St. John I, Pope & Martyr (Optional Memorial) |
| Friday 22 May | St. Rita of Cascia, Religious (Optional Memorial) |
| Sunday 24 May | Seventh Sunday of Easter |
| Saturday 30 May | The Blessed Virgin Mary, Mediatrix of All Grace (Opt. Mem. — some calendars) |
| Sunday 31 May | Pentecost Sunday (Solemnity — Liturgical colour: Red) |
Note: The Ascension of the Lord is celebrated on Thursday 14 May in countries that observe it on the proper Thursday of the sixth week of Easter. In regions where it is transferred to the Seventh Sunday of Easter, it falls on Sunday 17 May. Confirm with your diocesan ordo. The Saturday before Pentecost (30 May) is traditionally kept as a vigil day; many communities observe an extended Vigil of Pentecost.
✠ THE SUNDAY GOSPELS — CYCLE A
3 May — Fifth Sunday of Easter
John 14:1–12 — "I am the way, the truth, and the life."
The Lord speaks in the upper room on the night of His passion. He tells His disciples He goes to prepare a place for them. Thomas asks the way; Philip asks to be shown the Father. The answer to both questions is the same: "Whoever has seen me has seen the Father." The Resurrection has not yet come when these words are spoken, but the Church hears them in the full light of Easter — knowing now that the Way has walked through death and returned, that the Truth has been vindicated by the empty tomb, that the Life has conquered the last enemy.
10 May — Sixth Sunday of Easter
John 14:15–21 — "I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate."
The promise of the Paraclete. The world will not receive the Spirit of truth because it neither sees nor knows Him — but the disciples know Him, because He dwells with them and will be in them. The promise is not only for the apostles but for every soul who keeps the commandments and is loved by the Father and the Son. "I will not leave you orphans; I will come to you." The Ascension will not be abandonment; it will be the condition for the Spirit's coming.
17 May — The Ascension of the Lord (Solemnity)
Matthew 28:16–20 — "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me."
The Great Commission. The eleven disciples go to the mountain in Galilee. Some worship; some doubt. And from this mixture of faith and hesitation, Christ sends His Church into the world: to all nations, baptising and teaching. The Ascension is not withdrawal — it is universal commissioning. The one who has ascended fills all things.
24 May — Seventh Sunday of Easter
John 17:1–11a — The High Priestly Prayer
The Lord prays to the Father in the hearing of His disciples — and in their hearing, in the hearing of the Church that has read these words for twenty centuries. "Father, the hour has come; glorify your Son so that the Son may glorify you." The prayer moves from the Son to the disciples to all who will believe through their word. It is the prayer of the Ascended Lord for the Church He has left on earth, still being offered at every Mass.
31 May — Pentecost Sunday
John 20:19–23 — "Receive the Holy Spirit."
The same passage read on Divine Mercy Sunday, now heard in the full blaze of Pentecost light. The Risen Christ enters through locked doors. He breathes on them. "Receive the Holy Spirit." The breath of the Risen Lord is the same breath that moved over the waters at creation. The Church is born not from an institution or a programme but from this breath — and every Pentecost is its birthday.
✠ OUR LADY AND THE MONTH OF MAY
May devotion to Our Lady is among the most ancient and universal expressions of Catholic popular piety. The practice of crowning a statue of Mary, offering flowers, praying the Rosary daily, and gathering for evening Marian devotions belongs to nearly every Catholic culture on earth — from the villages of Tamil Nadu to the mountain parishes of Bavaria to the barrios of Mexico City.
The theological foundation of May devotion is not sentiment but doctrine. Mary is Theotokos — God-bearer — the title defined at Ephesus in 431 AD, the title that places her not at the centre of her own story but at the centre of the mystery of the Incarnation. She is venerated because of who her Son is, not instead of Him. Every May flower laid at her feet is an act of Christology — a profession that the one she carried in her womb is truly God.
The Rosary, the great prayer of May, is a meditation on the life of Christ through the eyes of His mother. The Joyful Mysteries, the Sorrowful Mysteries, the Glorious Mysteries, the Luminous Mysteries added by St. John Paul II — all are the Gospel arranged for the praying hand. May is the month to pray it daily, if one does not already; to return to it, if one has grown cold; to teach it, if there are children in the household who have not yet learned it.
The Feast of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary falls on 31 May — the last day of the month — but in 2026 it is subsumed by the Solemnity of Pentecost, which takes absolute precedence. The Visitation will be celebrated on another available day, or devoutly recalled in private prayer. This coincidence is itself instructive: Mary goes to Elizabeth bearing the Word Incarnate, and at her greeting, John leaps in the womb and Elizabeth is filled with the Holy Spirit. The Visitation is a Pentecost in miniature. The month ends, in 2026, with its own Pentecost — and with the memory of the one who brings the Spirit wherever she goes.
✠ THE ASCENSION OF THE LORD
The Ascension is the most misunderstood of the Easter mysteries. It appears to be an ending — the departure of the Lord, the closing of the visible phase of His ministry, the moment when the disciples are left alone. But the New Testament reads it as a beginning.
In Acts 1, the disciples ask whether the kingdom will be restored to Israel at this time. The answer redirects them from speculation to mission: "You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth." The Ascension does not end the story; it commissions the next chapter.
In John 16, the Lord had already explained the logic: "It is to your advantage that I go away, for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to you." The physical presence of the Risen Christ in one place at a time gives way to the universal presence of the Spirit in every place at every time. The Ascension is the condition of Pentecost. The going-up is what makes the coming-down possible.
For the Church in May 2026, the Ascension is the invitation to live the ten days that follow as the first disciples lived them — in prayer, in community, in expectancy. The original novena was not a printed prayer card; it was ten days in an upper room with the Mother of God and the apostles, waiting for the fire.
✠ THE SAINTS OF MAY
✦ St. Joseph the Worker — 1 May (Optional Memorial)
Instituted by Pope Pius XII in 1955 on the first of May — the date on which many nations celebrate Labour Day — this feast presents Joseph not only as the husband of Mary and the foster-father of Jesus, but as the craftsman of Nazareth: the man who supported the Holy Family by the work of his hands, who taught the Son of God to use a plane and a chisel, who showed the eternal Word what it means to earn one's bread by honest labour. He is the patron of workers, of fathers, and of a peaceful death.
✦ St. Athanasius of Alexandria — 2 May (Memorial)
Athanasius (c.296–373) was the Bishop of Alexandria who spent more of his episcopate in exile than in his see — five times banished by five different emperors — because he refused to compromise the doctrine that the Son is of one substance with the Father. Against the entire weight of imperial Arianism, he stood. The phrase attributed to him — Athanasius contra mundum, Athanasius against the world — became the permanent description of the theologian who holds the truth when the world has chosen the convenient error.
✦ Ss. Philip and James, Apostles — 4 May (Feast)
Philip is the apostle who says to Jesus at the Last Supper: "Lord, show us the Father, and it is enough for us." He is the apostle of the human longing that has not yet understood what it has already been given. James the Less, son of Alphaeus, is the figure behind the Letter of James — the New Testament's most concentrated text on the practical life of faith: the care of widows and orphans, the bridling of the tongue, the prayer of the sick, the wisdom that comes from above.
✦ St. Matthias, Apostle — 14 May (Feast)
Matthias was chosen by lot — by prayer and lot — to replace Judas among the Twelve. He was already among those who had accompanied the Lord throughout His ministry, from the Baptism of John to the Ascension. His election is the first act of the Church after the Ascension and before Pentecost: the first exercise of apostolic discernment, the first prayer over a decision. He is the patron saint of every choice made in faith when the way forward is not yet fully clear.
✦ St. John I, Pope and Martyr — 18 May (Optional Memorial)
John I (d. 526) was the first pope to visit Constantinople, sent by the Ostrogothic king Theodoric on a diplomatic mission to the Byzantine emperor. He was received with extraordinary honour in the East. On his return, Theodoric — suspicious of the outcome — imprisoned him. He died in prison. He is the pope who died as a consequence of having tried to keep the peace between two powers that ultimately could not coexist. He was declared a martyr by the Church.
✦ St. Rita of Cascia — 22 May (Optional Memorial)
Rita (1381–1457) is known as the patron of impossible causes — a title that emerged from the particulars of her life: a widow who had lost her husband to a vendetta and prayed that her two sons would die rather than pursue revenge (they did, in peace, before they could act on it), and an Augustinian nun who received the stigmata of a thorn from the crown of Christ pressed into her forehead. Her cult is among the most popular in the Catholic world because she is the saint of situations that have no human solution.
✦ St. Bede the Venerable, Doctor — 25 May (Optional Memorial)
Bede (673–735) was a Northumbrian monk who spent almost his entire life within a few miles of the monastery where he was given as a child oblate. From that enclosure he produced the Ecclesiastical History of the English People — the founding text of English historical writing — along with biblical commentaries, hagiographies, and scientific treatises. He died dictating his translation of the Gospel of John. He is a Doctor of the Church, the patron of historians, and the proof that the deepest scholarship can flourish in the deepest stability.
✦ St. Philip Neri — 26 May (Memorial)
Philip Neri (1515–1595) was the apostle of Rome — the priest who evangelised the city not by argument but by joy, by the confessional, by the Oratory where music and sacred reading and spiritual conversation drew the young men of Rome away from the streets and into something better. His mystical life was intense to the point of physical abnormality — a heart so enlarged by divine love that his ribs were permanently displaced. He is the patron of joy, of Rome, and of the conviction that holiness is not grim.
✦ St. Augustine of Canterbury — 27 May (Optional Memorial)
Augustine (d. 604) was the Benedictine monk sent by Pope Gregory the Great to evangelise Anglo-Saxon England. He landed in Kent in 597, was received by King Γthelberht, baptised the king and thousands of his subjects, and became the first Archbishop of Canterbury. The Church of England — in all its subsequent complexity — traces its apostolic founding to this missionary who was afraid to go, turned back, was encouraged by Gregory to continue, and went. His feast connects May's Marian fruitfulness to the missionary mandate of the Ascension.
✠ THE NOVENA OF PENTECOST
Between the Ascension and Pentecost — whether one observes the Ascension on Thursday 21 May or Sunday 24 May — there falls a space of ten days. This is the original novena: the one the Church has always kept, with or without that name, because the Acts of the Apostles describes exactly what the disciples did. "All these with one accord were devoting themselves to prayer, together with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus." (Acts 1:14)
The traditional Novena to the Holy Spirit — nine days of prayer ending on Pentecost Eve — is one of the most ancient novenas in the Church. Each day is associated with one of the seven gifts of the Spirit: wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, knowledge, piety, fear of the Lord — the seven gifts of Isaiah 11 that the Spirit of the Messiah was to carry, and that Confirmation confers on every Christian.
May is the month to pray this novena — in the family, in the parish, in private. It is the month to ask, as the disciples asked in the upper room with Mary, for the fire that the world cannot give and the world cannot take away.
✠ THE MONTH'S INVITATION
The saints of May — Joseph who worked with his hands, Athanasius who held the truth alone, Rita who brought impossible situations before God, Philip Neri who made Rome laugh its way into holiness, Bede who wrote the history of the faith from a monastic cell — are all, in their different ways, witnesses to the same mystery: that the Spirit who descended at Pentecost does not confine Himself to the spectacular. He works in the workshop, the scriptorium, the confessional, the prison, the sickroom, the Upper Room.
May begins with the Worker and ends with the Fire. Between them: Our Lady's month, the Ascension's great commissioning, ten days of the oldest prayer in Christian history. The Church does not enter June unprepared. She enters it having been sent — having received the promise and waited for its fulfilment.
Pray the Rosary. Keep the Ascension. Keep the novena. Welcome Pentecost. These are not devotions added to an already full life. They are the form that May takes when it is lived from the inside of the faith rather than the outside.
"Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful, and kindle in them the fire of your love."
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