St Cecilia . . .

In the city of Rome there was a virgin named Cecilia, who came from an extremely rich family and was given in marriage to a youth named Valerian. She wore sackcloth next to her skin, fasted, and invoked the saints and angels, beseeching them to guard her virginity
During her wedding ceremony she was said to have sung in her heart to God and before the consummation of her nuptials, she told her husband she had taken a vow of virginity and had an angel protecting her. Valerian asked to see the angel as proof, and Cecilia told him he would have eyes to see once he travelled to the third milestone on the Via Appia and was baptised by the Pope.
Following his baptism, Valerian returned to his wife and found an angel at her side. The angel then crowned Cecilia with a chaplet of rose and lily and when Valerian’s brother heard of the angel and his brother’s baptism, he also was baptised and they then dedicated their lives to burying the saints who were murdered each day by the Prefect of the city.
Both brothers were arrested and brought before the Prefect and executed after they refused to offer sacrifice to the gods.
As her husband and brother-in -law buried the dead, Cecilia spent her time preaching and in her lifetime was able to convert over four hundred people, most of whom were baptised by the Pope.
Cecilia was later arrested and condemned to be suffocated in the baths. She was shut in for one night and one day, as fires were heaped up and stoked to a terrifying heat - but Cecilia did not even sweat. When the Prefect heard this, he sent an executioner to cut off her head in the baths.







