A Monthly Calendar of Catholic Saints
Contents
Walking With the Saints Through the Year
The Catholic Church remembers her saints every day of the year. These holy men and women—martyrs and mystics, kings and beggars, scholars and simple laborers—form what the Church calls the “communion of saints,” a vast family that spans every century and every corner of the globe. Their lives are not museum pieces. They are living witnesses to the truth that ordinary people, in ordinary circumstances, can become extraordinary through grace.
The Saints of the Day calendar offers a simple and meaningful way to journey through the liturgical year with the Church. Each month presents a collection of saints whose feast days fall within that month. Some are universally celebrated across the entire Church. Others are honored in particular regions, religious orders, or local communities. All of them, in their unique ways, point toward the same destination: union with God.
Why the Saints Matter Today
In a world that often celebrates power, wealth, and self-promotion, the saints stand as quiet but powerful contradictions. They chose poverty over riches, humility over pride, sacrifice over comfort, and faith over fear. Their stories remind us that holiness is not the privilege of a chosen few but the calling of every baptized Christian.
The saints also teach us that there is no single path to God. Saint Francis of Assisi abandoned wealth to embrace radical poverty, Saint Thomas Aquinas spent his life in study and contemplation, Saint Thérèse of Lisieux found greatness in small, hidden acts of love, Saint Maximilian Kolbe gave his life in a concentration camp so that another might live. Saint Josephine Bakhita rose from slavery to become a witness to human dignity. Each story is different. Each grace is the same.
The Church’s calendar of saints is not merely a list of names and dates. It is a school of holiness, a daily reminder that the Christian life is meant to be lived with courage, generosity, and love. When we read about the saints, we do not simply admire them from a distance. We ask them to pray for us, to walk with us, and to show us how to follow Christ in our own time and place.
How to Use This Calendar
This monthly guide is designed to help you stay connected to the rich tradition of the Catholic Church throughout the year. You can use it in several ways:
- Daily reflection: Read about the saint of the day each morning. Let their example shape your prayers and decisions.
- Feast day preparation: If a particular saint’s feast is approaching, spend time learning about their life in the days leading up to it.
- Spiritual inspiration: When facing a challenge, seek out a saint who endured something similar. Their intercession and example can bring comfort and direction.
- Family or classroom use: Share the saint of the day with children or students. The lives of the saints are among the most effective tools for teaching the faith.
The Saints and the Liturgical Year
The Church’s calendar is not random. It follows the rhythm of the liturgical year, with its seasons of Advent, Christmas, Lent, Easter, and Ordinary Time. The saints are woven into this rhythm. Some months are dense with feasts—November, for example, begins with All Saints and All Souls, then continues with saints who prepared the Church for the coming of Christ. Other months, like July, have fewer solemnities but are rich in the memorials of apostles, martyrs, and founders of religious orders.
Each month below contains the full list of saints celebrated on each day. Click any month to explore their stories, prayers, and the spiritual lessons they offer.
Explore the Saints by Month
JANUARY
The year begins with the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, followed by saints who taught the Church to begin everything in Christ. From Basil the Great and Gregory Nazianzen to Francis de Sales and Thomas Aquinas, January’s saints are teachers and reformers.
FEBRUARY
Short in days but rich in devotion, February brings the Presentation of the Lord, the chair of Saint Peter, and saints like Blaise, Valentine, and Polycarp. It is a month of purification and enduring love.
MARCH
March opens with Saint David and Saint Katharine Drexel, then moves through Patrick and Joseph, the foster father of Christ. Spring’s arrival mirrors the new life these saints embody.
APRIL
The Easter season dominates April, with saints who witnessed the Resurrection or who, like George and Mark, proclaimed it with their lives. Divine Mercy Sunday falls in this month, a gift from Saint Faustina.
MAY
Mary’s month brings saints who loved her deeply: Philip Neri, Rita of Cascia, and Bede the Venerable. It is a month of blossoms, both in nature and in the soul.
JUNE
June celebrates the Sacred Heart and the birth of John the Baptist. Saints like Anthony of Padua, Aloysius Gonzaga, and Thomas More remind us that love of God demands everything.
JULY
The summer month of July honors the apostles Peter and Paul, then turns to pioneers like Kateri Tekakwitha and founders like Camillus de Lellis. It is a month of bold witness.
AUGUST
August is crowded with great saints: Dominic, Lawrence, Clare, Bernard, Augustine, and the Queenship of Mary. It is a month that reminds us how deeply the Church is shaped by her saints.
SEPTEMBER
As the Church year turns toward its close, September offers Matthew the Evangelist, Our Lady of Sorrows, Vincent de Paul, and Jerome. It is a month of Scripture and service.
OCTOBER
The rosary month brings Teresa of Ávila, Ignatius of Antioch, Luke the Evangelist, and John Paul II. It is a month of mission, martyrdom, and maternal protection.
NOVEMBER
The month of the dead begins with All Saints and All Souls, then journeys through Martin de Porres, Leo the Great, and Andrew the Apostle. It is the Church’s most solemn month.
DECEMBER
Advent’s waiting is enriched by Nicholas, Ambrose, Lucy, and John of the Cross. The year ends with the Holy Family, reminding us that holiness begins at home.
The saints are not distant heroes. They are our elder brothers and sisters in faith, our intercessors, our companions on the journey. Their feast days are not mere anniversaries. They are invitations—invitations to pray as they prayed, to love as they loved, and to hope as they hoped.
Select any month above and begin walking with the saints. Let their witness encourage you to grow in faith, deepen your prayer life, and walk more closely with God throughout the year.




