St. James was the son
of Zebedee, a Galilean fisherman, and Salome, a pious woman who tended after
Christ. He and his younger brother, St. John (Feast
Day: December 27), were called as disciples just after Simon Peter
and Andrew were called, and Peter, James and John are often mentioned together
in Scripture, having been witness to the raising of Jairus's daughter, the Transfiguration, and Christ's Agony in the garden
of Gethsemani.
He and his brother must have been quick to anger and zealous as they came to be
called "Boanerges" ("Sons of Thunder") -- a nickname
given to them by Jesus Himself. After Our
Lord's Ascension, tradition says that St. James's zeal for
evangelizing took him to parts of Spain for a time, as St. Paul had wanted to
do (Romans 15:24), whereafter he returned to Judea for his martyrdom.
In A.D. 44, Herod Agrippa I, the grandson of Herod the Great who tried to have
Baby Jesus killed, set out to do the will of the Jews by dealing harshly with
local Christians. St. James was accused, and Herod then "killed James, the
brother of John, with the sword." (Acts 12:1-2). Church Historian,
Eusebius, tells us that St. James's accuser followed James to martyrdom when he
converted after hearing the Saint's confession to Herod.
Here tradition picks up again by telling us that James's relics were translated
to Spain (of course, legends grew surrounding the event, one strange and lovely
one in particular apparently meant to explain why the cockleshell is St.
James's emblem. It is said that when the Saint's relics were being conveyed by
ship from Jerusalem and approached the coast of Portugal, a man happened to be
riding his horse on the beach. The horse disobediently plunged into the sea,
with its rider, making for the boat. They sank, of course, but then rose again,
covered with scallop shells, and hence the cockleshell became the symbol of our
hero). The relics were entombed and rather forgotten after years of Roman
persecution, Vandal and Visigoth invasions, and Muslim attacks -- forgotten,
that is, until an early 9th century hermit named Pelayo discovered the tomb --
some say after seeing a star marking the place -- in an area that became known
as Compostela, which means "Field of Stars." The King built a
cathedral to mark the location (Pelayo's Bishop, Theodomor of Iria, is also
buried there, refusing to be buried in his See out of his desire to be near the
Saint).
The faithful began to make pilgrimages to the site -- so much so that
Compostela became the third greatest place of pilgrimage, just after Jerusalem
and Rome -- and still make the pilgrimage today. After making one of the many
routes, known as "the Camino," pilgrims attach cockleshells or their
facsimile to their hats or clothes as "pilgrim badges," signs that
they'd venerated the holy relics. Any year in which St. James's Day falls
on a Sunday is called a Holy Year, and a plenary indulgence
may be gained by making the pilgrimage (his Feast falls on a Sunday every 6, 5,
6, and 11 years). To gain the indulgence, one must fulfill the usual conditions
of plenary indulgences, must intend the pilgrimage for spiritual purposes and
must have made the last 63 miles (100 km) on foot or on horse, or the last 125
miles (200 km) on bicycle. Sadly, many -- thousands -- make the pilgrimage for
non-Catholic reasons nowadays.
At the time of the Muslim ("Moorish") invasions mentioned
above, a particular battle took place that was to seal St. James ever more
closely to Spain, where he is known as "San Tiago." At the Battle of
Clavijo in A.D. 841, the Christians had lost and were in retreat when King
Ramirez of Leon had a dream in which the Apostle assured him of victory. He
relayed his vision to his men, and the next morning he had his trumpeters sound
the call to battle. There, on the field, the men saw St. James on a horse
adorned with cockleshells, waving a banner. He led the Christians on to a clear
victory, and ever since, the Spanish battle-cry has been "Santiago!"
St. James is the Patron of Spain, equestrians, blacksmiths, tanners,
veterinarians. He is usually depicted in art with his symbols -- the
cockleshell, pilgrim hat, sword, Sacred Scripture -- or on horeseback, usually
trampling a Moor.
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