Saturday 30 January 2021

St Blaise and the Blessing of throats

 

Despite the continuing difficult situation which means that quite a number of parishes are temporarily closed for public worship, St Catherine's is open as usual for Mass and Devotions this Sunday and throughout the week. Covid 19 security precautions are in place for everyone's safety. Masks are available from the stewards, should you have forgotten yours.

The Blessing of St Blaise will take place on Wednesday (with Covid 19 precautions in place)

This Sunday is World Leprosy Day. Sadly, much of the work of raising funds through the Order of St Lazarus has been suspended during the pandemic but we hope that it might be possible to resume later this year. The 10am Mass on Sunday is offered for the intentions of the Grand Master of the Order and it's work.

SUNDAY

8.30am

10am 



Monday 9.30am. Feria

Tuesday 12 noon (EF). Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Wednesday 9.30am. St Blaise - with the Blessing of Throats

Thursday 7pm Novena of the Miraculous Medal & Benediction. Feria

Friday 9.30am. St Agatha

Saturday 12 noon (EF). St Titus

Confessions between 11.30am & 11.50am



SAINT BLAISE AND BLESSING OF THROATS:
 
Although separated by customs, language, politics and more, Catholics around the world celebrate many of the same God-inspired devotional acts, practices and rituals handed down through the centuries by Holy Mother Church. Such a devotion is the memorial celebrating St. Blaise and the blessing of throats every Feb. 3 in the Western Church.

There are few facts known about St. Blaise except that he was a fourth-century bishop in the city of Sebaste, Western Armenia, and died as a martyr. A physician, he was regarded as a righteous man and, at an early age, elected bishop by the citizens of Sebaste. Beyond those few facts, much of what we know of Blaise comes from tradition. He became, during the Middle Ages, one of the most popular of all the saints, especially in Armenia. He is the patron saint of Dubrovnik, Croatia. His relationship with Dubrovnik is unique in that he never visited the city. In 971, he appeared in a vision to a local man warning that a Venetian force was about to invade the town. The townspeople responded with defensive measures and the Venetians, having lost the element of surprise, departed.

During the fourth century, the Roman Empire was separated between Emperor Constantine in the West and Emperor Licinius in the East. While frequently at odds, they came together in February 313 at Milan, Italy, to sign the Edict of Milan, intended to end all religious persecution. While this document always has been heralded as essential to Christian history, it did not end a long-simmering tension between the two emperors. Indeed, historians have recorded that Licinius was filled with greed and only signed the agreement for political purposes. There would be repeated conflicts between the East and West, mostly caused by Licinius, who was quick to continue the persecutions of Christ’s followers despite signing the Edict of Milan. In the year 316, St. Blaise would become a victim of Licinius’s hostility against Christians.

At first, Blaise avoided being arrested by escaping into the hill country near Sebaste, where he hid in a cave. His only visitors were said to be wild animals that seemed drawn to Blaise. Eventually, Bishop Blaise was found out, arrested and brought before Agricolaus, the local Roman governor. He was scourged for his Christian beliefs and thrown into prison. Tradition holds that either en-route to prison or after he was incarcerated, two miracles attributed to Blaise occurred. A woman came to the bishop upset that a wolf had carried off her pig. Blaise offered up prayers, and the wolf returned the pig. Another incident, one for which he is most known, occurred when a mother pleaded for Blaise to cure her son who was dying from a fish bone lodged in his throat. Blaise prayed over the boy, and the child was healed.

Agricolaus soon confronted Blaise, demanding he deny Jesus or be tortured. Blaise refused, and one of the instruments of torture was an iron comb used to painfully scrape his skin. No amount of torture brought a denial of Christ, so in 316 Blaise was beheaded. 

The miraculous cure of the boy suffering from the fish bone — and because Blaise had been a physician — created the belief that St. Blaise could cure most illnesses but especially those of the throat. As early as the ninth century in the Western Church, he was invoked for throat ailments. During the Middle Ages, his cult as a miraculous saint was widespread throughout Europe. He was one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers, whom Christians believed could cure a variety of personal medical problems. Today there are Catholic Churches all over the world bearing the name of St. Blaise.

The candles used in the blessing of throats may be those blessed the day before on Candlemas, Feb. 2.  Those desiring a blessing of their throats proceed to the altar rails where the priest with the two blessed candles, tied with a red ribbon, holds them in the form of an X. He touches the candles to each side of the person’s neck and says: “Through the intercession of St. Blaise, bishop and martyr, may God deliver you free from every disease of the throat, and from every other disease. In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” The red ribbon represents the blood of martyrs, and the candles held in the shape of an “X” represent the martyrdom of another saint, St. Andrew, who according to tradition was crucified on an X-shaped cross. Not only are we freed from disease but from everything keeping us from God.

Devotions like making the Stations of the Cross during Lent, receiving ashes on Ash Wednesday, kissing the cross on Good Friday and getting our throats blessed on St. Blaise day are essential parts of our Catholic lineage. Each ritual excites us, elevates our hearts; we come away refreshed and with a sense that something beyond the ordinary has just happened, not just to us but to thousands of the faithful that same day in every corner of the world. We can’t help but know that it’s good to be Catholic!




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