THE OCTAVE OF SAINT JOHN, APOSTLE AND EVANGELIST - January 3
The
Octave of the Beloved Disciple closes today: let us devoutly offer him our
parting homage. We shall meet him again, during the year; for, on the 6th of
May, when the Resurrection of his Divine Master is gladdening the Church with
the Easter joys, we shall have the Feast of our Apostle's Confession, made
before the Latin Gate; but his grand Feast ends today, and he has done too much
for thanks. Let us begin by exciting ourselves to a great reverence for our
Saint ; and for this end, let us continue the considerations, we were making
this day week, on the favors conferred upon him by Jesus. The Apostolate of St.
John produced a plentiful harvest among the people to whom he was sent. The
Parthians received the Gospel from him, and most of the Churches of Asia Minor
were founded by him. Of these latter, seven, together with their Angels, were
chosen by Christ himself, to typify the several kinds of Pastors; and probably,
as some have interpreted this passage of the Apocalypse, these Seven may be
taken as representing the seven Ages of the Church herself. Neither must we
forget, that these Churches of Asia Minor, shortly after St. John had founded
them, sent Apostles into our Western Europe.
Thus, for example, the illustrious Church of Lyons was one of the conquests
made by these early Missioners; and St. Pothinus, the first Bishop of Lyons,
was a disciple of the disciple of St. John St. Polycarp the Angel of the Church
of Smyrna whose Feast we shall keep a few days hence. But St. John's apostolic
labors in no wise interfered with the care, which his own filial affection and
the injunctions of our Savior imposed upon him the care of the Blessed Mother
and Virgin Mary. So long as Jesus judged her visible presence on the earth to
be necessary for the consolidation of his Church, so long did John enjoy the
immense happiness of her society, and of being permitted to treat her as his
most beloved Mother. After a certain number of years, during which he had dwelt
with her in the city of Ephesus, he
returned with her to Jerusalem, whence she ascended to heaven from the desert
of this world, as the Church sings of her, as a pillar of smoke of aromatic spices
of myrrh and frankincense. The holy Apostle had to bear this second separation,
and continue preaching the Gospel until that happy day should come, when he
also should ascend to that blissful region, where Jesus his Divine Friend, and
Mary his incomparable Mother, were awaiting his arrival. The Apostles, those Lights
placed by the hand of Jesus himself upon the candlestick of the Church, died
out by martyrdom one after the other, leaving St. John the sole survivor of the
Twelve. His white hair, as the early Fathers tell us, was encircled with a thin
plate of gold, the mark of episcopal dignity; the Churches treasured up the
words which fell from his inspired lips, and considered them as their rule of
Faith; and his prophecy of Patmos, the Apocalypse, proves that the future of
the Church was also revealed to him. Notwithstanding all this, John was humble
and simple, like the Divine Infant of Bethlehem ; and one cannot read without
emotion what the early writers tell us of him, how he was often seen fondling a
pet bird in his venerable hands. He that had, when young, leaned his head upon
the Breast of that God, whose delights are to be with the children of men that
had stood near his Lord during the Crucifixion, when all the other Apostles
kept away in fear that had seen the soldier's Spear pierce the Sacred Heart, which
so loved the world when old age had come upon him, was forever urging upon all
he met the duty of loving one another. His tender compassion for sinners was
such as we might naturally look for from the favorite Disciple of the Redeemer;
and we are not surprised at that example which would have been wonderful in any
other Saint than John of his going in search of a young man, whom he had loved
with a Father's love, and who had abandoned himself, during the Apostle's
absence, to every sort of sin: old age was no hindrance to this fatiguing
search, which ended in his finding the young man amidst the mountains, and leading
him back to repentance. And yet, this same gentle and loving Saint was the
inflexible enemy of heresy; for heresy, by destroying Faith, poisons Charity in
its very source. It is from this Apostle, that the Church has received the
maxim she gives to us of shunning heresy as we would shun a plague: If any man
come to you and bring not the doctrine of Christ, receive him not into the
house, nor say to him God speed thee; for he that saith unto him, God
speed thee, communicateth with his wicked works.
St. John having, one day,
entered one of the public baths, he was no sooner informed that the heresiarch
Cerinthus was in the same building, than he instantly left the place, as though
it were infected. The disciples of Cerinthus were indignant at this conduct of
the Apostle, and endeavored to take away his life, by putting poison into the
cup he used to drink from; but St. John having made the sign of the cross over
the cup, a serpent was seen to issue from it, testifying both to the wickedness
of his enemies, and to the divinity of Christ. This apostolic firmness in
resisting the enemies of the Faith, made him the dread of the heretics of Asia;
and hereby, he proved how justly he had received from Jesus the surname of Son
of Thunder, a name which he shared with his Brother, James the Greater, the
Apostle of Spain. The miracle we have just related has suggested the assigning
to St. John, as one of his emblems, a cup with a serpent coming from it.
Many countries, in Germany particularly, there is the custom, on the Feast
of St. John, of blessing wine ; and the prayer, used on the occasion, alludes
to the miracle. In these same countries, there also prevails the custom of
taking, at the end of meals, what is called St. John's Cup, putting, as it
were, under the Saint's protection, the repast just taken. For brevity's sake,
we omit several other traditions regarding our holy Apostle, to which allusion
is made in many of the Medieval Liturgical pieces which we have quoted: but, we
cannot refrain from saying a few words in reference to his Death. The passage
of the holy Gospel read on the Feast of St. John, has often been interpreted in
the sense that the Beloved Disciple was never to die, although our Lord's words
are easily explained without putting such a meaning upon them. The Greek
Church, as we have already seen in her Offices, professes her belief in St.
John's exemption from death. It was also the opinion of several holy Doctors of
the Church, and found its way into some of the Hymns of the Western Church. The
Church of Rome seems to countenance it, by one of the Antiphons in the Lauds of
the Feast; but it must be acknowledged, that she has never favored this
opinion, although she has not thought proper to condemn it.
Tomb of St. John the Apostle,
in St. John's Basilica, Ephesus, near modern day Selçuk, Turkey.
The Tomb
of St. John once existed at Ephesus; we have early traditions regarding it, and
miracles are related which were wrought by the miraculous oil, which flowed,
for centuries, from the Tomb. Still, it is strange, that no mention has ever
been made of any Translation of the Body of St. John ; no Church has ever
boasted of its possessing it ; and as to particular Relics of this Apostle,
they are not only very rare, but a great deal of vagueness has always clung to
them. At Rome, when a Relic of St. John is asked for, the only one given is a
small piece of the Tomb. With these facts before us, we are forced into the
idea, that there is something mysterious in this total ignorance with regard to
the Body of a Saint so dear to the whole Church; whereas, the Bodies of all the
other Apostles have been the subject of most interesting and detailed accounts,
and we can name the Churches which have possessed either the whole or a portion
of their venerable remains. Has our Redeemer willed that the Body of his dear
Disciple should be glorified before the Day of Judgment? Has he, in his own
inscrutable designs, withdrawn it from the sight of man, as he did that of Moses?
These are questions, which will, perhaps, never be solved on this earth; but it
is almost impossible not to acknowledge, as so many holy writers have done,
that the mystery, wherewith it has pleased our Lord to shroud the virginal Body
of St. John, may be considered as an additional reward given to the Disciple,
whom he so tenderly loved, during life, on account of his purity.
Let us listen, once more, to the sweet praises given to St. John
in the various Liturgies. And first, let us open the Roman Breviary, where we
shall find the following Responsories
This
is John, who, at the Supper, reclined his head on the Lord's Breast: Blessed
Apostle, unto whom the secrets of heaven were revealed. He drank in the streams
of the Gospel from the sacred fount itself of our Lord's Breast. Jesus loved
him, for the special prerogative of his chastity made him worthy of a special
love: Because, being chosen by Christ as
a virgin, he remained a virgin forever. When, at length, he was about to die on
the Cross, he commended his Virgin Mother virgin, he remained a virgin forever.
When, at length, he was about to die on the Cross, he commended his Virgin
Mother to this his virgin disciple.
Because. In that day, I will take
thee to be my Servant, and I will make thee as a signet in my sight: For I have
chosen thee, saith the Lord. Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give
thee the crown of life.
The Mozarabic Breviary, in the Office of St. John the
Evangelist, contains the following beautiful prayer:
Ineffable, O Lord,
are the streams of thy Heart, where with the Disciple, whom thou lovedst above
the rest,
deserved to be filled, when leaning on thy Breast : we, therefore,
humbly beseech thee, that our senses being mortified, we may deserve to walk,
at all times, in thy footsteps : that thus, by the intercession of this thy
holy disciple John, the fire of thy love may so burn and consume us, as to make
us, in all things, a holocaust well-pleasing unto thee.
We find, also, this other prayer, in the Missal of the same Gothic
Liturgy.
PRAYER
See, O God, the
sins whereby we are weighed down, and how we daily create to ourselves the
poison that destroys and the pain that punishes, inasmuch as we are each day
infected with the poison of the deeds of our flesh, yet give we no thought to
the amending our lives. But, whereas faith teaches us that thou seest our sins,
and, because thou art merciful, thou awaitest us that we return to thee by
humble confession; therefore, do we beg the intercession of John, thine Apostle,
who having drunk a deadly poison, not only, by the invocation of thy name,
escaped hurt himself, but raised them to life who had been poisoned by that
same cup. By this his intercession, drive far from us both the lustful flames
of our own flesh, and the poison of the old enemy's suggestions; that worshiping thee by our faith, we may be guarded
against the hidden poison of latent passions, as the poison offered to the
Apostle John left him uninjured.
We take from the Menaea of the Greek Church a second selection
of stanzas in honor of the holy Evangelist.
ON THE FEAST OF ST. JOHN THE THEOLOGIAN {XXVI. Septembris.)
Leaving the waters
of the sea, thou didst, with much wisdom, draw all nations to the Faith by the
rod of the Cross; for, as Christ told thee, thou wast a Fisher of men, drawing
them unto holiness. Therefore, didst thou spread abroad the knowledge of the
Word, and, by thy preachings, O Theologian Apostle, thou didst gain over Patmos
and Ephesus. Beseech Christ our Lord to grant forgiveness of sin to us who
lovingly celebrate thy holy memory. Thy tongue was made the pen of Him who
wrote by thee the Holy Ghost; it showed us, by divine inspiration, the
venerable and divine Gospel. The blaze of thy great and divine Theology, O
glorious Apostle, illumined the earth that was shining with a triple light
Truly was thy divinely taught tongue, O Theologian, as the pen of one that
writes swiftly, for it beautifully wrote on the tablets of our hearts the true
knowledge and the New Law. To measure the height of the heavens, and explore
the depths of the sea, is a rash and vain attempt — so too is it, to count the
stars or the sand on the shore. In like manner, we may not count the number of
crowns wherewith Christ crowned his Beloved Disciple, who reposed on his
Breast, and, in the mystic Supper, was most sumptuously regaled as the
Theologian and Friend of Jesus. Thou didst once ask to sit near Jesus on a
terrestrial throne; but he gave thee to recline on his Breast, and placed thee
on a peaceful and eternal throne of beauty, O thou that art called the Theologian,
and art the glory of the Apostles! Let us now loudly celebrate in spiritual
canticles this servant of Christ : — he is the flower of holy virginity, the
chosen dwelling of sublime virtues, the instrument of wisdom, the temple of the
Spirit, the burning tongue of the Church, the most bright eye of charity, the
most venerable John. O Evangelist John! Angelic, virgin, taught of God! 'twas
thou didst tell us of that Sacred Side, from whence, as from a most limpid
stream, flowed Blood and Water : thus didst thou teach our souls the way to
life eternal.
The Latin Churches of the Middle Ages were fervent in their praises of
St. John, and have left us a great many Hymns in his honor. Out of the number,
we select only two; the first is the composition of Adam of Saint- Victor, and
is the finest of the four written on St. John by the great lyric Poet of those
times.
'Tis the Feast of St. John, let us rejoice; let us sing his praise with
glad hearts. But, let our lips so speak his praise, that our hearts be not
devoid of fervor, and so relish the hidden joy. This is the Disciple the Beloved
of Christ, who leaned on his sacred breast, and imbibed wisdom. 'Twas to him
that Jesus, dying on the Cross, left his Mother: John, the virgin, was guardian
of the Virgin. His heart was filled with burning charity; his exterior, his
miracles, his words, were a shining light. As the fire of criminal passion had
never impaired his soul; so did he come unhurt from the cauldron of boiling oil.
He checked the power of poison; death, disease, and demons, fled at his bidding.
And yet, with all this heavenly power, he was the tenderest hearted friend to
them that were in grief. Some precious stones had been broken; he miraculously
brought the fragments together, and thus pieced, gave them to the poor. He was
a living treasure, for he changed the branches of a tree into gold, and stones
into gems. He is invited to a banquet by a Friend; that Friend was Jesus,
surrounded by his Dis ciples : From the tomb wherein he had been laid, he then
came forth alive, and ascended to enjoy the infinite feast. Innumerable
witnesses will tell thee, (though thyself may see it, if thou wilt,) that round
his tomb there falls a Manna, the symbol of that Banquet which Jesus gave him. The Eagle is the emblem of this Evangelist, for he
looks steadfastly at the Sun, that is, at the Eternal Word in the Bosom of the
Eternal Father. By his miracles, the gentile world, a stubborn world, the world
of Asia, was converted. His writings enlighten, and, by their light, confirm
the one true Church. Hail, then, vessel of unsullied chastity! Vessel filled
with heavenly dew! Pure within, fair without, and noble in every part. Oh! Pray
for us, that we may follow the path of holiness, and by the cleanliness of our
hearts, be rewarded with the vision of the Triune God. Amen.
The second Sequence is taken from the ancient Missals of the
Churches of Germany, and is extremely beautiful.
The Word of God, who was born of God, and was not made nor created, and
who came down from heaven this Word was
seen, and handled, and revealed to men, by John the Evangelist. John sprang up
amidst those true rivulets, which, from the commencement, flowed from the True Fountain;
he has made the whole world drink of that life-giving nectar, that flows from
the throne of God. He soared above the heavens, and gazed, with the fixedness
of his soul's eye, on the brightness of the true Sun; this spiritual
contemplator saw, as it were from under the wings of the Seraphim, the Face of
God. He hears what songs are sung round the Throne by the Four and Twenty
Elders and the heavenly Harpers. He has stamped upon the coin of our
terrestrial city the impress and seal of the Holy Trinity. He, the guardian of
the Virgin, wrote his Gospel, that he might show to the world the profound
mystery of the Di vine Generation: and Jesus, after allowing him to recline on
his Sacred Heart, com mended his own pure Lily, Mary, to this his and her much
loved one, the Son of Thun der. He drinks a deadly poison! But the virtue of
his faith pre serves his virginal body from death. Nay, the very creature that
was prepared to torture him the boiling oil stood wondering at his feeling not
its cruel power to pain. Nature is obedient to him. He bids the stones be gems,
and they obey: he bids the branch of a tree turn its pliant fibres into the
precious metal of gold, and it obeys. He bids the Sepulchre and death yield
back them whom poison had made their victims; they obey. He stops the blasphemous
howlings of Ebion, Cerinthus, and Marcion. He is the Eagle, soaring to the infinite;
nor Seer, nor Prophet, passed him in his flight. No pure mind ever saw more
clearly than he so many mysteries, already past or yet to come. Jesus, the
Bridegroom, clothed in his scarlet robe, after being seen by men, but not
understood, returned to his palace above: he sent to his Bride the Eagle of Ezechiel,
that he might relate to her the mystery seen in heaven. O Beloved Disciple! Speak
to us of thy Beloved: tell the Church the beauty of this thy Jesus, who is her
chosen Spouse: tell her, who is the Bread of the Angels: tell her, what feasts
her Spouse's presence causes to the citizens of heaven. Speak to her of that
Bread which feeds the soul with truth ; reveal to her that Supper of thy Lord
taken on the Breast of thy Lord : we will sing to the Lamb, we will sing round
the Throne, we will praise him above the heavens, tor his having given us such
a Patron as thee.
O glorious Saint! We thank thee with all the gratitude of our hearts,
for the assistance thou hast so lovingly granted us, during the celebration of
this grand Feast of Jesus' Birth. Thou art ever with us at Christmas; but it is
only to help us to know Jesus the more ; for, in considering thy prerogatives,
we are giving praise to Him, who gave them to thee. We offer thee, then, the
homage of our admiration and thanks, dear Friend of Jesus, and adopted Child of
Mary! Before leaving us, suffer us to offer thee, once more, our humble
petitions. Pray, sweet Apostle of Fraternal Love! that the hearts of all men
may be united in holy charity ; that dissensions may cease ; that the
simplicity of the dove, of which thou wast such a touching example, may become
the spirit of our present age, adverse though it seem to this commandment of
our Lord. May Faith, without which love and charity cannot exist, be maintained
in all its purity; may the serpent of heresy be crushed, and its poisoned cup
find neither teachers to offer it, nor disciples to drink it. May the
attachment to the doctrines of the Church be firm and courageous; may no human
schemes or theories, or cowardly toleration of error, enervate the principles
of truth and morals ; may the children of light boldly disown fellowship with
the children of darkness. Remember, O holy Prophet! The sublime vision granted
thee of the Churches of Asia Minor; and obtain for the Angels, who are set over
ours, that unflinching faithfulness, which alone wins the victory and the
Crown. Pray, also, for those countries which received the Gospel from thee, but
have since de served to lose the Faith. They have been suffering, now for ages,
the consequences of false doctrines slavery and degradation; intercede for
them, that they may be regenerated by Jesus and his Spouse the Church. From thy
heavenly home, send Peace to thine own dear Church of Ephesus, and to her
Sister-Churches of Smyrna, Pergamus, Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, and Laodicea;
may they awake from their sleep; may they rise from their tomb ; may
Mahometanism cease its brutalizing tyranny over them may schism and heresy,
which now keep the East in a state of barbarism, be extinguished ; and may the
whole flock be once more united in the one Fold. Cover with thy protecting love
the holy Church of Rome, which was witness of thy glorious Confession, and
which she counts as one of those her grand glories, which began with the
Martyrdom of thy fellow Apostles, Peter and Paul. May she receive a fresh
infusion of light and charity, now that the harvest is whitening over so many
countries. And, lastly, Beloved Disciple of the Savior of mankind! Pray that,
on the last day, we may enjoy the sight of thy glorified Body; and, after
having so often presented us, on this earth, to Jesus and Mary in Bethlehem,
present us, on that day, to the same Jesus and Mary in the glories of the
eternal Vision.
Dom Prosper Gueranger – The Liturgical Year
No comments:
Post a Comment