SAINT JOHN
BEFORE THE LATIN GATE
The Beloved Disciple John, whom we saw standing near
the Crib of the Babe of Bethlehem, comes before us again to-day; and this time,
he is paying his delighted homage to the glorious Conqueror of death and hell.
Like Philip and James, he too is clad in the scarlet robe of Martyrdom. The
Month of May, so rich in Saints, was to be graced with the Palm of St. John.
Salome one day presented her two sons to Jesus, and, with a mother's ambition,
had asked him to grant them the highest places in his kingdom. The Saviour, in
his reply, spoke of the Chalice which he himself had to drink, and foretold
that these two Disciples would also drink of it. The elder, James the Greater,
was the first to give his Master this proof of his love; we shall celebrate his
victory when the sun is in Leo; it was to-day that John, the younger Brother,
offered his life in testimony of Jesus' Divinity. But the martyrdom of such an
Apostle called for a scene worthy the event. Asia Minor, which his zeal had
evangelised, was not a sufficiently glorious land for such a combat. Rome, —
whither Peter had transferred his Chair and where he died on his cross, and
where Paul had bowed down his venerable head beneath the sword, — Rome alone
deserved the honor of seeing the Beloved Disciple march on to Martyrdom, with
that dignity and sweetness which are the characteristics of this veteran of the
Apostolic College. Domitian was then Emperor, — the tyrant over Rome and the
world. Whether it were that John undertook this journey of his own free choice,
and from a wish to visit the Mother-Church, or that he was led thither bound
with chains, in obedience to an imperial edict, — John, the august founder of
the Seven Churches of Asia Minor, appeared before the Tribunal of pagan Rome.
He was convicted of having propagated, in a vast province of the Empire, the
worship of a Jew that had been crucified under Pontius Pilate. He was a
superstitious and rebellious old man, and it was time to rid Asia of his
presence. He was therefore sentenced to an ignominious and cruel death. He had
somehow escaped Nero's power; but he should not elude the vengeance of Caesar
Domitian! A huge cauldron of boiling oil is prepared in front of the Latin
Gate. The sentence orders that the preacher of Christ be plunged into this
bath. The hour is come for the second son of Salome to partake of his Master's
Chalice. John's heart leaps with joy, at the thought that he, — the most dear to
Jesus, and yet the only Apostle that has not suffered death for him, — is, at
last, permitted to give him this earnest of his love. After cruelly scourging
him, the executioners seize the old man, and throw him into the cauldron; but,
lo! The boiling liquid has lost all its heat; the Apostle feels no scalding; on
the contrary, when they take him out again, he feels all the vigor of his
youthful years restored to him. The Praetor's cruelty is foiled, and John, the
Martyr in desire, is to be left to the Church for some few years longer. An
imperial decree banishes him to the rugged Isle of Patmos, where God reveals to
him the future of the Church, even to the end of time. The Church of Rome,
which counts the abode and martyrdom of St. John as one of her most glorious
memories, has marked, with a Basilica, the spot where the Apostle bore his
noble testimony to the Christian Faith. This Basilica stands near the Latin
Gate, and gives a title to one of the Cardinals.
In honour of the great Apostle of love, we give the following Sequence, composed by Adam of Saint Victor.
In honour of the great Apostle of love, we give the following Sequence, composed by Adam of Saint Victor.
SEQUENCE
The happy realm of grace, (where the King of glory is
seen by the soul's unfettered ken,) gives union with his God, and equality with
Angels, to John, whose revelations have made known to men the mysteries of
heaven. He drank of the living waters that spring up to life eternal, when he
leaned on his Lord's breast. The wonderful miracles he wrought have made him
shine as a bright light in the Church. He quenched the heat of the boiling oil.
Men know that the torments for him are cruel beyond measure; yet do they
wonder within themselves, how a man can be a Martyr, and feel no pain ? O
Martyr, O Virgin, O guardian of the * Virgin by whom the world received Him who
is its glory! Pray for us to this Jesus, from whom, and in whom, and by whom,
are all things. O thou that wast loved above the rest! — By thine.
We are delighted to meet thee again, dear Disciple of
our risen Jesus! The first time we saw thee, was at Bethlehem, where thou wast
standing near the Expected of Nations, the promised Saviour, who was sweetly
sleeping in his Crib.
We then thought on all thy glorious titles: Apostle,
Evangelist, Prophet, high-soaring Eagle, Virgin, Doctor of Charity, and, above
all, Jesus' Beloved Disciple. Today, we greet thee as Martyr; for if the
ardour of thy love quenched the fire prepared for thy torture, thy devotedness
to Christ had honestly and willingly accepted the Chalice, of which he spoke to
thee in thy younger years. During these days of Paschal Time, which are so
rapidly fleeting by, we behold thee ever close to this divine Master, who
treats thee with every mark of affection. Who could be surprised at his partiality
towards thee? Wast thou not the only one of all the Disciples, who stood at the
foot of the Cross? Was it not to thee that he gave the care of his Mother, and
made her thine? Wast thou not present when his Heart was opened, on the Cross,
by a Spear? When, on the morning of the great Sun day, thou repairedst with
Peter to the Tomb, wast thou not, by thy faith, the first of all the Disciples,
to honor Jesus' Resurrection Oh, yes! thou hast a right to all the special love
wherewith Jesus treats thee ; — but pray to him, for us, O blessed Apostle We
ought to love him for all the favours he has bestowed upon us ; and yet we are
tepid in his love, — we humbly confess it. Thou hast taught us to know the
Infant Jesus, thou hast described to us the Crucified Jesus ; show us now the
Risen Jesus, that we may keep close to him during these last few days of his
sojourn on earth. And when he has ascended into heaven, get us brave hearts,
that, like thee, we may be prepared to drink the Chalice of trials which he has
destined for us. Rome was the scene of thy glorious confession, O holy Apostle!
She is most dear to thee; unite, then, with Peter and Paul in protecting her.
If the palm of Martyrdom be in thy hand as well as the pen of the Evangelist,
remember it was at the Latin Gate that thou obtainedst it. It was in the East
thou didst pass the greater part of thy life; but the West claims the honor of
counting thee as one of her grandest Martyrs. Bless our Churches, reanimate
our Faith, rekindle our Love, and deliver us from the Antichrists, against
whom thou warnedst the Faithful of thine own times, and who are causing such
ravages among us. Adopted son of Mary! Thou art now enjoying the sight of thy
Mother's glory: oh! Present to her the prayers we are offering to her during
this Month, which is consecrated to her, and obtain for us the petitions which
we presume to make to her.
The happy realm of grace, (where the King of glory is seen by the soul's unfettered gaze,
gives union with his God, and equality with Angels, to John, whose revelations have made known to men the mysteries of heaven.
He drank of the living waters that spring up to life eternal, when he leaned on his Lord's breast. The wonderful miracles he wrought have made him shine as a bright light in the Church.
He quenched the heat of the boiling oil.
Men know that the torments for him are cruel beyond measure; yet do they wonder within themselves, how a man can be a Martyr, and
feel no pain?
O Martyr, O Virgin, O guardian of the * Virgin by whom the world received Him who is its glory! Pray for us to this Jesus, from whom,
and in whom, and by whom, are all things.
O thou that wast loved above the rest!
By thine intercession and prayers, render propitious unto us.
Thou that art a stream, lead us to the Fountain.
Thou that are a hill, lead us to the mountain.
O thou, whom grace made so wholly pure, pray for us that we may see the Beloved. Amen.
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