Friday, July 22, 2011

The Feast of St. James

The Christ of the Portico della Gloria,
Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela

In each parish, the patronal feast day is observed as a solemnity - that's why, at St. James this weekend, you won't hear anything about the Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary Time! Instead, we observe the feast of our patron, St. James, with great solemnity.

Last year, Pope Benedict XVI visited the great shrine to St. James at Santiago de Compostela, Spain. In his homily, he said:

For those disciples who seek to follow and imitate Christ, service of neighbour is no mere option but an essential part of their being. It is a service that is not measured by worldly standards of what is immediate, material or apparent, but one that makes present the love of God to all in every way and bears witness to him even in the simplest of actions. Proposing this new way of dealing with one another within the community, based on the logic of love and service, Jesus also addresses “the rulers of the nations” since, where self-giving to others is lacking, there arise forms of arrogance and exploitation that leave no room for an authentic integral human promotion. . . .

The celebration of this Holy Year of Compostela also brings this to mind. This is what, in the secret of their heart, knowing it explicitly or sensing it without being able to express it, so many pilgrims experience as they walk the way to Santiago de Compostela to embrace the Apostle. The fatigue of the journey, the variety of landscapes, their encounter with peoples of other nationalities - all of this opens their heart to what is the deepest and most common bond that unites us as human beings: we are in quest, we need truth and beauty, we need an experience of grace, charity, peace, forgiveness and redemption. And in the depth of each of us there resounds the presence of God and the working of the Holy Spirit. Yes, to everyone who seeks inner silence, who keeps passions, desires and immediate occupations at a distance, to the one who prays, God grants the light to find him and to acknowledge Christ. Deep down, all those who come on pilgrimage to Santiago do so in order to encounter God who, reflected in the majesty of Christ, welcomes and blesses them as they reach the Pórtico de la Gloria.


Explore more about the history and experience of the Camino in a special feature on the Cathedral website.  Read more about the life and legend of Saint James here.