This is the day to make a mystical pilgrimage to
Compostela, to kneel at the
tomb of the
son of Zebedee, the tomb of
Santiago, whose name was the battle cry of Spain. Here is an article from a few years ago by
Mary Jo Anderson:
Today is the feast day of Saint James the Greater.
Millions of pilgrims have trekked across four ancient pilgrim paths that
thread through Europe, converging in the Pyrenees, then across
northwestern Spain to the tomb of St. James at his shrine in Santiago
de Compostela (St. James of the Starry Field).
Modern pilgrims walk the Camino, “The Way of St. James,”
in the footsteps of great pilgrims of the past, including St. Godric of
Norfolk, El Cid, St. Francis of Assisi, John of Gaunt, and Lorenzo de
Medici. Henry II, father of Richard the Lionhearted, offered to make the
pilgrimage in expiation for the murder of St. Thomas Becket. Historians
credit the forging of a common European identity to the Camino de
Santiago. Through the centuries Christian pilgrims have built great
monasteries, abbeys, and hospitals along these roads, along with a
shared culture—art, architecture, fashion, literature, and faith.
Pilgrimage fervor suffered when the Reformation split
Europe, dividing European identities and loyalties. Interest surged
again in the 1980s; today more than a quarter million pilgrims a year
set off for Santiago where
archeologists have found inscriptions for the Apostle’s two disciples, and where Christians believe the Son of Zebedee himself lies in a silver casket.
The apostle James, along with his brother John, and Simon
Peter were Jesus’ confidantes. They alone among the apostles were
present at the Transfiguration and in the Garden of Gethsemane. James
preached in Spain after the disciples went forth following the
Resurrection. He was beheaded by Herod Agrippa in 42 A.D., the first
apostle to die, the first apostle martyred. His followers returned
James’ body to Spain, burying his remains in Galicia in the northwestern
corner of the peninsula. And there the apostle lay forgotten until 813,
when most of Spain groaned under the Saracen boot.
A Muslim storm burst from North Africa over most of
Iberia in 711 A.D. taking Christians captive, pillaging towns and
swarming north over the Pyrenees into France. By 800, Christians had
been backed into the northernmost region and a humiliating tribute of a
100 virgins per year was demanded of local governors.
The twelfth-century collection of history, verse, liturgy, and travelogue about the Camino, known as Codex Calixtinus,
records a legend that Charlemagne himself had a vision of a knightly
protector who identified himself as St. James (Sant Iago, Santiago), the
apostle of Jesus Christ:
Look you, my body is in Galicia, but no man knoweth
where and the Saracens oppress the land…the starry sky signifies you
shall go to Galicia at the head of a great host and after you all
peoples shall come in pilgrimage even till the end of time…and your name
shall abide in the memory of man until the Day of Judgment.
The warrior emperor was to liberate the roadway that ran
to the tomb. In Galicia, James’ burial crypt had been rediscovered in
813 and a small chapel was built (by Bishop Teodomir) to protect it.
Myth or miracle, a rout now known as the Battle of Clavijo was fought in
the year 844 by desperate Christians with their backs against the
mountains, led by Ramiro 1 of Asturias. Suddenly, there appeared a
heavenly horseman, sword aloft, who slew every Muslim in his path: Santiago Matamoros. Inspired by their champion, the faithful began the reconquest of Spain.
Seven hundred years later Queen Isabella finally
recovered all of Spain from Muslim rule. She immediately pawned her
jewels to finance Christopher Columbus. Isabella, who built hospitals
for pilgrims along the Camino, knew that Christianity must evangelize
any lands beyond the horizon, lest Mohammed’s forces dominate the
world. Today’s politically correct agenda overlooks Isabella’s urgent
hope. But there is confirmation of her intent in a letter from Columbus to an official
“Treat the Natives with the utmost kindness. Protect them from all
wrong and insult…and ever bear in mind that their majesties are more
desirous of the conversion of natives than any riches to be derived from
them.” (Read more.)
1 comment:
And they are our friends in heaven.
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