Pilgrims on the Way

The Feast of Saint James

Today is the Feast of Saint James the Greater, known throughout the Spanish-speaking world as Santiago and in French as Saint Jacques. He was one of Christ’s Twelve Apostles.

Saint James is the patron saint of the archdiocese of Seattle. May you have the joy of the feast!

James and his brother John were natives of Galilee, sons of the fisherman Zebedee and his wife Salome, whom the Eastern Christians name Myrrh-bearer.

Santiago Apóstol

They were disciples of John the Baptist, but the Baptist sent them to Jesus.

So fiery were these two brothers, Saints James and John, that Christ named them Boanerges – “Sons of Thunder” (Mark 3:17).

Along with Saint Peter, James and John made up Christ’s closest disciples. These three were with Him at many key moments in His ministry, including the Transfiguration (Matthew 17, Mark 9, Luke 9:28ff) and even to Gethsemane (Mark 14:33).

After the Crucifixion and Resurrection of Christ, Saint Luke tells us in the Acts of the Apostles how Herod had James killed with the sword (Acts 12:2) in 44 BC.

So much for history. Now for legend.

Legend has it that prior to his martyrdom, James embarked on a missionary journey to northwestern Hispania. It was not particularly successful, and the Medieval Golden Legend records that he only made nine disciples and ordained only four men.

In AD 40, in his despair and discouragement, he prayed for guidance on the banks of the Ebro River near the town of Caesaraugusta, modern day Zaragoza. There, the Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to him. Bi-locating from Jerusalem, she offered him encouragement and consolation.

After this, James returned to Jerusalem. The fiery-tempered Apostle ran afoul of King Herod, and he met his death. And at this point, the story takes an even stranger turn.

From the Golden Legend:

When the blessed Saint James was beheaded, his disciples took the body away by night for fear of the Jews, and brought it into a ship, and committed unto the will of our Lord the sepulchre of it, and went withal into the ship without sail or rudder. And by the conduct of the angel of our Lord they arrived in Galicia. …

And then the disciples of Saint James took out his body and laid it upon a great stone. And anon the stone received the body into it as it had been soft wax, and made to the body a stone as it were a sepulchre.

Sign above the entrance to the crypt at Santiago.
Sign above the entrance to the apostle’s crypt at Santiago.
Saint Jacques (Santiago Peregrino), Cathedral of Le Puy-en-Velay


The outside world rediscovered the site of the Saint’s tomb in the early ninth century, and the first pilgrimages to Santiago de Compostela began shortly thereafter. Saint James became the patron of Christian Spain, and in his name the Islamic Moors were eventually driven out of the country.

Is the legend true? The Church has never taken a definitive stance, though the relics themselves were authenticated by Pope Leo XIII in 1884. It took a thousand years to confirm the identity of the bones in the tomb, and over that time and longer, many millions of pilgrims have come here to honour the memory and the sanctity of this man who was Christ’s Apostle.

Francine and I walked much of this pilgrimage twice, first in 2013 and then again in 2016. In 2018, we walked a (somewhat abbreviated) Camino of only about 100 miles (160 km).

In 2022, we walked a route known as the Camino Primitivo, which is the route of the first known pilgrim to Santiago (other than the apostle himself), King Alfonso II of Asturias.

In 2023, I walked a thousand miles from Le Puy-en-Velay to Santiago de Compostela, while Francine served as an hospitalera in Logroño and then walked the Portuguese route.

Francine had wanted us to walk the Voie de Vézelay – also known by its Latin designationVia Lemovicensis – all the way from Vézelay in France, through Nevers (where her Confirmation saint, Bernadette, is entombed), past Saint-Jean and the Pyrenees, to Santiago de Compostela in Spain.

We won’t get that opportunity to walk together, but I’m planning to walk this route in Vicarie Pro for Francine sometime in the next few years. She first became aware of it in 2022, and we had been training for this “long Camino” since January of 2024.

Yesterday, I restarted that training.

The Via Lemovicensis in France
The pilgrim’s badge to Santiago de Compostela

Almighty ever-living God,
who consecrated the first fruits of your Apostles
by the blood of Saint James,
grant, we pray,
that your Church may be strengthened
by his confession of faith
and constantly sustained by his protection.

Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
God, for ever and ever.

Amen.

Saint James, pray for us.

Saint James the Greater

(originally published at The World is Quiet Here)

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