St. Blaise

The Presentation of the Lord: February 2, 2025

Question of the Week: What do you think Simeon meant when he said of Jesus, “Behold, this child is destined for the fall and rise of many in Israel, and to be a sign that will be contradicted—and you yourself a sword will pierce—so that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed”?

A number of years ago, I travelled to Croatia on pilgrimage to see the city of Dubrovnik. Within the larger city, there was a much older walled city filled with many churches. One in particular was our destination—the center basilica dedicated to St. Blaise, or Sveti Vlaho in Croatian. Every year on February 3, the relics of the saint, his head, a bit of bone from his throat, his right hand and his left, are paraded in reliquaries. The festivities begin the previous day, Candlemas, when white doves are released. Chroniclers of Dubrovnik such as Rastic and Ranjina attribute his veneration there to a vision in 971 to warn the inhabitants of an impending attack by the Venetians, whose galleys had dropped anchor in Gruž and near Lokrum, ostensibly to resupply their water but furtively to spy out the city’s defenses. St. Blaise (Blasius) revealed their pernicious plan to Stojko, a canon of St. Stephen’s Cathedral. The senate summoned Stojko, who told them in detail how St. Blaise had appeared before him as an old man with a long beard and a bishop’s mitre and staff. In this form the effigy of Blaise remained on Dubrovnik’s state seal and coinage until the Napoleonic era.

St Blaise never lived in Dubrovnik! He studied philosophy in his youth and was a doctor in Sebaste in Armenia, the city of his birth. He exercised his art with miraculous ability, good-will, and piety. When the bishop of the city died, he was chosen to succeed him, with the acclamation of all the people. His holiness was manifest through many miracles. From all around, people came to him to find cures for their spirit and their body. Even wild animals came in herds to receive his blessing. In 316, Agricola, the governor of Cappadocia and of Lesser Armenia, having arrived in Sebastia at the order of the emperor Licinius to kill the Christians, arrested the bishop. As he was being led to jail, a mother set her only son, choking to death on a fish-bone, at his feet, and the child was cured straight away. Regardless, the governor, unable to make Blaise renounce his faith, beat him with a stick, ripped his flesh with iron combs, and beheaded him.

We will be blessing throats after all the Sunday Masses this week. St. Blaise, pray for us!

St. Thomas the Apostle Church