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Born:
unknown
Died: c.251
Canonized:
Feast Day: July 25
Patron Saint of: bookbinders, epilepsy, gardeners,
mariners, pestilence, thunder-storms, travelers
A martyr, probably of the third century.
Although St. Christopher is one of the most popular
saints in the East and in the West, almost nothing
certain is known about his life or death. The legend
says: A heathen king (in Canaan or Arabia), through
the prayers of his wife to the Blessed Virgin, had a
son, whom he called Offerus (Offro, Adokimus, or
Reprebus) and dedicated to the gods Machmet and
Apollo. Acquiring in time extraordinary size and
strength, Offerus resolved to serve only the
strongest and the bravest. He bound himself
successively to a mighty king and to Satan, but he
found both lacking in courage, the former dreading
even the name of the devil, and the latter
frightened by the sight of a cross at the roadside.
For a time his search for a new master was in vain,
but at last he found a hermit (Babylas?) who told
him to offer his allegiance to Christ, instructed
him in the Faith, and baptized him. Christopher, as
he was now called, would not promise to do any
fasting or praying, but willingly accepted the task
of carrying people, for God's sake, across a raging
stream. One day he was carrying a child who
continually grew heavier, so that it seemed to him
as if he had the whole world on his shoulders. The
child, on inquiry, made himself known as the Creator
and Redeemer of the world. To prove his statement
the child ordered Christopher to fix his staff in
the ground. The next morning it had grown into a
palm-tree bearing fruit. The miracle converted many.
This excited the rage of the king (prefect) of that
region (Dagnus of Samos in Lycia?). Christopher was
put into prison and, after many cruel torments,
beheaded.
The Greek legend may belong to the sixth century;
about the middle of the ninth, we find it spread
through France. Originally, St. Christopher was only
a martyr, and as such is recorded in the old
martyrologies. The simple form of the Greek and
Latin passio soon gave way to more elaborate
legends. We have the Latin edition in prose and
verse of 983 by the subdeacon Walter of Speyer,
"Thesaurus anecdotorum novissimus" (Augsburg,
1721-23), II, 27-142, and Harster, "Walter von
Speyer" (1878). An edition of the eleventh century
is found in the Acta SS., and another in the "Golden
Legend" of Jacob de Voragine. The idea conveyed in
the name, at first understood in the spiritual sense
of bearing Christ in the heart, was in the twelfth
or thirteenth century taken in the realistic meaning
and became the characteristic of the saint. The fact
that he was frequently called a great martyr may
have given rise to the story of his enormous size.
The stream and the weight of the child may have been
intended to denote the trials and struggles of a
soul taking upon itself the yoke of Christ in this
world.
The existence of a martyr St. Christopher cannot be
denied, as was sufficiently shown by the Jesuit
Nicholas Serarius, in his treatise on litanies, "Litaneutici"
(Cologne, 1609), and by Molanus in his history of
sacred pictures, "De picturis et imaginibus sacris"
(Louvain, 1570). In a small church dedicated to the
martyr St. Christopher, the body of St. Remigius of
Reims was buried, 532 (Acta SS., 1 Oct., 161). St.
Gregory the Great (d. 604) speaks of a monastery of
St. Christopher (Epp., x., 33). The Mozarabic
Breviary and Missal, ascribed to St. Isidore of
Seville (d. 636), contains a special office in his
honour. In 1386 a brotherhood was founded under the
patronage of St. Christopher in Tyrol and Vorarlberg,
to guide travellers over the Arlberg. In 1517, a St.
Christopher temperance society existed in Carinthia,
Styria, in Saxony, and at Munich. Great veneration
was shown to the saint in Venice, along the shores
of the Danube, the Rhine, and other rivers where
floods or ice-jams caused frequent damage. The
oldest picture of the saint, in the monastery on the
Mount Sinai dates from the time of Justinian
(527-65). Coins with his image were cast at Würzburg,
in Würtermberg, and in Bohemia. His statues were
placed at the entrances of churches and dwellings,
and frequently at bridges; these statues and his
pictures often bore the inscription: "Whoever shall
behold the image of St. Christopher shall not faint
or fall on that day." The saint, who is one of the
fourteen holy helpers, has been chosen as patron by
Baden, by Brunswick, and by Mecklenburg, and several
other cities, as well as by bookbinders, gardeners,
mariners, etc. He is invoked against lightning,
storms, epilepsy, pestilence, etc. His feast is kept
on 25 July; among the Greeks, on 9 March; and his
emblems are the tree, the Christ Child, and a staff.
St. Christopher's Island (commonly called St.
Kitts), lies 46 miles west of Antigua in the Lesser
Antilles.
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