A Book for the Feast Day of St. John the Baptist
Today is the feast day of St. John the Baptist, and Sula, Parish Cat at Old Mission, has a book that is perfect for the day. The cover of Sains I Know shows the statue of St. John the Baptist in Sula's hometown of San Juan Bautista (St. John the Baptist). Here is Sula's description of SJB.
St. John the Baptist
Early first Century A.D.
The town of San Juan Bautista (St. John the Baptist), where
our Mission is located, was founded on the feast day of St. John the Baptist,
June 24 (the reason that most of my books have been released on June 24), and
named after him. Our Mission was founded on that day, too. In the beginning,
the two were very connected.
St. John the Baptist is one of the best-known saints, even
to non-Catholics. Even so, his exact birth dates are not known. He was born six
months before Jesus, whose coming he foreshadowed, and was murdered in the last
year of Jesus’s ministry, so we do know the approximate dates—the first 30 or
so years of the first century. He was so young when he was killed, but for such
a short life, he made a significant impact on the world. He influenced
Christianity, Islam, and Baha’i—and perhaps other faiths.
Here is what most history books will say about him: He was a
Jewish itinerant preacher in the early first century. He was born in Jerusalem
and died in present-day Jordan. History has it that he is buried in the Umayyed
Mosque in Damascus, Syria. At least, there is a place in the mosque where he is
supposedly buried; my amanuensis has seen it.
John’s parents are almost as well known as he is, and they
are described well in the Bible. His mother, Elizabeth, became pregnant very
late in life, well beyond a time when she would have been considered capable of
becoming pregnant. John’s father, Zachariah, served as a priest in the temple,
and in the temple, the angel Gabriel told him Elizabeth would bear him a son.
John’s name was given to him by God. The angel who had told Zechariah
about Elizabeth’s pregnancy also told him what to name the baby. When Zachariah
doubted the angel and questioned him, Gabriel told him that his punishment for
doubting God would be to lose his ability to speak until John was born. And
that is exactly what happened!
According to Scripture, the grown-up John wore clothing made
from camel hair (I think that was probably itchy), and he ate locusts (yuck)
and wild honey (not bad). Clearly, like so many saints who came after him, St.
John the Baptist was given to a life of austerity and putting God first, before
any kind of physical comfort, possessions, or luxurious lifestyle.
St. John had a lot of followers who believed his messianic
message. That made some of the religious leaders of the time very mad, but they
did not kill him. How did John die? Quite gruesomely. Salome, the stepdaughter
of Herod, ruler of Galilee and Perea at the time, danced for Herod and after
finishing and being told she could have anything she desired, she said that she
wanted the head of John the Baptist, imprisoned by her uncle, on a silver
platter. That is how John died! And yes, Herod also ordered the execution of
Jesus some time later.
While we can all aspire to become saints, we probably cannot
aspire to be as great, as humble, as special as John. Unlike most saints, he
really was larger than life while on earth. He was conceived with a special
mission: to prepare the way for Jesus’s coming, and he did that superbly well,
not only by preaching about Jesus’s coming but also by baptizing Jesus and
others, including people others despised, such as tax collectors. Like Jesus
and St. Paul, he also preached love. John was special because he was sent by
God to “bear witness to the light (Jesus).” Now, really, that is quite special,
isn’t it?
St. John the Baptist is claimed as patron saint by many places around the world. And my home is very specially named: St. John the Baptist (San Juan Bautista).
For more posts about Sula and her many books, click HERE.
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