“It is not lawful for thee
to have thy brother’s wife.” Death has no power over these words (cf.
Gueranger. The Liturgical Year. vol. 14., p. 109). A tyrant may put to death
the man who speaks these words, but he cannot put these words to death. They
are truth itself. “It is not lawful for thee to have thy brother’s wife.” This
is not a man made law. This is God’s eternal law that cannot be broken without
dire consequences.
These are the dire
consequences:
“Josephus relates how
[Herod Antipas] was overcome by the Arabian Aretas, whose daughter he had
repudiated in order to follow his wicked passions; and the Jews attributed the
defeat to the murder of St. John. He was deposed by Rome from his tetrarchate,
and banished to Lyons in Gaul, where the ambitious Herodias shared his disgrace.
As to her dancing daughter Salome, there is a tradition gathered from ancient
authors, that, having gone out one winter day to dance upon a frozen river, she
fell through into the water; the ice, immediately closing round her neck, cut
off her head, which bounded upon the surface, thus continuing for some moments
the dance of death" (Gueranger 112).
This feast actually
celebrates four events. The first event is the beheading itself. “The second
event is the burning and gathering, or collecting, of St. John’s bones”
(Voragine, The Golden Legend. Vol II., p. 135). This is called the second
martyrdom of St. John the Baptist. His disciples had buried his body at
Sebaste, a city in Palestine…and many miracles had occurred at his tomb (cf.
Voragine 135). “For this reason the pagans, by order of Julian the Apostate,
scattered his bones, but the miracles did not cease, and the bones were
collected, burned, and pulverized, and the ashes thrown to the winds to be
blown over the fields…” (135). On the day when the bones were collected to be
burned, some monks from Jerusalem secretly mingled with the pagans and carried
out many of the relics, saving them from destruction. They delivered these to
Philip, bishop of Jerusalem, who sent them to Anastasius, the bishop of
Alexandria. During the Crusades, many of them were brought into the West and
distributed among many churches.
The third event
commemorated on this feast is the finding of the head of St. John the Baptist
which happened on this day. It is said that when John was beheaded, Herodias
had John’s head taken to Jerusalem to be buried because “she feared that the
prophet would return to life if his head was buried with his body. Four hundred
years later some monks took the head to venerate it in a more proper place. It
was stolen and hidden in a cave. The man who stole it revealed on his deathbed
where it was, but the hiding place was kept secret for a long time. Many years
later, a holy monk, St. Marcellus, had taken up residence in this cave. It was
revealed to him where the head was hidden. The head was then enshrined in a
beautiful church in Poitiers in France.
The fourth event is the
translation of one of St. John’s fingers and the dedication of a church. The
finger with which he pointed to the Lord, could not be burned. The finger made
its way to Normandy, France where a church was built in honor of St. John the
Baptist.
Very interesting homily by Fr. Eric M. Andersen, I now new that the head of St. John the baptist was later discovered and recovered by a Holy Monk, Oh St. John the baptist as miracles do take place on your tomb even at the scattering of your bones may the miracle happen to me to gain my vocation in Jesus name Amen
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