In our Catholic Christian tradition we’ve been blessed with many role models for holiness in our saints. But sometimes it can be difficult to keep them all straight. In this series, “Telling them apart,” I’m going to present some side-by-side comparisons in order to help us keep track of commonly confused saints. And I’m going to start with two apostles named James.A few years ago I achieved a long-time goal of walking the Camino de Santiago – a pilgrimage route dating back to the Middle Ages which leads to the tomb of St. James the Apostle in Santiago de Compostela in northwestern Spain. Many of us had started at the border with France, intending to walk the full 800 kilometres across Spain, though I also met people who had begun walking from their homes in Belgium, Germany, and the Netherlands. From time to time, we’d get talking, and someone would ask the inevitable question: Which St. James the Apostle is it? And no one knew. (Evidence of the enduring Catholic tradition of going on pilgrimage just because.) Out of 12 men chosen to be his Apostles, Jesus called two men named Yakob. In English we call them James. But which one is which?
The names of the twelve apostles are these: first, Simon called Peter, and his brother Andrew; James, the son of Zebedee, and his brother John; Philip and Bartholomew, Thomas and Matthew the tax collector; James, the son of Alphaeus, and Thaddeus; Simon the Cananean, and Judas Iscariot who betrayed him. (Matthew 10:2-4)
[Herod] had James, the brother of John, killed by the sword… (Acts 12:2)This is believed to have taken place around the year 44 AD, making him the first of the Apostles to be martyred. So when did he get to Spain? Now, that’s a tricky one. There is no contemporary account of the Apostle James travelling to the Iberian Peninsula to preach the Good News. In fact, the first time we find this legend written down is sometime in the ninth century. Legend also says that after his death his body was miraculously returned to the land and the people he loved and to whom he had preached. I would love to know where the truth lies in all the stories told about St. James and Spain, but we will probably never know. What we do know is that his shrine at Santiago de Compostela was one of the most famous sites of Christian pilgrimage in the Middle Ages after the Holy Land and Rome, and it has experienced a resurgence in popularity in recent decades among many types of Christians and even among many non-Christians. Along with St. Teresa of Avila, this St. James is the patron of Spain. He is often depicted as a pilgrim travelling to Santiago with a staff and a broad-brimmed pilgrim’s hat and a water gourd (though why he is depicted as a pilgrim travelling to his own shrine may be an artistic mystery!). The scallop shell is also a symbol of St. James and his shrine, but how that came to be is yet another mystery. His feast day is celebrated on July 25.
In his Wednesday General Audience, Pope Francis continued this cycle of catechesis on "Jesus Christ our Hope," as part of the Jubilee 2025. This week he reflected on the Magnificat, the Virgin Mary's Song of Praise after she is greeted by her cousin Elizabeth.
Reflecting on the vision given to St. Joseph in the Gospel of Matthew, Pope Francis said that "He dreams of the miracle that God fulfils in Mary’s life, and also the miracle that he works in his own life: to take on a fatherhood capable of guarding, protecting, and passing on a material and spiritual inheritance."
Pope Francis continued this cycle of catechesis on "Jesus Christ our Hope." Reflecting on the Angel Gabriel's greeting to the Virgin Mary at the Annunciation, he said that "The 'Almighty,' the God of the 'impossible' is with Mary, together with and beside her; He is her companion, her principal ally, the eternal 'I-with-you.'"
In his weekly catechesis, Pope Francis reflected on the fruits of the Spirit. Beginning with Joy, he said that "not only is it not subject to the inevitable wear of time, but it multiplies when it is shared with others! A true joy is shared with others; it even spreads."
In his weekly catechesis, Pope Francis reflected on how the Holy Spirit empowered the Blessed Virgin Mary to become the Mother of God.