Today the Church celebrates with a Major Feast the life and ministry of St. Matthias, the successor to Judas Iscariot. We don’t know a whole lot about Matthias. He was, according to the book of Acts, selected by lot after the eleven apostles nominated him and another disciple named Joseph Barsabbas. Nothing more is ever said of either Joseph or Matthias in the New Testament. There is some interesting if probably apocryphal information at the Patron Saints Index, particularly how he died and where he preached. (The site does not say where it gets their information.) I’m not exactly sure what good it was that Matthias was named an Apostle, given his otherwise complete anonymity, but there it is. And I have to wonder what Joseph B. thought of the whole proceeding. Was he upset he wasn’t selected? After all, both had been followers of Jesus “beginning from the baptism of John until the day when he was taken up from us.” It’s speculated that Joseph (also named Justus acc. to the Anchor Bible Dictionary) was one of the seventy that Jesus sent out in Luke’s Gospel. But again, we know nothing else of him.
Check out the lessons appointed in the Office for today (scroll down a bit until you those for Matthias). Except for the first lesson at Morning Prayer, they seem a little weird to me. The Second lesson at MP seems to be a slam on Judas Iscariot, given its context as appointed for this feast, but the passage itself is not written to denigrate Judas specifically at all. (It is, however, a great basis for all sorts of horror movies, such as the Damien series.) And both Evening Prayer lessons have to do with either Samuel or Paul telling audiences that they’ve been faithful and prudent and that nothing can be held against them. Again, this is interesting enough in the contexts of the books the passages are drawn from, but I really don’t see the connection to Matthias at all. And the lessons for Matthias from the 1928 edition of the BCP if anything, are even more bizarre. Anyone have any ideas?
RFSJ
2 comments:
It is easy to see that Matthias
is the patron of motorcyclists.
He has a chopper!
So why the chopper? It’s in about 90% of the pictures I could find of him. However, no explanation.
By tradition, Matthias was stoned to death and then beheaded. Thus, the axe. See http://home.att.net/~wegast/symbols/apostles/apostles.html for details.
RFSJ
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