The Blessing of Throats in honor of St. Blaise invokes a Saint who is part of a larger group of special Saints designated as “The Fourteen Holy Helpers”, or the “Helping Saints”.
The terrible plague called the “Black Death”, which ravaged Christendom in the late 1340s, was the occasion for the grouping of 14 particular Saints as intercessors.
St. George
St. Blaise
St. Pantaleon
St. Vitus
St. Elmo (Erasmus)
St. Christopher
St. Denis
St. Cyriac
St. Achatius
St. Eustace
St. Giles
St. Catherine of Alexandria
St. Margaret of Antioch
St. Barbara
The “Black Death” was so-called because among the terrible symptoms of this disease were the turning black of a person’s tongue, extreme dryness of the throat, violent headache, fever and sores on the stomach. The sickness came on suddenly, took people out of their minds, and caused death within a few hours. Many people died without the Last Sacraments.
People were panicked everywhere and that led to violence and the overthrow of the normal ties of family and community. In the midst of this calamity people turned in humble faith towards their Saints who were associated with deliverance from particular ailments.
For example: St. Christopher and St. Giles against the Plague; St. Denis against headache; St. Blaise against all disease of the throat; St. Catherine against all disease of the tongue; St. Elmo against stomach ills; St. Barbara against fever; St. Vitus against epilepsy. St. Pantaleon was the patron of physicians. St. Cyriac was a patron Saint to be invoked against terrible temptations, especially in the hour of death. St. Achatius was the Saint to be prayed to in the last agony preceding death; SS. Christopher, Barbara and Catherine were Saints for protection against a sudden and unprovided death. St. Giles was prayed to for the grace of a good confession. St. Eustace was invoked in time of family troubles. Since domestic animals, too, were coming down with the Plague, people had recourse to the prayers of SS. George, Elmo, Pantaleon and Vitus.
Thus we can trace the development of the devotion to the “Fourteen Holy Helpers” out of their joint patronage in helping the people in times of contagion.
We should hardly look down on the pious confidence of our forebears on the smug assumption that we have “science” and they didn’t. They made use of whatever knowledge of the natural world they had, just as we do. It is a negative stereotype to imagine religious believers of the past ages of faith as just superstitious and clueless, not at all practical. We should admire, rather, their faith-borne trust that God would come to their help in situations which were beyond them and in miraculous ways if necessary.
Therefore, let us invoke St. Blaise today together with all of the Fourteen Holy Helpers, especially to deliver us from this scourge of pestilence which is now in its third year.
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes is Newton and Needham Massachusetts' oldest Roman Catholic Parish. Founded as Saint Mary Parish in 1870, it was renamed "Mary Immaculate of Lourdes" when the new Church was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1910. In addition to being a regular territorial parish of the Archdiocese of Boston it is also a "Mission Parish" since 2007 with a special apostolate for the Traditional Latin Mass (1962 Missal).
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes Church
270 Elliot Street
Newton, MA 02464
USA
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