St James (1st century) son of Zebedee and brother of John
St James, sometimes called the Greater, is probably best known today through the Camino, or the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, Spain. Pope Benedict XVI visited this shrine on 6th November 2010.
Son of Zebedee
James, sometimes known as the Great, by contrast with James the Less, the son of Alphaeus (feast 3rd May Saints Philip and James) is described in the Gospels along with John as "the son of Zebedee", a fisherman. Jesus recruited both of them along with Simon and his brother Andrew by the Sea of Galilee.
They were in their helping their father mend the nets. They left him in the boat with the men he employed and went after Jesus (Mark 1:16-20).
"Sons of Thunder"
James and John are called Boanerges or "Sons of Thunder" (Mark 3:17). This seems to stem from the incident reported in Luke 9:54 where a Samaritan village would not receive Jesus because he was making for Jerusalem. James and John asked Jesus if he wanted them to call down fire from heaven to burn them up!
Peter, James and John
On three important occasions in the life of Jesus in the New Testament, James is numbered with Peter and John in a threesome: the first of these is in raising the daughter of Jairus to life (Mk 5:35-43); the second is the transfiguration (Mk 9:2-8); the third is during his agony in Gethsemane (Mk 14:32-42).
Beheaded by King Herod Agrippa
The next mention of him in the New Testament is in Acts 12:2 where he is mentioned in the context of the arrest and miraculous escape of Peter as the first apostle put to death for the Christian faith by Herod Agrippa I (king of Judaea and Samaria 41-44 AD).
The legend of James in Spain
The legend or tradition about St James in Spain comes from the 12th-century Historia Compostellana commissioned by bishop Diego Gelmírez.
Two elements are central to it: first, that St James preached the gospel in Iberia as well as in the Holy Land; and second, that after his martyrdom at the hands of Herod Agrippa I, his disciples carried his body by sea to Iberia, where they landed at Padrón on the coast of Galicia, and took it inland for burial at Santiago de Compostela.
St James the Moorslayer
An even later tradition has James miraculously appearing during the battle of Clavijo in 844 to fight for the Christian army led by Ramiro I of Asturias against the Muslims led by the Emir of Córdoba.
It is from this tradition arose of Santiago Matamoros (St James the Moorslayer), celebrated in Spanish art and literature.
This is mentioned by Cervantes in Don Quixote and is celebrated in numerous statues in churches along the route of the Camino.
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