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Information:
| Feast Day: |
April 25 |
| Born: |
1st century AD, Palestine |
| Died: |
April 25, 68 AD, Alexandria |
| Major Shrine: |
Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox Cathedral (Cairo, Egypt)
Saint Mark's Coptic Orthodox Cathedral (Alexandria, Egypt)
Basilica di San Marco (Venice, Italy) |
| Patron of: |
against impenitence, against struma, attorneys, barristers, captives, glaziers, imprisoned people, prelature of insect bites, Ionian Islands, lawyers, lions, notaries, prisoners, scrofulous diseases, stained glass workers, struma patients, Venice |
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St Mark was of Jewish extraction. The
style of his gospel abounding with Hebrewisms shows that
he was by birth a Jew, and that the Hebrew language was
more natural to him than the Greek. His acts say he was
of Cyrenaica, and Bede from them adds, of the race of
Aaron. Papias, quoted by Eusebius, St. Austin, Theodoret,
and Bede say he was converted by the apostles after
Christ's resurrection. St. Irenaeus calls him the
disciple and interpreter of St. Peter, and, according to
Origen and St. Jerome, he is the same Mark whom St.
Peter calls his son. By his office of interpreter to St.
Peter, some understood that St. Mark was the author of
the style of his epistles; others, that he was employed
as a translator into Greek or Latin of what the apostle
had written in his own tongue, as occasion might require
it. St. Jerome and some others take him to be the same
with that John, surnamed Mark, son to the sister of St.
Barnabas; but it is generally believed they were
different persons, and that the latter was with St. Paul
in the East at the same time that the Evangelist was at
Rome or at Alexandria. According to Papias, and St.
Clement of Alexandria, he wrote his gospel at the
request of the Romans; who, as they relate, desired to
have that committed to writing which St. Peter had
taught them by word of mouth. Mark, to whom this request
was made, did accordingly set himself to recollect what
he had by long conversation learned from St. Peter; for
it is affirmed by some that he had never seen our
Saviour in the flesh. St. Peter rejoiced at the
affection of the faithful; and having revised the work,
approved of it, and authorized it to be read in the
religious assemblies of the faithful. Hence it might be
that, as we learn from Tertullian,6 some attributed this
gospel to St. Peter himself. Many judge, by comparing
the two gospels, that St. Mark abridged that of St.
Matthew; for he relates the same things, and often uses
the same words; but he adds several particular
circumstances and changes the order of the narration, in
which he agrees with St. Luke and St. John. He relates
two histories not mentioned by St. Matthew, namely, that
of the widow giving two mites, and that of Christ's
appearing to the two disciples going to Emmaus. St.
Austin calls him the Abridger of St. Matthew. But
Ceillier and some others think nothing clearly proves
that he made use of St. Matthew's gospel. This
evangelist is concise in his narrations, and writes with
a most pleasing simplicity and elegance. St. Chrysostom9
admires the humility of St. Peter (we may add also of
his disciple St. Mark) when he observes that his
evangelist makes no mention of the high commendations
which Christ gave that apostle on his making that
explicit confession of his being the Son of God; neither
does he mention his walking on the water; but gives at
full length the history of St. Peter's denying his
Master, with all its circumstances. He wrote his gospel
in Italy, and in all appearance before the year of
Christ 49.
St. Peter sent his disciples from Rome to found other
churches. Some moderns say St. Mark founded that of
Aquileia. It is certain, at least, that he was sent by
St. Peter into Egypt, and was by him appointed Bishop of
Alexandria (which, after Rome, was accounted the second
city of the world), as Eusebius, St. Epiphanius, St.
Jerome, and others assure us. Pope Gelasius, in his
Roman Council, Palladius, and the Greeks universally add
that he finished his course at Alexandria by a glorious
martyrdom. St. Peter left Rome and returned into the
East in the ninth year of Claudius and forty-ninth of
Christ. About that time St. Mark went first into Egypt,
according to the Greeks. The Oriental Chronicle,
published by Abraham Eckellensis, places his arrival at
Alexandria only in the seventh year of Nero and sixtieth
of Christ. Both which accounts agree with the relation
of his martyrdom, contained in the ancient acts
published by the Bollandists, which were made use of by
Bede and the Oriental Chronicle, and seem to have been
extant in Egypt in the fourth and fifth centuries. By
them we are told that St. Mark landed at Cyrene, in
Pentapolis, a part of Lybia bordering on Egypt, and by
innumerable miracles brought many over to the faith, and
demolished several temples of the idols. He likewise
carried the gospel into other provinces of Lybia, into
Thebais, and other parts of Egypt. This country was
heretofore of all others the most superstitious; but the
benediction of God, promised to it by the prophets, was
plentifully showered down upon it during the ministry of
this apostle. He employed twelve years in preaching in
these parts before he, by a particular call of God,
entered Alexandria, where he soon assembled a very
numerous church, of which it is thought, says Fleury,
that the Jewish converts then made up the greatest part.
And it is the opinion of St. Jerome and Eusebius that
these were the Therapeutes described by Philo, and the
first founders of the ascetic life in Egypt.
The prodigious progress of the faith in Alexandria
stirred up the heathens against this Galilaean. The
apostle therefore left the city, having ordained St.
Anianus bishop, in the eighth year of Nero, of Christ
the sixty-second, and returned to Pentapolis where he
preached two years, and then visited his church of
Alexandria, which he found increased in faith and grace
as well as in numbers. He encouraged the faithful and
again withdrew; the Oriental Chronicle says to Rome. On
his return to Alexandria, the heathens called him a
magician on account of his miracles, and resolved upon
his death. God, however, concealed him long from them.
At last, on the pagan feast of the idol Serapis, some
that were employed to discover the holy man found him
offering to God the prayer of the oblation, or the mass.
Overjoyed to find him in their power, they seized him,
tied his feet with cords and dragged him about the
streets, crying out that the ox must be led to Bucoles,
a place near the sea, full of rocks and precipices,
where probably oxen were fed. This happened on Sunday,
the 24th of April, in the year of Christ 68, of Nero the
fourteenth, about three years after the death of SS.
Peter and Paul. The saint was thus dragged the whole
day, staining the stones with his blood and leaving the
ground strewed with pieces of his flesh; all the while
he ceased not to praise and thank God for his
sufferings. At night he was thrown into prison, in which
God comforted him by two visions, which Bede has also
mentioned in his true Martyrology. The next day the
infidels dragged him, as before, till he happily expired
on the 25th of April, on which day the Oriental and
Western churches keep his festival. The Christians
gathered up the remains of his mangled body and buried
them at Bucoles, where they afterwards usually assembled
for prayer. His body was honourably kept there, in a
church built on the spot, in 310; and towards the end of
the fourth age the holy priest Philoromus made a
pilgrimage thither from Galatia to visit this saint's
tomb, as Palladius recounts. His body was still honoured
at Alexandria, under the Mahometans, in the eighth age,
in a marble tomb. It is said to have been conveyed by
stealth to Venice in 815 Bernard, a French monk, who
travelled over the East in 870, writes that the body of
St. Mark was not then at Alexandria, because the
Venetians had carried it to their isles. It is said to
be deposited in the Doge's stately rich chapel of St.
Mark in a secret place, that it may not be stolen, under
one of the great pillars. This saint is honoured by that
republic with extraordinary devotion as principal
patron.
The great litany is sung on this day to beg that God
would be pleased to avert from us the scourges which our
sins deserve. The origin of this custom is usually
ascribed to St. Gregory the Great, who, by a public
supplication or litany, with a procession of the whole
city of Rome, divided into seven bands or companies,
obtained of God the extinction of a dreadful pestilence
This St. Gregory of Tours learned from a deacon, who had
assisted at this ceremony at Rome. The station was at
St. Mary Major's, and this pro cession and litany were
made in the year 590. St. Gregory the Great speaks of a
like procession and litany which he made thirteen years
after on the 29th of August, in the year 603, in which
the station was at St. Sabina's. Whence it is inferred
that St. Gregory performed this ceremony every year,
though not on the 25th of April, on which day we find it
settled, in the close of the seventh century, long
before the same was appointed for the feast of St. Mark.
The great litany was received in France, and commanded
in the council of Aix-la-Chapelle in 836, and in the
Capitulars of Charles the Bald. St. Gregory the Great
observed the great litany with a strict fast. On account
of the Paschal time, on the 25th of April, it is kept in
several dioceses only with abstinence; in some with a
fast of the Stations, or till None.
Nothing is more tender and more moving than the
instructions which several councils, fathers, and holy
pastors have given on the manner of performing public
supplications and processions. The first council of
Orleans orders masters to excuse their servants from
work and attendance, that all the faithful may be
assembled together to unite their prayers and sighs. A
council of Mentz commanded that all should assist
barefoot and covered with sackcloth; which was for some
time observed in that church. St. Charles Borromaeo
endeavoured, by pathetic instructions and pastoral
letters, to revive the ancient piety of the faithful on
the great litany and the rogation days. According to the
regulations which he made, the supplications and
processions began before break of day and continued till
three or four o'clock in the afternoon. On them he
fasted himself on bread and water and preached several
times, exhorting the people to sincere penance. A
neglect to assist at the public supplications of the
church is a grievous disorder and perhaps one of the
principal causes of the little piety and sanctity which
are left, and of the scandals which reign amongst
Christians. They cannot seek the kingdom of God as they
ought, who deprive themselves of so powerful a means of
drawing down his graces upon their souls. We must join
this procession with hearts penetrated with humility,
and spend some time in prayer, pious reading, and the
exercises of compunction. What we are chiefly to ask of
God on these days is the remission of our sins, which
are the only true evil and the cause of all the
chastisements which we suffer or have reason to fear. We
must, secondly, beg that God avert from us all scourges
and calamities which our crimes deserve, and that he
bestow his blessing on the fruits of the earth.
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Fr. William Saunders - Who Really Wrote the Gospels?
Father Saunders answers the following question, 'I recently attended a religious education workshop, and the teacher said that the Gospels were written by the early Church community probably between the years 200 and 300, not by St. Mark, etc. I find this strange. If this is true, then the Gospels really don't tell us much about Jesus but seem more 'made up' by later believers. A straight answer please.' This article appeared in the March 9, 199
Catholic Encyclopedia - St. Mark
Apostle and evangelist. It is assumed in this article that the individual referred to in Acts as John Mark, is identical with the Mark mentioned by St. Paul and by St. Peter. While it is strongly suggested, on the one hand by the fact that Mark of the Pauline Epistles was the cousin of Barnabas, to whom Mark of Acts seems to have been bound by some special tie; on the other by the probability that the Mark, whom St. Peter calls his son, is no other than the son of Mary, the Apostle's old friend in Jerusalem.
Alban Butler - St. Mark, Evangelist, Patron Saint of Venice
April 25 -- St. Mark was the son of a Jerusalem Christian named Mary, whose home was a meeting place for Christians after the Ascension of Jesus. He is the author of the shortest of the New Testament Gospels and was an associate of both Peter and Paul.
NA - Divine Liturgy of St. Mark
Eastern liturgy of the patriarchate of Alexandria.
Catholic Software - Gospel According to St. Mark
Text and footnotes are from the 1899 version of the Douay-Rheims Bible. Used with permission from Catholic Software's Douay Bible program, a complete multimedia Bible for the PC.
Fr Dominic Mary, MFVA - Feast of St. Mark
Father Dominic gave the homily for the Feast of St. Mark, 25 April 2008, at Our Lady of the Angels Monastery, Hanceville, Alabama. After giving biographical details on St. Mark himself, Father provided an overview of the Gospel according to St. Mark.
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