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Feast of St. Blaise lights way to Christ

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  • Feast of St. Blaise lights way to Christ

    Telegraph Herald (Dubuque, IA)
    February 4, 2005 Friday

    Feast of St. Blaise lights way to Christ; Catholics accept the
    blessing for protection from throat illnesses

    MADELIN FUERSTE

    Dubuque

    Students at St. Joseph the Worker School gathered for a time-honored
    Catholic tradition Thursday.

    They celebrated the feast of St. Blaise with the annual blessing of
    the throat.

    To those who have never seen it done, crossing two unlit candles over
    the throat is a curious sight.

    "It is one of those things that Catholics do that non-Catholics don't
    do," said the Rev. Mark Ressler, in his first year at St. Joseph the
    Worker Catholic Church in Dubuque.

    Students said this is a prayer service they look forward to.

    "With all the colds and flu going around right now, and we even have
    a couple of kids out today, it's kind of important. It's kind of
    reassuring," said eighth-grader Laura Davis.

    St. Blaise Day is celebrated by Catholics worldwide.

    Many of the students learned about St. Blaise by researching Catholic
    history in class.

    For eighth-graders in teacher Jane Northrup's class, that meant
    choosing a saint, learning about that person and writing a report.

    "It was a creative way to learn about them," said eighth-grader
    Lauren Siegert.

    Little is known about St. Blaise, who was Bishop Blaise of Sebaste in
    Armenia in the 4th century. He lived at a time when Christians
    endured great persecution. As the story goes, St. Blaise was warned
    in a message from God to escape to the hills, and he took refuge in a
    cave. He eventually was taken prisoner and returned to the governor.
    On the way he encountered a boy choking on a fish bone and cured him.
    Hence the tradition as it is practiced today.

    The candles used in the service are blessed the day before during the
    Feast of the Presentation of the Lord.

    During Thursday's prayer service, which was open to the public and
    attended by St. Joseph's first through eighth grades, Ressler said
    the candles signified that "Christ is the light of the world."

    Those attending prayed for "protection from illness of the throat and
    from colds, sore throats, flu and other sickness."

    The annual St. Blaise Day blessing of the throats was one of many
    school activities taking place during Catholic Schools week, which
    ends today.

    GRAPHIC: Olivia Dodds, a second-grader at St. Joseph the Worker
    School in Dubuque, has her throat blessed during a Mass on Thursday
    celebrating the feast day of St. Blaise, the patron of throat
    ailments.
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