Jude, also known as Thaddeus, is clearly distinguished from Judas
Iscariot, the betrayer of Jesus. Mentioned twice in the Gospels (John
6:16 and Acts 1:13), he is thought to have been a cousin of Our Lord on
St. Joseph’s side.
His attribute is the club or ax, by means of
which he is thought to have suffered martyrdom. The most generally
recognized depiction of St. Jude, the apostle holds a medallion with the
face of the Lord, possibly linked to the image of Edessa.
The legend of the image of Edessa is recorded in the Historia Ecclesiastica
written by Eusebius. According to the account, King Abgar, being ill,
sent a letter to Jesus through a messenger by the name of Hannan. In
this letter Abgar asked Jesus for a cure. Hannan either painted an image
of the face of Jesus, or received it miraculously, by Jesus lifting a
cloth to His face and imprinting His image upon it. The royal messenger
brought the image back to Edessa. After the death of our Holy Savior,
the apostle Thomas sent Jude to Abgar, and Jude cured the king
miraculously. Astonished, the king accepted Christianity and many of his
subjects were baptized.
St. Jude is also depicted with a flame
above his forehead indicating that he received the Holy Ghost with the
other apostles at Pentecost.
According to tradition, after Jude’s
martyrdom, pilgrims visited his grave and many experienced his powerful
intercession. St. Bridget of Sweden and St. Bernard had visions from
God in which they were shown St. Jude as “The Patron Saint of the
Impossible.”
His relics were brought from Beirut to Rome and today rest alongside those of St. Simon in St. Peter’s Basilica.
Photo by: Loci B. Lenar
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