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Inside St. Jerome Church

The Windows of St. Jerome

photos by
Francis Abbey

St. Sebastian, Visit the Imprisoned

Feast Day January 20 (birth date unknown-died circa 288)

The Acts relate that he was an officer in the imperial bodyguard and had secretly done many acts of love and charity for his brethren in the Faith. When he was finally discovered to be a Christian, in 286, he was handed over to the Mauretanian archers, who pierced him with arrows; he was healed, however, by the widowed St. Irene. He was finally killed by the blows of a club. These stories are unhistorical and not worthy of belief.

The earliest mosaic picture of St. Sebastian, which probably belongs to the year 682, shows a grown, bearded man in court dress but contains no trace of an arrow. It was the art of the Renaissance that first portrayed him as a youth pierced by arrows. In 367, a basilica which was one of the seven chief churches of Rome, was built over his grave. The present church was completed in 1611 by Scipio Cardinal Borghese. His relics in part were taken in the year 826 to St. Medard at Soissons. Sebastian is considered a protector against the plague. Celebrated answers to prayer for his protection against the plague are related of Rome in 680, Milan in 1575, and Lisbon in 1599.

Click on one of the Saints to the right to learn more about them.

GoTo Inside St. Jerome
St. Jerome
St. Margaret
St. Helena
St. Joan of Arc
St. John & St.Paul
St. Sebastian
St. Maria Goretti
Sts. Marius, Martha,
Audipax & Abactium

St. Martin
St. Monica
St. Justin
St. Elizabeth
St. Thomas More
St. Pantelon
Martyrs of Uganda
Blessed Mother


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