December 29, Fifth Day in
the Octave of Christmas
Given
the tempo of the liturgical season with its feasts it is easy to overlook
that one saint who for many centuries was, after Mary and Joseph, the
most venerated person in European Christendom.
St. Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury was assassinated
in his cathedral on December 29, 1170 because of his opposition to his
former friend, King Henry II of England, who was encroaching on the
liberties of the English Church.
Devotion to him spread like wildfire. He was enshrined
in the hearts of men, and in their arts. In statues and stained glass,
in song and story this good bishop was everywhere to be found: France,
Italy, Spain, Sweden. Many miracles were attributed to his heavenly
advocacy. — Excerpted from Days of the Lord