Feastday: October 28 Patron of
Desperate Cases
St. Jude, known as
Thaddaeus, was a brother of
St. James the Less, and a
relative of Our Saviour. St.
Jude was one of the 12
Apostles of Jesus.
Ancient writers tell us
that he preached the Gospel in
Judea, Samaria, Idumaea,
Syria, Mesopotamia, and Lybia.
According to Eusebius, he
returned to Jerusalem in the
year 62, and assisted at the
election of his brother, St.
Simeon, as Bishop of
Jerusalem.
He is an author of an
epistle (letter) to the
Churches of the East,
particularly the Jewish
converts, directed against the
heresies of the Simonians,
Nicolaites, and Gnostics. This
Apostle is said to have
suffered martyrdom in Armenia,
which was then subject to
Persia. The final conversion
of the Armenian nation to
Christianity did not take
place until the third century
of our era.
Jude was the one who asked
Jesus at the Last Supper why
He would not manifest Himself
to the whole world after His
resurrection. Little else is
known of his life. Legend
claims that he visited Beirut
and Edessa; possibly martyred
with St. Simon in Persia.
Jude is invoked in
desperate situations because
his New Testament letter
stresses that the faithful
should persevere in the
environment of harsh,
difficult circumstances, just
as their forefathers had done
before them. Therefore, he is
the patron saint of desperate
cases and his feast day is
October 28. Saint Jude is not
the same person as Judas
Iscariot who betrayed Our Lord
and despaired because of his
great sin and lack of trust in
God's mercy.
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