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Valentine’s Day History
For most, Valentine’s’ Day is associated with either a friendly exchange of “Valentines” among children or a celebration of romantic love between adults. However, few know the history of the saint for which the holiday is named. The story of his life is a beautiful example of sacrificial love (for God and for others).Who Is St. Valentine?
It is believed that St. Valentine served as
a priest in third century Rome.* At that time, Emperor Claudius II had a
standing decree that young single men were not to marry. The Emperor
thought that marriage and children were a distraction to men of fighting
age who were needed to serve as soldiers (with their full allegiance
given to Rome).
It was perhaps similar thinking that led
Claudius to persecute Christians. The Emperor (rightly) believed that
Christians devoted their strongest allegiance to something and someone
other than Rome.
St. Valentine, believing that Claudius was
interfering with matters of the Church and of God, is said to have
married young lovers in secret. Tradition holds that he also assisted
many Christian martyrs, helping some to escape the harsh Roman prisons.
For one or both of these reasons, Valentine
himself was imprisoned. Yet, difficult conditions did not hinder his
very evident commitment to the Lord. He preached his faith to his prison
guard Asterius, who was converted and baptized along with his whole
family. And, it is said that St. Valentine restored sight to the blind,
adopted daughter of Asterius, with whom he fell in love (remember,
priests were allowed to marry before the fourth century).
When word of these events reached Claudius, he ordered that if
Valentine would not immediately deny his faith, he should be beaten and
afterwards beheaded. Far from being intimidated by Claudius’ command,
Valentine apparently tried to convert the emperor — an action which
secured his fate.
Just before his death on February 14,
around 270 A.D., Valentine is said to have penned a tender farewell
letter to the daughter of Asterius, who had visited him regularly during
his confinement. He signed the letter, “From Your Valentine.”
How Did St. Valentine’s Day Begin?
In 496 A.D., Pope Gelasius officially set
aside February 14 to honor St. Valentine. It is believed that Christians
came to associate Valentine’s Day with romantic love because they were
trying to supplant a popular pagan Roman festival called Lupercalia,
celebrated on February 15.
For the Lupercalia celebration, Roman boys
would choose a partner by drawing the name of a girl from a box or urn;
the couple would then exchange gifts. The partnership would sometimes
last until the next Lupercalia celebration, or it may even result in
marriage.
Christian leaders tried to replace this
custom by encouraging believers to draw saints’ names from a box. The
saint would then be your patron saint for the year. But this tradition
never quite caught on. Rather, Christians chose to celebrate the virtue
of love, particularly romantic love, on St. Valentine’s Day. By all
accounts, St. Valentine’s life modeled this virtue (in the pure and
selfless way described in 1 Corinthians 13: 4-8 of the Bible). It seems fitting that the day set aside to remember him would be a day to celebrate love!
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