The official Patron Saint of the Elderly is St Anthony of
Padua, who is in some ways a strange choice, given that he died at the age of
35 or 36. A more convincing candidate for the job might have been St Narcissus
of Jerusalem, whose saint’s day falls on 29th October. As he appears
by some accounts to have been around 117 at the time of his death, he surely
knew a heap more about old age than St Anthony!
Narcissus, who was apparently born in around 99 AD, was a
Greek who was appointed to lead the Christians in Jerusalem at the age of 80,
being the 30th bishop to hold this office. He was a strong bishop
who, despite his age, did the job very well and had no time for slackness on
the part of either clergy or laity.
During his time in office he presided over a council of
bishops that decided that Easter would always be celebrated on a Sunday, thus
breaking the direct link with the Jewish Passover.
After some years in the role he decided that he wanted some
time to meditate and pray in seclusion so he resigned his office and left
Jerusalem to lead a hermit’s life in the desert. There had been some
dissatisfaction with his rule, including a false accusation of a terrible
crime, and this may also have been a reason for wanting to get away.
However, without him in charge things did not go so well for
the Jerusalem Christians and, when Narcissus came back to the city after
several years’ absence, he was persuaded to become bishop once again, despite
his extreme old age at this time.
Narcissus needed help with his duties and so he appointed a
deputy named Alexander to do most of the donkey-work. Narcissus died in office
in around the year 216, after which Alexander continued as bishop on his own.
Saints need to have performed at least one miracle
(preferably two) before they are allowed to be so named. Narcissus apparently
turned water into oil in order to keep the church lamps burning at Easter-time
(see picture). He was therefore a practical as well as a very long-lived saint!
© John Welford
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