Followers

Sunday, 28 June 2020

St Sernin



29th November is the saint’s day of Sernin of Toulouse, a 3rd century martyr.

Sernin was born in Rome in about 245. He was sent as a Christian missionary to Spain but then moved to France where he became Bishop of Toulouse. His activities in the area were very successful, but, not surprisingly, his success made him many enemies among the local pagan priests.

Sernin made himself particularly unpopular by building a house on one side of the pagan temple in Toulouse and a church on the other side, thus surrounding the temple with Christian influences. The effect was that the pagan oracles stopped working.

The pagan priests depended on the oracles for their income so they decided to take the only action that seemed reasonable in the circumstances, namely to get rid of Sernin. Without this Christian bishop queering their pitch, perhaps their gods would return to the temple and speak through the oracles again, thus restoring the priests’ cushy lifestyle.

The priests grabbed hold of Sernin as he was walking past the temple and dragged him inside, where a bullock was about to be sacrificed. However, they had a better use for the animal, which was to tie Sernin’s feet to it and send it charging down the hill outside the temple. The result was that Sernin’s brains were dashed out on the cobbles.

Presumably the priests then claimed that it was business as usual at the temple.


© John Welford

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