This account of James and...
Illustration
This account of James and John, "sons of thunder," reminds one of Jean-Baptiste Marie Vianney. Known as St. John Vianney, he is the patron saint of parish priests. A deserter from the French Army, he entered training for the priesthood, but he had great difficulty in learning Latin. Nonetheless he was finally ordained (1815) and eventually appointed as parish priest in a remote village. Finding him uneducated and irritatingly zealous, a number of his congregation circulated a petition, declaring him "unfit." When he finally got his hands on this petition, instead of tearing it up, he himself signed it. The story of his act of humility spread throughout the neighboring villages, then through the whole of France and to other countries. People began to journey to his village and seek his wisdom. By 1855 the estimated number of visitors reached 20,000 a year.
-- Bristow
-- Bristow