| Saint Raphael the Archangel | |
|---|---|
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| Feast Day | |
| Patron | Travelers, The Blind, Physicians, Nurses, Medical Workers, Happy Meetings, Matchmakers, Those Seeking Healing (Physical, Mental, Emotional) |
The cult of archangel Raphael can be traced back to the 11th century; his feast day is celebrated together with that of the archangels Michael and Gabriel. His name comes from the Hebrew “Rafa-El,” or “medicine of El [God],” the opposite of the name of the demon Asmodeus, “he who causes to perish.”
History
Raphael is the protagonist of an entire book of the Bible. The archangel accompanies Tobias, the young son of Tobit and Anna, when Tobit asks Tobias to carry out a delicate mission that will require a long and dangerous journey.
The story recounted in the Book of Tobit takes place during the time of the revolt of the Maccabees. Tobit, the boy’s father, is a generous man who gives of himself to alleviate the suffering of his fellow Jews during the period of the deportation in Assyria. He shares his goods with the poor, gives alms prodigally, and punctually pays tithes on the income he receives from his land and his cattle. His piety goes so far as to lead him to bury the abandoned dead. In the twists and turns of life, Tobit loses all that he has, including – following an act of charity – his sight. At this point, Tobit asks his son for help.
Tobias’s father asks him to travel to a distant place to recover a large sum of money he had left in trust with a friend. The young man is willing to go, and at his father’s suggestion, he looks for a guide. The first person Tobias meets is a wayfarer who is familiar with the area; the man agrees to accompany him. As they camp by the Tigris river, a great fish attacks the boy, who at first is frightened. But the wayfarer – who is the archangel Raphael in disguise – tells him to capture the fish and to put aside its heart, liver and gall.
When they have almost reached their destination, the archangel urges Tobias to stop to visit some of his relatives, where his cousin Sarah lives. According to Mosaic law, Tobias is entitled to marry her. Sarah had been married to seven men in succession, all of whom had been killed by the demon Asmodeus on their wedding night. The young woman would have killed herself for shame, and refrained only so as not to cause yet more sorrow to her parents. She agrees to become Tobias’ wife. The wayfarer tells Tobias that he can overcome the demon by placing the fish’s heart and liver on burning incense, creating a smoke that will make the demon flee.
After the wedding, Tobias returns to his father, for now he knows how to heal Tobit’s blindness. Tobias anoints his father’s eyes with gall from the fish, and Tobit sees. Tobias would like to pay the wayfarer for all his help, but taking both father and son aside, the traveling companion reveals his true identity. He explains that God, who was moved by the prayers and charity of both father and son, sent him to heal and guide them. He says of himself, “I am Raphael, one of the seven holy angels who present the prayers of the saints and enter into the presence of the Holy One.” This sacred story gave rise to a medieval practice: whenever an adolescent or youth left home for the first time, he carried with him a small image of himself in the place of Tobias, accompanied by the archangel. [1]
Miracles and Testimonies
- Healing Tobit's Blindness - Raphael guided Tobit's son, Tobias, to use a specific fish's organs (gall) to cure his father's blindness, restoring his sight.
- Freeing Sarah from Asmodeus - He instructed Tobias on how to use the fish's heart and liver to drive away the demon Asmodeus, freeing Sarah from its torment.
- Guidance and Protection - Raphael served as a divine guide and protector for Tobias on his perilous journey, instructing him in prayer, medicine, and spiritual wisdom.
Devotion
The three Archangels, whom we celebrate on 29 September, were contemplatives of the Glory of God and messengers of the Good News. Their names express their mission, not their nature. They are messengers of the Lord who proclaim his will and “along with the Saints, constitute the immense multitude of worshippers of the living God”.
Archangel Raphael is considered the protector of health, of travellers, of young people and of pharmacists.
Saint Gregory the Great highlighted that the Archangels are more than angels because they “announce the greatest of mysteries”. The Church honours only three of them liturgically because the Scriptures mention them and their mission. [2]
Legacy
Pope Francis thus summed up the roles of the Archangels: “Michael defends us, Gabriel gives us the good news and Raphael takes us by the hand and walks with us; he helps us with the many things that occur along the journey”. We must ask Raphael to help “us not to be tempted to take the wrong step, to take the wrong path”, the Holy Father stressed. “Guide us along the right path; you are our traveling companion as you were [once] the traveling companion of Tobias”, he concluded. [3]
