The eighth of August is kept in some places as the feast of the Fourteen Holy Helpers, sometimes called the Auxiliary Saints in English, who are venerated for their efficacious intercession and protection in certain regards, especially against a number of maladies and dangers. The devotion to these Saints as a group originated in Germany in the fourteenth century, during the period of the Black Death; they are called Nothelfer in German, ‘helpers in need’. The devotion spread to several other parts of Europe, and grew in popularity, being endowed with special indulgences by Pope Nicholas V (1447-55). It would seem from the liturgical books of that period that they were not kept with a feast per se, but a votive Mass in their honor is found in several Missals. In the Cracow Missal of 1483, we find the following rubric introducing the feast.
The Mass of the Fourteen Holy Helpers, approved by Pope Nicholas, …it is powerful on their behalf, however so much one is in great illness or anguish or sadness, or in whatsoever tribulation a man shall be. It is powerful also on behalf of the imprisoned and detained, on behalf of merchants and pilgrims, for those that have been sentenced to die, for those who are at war, for women who are struggling in childbirth, or with a miscarriage, and for (the forgiveness of) sins, and for the dead.
The Mass of the Fourteen Holy Helpers, in the Missal according to the Use of Cracow, printed in 1493. |
In the Missal of Bamberg, the collect of the feast reads as follows:
Almighty and merciful God, who didst adorn Thy Saints George, Blaise, Erasmus, Pantaleon, Vitus, Christopher, Denis, Cyriacus, Acacius, Eustace, Giles, Margaret, Barbara and Catherine with special privileges above all others, so that all who in their necessities implore their help, according to the grace of Thy promise, may attain the salutary effect of their pleading, grant to us, we beseech Thee, forgiveness of our sins, and with their merits interceding, deliver us from all adversities, and kindly hear our prayers.
The words “according to the grace of Thy promise” here refer to the tradition that each of these saints received a promise from God that their intercession would be particularly effective on behalf of those who honor the Saint. Thus, in the proper office of Saint Margaret of Antioch, we read the following antiphon, “Let all people magnify the holy name of the Lord, who at the last requests of Saint Margaret promised that, at the instance of her prayer, He would give the rewards of life to those who worthily keep her solemn feast; and may He make us their fellows, and mighty in love, unto His praise for all ages without end.”
The altarpiece of the Fourteen Holy Helpers, from the now-suppressed Heilbronn Abbey in the Baden-Württemberg region of Germany, 1498.
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