Jul 25, 2011
Catholics celebrate the feast day of St. James the Greater on July 25. For millennia, scholars have lacked detailed evidence on the career of this apostle except for a handful of passages in the New Testament. But what little is known still bears much fruit for men looking for a role model on how to live as a faithful follower of God.
Called on the job
St. James was a fisherman, at work on the Sea of Galilee with his brother John and their father, Zebedee, when we first meet him in the Gospel of St. Matthew. After Jesus had first called brothers Peter and Andrew, he walked further and saw the father and his two sons mending their nets. The Lord called to the brothers, and together James and John left their nets, the boat, their father, and followed Christ (cf. Mt 4:18-22).
Men today work longer hours than their counterparts did just a generation ago. Most working husbands and fathers look to fishing now more for relaxation rather than income. But regardless of their line of work, or how much it pays, Jesus calls all men to follow him always in what they do professionally. Men, like St. James, need only to listen and act to the call on the job.