Feast of Saints Peter and Paul

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It has always been a curiosity of mine as to why each of these Saints don’t have their own feast day since they are both huge figures in the early Church on their own merits. Can anyone help me understand why they have a joint feast day?

Thanks,

John
 
A priest mentioned this briefly in his Homily yesterday. I will most likely do it injustice, but here I go:

They are celebrated together (1) partly because their combined feast is a Holy Day of Obligation (though not obligatory in many places) and (2) their apostolic lives, accomplishments, and martyrdom together helped found the Church.

The Church would not have gotten off to the start that it did without the extraordinary efforts of these two. St. Peter at his chair, leading the Church from Antioch and eventually Rome and St. Paul traveling around evangelizing and catechizing the nations.

Their lives together remind us of the founding of the earthy Church, after Christ’s Resurrection and Ascension.

I pray this helps.

God Bless!
 
A priest mentioned this briefly in his Homily yesterday. I will most likely do it injustice, but here I go:

They are celebrated together (1) partly because their combined feast is a Holy Day of Obligation (though not obligatory in many places) and (2) their apostolic lives, accomplishments, and martyrdom together helped found the Church.

The Church would not have gotten off to the start that it did without the extraordinary efforts of these two. St. Peter at his chair, leading the Church from Antioch and eventually Rome and St. Paul traveling around evangelizing and catechizing the nations.

Their lives together remind us of the founding of the earthy Church, after Christ’s Resurrection and Ascension.

I pray this helps.

God Bless!
Phil,
You did the topic perfect justice.

Thanks for the info.

Mary.
 
From Augustine’s Sermon #295:
On a single day the memory of the sufferings of both these Apostles is celebrated, though they suffered on separate days, but by the spirit and the closeness of their suffering they constitute one. Peter went first, and Paul followed soon after him.
 
Also keep in mind the following:

  1. *]Other than Our Lady, St. John the Baptist, and St. Joseph, no other saints are celebrated with solemnities - the highest rank of feast. The feast of Sts. Peter and Paul is a solemnity which means it is celebrated like a Sunday (Gloria, Credo).
    *]It is a venerable and ancient tradition to celebrate these two great saints together as they are jointly honored as the “Princes of the Apostles”. The early Fathers speak of their blood (shed in Christ’s name) jointly consecrating the city of Rome.
    *]Both St. Peter and St. Paul also have their own separate feasts: the feast of the Chair of St. Peter (Feb 22) and the feast of the Conversion of St. Paul (Jan 25). Only Our Lady, St. Joseph, St. John the Baptist, and Sts. Peter and Paul have more than one feast on the universal calendar.
 
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