Few tales from the Crusades are as strange & inspiring as that of the Leper Knights.
Scarred in body but burning with faith, these warriors bore both their Cross & a disease feared by all, yet they rode into battle undaunted.
The Order of the Leper Knights – a 🧵✝️
To understand how the Leper Knights came to be, we must first understand the medieval Christian attitude toward leprosy.
It was a terrible disease, but it was also seen as a "sacred disease" with religious meanings attributed to it.
Leprosy (Hansen’s disease) is caused by a bacterial infection that leads to skin lesions, nerve damage, and gradual disfigurement.
Over time, it results in loss of limb control and a slow physical decline. It was an ancient and endemic disease in medieval Europe. Out of fear of contagion, lepers were often treated as outcasts in society.
But Christianity brought a change in these attitudes: Jesus Christ healed a leper, extending His grace to the rejected. At that time, leprosy was incurable, and that healing was seen as a miracle.
Treating lepers with kindness came to be seen as a model of Christian love. Charity toward lepers was highly respected.
Some even believed that lepers were marked by God for salvation, and that showing them mercy would win God’s favor.
Thus, leprosy came to be viewed as a “sacred disease.” It was a sickness that humbled even the proud and the rich, bringing them closer to God.
It also became a reminder that Christ, by assuming human flesh, became the most despised and rejected among men.
Saint Lazarus was the patron saint of lepers. In the Bible, he appears as a poor beggar “covered in sores,” believed to be a reference to leprosy.
The Order of Saint Lazarus adopted a green cross on a white background as its emblem.
The Order of Saint Lazarus received many donations from rulers and elites of the Crusader kingdoms. It began as a purely hospitaller order, caring for lepers, and followed the Rule of Saint Augustine. But it eventually evolved into a military order.
The Crusader states were constantly in need of manpower. Eventually, the Knights of Saint Lazarus also took part in battles.
The order welcomed knights who had contracted leprosy, giving them the chance to continue fighting in the Crusades.
The Livre au Roi, the legal code of the Kingdom of Jerusalem (c. 1198–1205), declared that a knight with leprosy should join the Order of Saint Lazarus, “where it is established that those with such disease should be.”
In 1255, Pope Alexander IV praised the Order of Saint Lazarus as a “convent of nobles, active knights, and others, both healthy and leprous, whose purpose is to expel the enemies of the Christian name.”
The prestige of the order was rising.
Leprosy has a slow incubation period and can go undiagnosed for up to seven years before severe disability sets in. Many could still fight.
King Baldwin IV, for example, was a skilled horseman who learned to ride despite his disability. He was courageous and personally fought in battle.
Due to a labor shortage in the Crusader states, leper knights who could still perform basic combat roles were valuable on the battlefield. But there was also a religious aspect, due to the status of leprosy as a “sacred disease.”
Leper crusader knights were seen as sufferers chosen by God, going into battle to attain martyrdom. They were nicknamed the “Living Dead.” They developed a reputation for fighting to the death and never surrendering.
The Knights of Saint Lazarus fought in the Battle of La Forbie in 1244, where they fought to the death. After the crusader army was defeated, it was reported that “all the leper knights of the house of Saint Lazarus were killed.”
The Knights of Saint Lazarus also fought in the Battle of Mansurah in 1250. In 1253, Pope Innocent IV noted that “all the leper knights of the said house were miserably killed by the enemies of the faith.”
It seems the leper knights fought as an independent force on the battlefield and stayed away from the main army to avoid infecting the other troops. The chronicler Jean de Joinville mentioned a raid by leper knights near Ramleh in 1252.
The last battle of the leper knights was the Siege of Acre in 1291. The Order of Saint Lazarus managed to gather 25 knights for one final battle. They fought for the Crusader states to the end, and all of them perished that day.
But the stories and legends about the leper knights lived on. In 1323, a bishop recalled how “the knight brothers and others of the said hospital were many times horribly killed, and their houses in Jerusalem and in many other places in the Holy Land were devastated.”
After the fall of Acre and the end of the Crusader states in the Holy Land, the Order of Saint Lazarus was reduced to Europe.
The order abandoned all military activity. The days of the crusader leper warriors had come to an end.
But their legend lives on for eternity.
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You should have a devotion to Saint George, the dragon slayer, especially nowadays.
Once, he slew a dragon.
Today, we face many dragons: relativism, tyranny, spiritual apathy.
Here’s why the devil fears St George & why we need to reignite devotion to him - a🧵✝️🇬🇪
A city is terrorized by a dragon. To appease it, the people offer sheep, then eventually their own children.
When the king’s daughter is chosen, a lone Christian knight appears.
Saint George slays the beast and proclaims Christ to the stunned citizens.
The symbolism:
>The dragon = Satan, tyranny, demonic systems.
>The princess = innocent souls, society held hostage.
>The people = a compromised, frightened world.
>Saint George = the baptized warrior who refuses to bow to fear or evil, and who fights back.
Why does nearly every Catholic country have a shrine to Saint Michael?
From Italy to Mexico
From France to the Philippines
From Ireland to Ethiopia
Saint Michael appears wherever the Church fights for survival.
Here’s why - a 🧵
Saint Michael doesn’t just protect individuals, he protects the Church & the children of God
That’s why the Church has built shrines, monasteries, and chapels to him for over a thousand years.
And most of them aren’t built in cities.
They’re built on mountain-tops, cliffs, islands, and high places, like heavenly outposts in the war against darkness.
Monte Gargano, Italy (490 AD)
The First Michaelic Apparition
A man’s bull disappears. He finds it kneeling in a cave. He shoots an arrow at it, but it turns in midair and wounds him instead.
After listening to him, the bishop called for three days of prayer and penance at the end of which St. Michael the Archangel appeared to him in a dream to ask him to dedicate the cave to Christian worship, which happened on 29 September 493, after 2 other appearances. A fourth apparition took place in 1656 when the city of Monte Sant'Angelo defeated the plague.
It becomes the first shrine to Saint Michael in Western Europe, still active today.
It has witches, talking animals, and no mention of “church.”
But it may be one of the clearest depictions of the Gospel ever put to film.
Here’s the truth behind the Christian heart of The Chronicles of Narnia - a 🧵✝️
Narnia was written by C.S. Lewis, one of the 20th century’s greatest Christian writers and apologists.
A former atheist who converted after conversations with J.R.R. Tolkien, Lewis became a devout Anglican, and saw storytelling as a way to baptize the imagination.
He called Narnia a “supposal”, not an allegory, but “suppose Christ came into a world like Narnia…”
Make no mistake: Aslan the Lion is a clear Christ-figure.
>He is the Son of the Emperor Beyond the Sea
>He is prophesied to return and defeat evil
>He gives his life in place of a traitor
>He dies willingly, and rises again
His death on the Stone Table and resurrection mirror the Passion of Christ.
“When a willing victim who had committed no treachery was killed in a traitor’s stead… Death itself would start working backward.”
No religion on earth has ever honored women as much as Christianity does.
A bold claim? Not so much. Let’s dive into why this statement is 100% true through the lenses of Apostolic Christianity - a🧵✝️
Christ included women in his ministery
>He revealed He was the Messiah firstly to the Samaritan woman at the well (John 4).
>He welcomed Mary of Bethany to “sit at His feet” as a disciple (Luke 10,39). A role traditionally reserved for men.
>Women were the first witnesses of the Resurrection, the cornerstone of our faith (Matthew 28, 1-10)
Countless Christian women have changed and shaped society for the better.
Isabel la Catolica, Queen of Castille, finished the Reconquista
St. Monica’s prayers converted St. Augustine.
St. Macrina the Younger shaped the minds of her brothers, Sts. Basil and Gregory of Nyssa.
St. Catherine of Siena advised popes and reformed the Church.
Not to mention the 4 female doctors of the Church: Hildegard of Bingen, Catherine of Siena, Teresa of Ávila, Thérèse of Lisieux.