The Angelic Warfare devotion, also called the Cord of St. Thomas, is named after a supernatural event in the life of St. Thomas. When St. Thomas entered the Dominican Order, his family — especially his mother, the Countess Theodora — was very opposed to his choice of vocation. They were not opposed to his becoming a priest, but they were of noble blood, related to the royal houses of France, Sicily, Aragon and Germany. They wanted him to become a churchman who was powerful in the political sense.
Thomas, however, could not be dissuaded from his desire to join the friars of St. Dominic, a relatively new and untried group who were poor and possessed little political influence.
St. Thomas asked his superiors to get him away from his family’s efforts to hinder his vocation. They decided to send him from Naples, near
his birthplace in Aquino, to Paris for his formation.
Frustrated in her desire to keep him from entering the Dominicans, Thomas’ mother ordered her two sons, Landolf and Reginald, both knights, to bring her son home in order to dissuade him. They captured him on the way to Paris, and Thomas became the virtual prisoner of his family. His brothers tried for several years to change his mind.
When argument would not prevail, these hardened soldiers decided on a direct course of action. They sent a woman of ill repute into
St. Thomas’ room to tempt him away from his vocation by causing him to break his vow of chastity. Thomas immediately took ...