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Saint's Blood Liquefies - Good Omen for the World
Reuters ^ | 09/20/2001 | Reuters

Posted on 09/22/2001 6:04:00 PM PDT by Cultural Jihad

Thursday September 20 7:22 AM ET

Saint's Blood Liquefies - Good Omen for the World

NAPLES, Italy (Reuters) - Thousands of Neapolitans crammed into the city's cathedral Wednesday to witness the liquefaction of their patron saint's blood -- a good omen for Naples and the world, according to the faithful.

After an hour of prayer, Archbishop Michele Giordano held aloft the silver and glass vial purported to contain the dried blood of Saint Gennaro and thousands craned their necks to see if the blood had indeed liquefied.

The substance usually turns to liquid twice a year -- on September 19, the saint's feast day, and on the first Saturday in May. In the past, disaster has struck when the blood has remained dry.

``This is an important sign of hope not only for the city but also for the United States following the attacks,'' Antonio Bassolino, the head of the Campania region which includes Naples, declared after the ceremony.

``Like all Neapolitans, I hoped deeply that a good sign would come quickly. It is always a very emotional moment, but this year it was particularly so, given the difficult times for the city and international events,'' he said.

Naples was struck by flash floods last week which left two people dead and more than $150 million in damage.

The ceremony, which Neapolitans revere as a miracle, was also attended by the American consul to Naples, Clyde Bishop, who leant forward and kissed the vial after it was shown the blood had liquefied.

During the prayers, Archbishop Giordano called on Saint Gennaro for protection ``for America, Italy, and the whole world,'' and asked the congregation to think particularly of those Neapolitans who live in New York.

Some Neapolitans, traditionally very superstitious, fear disaster may strike the city if the blood of the fourth-century martyr does not turn to liquid.

Disaster has struck at least five times after the blood failed to liquefy, including in November 1980 when some 3,000 people died in a massive earthquake that struck southern Italy.

Scientists have confirmed the substance inside the closed vial is blood but cannot explain why it turns to liquid.


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To: rockfish59
i see the religious posts draw in the texas dumbasses!

Careful, rockfish ... you don't want to go down that road.

161 posted on 09/24/2001 8:25:40 AM PDT by al_c
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To: patent
< /explicit on >

Please add me to your bump list.

< /explicit off >

162 posted on 09/24/2001 8:27:42 AM PDT by Petronski
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To: ASTM366
The Holy Bible warns us about foolery like this in many scriptures. What will Satan come up with next?

That's a good question, and a better rebuttal than the rationalistic attempts to explain away the phenomena. Keep in mind:

Matthew 12:25-27 If Satan drives out Satan, he is divided against himself. How then can his kingdom stand?

So the question is, does good fruit come from this miracle? If so, then Satan would be "driving out Satan." This is one criteria used by the Church to determine the authenticity of a miracle. The other criteria is to determine whether any teaching associated with the phenomena contradicts public revelation. If so, then the phenomena would not be from God. Because God cannot contradict Himself.

163 posted on 09/24/2001 8:31:30 AM PDT by Aquinasfan
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To: Cultural Jihad
Great photo of Bernadette. Almost chose that name for one of my daughters.
164 posted on 09/24/2001 10:30:17 AM PDT by Aquinasfan
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To: AmericanCheeseFood
John 3:16,Acts 2:1-4, Acts 15:13, Eph 6:10-17, Mark 16:20

Don't forget Mark 16:15: "He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved;" and

John 6:52-54 "Then Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, ye have no life in you."

165 posted on 09/24/2001 10:46:50 AM PDT by Aquinasfan
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To: al_c
sorry, should have said SOME of the tejas dumbasses! lol!

i miss del rio!

166 posted on 09/24/2001 4:27:57 PM PDT by rockfish59
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To: eastsider
Assuming you believe in the miracle of a six-day creation, what need does it serve to create an old-looking universe?

We wouldn't live long on a molten planet. Also, the stars were given for signs. When Mount St. Helens, the local university geologists said the geologic changes would normally have taken 10 thousand years. So much for "old" theory.

167 posted on 09/24/2001 6:49:38 PM PDT by aimhigh
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To: JMJ333, askel5
I did a bit of research on E. Michael Jones, and not all Catholics are comfortable with his positions. It is true that there are people inside the church who seek to do her harm. You have, however, interested me in him and I will be picking up a copy of the book you recommended.

I'm glad to hear it. I owe allegiance to ideas, and less so people. I do not know that much about Jones, but his reporting on Med. is extremely credible, and jives with what others have told me. As to your link. Jones was on tenure track at Notre Dame, but claims to have (been) left because of his views on sexuality and the pill, which coincided a lot more with those of JP2 than the faculty at ND. That someone coming from the right says what he says makes him more, and not less credible.

He continually harps on the discussions that occured in the American church after V2, and makes much of discussions between Fr. Hesburgh (ND's president) and leaders of the WASP business community, in which it was discussed that Catholics would leave their intellectual ghetto and abandon their distinctiveness in exchange for the acceptance they had previously been denied. In his opinion, part of this affected the discussions leading up to the promulgation of Humanae Vitae, with a Rockefeller jetting with Hesburgh to Rome to implore Paul VI not to ban the pill etc. In his opinion, and I think few doubt it, a permissive sexual atmossphere is incompatible with the Catholicism of yore. Whether events on the ground preceded colliquoys among America's movers and shakers, Catholic or not, or vice a versa is open to debate, and it does not seem to me that Jones advocates the hard core "conspiratorial" line that is attributed to him. My *hunch* is that there is more to the link than is reported. I'll add more later. As for harm, so true, all we can do is act in good faith, and use good judgement.

168 posted on 09/24/2001 11:55:42 PM PDT by a history buff
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To: JMJ333
I must get to bed. But yes, I have read some of his apocalpytic writings, enough to know that it has little to do with what I deem healthy spirituality and mysticism, using the criteria of St. John of the Cross. The alleged inaccuracies I have from the book recommended above. IMO he's a Catholic amalgam of the Delphic oracle and the weekly world news.
169 posted on 09/24/2001 11:58:37 PM PDT by a history buff
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To: a history buff
I read parts of a book a few years ago by Father Gobbi entitled "To The Priests Our Lady's Beloved Sons" which is distributed by "The Marian Movement Of Priests." I didn't really see anything that was against doctrine, coupled with the fact that the clergy [et al] has remained silent for 25 years by not speaking up against these said false claims. Perhaps some of the original text was edited out?

My pastor is a member of the Marion movement. I have a lot of respect for him, so you can see why I was skeptical. I will give the book a chance, and keep an open mind. :)

170 posted on 09/25/2001 12:34:21 AM PDT by JMJ333
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To: Theresa
I went back and am having to tear apart Father Gobbi, so I will do the same for Medjugorie. I respect your opinion. Do you have any good links?

Heck...humility isn't that difficult. ;)

171 posted on 09/25/2001 12:43:25 AM PDT by JMJ333
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To: aimhigh
I understood your post to mean that miracles involving the transformation of matter satisfied a need, and I was merely asking what need the miracle of a six-day universe satisfied. If I misunderstood you, please forgive me.
172 posted on 09/25/2001 1:12:57 AM PDT by eastsider
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To: sinkspur
I'm a believer in miracles, but only those that have been thoroughly investigated and affirmed by the Vatican.

Care to name a few?

173 posted on 09/25/2001 1:28:37 AM PDT by PRND21
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To: Aquinasfan
Not that these acts really bring one to salvation but they are important .To say that you'd have to say that everyone Jesus came across (I.E. Mark 5:1-20, the first evangelist) and several other figures in the Bible flunk out of the Kingdom (which they don't = P ) .

Needless to say it's grace, not works, that brings a man to salvation . It takes repentence (to turn away from) of sin then acceptence of Christ Jesus as Lord .

Cheese .

174 posted on 09/25/2001 1:44:02 AM PDT by AmericanCheeseFood
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To: JMJ333 a history buff
Thanks for the bump.

E. Michael Jones is another whose work has prompted my personally contacting a writer to learn more. I have no reason as yet to find him at all discreditable.

175 posted on 09/25/2001 3:51:20 AM PDT by Askel5
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To: AmericanCheeseFood
Needless to say it's grace, not works, that brings a man to salvation . It takes repentence (to turn away from) of sin then acceptence of Christ Jesus as Lord .

I don't argue with that. Salvation by grace alone and "Repent and believe!"

But this does not logically rule out the need for the Sacraments and the Church.

From "Catholic Answers:"

We read: "Therefore let us leave the elementary teachings of Christ and go on to maturity, not laying again the foundation of repentance from acts that lead to death, and of faith in God, instruction about baptisms, the laying on of hands, the resurrection of the dead, and eternal judgment" (Heb. 6:1)

Notice how in this passage we are walked through the successive stages of the Christian journey--repentance, faith, baptism, confirmation, resurrection, and judgment. This passage encapsulates the Christian's journey toward heaven and thus gives what theologians call the order of salvation or the ordo salutis. It thus well qualifies as "the elementary teachings" of the Christian faith.

The laying on of hands mentioned in the passage clearly must be confirmation: The other kinds of the imposition of hands (for ordination and for healing) are not done to each and every Christian and thus could scarcely qualify as basic teachings which form part of the order of salvation.

_______________________

This is confirmed by the constant teachings of the early Church Fathers, as is the Eucharist. See:

http://www.catholic.com/ANSWERS/tracts/eucharis.htm

176 posted on 09/25/2001 7:52:36 AM PDT by Aquinasfan
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To: a history buff
re: #168

Jones did not work for Notre Dame; he worked for St. Mary's, which is a separate institution and makes its own decisions about tenure. And Hesburgh hasn't been the president of ND for several years.

177 posted on 09/25/2001 7:52:47 AM PDT by independentmind
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To: independentmind
You're right, it was late last night. They're both in South Bend, and somehow I had the sense there was some connection. I mentioned Hesburgh because Jones does so, tirelessly.
178 posted on 09/25/2001 8:53:54 AM PDT by a history buff
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To: JMJ333
I bothered to check your links.

The following is to be said.

1) EWTN does not have completely clean hands in promoting this crowd; a person or people writing Mother Angelica telling her their lives have been destroyed by indisputably phony mystics she promoted never got an answer back.

2)The second link emanates from people with pecuniary interests in the apparition industry, and wrongly states that the bishop spoke as a private person. He did so ex officio, and thus his "private opinion" is about as meaningful as that of Alan Greenspan's on inflation. Link #2 promotes Garabandal, and certified fraud.

The Zadar declaration was made at the beginning of a genocidal war in which Croatian nationalism, heavily promoted by the Med. crowd, played a crucial role.

The more one reads both sides of the story, the bigger the travesty seems.

179 posted on 09/26/2001 8:25:56 AM PDT by a history buff
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To: a history buff
I already said mea culpa to Theresa! I promised to learn more about medjugorie and father gobbi! Eh--humility isn't that difficult. ;)

Still, regarding the liquification of blood--I don't think it is contrary to our faith. I do believe in miracles.

180 posted on 09/26/2001 9:14:38 AM PDT by JMJ333
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