Posted on 09/22/2001 6:04:00 PM PDT by Cultural Jihad
Yeah, you're right. Us Catholic Italians are freaks.
No. The liquification of the blood can be accomplished a couple of different ways besides miraculous occurrence.
I don't necessarily believe or disbelieve the liquifaction.
But the liquification has led this community in Naples to tie it to good luck.
That's superstition, which is, I'm afraid, what this whole liquification is, since the Vatican, in 600 years, has not verified the validity of this as a miracle.
Heck...they go to Costco and buy the whole store out of whatever they need. My first experience with Mormons was as I related. Neighbor in an RV park in Vegas came in with his pick-up truck filled with soda. Naturally, I was curious. And he didn't see what I found odd about what he was doing with all that pop either. So we were even. Learned a little more when I bought commerical property in a Mormon town in AZ. Can't say we didn't have our rough spots but once I found out what the deal was, and how it was much like the New England town I was raised in (which kept out Catholics and Jews), we got along fine.
On 11 February 1858, around the time of her first Communion, she was gathering firewood with her sisters when a beautiful lady appeared to her in a cave. She appeared a total of 18 times.
During the apparitions Bernadette was persecuted by the authorities and also by her family. Before the last apparition the Lady said to her " I am the Immaculate Conception" ,she asked her to pray for sinners and to have a Chapel built near the grotto. After the last apparition a spring of miraculous waters sprang from the ground.
A great basilica was built in that place, where millions of pilgrims honor Our Lady every year.
Bernadette became a nun and died at the age of thirty six, her body remains incorrupt.
The Work of God Apostolate
www.theworkofgod.org
There are many miracles which aren't officially approved by the church but are nonetheless worthy of belief. For example, the apparitions at Medjugorie aren't official, yet the faithful are encouraged to make a pilgimage to receive grace. There is a book by Joan Carroll Cruz entitles Relics and it has a chapter about the liquification phenonmenon. The book contains the Nihil Obstat and Imprimitur, which are official declarations that the contents are free from doctrinal error and the faithful can choose to believe or not.
That sounds like a sight not to be missed.
Must be awe inspiring.
Hehehe. If Madame Cleo can guess my credit card number and expiration date, she is welcome to use it. ;)
How much more beautiful must be the Creator of beauty than beauty itself!
I can receive grace praying to the Blessed Mother in my living room.
I'm sure the faithful ARE encouraged to go to Medjugorie.
By the residents of Medjugorie. Tourists are good for business.
Excuse my cynicism, but I witnessed one of these "unofficial" miracles out in Lubbock, Texas. Seven thousand Mexicans gathered daily for two weeks to witness the Blessed Mother in the sun.
YOu ever looked directly at the sun? You might imagine you're seeing all kinds of things.
The Bishop of San Angelo, Bishop Michael Sheehan (now Archbishop of Santa Fe and a personal friend) endured untold abuse because he wouldn't go out to the field and sanction the event as a miracle.
BTW, an imprimatur can be given by any bishop, any where.
There's always next September 19th. Let us know what you see. ;)
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