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Carrying physical and emotional baggage, U.S. military visit Lourdes
cns ^
| May 19, 2014
| Carol Glatz
Posted on 05/20/2014 2:10:17 PM PDT by NYer
LOURDES, France (CNS) -- About 60 retired or active duty U.S. military personnel packed their uniforms, flags, wheelchairs, canes and the inevitable emotional baggage of their daily struggles to take part in a pilgrimage to Lourdes.
While many of these men and women, who had been injured in some way in the line of duty, went to seek peace and healing from this sacred place, some said they also found enormous and unexpected blessings from the people they encountered on their journey.
The soldiers, together with family members or caregivers, took part in a "Warriors to Lourdes" pilgrimage, sponsored by the U.S. Archdiocese for the Military Services and the Knights of Columbus. The Knights covered the costs for the wounded personnel for the weeklong encounter of prayer, healing and friendship. For many of them, the May 13-19 visit to Lourdes -- where Mary appeared to St. Bernadette Soubirous in 1858 -- was their first pilgrimage ever.
U.S. Sgt. Daniel Woodley, who was wounded in Afghanistan, lights a candle near the grotto at the Shrine of Our Lady of Lourdes in southwestern France. (CNS/Paul Haring)
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Kirsten Sippel-Klug, a physical therapist at the U.S. Army Health Clinic in Stuttgart, Germany, went on the pilgrimage as a volunteer to serve soldiers needing assistance. At first her idea was just to help others on their spiritual journey; she did not think much about her own.
She said she saw going to Lourdes as a service, a way to honor her very Catholic grandmother, and as a way to get a "jumpstart back to an active religious faith" after fighting stage 3 breast cancer. She said the language and cultural barriers at her local German parish have kept her from truly feeling a part of the faith community.
The pilgrimage "feels like a homecoming," she said, because she has been able to attend Mass in English, and she went to confession for the first time in 30 years. "The first thing the priest said to me was 'Welcome back,' which was a super-smart first line."
"Right now the door is open, I've stepped in and I have a lot of questions" about the church's teachings and how they stand up to her more science-oriented mindset.
"I'm your average lapsed Catholic and I'm so glad I did it. It's a beautiful way back into the church," she said. "I want to come back next year and keep coming back to serve" and reflect.
U.S. Army Maj. Derrick Mitchell said long deployments overseas mean spiritual life is "just you and God"; going to church and Scripture studies and discussions are nearly impossible.
Since he returned stateside, he's been seeking greater closeness to God with his church, and he saw the pilgrimage as an opportunity for "spiritual uplifting and renewal."
As a member of an African Methodist Episcopal church near Fort Bragg, North Carolina, Mitchell said he was learning about the significance of lighting candles, the Eucharist and the veneration of Our Lady in Catholicism.
Though the rituals were unfamiliar and new, "the story behind it is the same," he said. "It's all about love and taking care of your brother."
"In the military, we definitely believe in covering the other guy's back, looking out for him, just like Jesus believed that the stronger should look out for the weaker."
The warriors pilgrimage "has taught us about love and to (find) the good in the other no matter where you are" in life and what culture you belong to. "We all have that commonality."
Army Capt. Pamela Duggins, who served in Iraq, had seen the importance of a pilgrimage to Mecca for Muslims during her time in the Middle East. She said when a friend gave her a brochure about the "Warriors to Lourdes" event and she saw a religious pilgrimage "exists for Christians, I was like, 'Oh my God, seriously? I want to experience that.'"
"I wanted to renew my faith, and my faith is pretty strong, but sometimes you want to be around people who are seeking the same thing," said the officer, who retired to Arizona on medical disability.
She said she had come with a clear idea of what she wanted from God, but instead she "got something completely different."
"And what's so amazing is it turns out that ends up being exactly what I needed and you don't realize it at first because we're so busy thinking, 'No, this is what I want.'"
After talking to the many men and women on the trip who were going through even bigger challenges, "I wondered, 'Why was I complaining?'" Sharing stories and experiences, "you realize people have gone through the same thing and gotten through it."
Facing a string of difficulties, Duggins credits her Christian faith with keeping her alive and getting her through each day, "one day at a time."
Even though she's read about the Lord's Passion "thousands of times," taking part in the Way of the Cross procession in Lourdes, where "you see it laid out, stage by stage" before life-sized statues depicting Jesus' passion and death on the cross, really hit home for her, she said.
Referring to the crosses every person carries in life, she said Jesus "keeps telling us each and every day just to leave it, 'I got it. I got it.' And all we have to do is just turn around and leave it at the foot of the cross and he's going to take it all."
Lt. Col. Theresia Pawlowski, a U.S. Army officer of the Secretary of Defense working out of Fort Belvoir, Virginia, said she hoped the pilgrimage would help the soldiers who are at a crossroads in their careers -- those who don't know yet whether their medical situations will lead them to early retirement or reassignment.
She was praying people learn to "not depend on their own strength and find out the will of God."
TOPICS: Catholic; Prayer
KEYWORDS: france; lourdes; military; oll
Rosary Miracle at Hiroshima
On August 6, 1945 the first nuclear bomb ever used was detonated over Hiroshima, Japan, killing 140,000 people. Everything within a mile of the blast was annihilated with nothing left standing, no survivors.
Yet, just eight blocks from ground zero (to be exact 1 kilometer or 6/10 of a mile) there was a two story house left standing intact with no damage to it, not even the windows were broken. When inquiry was made as to what was different about the building it was discovered that there was a community of eight Jesuit priests living there who said the Rosary each day.
Fr. Hubert Schiffer who headed the community was virtually untouched by the nuclear blast with no radiation found in his body, and he publicly testified to this miracle at the Eucharistic Congress in Philadelphia in 1976. According to Dr. Stephen Rinehart, a nuclear physicist with the U.S. Department of Defense who had studied this phenomenon intently, they should have been dead in a flash. In his commentary on the Hiroshima blast he states:
"Their residence should still have been utterly destroyed (temp; 2000 F and air blast pressures; 100 psi). In contrast, unreinforced masonry or brick walls (representative of commercial construction) are destroyed at 3 psi, which will also cause car damage and burst windows. At 10 psi, a human will experience severe lung and heart damage, burst eardrums and at 20 psi your limbs can be blown off. Your head will be blown off by 40 psi and no residential or unreinforced commercial construction would be left standing. At 80 psi even reinforced concrete is heavily damaged and no human would be alive because your skull would be crushed. All the cotton clothes would be on fire at 350 F (probably at 275 F) and your lungs would be inoperative within a minute breathing air (even for a few seconds) at these temperatures.
"There are no physical laws to explain why the Jesuits were untouched in the Hiroshima air blast. There is no other actual or test data where a structure such as this was not totally destroyed at this standoff distance by an atomic weapon. All who were at this range from the epicenter should have received enough radiation to be dead within at most a matter of minutes if nothing else happened to them. There is no known way to design a uranium-235 atomic bomb, which could leave such a large discrete area intact while destroying everything around it immediately outside the fireball...
"From a scientific viewpoint, what happened to those Jesuits at Hiroshima still defies all human logic from the laws of physics as understood today (or at any time in the future). It must be concluded that some other (external) force was present whose power and/or capability to transform energy and matter as it relates to humans is beyond current comprehension."
The Rosary miracle was intended as a lesson for the world, especially the people of the last times who would be subject to increasing calamities and the effects of war, nuclear accidents, etc.
"We believe that we survived because we were living the Message of Fatima. We lived and prayed the Rosary daily in that home." - the Jesuit priests
1
posted on
05/20/2014 2:10:17 PM PDT
by
NYer
To: Tax-chick; GregB; Berlin_Freeper; SumProVita; narses; bboop; SevenofNine; Ronaldus Magnus; tiki; ...
2
posted on
05/20/2014 2:10:38 PM PDT
by
NYer
("You are a puff of smoke that appears briefly and then disappears." James 4:14)
To: NYer
3
posted on
05/20/2014 2:30:30 PM PDT
by
Berlin_Freeper
(You can't be passive and moral.)
To: NYer
Thank you for posting the article!
To: NYer
I would love to go to Lourdes.
5
posted on
05/20/2014 2:44:31 PM PDT
by
kitkat
(STORM HEAVEN WITH PRAYERS FOR OUR COUNTRY)
To: Berlin_Freeper
I listened to the podcast, thanks. I couldn’t catch Robert’s last name. Do you know it?
6
posted on
05/20/2014 3:07:15 PM PDT
by
bronxville
(Margaret Sanger - “We do not want word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population,Â)
To: NYer
7
posted on
05/20/2014 3:07:40 PM PDT
by
bronxville
(Margaret Sanger - “We do not want word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population,Â)
To: bronxville
8
posted on
05/20/2014 3:19:17 PM PDT
by
Berlin_Freeper
(You can't be passive and moral.)
To: cindy-true-supporter
9
posted on
05/20/2014 3:40:00 PM PDT
by
Albion Wilde
("The commenters are plenty but the thinkers are few." -- Walid Shoebat)
To: NYer
Great post. Thank you. I wasn’t aware of the Military pilgrimage nor of the miracle at Hiroshima. If we can continue to make God’s message known, we will continue to have the hope we’ll need to survive and conquer our world’s current preoccupation with evil.
10
posted on
05/20/2014 3:49:07 PM PDT
by
MSSC6644
To: NYer
**”Right now the door is open, I’ve stepped in and I have a lot of questions” about the church’s teachings and how they stand up to her more science-oriented mindset.
“I’m your average lapsed Catholic and I’m so glad I did it. It’s a beautiful way back into the church,” she said. “I want to come back next year and keep coming back to serve” and reflect.**
Sounds like a couple of re-verts to me.
11
posted on
05/20/2014 3:59:31 PM PDT
by
Salvation
("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
To: Berlin_Freeper
12
posted on
05/20/2014 8:07:29 PM PDT
by
bronxville
(Margaret Sanger - “We do not want word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population,Â)
To: bronxville
13
posted on
05/20/2014 10:19:51 PM PDT
by
Berlin_Freeper
(You can't be passive and moral.)
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