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Holy Souls Crusade . " It is a holy and wholesome thought to pray for the dead that they may be loosed from their sins" (2 Mac 12:46) |
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Every Mass is a celebration of this special love of Jesus giving himself for us on the cross. From time to time God, in his mercy, reminds us of this love of Jesus who gave himself us. One example is the miraculous crucifix in a church in Limpias, near Santander, in northern Spain. The beautifully painted crucifix is six feet tall and is a meditation on the final moments of Jesus’ agony on the cross. The first of the miraculous events happened in August 1914 when a monk cleaning the face of the figure observed that the eyes which were turned upwards towards heaven were gradually closing and remained shut for five minutes. He fell from the ladder to floor. He examined the crucifix later and confirmed that there was no hidden mechanism and that the china eyes were firmly fixed and could not be moved. No further incidents were reported until 1919. There was a mission in the parish in March 1919 and on 30 March two Capuchin priests were hearing confessions when children told them the eyes of Christ had closed. Adults confirmed that the eyes were opening and closing, that Jesus’ gaze turned from side to side, and that perspiration was covering the figure’s neck and chest. During the first week in August 1919 Fr Valentin Incio, joined a group of pilgrims and reported: “At first Our Lord appeared to be alive...His eyes were full of life and looked about in different directions....Now came the most touching moment of all. Jesus looked at all of us, but so quietly and kindly, so expressively, so lovingly and divinely, that we fell on our knees and wept and adored Christ.... He moved his lips gently as if he were speaking or praying. At the same time a lady beside me saw Jesus on the cross trying to move his arms and get them loose from the cross.” Many doctors submitted statements. Dr Penamaria described the laboured breathing caused by contraction of the neck and heart muscles, and the struggle to be free from the cross which showed clearly the agony that the nails caused in his hands at each movement. He described the indrawing of breath like one struggling for air, and the blood which flowed over the lip to Jesus’ “quivering tongue” and the final moment when his head sank limply on his chest, and he expired. The whole manifestation witnessed by this doctor took over two hours. On 18 June 1921 people observed “Jesus began to pull at the shoulders, to writhe and bend as a man does when nailed alive to a cross. Everything was in motion, only the hands and feet remained fast....This whole scene of the dying Saviour lasted from the Holy Holy of the Mass until after the priest’s communion.” Pilgrims began to arrive from near and far. Royals visited Limpias, as well as Spanish bishops and Cardinals. Archbishops also arrived from Mexico, Peru, the Philippines, Cuba and other foreign nations. I have had the privilege of celebrating Mass in that church for a group of pilgrims (2003). More than 8,000 testimonies to the miraculous events have been made, many sworn on oath. They were made by Religious and lay people, even unbelievers and atheists, from all professions. Apart from the miraculous events, many miraculous cures were reported, estimated at over 1,000 in July 1921. Most of these cures occurred when pilgrims returned home, after their pilgrimages, and made use of pious objects which had been touched to the crucifix. In 1920 the Bishop of Santander officially notified Rome of the events and the following year Rome granted a plenary indulgence for those visiting the crucifix so the Church has recognised the extraordinary events that occurred in Limpias. Limpias, Santander, Spain Late Seventeenth Century When entering the sixteenth-century Church of St. Peter, attention is immediately captured by the beautiful life-size figure of the crucified Savior located above the main altar. Arranged on either side of the crucifix, and somewhat below it, are larger-than-life size figures of the Sorrowful Mother and St. John the Apostle. Believed to have been the work of Pedro de Mena, who died in 1693, the crucifix was given to the church by Don Diego de la Piedra Secadura, who had been born at Limpias in 1716. The crucifix is a meditation on the sufferings of Our Lord and is thought
to portray the Crucified in the final moments of His agony. Measuring six
feet tall, the corpus is clothed with a loin cloth that is held in place
with a rope. The feet are one atop the other and are pierced with a single
nail. The index and middle fingers of both pierced hands are extended as
though giving a final blessing. The face of Our Lord is of a particular
beauty, with it's eyes of china looking towards Heaven so that, for the
most part, only the whites of the eyes are visible.
One day in the month of August, 1914, I went into the parish church of Limpias, by order of my friend D. Gregorio Bringas, to fix the electric light over the high altar. In order to work more comfortably I put two large cases on the altar, an on them a ladder, the ends of which I leaned against the wall that serves as a background to the figure of the Crucified One. After I had worked for two hours, in order to rest myself a little I began to clean the figure so that it could be seen more clearly. My head was on a level with the Head of Christ, and at a distance of only a couple of feet from it. It was a lovely day and through the window in the sanctuary a flood of light streamed into the church and lit up the whole altar. As I was gazing at the crucifix with the closest attention, I noticed with astonishment that Our Lord's eyes were gradually closing, and for five minutes I saw them quite closed. Overwhelmed with fright at such an unexpected spectacle, I could still hardly quite believe what I saw, and was about to come down from the ladder. Notwithstanding, my bewilderment was so great that my strength suddenly failed me; I lost my balance, fainted, and fell from the ladder onto the edge of the altar itself and down the steps into the sanctuary. Another Miracle was when Archpriest D. Eduardo Miqueli was celebrating
Holy Mass, both missionaries were occupied in the confessional. Fr. Agatangelo,
however, delivered the day's sermon based on the words "My son, give me
thy heart." (pro.23:26). While he was speaking, a girl of about 12 entered
the confessional of Fr. Jalon and told him the eyes of Christ on the cross
were closed. Thinking that her claim was a product of her imagination,
the priest ignored her claim until other children also came to him with
the same message.
Another apparition took place on Palm Sunday, April 13, 1919, when two prominent men of Limpas approached the altar. Speaking of hallucination and mass hysteria as they looked upon the crucifix, one of them suddenly pointed upward and feel to his knees, crying for mercy and proclaiming his belief in the miracle. On Easter Sunday April 20, in the presence of a group of nuns know as the Daughter of the Cross who conducted a girls school in Limpas. They saw the eyes and lips of Santo Cristo move. Rev. Baron Von Kleist reports that: Many said the Savior looked at them; at some in a kindly manner, and at others gravely, and at yet others with a penetrating and stern glance. Many of them saw tears in His eyes; others noticed that drops of blood ram down from the temples pierced by the crown of thorns; some saw froth on His lips and sweat on His body; others again saw how He turned His eyes from side to side, and let His gaze pass over the whole assembly of people; or how; at the Benediction, He made a movement of the eyes as if giving the bless; how at the same time He moved the thorn- crowned head from on side to the other. Others had the impression that a deep, submissive sigh was wrested from His breast, some believed they saw Him whisper-in short, the most varied manifestations were observed on this crucifix. One of the first to declare his experience to the secular press was the well-known and highly respected D. Adolf Arenaza. His testimony was published May 5, 1919 in the newspaper La Gazeta del Norte, which was published in Bilbao. He reported that he joined a procession going to Limpas in order to visit the crucifix. While looking through his field-glasses he saw the movement of the eyes four times. He further stated that it could not have been and effect of the light nor and hallucination, since people saw the miracles from all parts of the church. He then asked, "Does Our Lord really move His eyes... I am rather of the opinion that He really does move them, for I have seen it myself." Several albums are found in the sacristy of the church of the Limpias.
these contain well over 8,000 testimonies of people who had seen the wonderful
apparitions. Of these 2,500 were sworn on oath.
Finally a report made by a medical student D. Heriberto de la Villa which was published in the paper Del Pueblo Astur on July 8, 1919. Little by little the breast and face became dark blue, the eyes move to the right then the left, upwards and down, the mouth somewhat open, as if He was having breathing difficulty. I also noticed that above the left eyebrow a wound formed, out of which a drop of blood flowed over His eyebrow, and remained stationary by the eye-lids. I believe it is my duty to swear upon oath what I had seen, and I did so in the sacristy of the church. I will conclude with a brief report made by a journalist. After watching the movement of the eyes and mouth he stated: I could perceive two movements of the jawbone, as if He were saying two syllables with His lips. I shut my eyes quite tight and asked myself: "What will He have said?" The answer was not long in coming, for in my innermost self I clearly heard the significant and blessed words, "Love Me!" Perhaps that is why Our Lord performed so many wonders for eyes of believers
and unbelievers. At Limpas He demonstrated the agony of His death and the
extent of His love for us, not only to evoke sentiments of pity and repentance,
but also to ask, no, to plead with us to love Him in return.
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