| Mary's Last Days Spent Here? | 
It doesn't get much more dramatic:  
At    left is a photograph of what    investigators first saw upon reaching what is now widely believed (including    by the official Church) to be the last home of the Blessed Mother, in    Ephesus, Turkey.
It came about through the mystical writings of Anne Catherine    Emmerich -- whose diaries contained an extremely detailed description of where    Mary spent her last days and led two different teams of searchers to the same    spot. (If there is interest, we may lead a pilgrimage here next    summer; for time and again, those who visit say they felt a grace there like    no other. There is even a replica now of the House of Ephesus in New   England.) We have written of this before.
Let's focus on how one team    -- led by a Father Eugene Poulin of Smyrna -- located a truly incomparable    treasure. 
It doesn't get much more dramatic:  
At    left is a photograph of what    investigators first saw upon reaching what is now widely believed (including    by the official Church) to be the last home of the Blessed Mother, in    Ephesus, Turkey.
It came about through the mystical writings of Anne Catherine    Emmerich -- whose diaries contained an extremely detailed description of where    Mary spent her last days and led two different teams of searchers to the same    spot. (If there is interest, we may lead a pilgrimage here next    summer; for time and again, those who visit say they felt a grace there like    no other. There is even a replica now of the House of Ephesus in New    England.) We have written of this before.
Let's focus on how one team    -- led by a Father Eugene Poulin of Smyrna -- located a truly incomparable    treasure. 
Fascinating it is to read how    this priest-scholar --    initially intensely skeptical of Emmerich, even hostile -- came to put stock in    what she had written and with the prayers and prodding of a holy nun named Sister Marie de Mandat-Grancey    eventually turned into    a champion of the discovery!
The incredible events seemed to    start when Father  Poulin, superior of the Vincentian monastery where Sister    Marie lived,    happened on an old book by Emmerich called The Suffering, Passion, and Death of Jesus Christ as he was    looking through his bookcase. This is the book that inspired a recent Passion movie and described the    Crucifixion in tremendous, excruciating detail -- as seen mystically by Emmerich.   
It was not something Father    Poulin had or would have read.
That's when the extraordinary events began.
For this same evening -- when    Father Poulin returned from classes -- Emmerich's book somehow had found its    way back on his desk!
He returned it to the shelf.
But the next evening it was    there again.
Disturbed (was someone playing a    joke?), the scholar now tossed the book across the room to the farthest corner        where it remained for an entire week. Somehow, the houseman wasn't picking it up.    The priest left it there, strangely content with looking on it like so much    litter.
After Mass one day, however, a    sudden, inexplicable, and startling desire arose in Father Poulin to    take a closer look at The Passion. In fact -- oddly enough -- so    strong was the compunction that he felt blood pounding in his veins!
Soon -- more remarkably still    -- he was touting the revelation to    others -- which met with what he feared: the derisive laughter of younger priests who were as    skeptical as he had been.
He talked it over with an elder    priest who did believe and who recommended another Emmerich book - The Life of the Blessed Virgin.- 
Here is where we get to the crux of this remarkable story.
For in this second book of    revelations,  Emmerich had focused on Mary and described the location, views, landmarks,    terrain, and characteristics of the Blessed Mother's last home not so far from    the monastery in Ephesus!
It was virtually a road map to    the site on a hillside overlooking that city and one called Samos.
The revelations were exact --    leading a team directed by Father Poulin (who had fallen ill and couldn't go    himself) to finding the spot on July 29, 1891.  
There was even an    artesian well that Emmerich -- who lived in Germany, and certainly had never    ventured anywhere nearby -- had also depicted.
In fact, it was two Turkish    Muslims [left] who helped the team search and protected them against    brigands.
"He stood still, frozen in    astonishment!" says the book of Father Henry Jung, a priest on the expedition.
They wondered over the gorgeous    terrain, which seemed like God loved it specially. It was mesmerizing.
 Was this where the Blessed    Mother was assumed?
As it turns out, the Church has    long suspected Ephesus as Mary's final residence and as far back as 431 A.D.,    an ecumenical council took place in Ephesus, during which Mary was given the    title "Mother of God" (Theotokos). The meeting was in the Church of the    Virgin Mary, which had been built in the Second Century. 
Noteworthy is the fact that back    then, a church was only dedicated to a person if he or she died in that place.
Meanwhile, after Father Poulin    and the expedition he had sent found the house,  a report was sent to Rome    where Pope Leo    XIII discontinued for all time indulgence formerly attached to the "tomb" of    Mary in Jerusalem and instead now obviously favored Ephesus as the true last    place for Mary. His successor, Pope Pius X, even    met with Sister Marie.
Fascinating stuff! Not just for    the history buff, but those interested in the Blessed Mother and devotion. As    one reviewer, Father Benedict Groeschel, himself a skeptical    scholar, said,    "I found this account of the discovery of the ruins of Ephesus to be    absolutely fascinating, and I'm sure many other readers will feel the same    way."
[resources: The Life of Sister Marie and Mary's House in Ephesus,  The Life of the Blessed Virgin, and  The Suffering, Passion, and Death of Jesus Christ]
from SPIRIT DAILY 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment