Visiting Ireland - Knock
May 14th 2008 22:01
Ireland is renowned for its Catholic faith. Everywhere you go in the South you find shrines on the roadside and churches EVERYWHERE. Traditionally people would stop to pray 3 times a day - 6am, midday and 6pm - and even now some of the TV stations will have a pause in viewing for people to reflect and pray.
If religion is what you are after then Knock is the place to visit. Located in County Mayo on the West Coast of Southern Ireland, it has been visited by the Pope and Mother Theresa as well as 1.5 million pilgrims annually.
During an 8 hour period on 21st August 1879 fifteen different people witnessed an apparition on the local church. The website tells the story as follows:
On the wet Thursday evening of the 21st August, 1879, at about the hour of 8 o'clock, Our Lady, St. Joseph, and St. John the Evangelist appeared in a blaze of Heavenly light at the south gable of the Church of St. John the Baptist. Behind them and a little to the left of St. John was a plain altar. On the altar was a cross and a lamb with adoring angels. The Apparition was seen by fifteen people whose ages ranged from six years to seventy-five and included men, women, teenagers and children.
The poor humble witnesses distinctly beheld the Blessed Virgin Mary clothed in white robes with a brilliant crown on her head. Over the forehead where the crown fitted the brow, she wore a beautiful full-bloom golden rose. She was in an attitude of prayer with her eyes and hands raised towards Heaven. St. Joseph stood on Our Lady's right. He was turned towards her in an attitude of respect. His robes were also white. St. John was on Our Lady's left. He was dressed in white vestments and resembled a bishop, with a small mitre. He appeared to be preaching and he held an open book in his left hand.
The witnesses watched the Apparition in pouring rain for two hours, reciting the Rosary. Although the witnesses standing before the gable were drenched, no rain fell in the direction of the gable. They felt the ground carefully with their hands and it was perfectly dry as was the gable itself.
The witnesses watched the Apparition in pouring rain for two hours, reciting the Rosary. Although the witnesses standing before the gable were drenched, no rain fell in the direction of the gable. They felt the ground carefully with their hands and it was perfectly dry as was the gable itself.
Original sections of the stone church have been set into the wall of the new chapel where a depiction of the apparition looks out over the church yard. Pilgrims can be seen walking the yards, rosary beads grasped firmly in hand, repeating prayers and lost on their own world as signs point out the times for the daily Mass held in the main church. The Shrine is open throughout the year, however the main Pilgrimage season is from the last Sunday in April to the Second Sunday in October. You may read here the 'TRADITIONAL STATION TO BE PERFORMED BY THE PILGRIM'.
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