The Most
Holy Eucharistic Miracle
of Santarém,
Portugal In
the village of Santarém Portugal, just a half hour drive
from Fátima, there occurred the Church's second most famous
Eucharistic Miracle after Lanciano.
The miracle
occurred on February 16th in the year 1247 when a woman married
to a man who frequently committed adultery in desperation had turned
to a Jewish Sorceress to seek a solution to her problem.
The sorceress
promised her a magical potion but demanded a Consecrated Host as
payment. The woman did as she was instructed, and faked an illness
in order to receive Holy Communion on a weekday since at that time
Mass was only celebrated on Sunday. She went to the Parish Church
of Saint Stephen, received communion and then as she was leaving
the Church, removed the Host from her mouth and tied it in a knot
in the veil covering her head. It was then that the Miracle occurred.
The Host
suddenly began to bleed profusely. The blood flowed so heavily that
it the people in the streets inquired about her sickness. Frightened,
she ran home and placed the Host still wrapped in the veil in a
wooden trunk where she kept her clean linens. Her husband discovered
the secret when a miracle occurred that night: From the chest came
a brilliant light that illuminated the entire house. The Host was
freed from the Knot and elevated by angels who sang Divine Praises.
The parish priest was called, and the pulsating Host was taken back
in procession to the Church of Saint Stephen where the Clergy in
order to stop the bleeding decided to seal it in a ball of melted
bees wax.
Nineteen years
passed and in 1266 when a canonical investigation was held, it was
discovered that a second miracle had occurred. The Host had freed
itself from the wax ball and was now in a little crystal ampoule.
Kings, Queens
and Saints venerated the Relic of the Miraculous-bleeding Host with
great splendor over the centuries and the object of national adoration.
No fewer than half a dozen Popes granted indulgences to the Cult
and Saint Francis Xavier came on pilgrimage before becoming the
great apostle of India.
Miraculous phenomena
occurred throughout the centuries involving the same Miraculous
Host. Images were seen and new emissions of blood were common. All
of this stopped however after the North American pilgrimages in
the late 1950's began visiting the Shrine very frequently and abusively
handling the Host. During this time the crystal ampoule was broken
through the sacrilegious practice of the touching of rosaries and
other religious items to It to take away as relics. By the 1970's
half the glass of the ampoule had been broken off and the silver
stopper removed, taken away as relics. The Host subsequently corrupted
due to exposure to the air and today only particles of blood and
solidified flesh are found clinging to the inside what remains of
the glass ampoule.
The Relics
were scientifically analyzed in 1997 for the 750th anniversary celebrations
of the Miracle and proven to be genuine and of a supernatural origin.
The relics of the Host and blood soaked wax were then sealed and
placed in a bulletproof case atop the Eucharistic Throne above the
main altar.
In 1997 the
Church of Saint Stephen of the Holy Miracle was recognized as the
Shrine of the Most Holy miracle.
(Based on"The
Story and Relics of the Most Holy Miracle of Santarém"
by Prof. Carlos Evaristo, Curator of the Museum of the Shrine of
the Most Holy Miracle of Santarém. Photos Copyright: Carlos
Evaristo 1997)
Eucharistic
Miracle of Bolsena, Italy
In 1263, Peter of Prague, a German priest on pilgrimage to Rome,
was celebrating Mass in Bolsena, Italy. He had come to doubt the
Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist. During the consecration,
blood suddenly dripped from the Sacred Host and covered his hands
as well as the altar. Startled, Father Peter interrupted the Mass
and left for nearby Orvieto, where Pope Urban IV was then residing.
Having absolved the priest of his past sin, the Holy Father ordered
the local bishop to bring him the miraculous Host and the bloodstained
altar cloth for examination. Impressed by this miraculous event,
the Pope had the Host and altar cloth placed in the Cathedral of
Orvieto, where they remain perfectly preserved to this day (Michael
Freze, S.F.O. Voices, Visions, and Apparitions).
Eucharistic
Miracle of Lanciano
In the year 700 at the monastery of St. Longinus in Luciano, Italy,
a priest from the Order of St. Basil was celebrating Mass. Having
doubted the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist, the priest
saw, during the consecration, the
bread
miraculously transformed into a circle of flesh and the wine appear
as bright as fresh blood. Eventually, the liquefied blood turned
into five pellets of various sizes and shapes. When the local archbishop
later weighed the pellets, it was discovered that one nugget weighed
the same as all five together, two as much as any three, and the
smallest as much as the largest. In February of 1574, another test
was done on the miraculous blood pellets. Again, any one of the
pellets weighed alone equaled the weight of all five pellets together.
In 1970, further tests were made on the body and blood of Jesus.
Analysis has proved that the bread and wine contain characteristics
of real human flesh and blood. Both belonged to the same blood type,
AB. Eventually, the Franciscans rebuilt the church that houses the
Eucharistic miracle of Lanciano. It is now called the Church of
St. Francis (Michael Freze, S.F.O. Voices, Visions, and Apparitions).
Eucharistic
Miracle of Blaine, France
In 1153, at Blaine, France, it is claimed that a young girl named
Agnes refused to believe in the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist.
During one Mass of the feast of the Holy Spirit celebrated by Archbishop
Anculphe de Pierrefonds of Soissons, Agnes and the congregation
saw the Host change into an image of the Child Jesus. This occurred
during the elevation. Agnes immediately converted and founded a
monastery where the miraculous Host was kept for centuries (Michael
Freze, S.F.O. Voices, Visions, and Apparitions).
Eucharistic
Miracle in Ferrara, Italy
It is claimed that on Easter Sunday, March 28, 1171, during a Mass
celebrated by Padre Pietro de Verona in Ferrara, Italy, blood spurted
out of the Host when it was broken in two during the sacred consecration.
The entire congregation witnessed this; they also saw the Host visibly
turn to a substance that looked like fresh human flesh (Michael
Freze, S.F.O. Voices, Visions, and Apparitions).
.