Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Izmir Catholic Church Home To Holy Lance

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Izmir Catholic Church Home To Holy Lance

    İZMIR CATHOLIC CHURCH HOME TO HOLY LANCE

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    May 13 2014

    İZMİR - Anadolu Agency

    An İzmir church is home to relics from the era of Jesus. One of them
    is the Holy Lance, which is believed to have pierced the side of Christ

    The priest of the church, Stefano Negro, says the originality of
    the lance was traditionally approved and sealed by the Vatican and
    that the seal of the document on the history of the lance, cannot be
    opened. AA Photo

    The Holy Lance, which is believed by Christians to have pierced the
    side of Jesus as he hung on the cross and became a legend, is being
    kept in İzmir's Santissimo Rossario Catholic Church as a relic.

    The priest of the church in Alsancak, Stefano Negro said the Gospel of
    John mentioned the lance, known to Catholics as the Spear of Longinus.

    "In the Bible, we see John's testimony. Jesus died after three hours of
    pain. Everyone was surprised how fast he died because it is a painful
    and long manner of execution. The Roman soldier who saw that Jesus
    died and wanted to prove it pierced his side with the lance," he said.

    Noting that the first state that recognized Christianity was an
    Armenian state, Negro said the first relics from the life of Jesus
    had been collected by Christians and these relics had been kept in
    the Nakhchivan region.

    He said that the Dominican priests began establishing the Catholic
    society in the 1300s and the region became a Catholic area. "As of the
    1600s, Armenians began migrating to the Ottoman Empire. The Dominican
    priests who also sought asylum in the Ottoman Empire in the 1720s
    moved to İzmir with relics. They were hosted in the Saint Polycarp
    Church with the relics and the holy lance for many years. Then the
    lance was taken to the Santissimo Rossario Catholic Church, which
    was established 110 years ago," he said.

    Vatican-approved relic

    Negro said the relics had been moved throughout history, and continued:
    "We don't have a mathematical proof, but it was determined that the
    lance dates back to the 1st century. What was told and the wound
    of Jesus confirm the holy lance according to the church. There are
    three known holy lances; we know that one of them is in our church
    in Vienna. Nobody knows which one is the original."

    There are three classes of sacred relics. The first-class is a part of
    the saint's body, the second-class is a piece of the saint's clothing
    or something used by the saint, while the third-class is an object
    which has been touched to a first-class relic. The class of the lance
    in the İzmir church is not clear.

    Feeling the pain Jesus suffered

    Churches were raven for relics in the Middle Ages, said Negro, adding,
    "Churches were considered as rich as their relics."

    He said some religious scholars who had examined the lance in their
    church were sure that it was the original mentioned in the mythos and
    this claim was officially documented in the 1800s. "The originality
    of the lance was traditionally approved and sealed by the Vatican
    and the seal of the document, which tells the history of the lance,
    cannot be opened."

    Negro said the legend of lance dated back to the 3rd-4th centuries
    and the approval dated back to the 15th century.

    The relics meant respect for their society, said Negro, and the
    Spear of Longinus reminded of the pain Jesus had suffered. "While
    commemorating the day when Jesus died, we put the lance's protective
    case on the altar. After the prayer, we decorated the holy lance
    with flowers. In this way, we show believers Jesus' pain better,"
    Negro said.

    May/13/2014

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/izmir-catholic-hurch-home-to-holy-lance.aspx?PageID=238&NID=66352&NewsCatID=393

Working...
X