XXXII
There are numerous eucharistic miracles verified and attested by the Vatican.
One at
Santarem Portugal 50 miles from Fatima is one that I have seen during my last
visit to Fatima.
A woman
living in Santarém, Portugal in the 13th century was distressed over the
unfaithfulness of her husband, and
decided to consult a sorceress for help. The sorceress told her the price
of her services was a consecrated host.
She went to
Mass at the Church of St. Stephen and received the Eucharist on her tongue,
removed the Eucharist from her mouth, wrapped it in her veil, and headed to the
door of the church. But before she got out, the host
began to bleed.
When she got
home, she put the bloodied host in a trunk. That night, a miraculous light
emanated from the trunk. She repented of what she had done and the next morning
confessed to her priest. Her priest came and retrieved the host and took it
back to the church.
The bloody
Host was taken in procession to the Church of St. Stephen, where it was encased
in wax (to contain the blood and the Host) and secured in the tabernacle.
Sometime later when the tabernacle was opened, the wax that had encased the
Host was found broken into pieces, and the Host was found miraculously enclosed
in a crystal pyx, along with the precious Blood. After the investigation and
approval by the Church authorities, the Church of St. Stephen was renamed
"The Church of the Holy Miracle."
Argentina-miracle-of-the
Host
Back in
1996, when Pope Francis was formerly Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio, a miracle of the
Host occurred in Buenos Aires. On August 18, 1996, three days after the feast
of the Assumption of Our Lady, a woman came up to Fr. Alejandro Pezet after
Holy Mass in a local church, and pointed to a discarded Host on a candleholder
at the back of the church. Unable to consume the Host, Fr. Pezet put it in a
container with water and placed it inside the tabernacle.
On August
26, a week later, as he opened the tabernacle, he saw that the Host had turned
blood red. He informed Bergoglio, who immediately had it photographed. On
September 6, the photographs revealed that the Host “had become a fragment of
bloodied flesh and had grown significantly in size”. For years, the Host was
kept secretly in the tabernacle. On October 5, 1999, Bergoglio, now an
Archbishop, seeing that the Host did not decompose, sent it for scientific
analysis in New York City through his representative Dr. Castanon.
Dr. Castanon
purposely did not give any background about the Host to Dr. Frederic Zugiba, a
well-known cardiologist and forensic pathologist, who did the
examination. His findings revealed that it was “real flesh and blood and
containing human DNA. Zugiba testified that the material was a fragment of the
heart muscle responsible for contraction to supply blood to all parts of the
body.
Dr. Zugiba
reported that the examined material was inflamed flesh containing a lot of
white blood cells, indicating that the heart was alive at the time the sample
was taken. Dr. Zugiba added that white blood cells would die in a matter of
minutes if the heart was no longer alive and functioning. The white blood cells
had penetrated the tissue, indicating that the heart had been under severe
stress, as if the owner had a trauma of being beaten on the chest. This reminds
us of the pain and trauma of the Crucifixion of our Lord.
Finally
informed that it was a Host, Dr. Zugiba was shocked and said, “How and why a
consecrated Host would change its character and become living human flesh and
blood will remain an inexplicable mystery to science.”
Every day,
on the altars of Catholic churches around the world, the greatest miracle possible
takes place: the transformation of bread and wine into the true Body and Blood
of Christ.
Nonetheless,
when we receive Communion, we can only touch its true nature with our faith,
because our senses only perceive bread and wine, physically unaltered by the
consecration.
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