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The Return of the Veronica to Rome

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Paul Badde is interviewed by Catholic News Agency about the upcoming Pilgrimage Procession of the Holy Face.  The interview is in German many browsers will translate it to english or other language.

Catholic News Agency Interview with Paul Badde January 14, 2016


Here are some excerpts of the interview as translated by my browser:
CNA: But is it not a contradiction if the image now comes in a copy to Rome and not as the original?

BADDE: No, on the contrary, it seems that this process is somehow particularly useful. Because in its time in Rome the then so-called veil of Veronica was in a sense the mother of all canonical images of Christ. In addition at St. Petersburg in Russia at that time there was a guild, which was only concerned with the production of image copies of this canonical image which then also served as image- documents of the incredible story of a true image of Christ in the world.Especially in Europe all these icons have always retold the wonders that God has shown in Jesus' face. That Christians really know precisely what God looks like. Only we know the "human face of God", of which Pope Benedict XVI repeatedly spoke. That is why today it comes from the incomparable original in Manoppello.   Although only a copy returns to Rome, but - it was manufactured according to the best technical possibilities of our time - as was done in the 13th century.


CNA: You are one of the world's leading experts on the sudarium. Many have written books on the archetype. Manoppello attracts more and more pilgrims.  The Internet is teeming with articles and statements. No one can say anymore that the veil picture is still unknown.What difference does  this little procession make?
BADDE: Now the knowledge of the image comes to the public no longer from books by various authors or from lectures and essays and polemics and debates of professors and nuns. But now it comes down to it in a liturgical way back into the heart of the universal Church, in a large church. And that's probably the most beautiful way that can be imagined for it. And that is completely new - that it is carried in this most peaceful manner without any dispute up to St. Peter's Basilica itself, where it had been kept in custody as a treasure.
photo by James Reynolds

CNA: Do you know how this program will look like in detail?
BADDE: Yes, on Saturday, January 16, 2016 the Holy Face is introduced by the group of pilgrims from Manoppello around 3pm with other  normal pilgrims  through the Holy Door in St. Peter's Basilica - and almost exactly at the place where It was stored in the old Constantinian basilica. That was in the former St. Mary's Chapel, where Michelangelo's Pietà stands today, at the front right of the basilica. From there the procession then goes back out onto St. Peter's Square and next to the Manger, where the whole group will form with the full choir of Manoppello, to carry it from there through the streets of the Holy Spirit to the Church of Santo Spirito.



CNA: Why is the church called Santo Spirito?
BADDE: Because in the Middle Ages all the hospitals were named after the Holy Spirit, then all the works of mercy were allocated as a matter of course.
CNA: And what happens then?

BADDE: Then solemnly carried into the reliquary in the church, which has been previously decorated already with red and white flowers such as for a wedding, the blood-red light of the Passion and the resurrection, which appear in the delicate image. But also because on this Sunday as in 1208 the Gospel of the Wedding at Cana will be read again. How it will then go on, is still somewhat uncertain. Because the beautiful church is usually very crowded, since John Paul II  in 1986 already made the church a center of DIVINA Misericordia, the "Divine Mercy", with special devotion of Sister Faustina Kowalska, with her relics and the famous picture of Christ which has been painted by her from her vision - recently along with relics of Saint John Paul and a statue of Our Lady of Fatima. Therefore, it is not difficult to recognize it as a sign of divine providence, that the true image of Christ will be taken here in the year of Mercy, where it picks up those threads again, which was spun here so long ago.
taken from https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnadenbild_vom_Barmherzigen_Jesus


CNA: Is there any competition between the images?
BADDE: If there were Monsignor Jozef Bart Polish rector of Santo Spirito, would not have immediately welcomed the offer of the Capuchin Father Carmine Cucinelli, the rector of the Basilica in Manoppello. Particularly Polish pilgrims love both images. And years ago the Trappist Blandina Paschalis Schlömer and researchers from Poland and Germany have found in a so-called superimposition that the face on the cloth of Manoppello is almost identical with the original from the image of the Merciful Jesus, hanging in Vilnius today There is only one true face of God. It is the face of Jesus.
CNA: And then?
BADDE: Then the veil picture is welcomed in the evening, the vigil of the Sunday Omnis Terra, by a Solemn Pontifical Mass in Santo Spirito at 6:30pm celebrated by Archbishop Georg Gänswein along with many priests.  The Archbishop already accompanied Pope Benedict XVI to Manoppello in September, 2006. After  this high Mass, it is to remain at the main altar for 24 hours for worship. On Sunday evening of 17 January, there will then be celebrated at the same hour once again  a second solemn Pontifical Mass by Archbishop Edmond Farhat, who was born in Lebanon and has served the Church in many countries as Apostolic Nuncio, most recently in Vienna. 


CNA: since this historic event dates back to whose initiative, as you call it? From the Pope?
BADDE: No. Significantly, but not from any other office in the Church, not even by the organizers of the year of mercy or the new evangelization, but from Daisy Neves, a Filipino lady from Bellevue, Washington, from the periphery and the far west of the U. SA .. Two years ago, she generously invited Fr. Carmine Cuccinelli with a similar replica of the Volto Santo to the Philippines. In September also to Canada, Los Angeles and into the slums of Manila. She is nothing more than a passionate lover of the Divine Face, who wants nothing more than that this miraculous image of God is again assigned a place of honor in every church on earth.
CNA: Why is the picture so important?
BADDE: Because it simply exists, totally inexplicably. And because it just now - in the midst of a huge Revolution of images - re-enters history to speak in the midst of all the noise in a very new and very comforting and immensely quiet way about the incarnation of God in Jesus Christ.
CNA: What does it tells us yet?
BADDE: that God has not become a book, but a human being. In this man we look at truth in the face. And in this face we learn everything there is to know about mercy. Or, in the words of Pope Benedict XVI of 6 September 2006: "If we really want to see the face of God, we must do nothing other than to contemplate the face of Jesus in his face we really see who God is and what God is like!"   


Salve Sancta Facies

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a reposting from February 1, 2012 in honor of this special day


All Photos by Paul Badde

a hymn by Pope Innocent III from the year 1216

Salve sancta facies nostri redemptoris,
in qua nitet species divini splendoris
Impressa panniculo nivea candoris,
dataque Veronice signum ob amoris


Hail holy face of our redeemer on which shines the appearance of divine splendor
Impressed upon a little cloth of snowy radiance and given to Veronica as a standard of love.





Salve, decus seculi, speculum sanctorum
Quod videre cupiunt Spiritus coelorum.
Nos ab omni macula purga vitiorum,
Atque nos consortio lunge beatorum


Hail beauty of the ages, mirror of the saints, which the Spirits of the heavens desire to see.
Cleanse us from every stain of sin and guide us to the fellowship of the blessed.




Salve nostra gloria in hac vita dura,
Labili ac fragili, cito transitura.
Nos perduc ad Patriam, o felix figura,
Ad videndam faciem que est Christi pura.


Hail our glory amidst this hard life, so fragile and unstable, quickly passing away.
Point us, o happy figure, to the heavenly homeland to see the face that is Christ indeed.






Salve o sudarium, nobile iocale
Et nostrum solatium et memoriale
Eius qui corpusculum assumpsit mortale
Nostrum verum gaudium et bonum finale!


Hail, o sudarium, noble encased jewel, both our solace and the memorial of him who assumed a little mortal body – our true joy and ultimate good!

The Veronica at St. Peter's Today toward Santo Spirito

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photo by Edward Pentin

photo by CNA/Alexey Gotovskiy


photo by CNA/Alexey Gotovskiy

pilgrims approaching Santo Spirito (courtesy of Paul Badde)


Inisde Santo Spirito Church (photo by Paul Badde)

Archbishop Georg Gänswein's Homily at Santo Spirito

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photo by Daniel Ibanez/CNA
Dear sisters and brothers!

Sunday today is called "Omnis Terra" in the words of Psalm 65 that we heard at the beginning of the Mass: "Omnis terra adoret te, Deus, et psallat tibi!" ("Let all the earth adore you, O God and sing psalms to you"). This Sunday was also called this eight hundred years ago ; and even then, as now, in all Catholic churches the Gospel of the wedding at Cana was proclaimed. Since then empires have fallen, swept away like autumn leaves; the Church has seen the succession of ninety popes; violent revolutions and wars have shaken Europe; fatal divisions have torn Christianity. So it seems almost a miracle the tranquility with which, in this Sunday's liturgy, we sing today as then: Praise the Lord, all you nations!

With this praise, however, today we also remember the fact that here 808 years ago, for the first time, Pope Innocent III  carried in procession the Holy Sudarium of Christ from St. Peter's to Santo Spirito. It was the holy veil that shows "the human face of God", which Pope Benedict XVI will never get tired of speaking about; and "the living face of the Father's mercy" to which Pope Francis has dedicated this Jubilee Year. And also back then, in January of 1208, the divine face of God here in this church, was connected to the concrete mercy of men; this church which much later, in 1994, St. John Paul II dedicated to the "Divine Mercy", in honor of Saint Faustina Kowalska, whose relics we venerate here. The Polish Pope was also a visionary and once more we experience that here today.

In fact, 808 years ago, in that very first procession, Pope Innocent III decreed that the holy image was not brought to the nobles of Rome, but to the sick pilgrims and the poor of the city, whose most important abode back then  was this hospital of  Santo Spirito. He also ordered that the papal chaplain, drawing from Peter's Pence, should distribute three coins to each of the three hundred sick and the thousand poor who were invited to attend the ceremony and who came from all over the city: one for bread, one for wine and the third for  meat. He also connected substantial indulgences to visiting the "true image" and for participating in its procession.

In fact it was an anticipation of the Holy Year, which only later, in 1300, was introduced to Rome by Boniface VIII. This all began right here!

From that time to the present modern age processions and expositions of the Holy veil have never ended. Soon there were countless pilgrims to Rome who wanted to contemplate the face of God. Later, it was in one of these processions that Dante learned to know the face of God. It is the face before which he ends the "cosmic excursion" of his Divine Comedy, as Pope Benedict XVI said ten years ago, when he presented his encyclical Deus Caritas Est. It is the face of the love that "moves the sun and the other stars", as Dante wrote in the best known passage in Italian literature.

It is the love of God who rejoices in us as "the bridegroom to the bride," as we have just heard in the words from the prophet Isaiah; and the strength of the Holy Spirit of whose various gifts St. Paul has once again made us aware in this church of Santo Spirito. And yet, nowhere else does this Spirit speaks more clearly and with more evidence as in the silent face of Christ, before whom we are gathered here today.

Because "this is the vocation and the joy of every baptized person: to bring and give Jesus to others", as Pope Francis said on January 3. And this is exactly what today is given to us - to become witnesses, in the moment when the good Capuchin friars of Manoppello here "bring and give Jesus", in whose face God himself shows his face.

In conclusion I would add just one thing on the Gospel of the wedding at Cana, about which so many instructive things have been said: who, in fact, could still wonder that Jesus worked his first public miracle exactly in favor of marriage and the family which are in such danger today that Pope Francis has dedicated synods to each of these! Indeed, in this time of Christmas in which we are still, we can understand perfectly that first miracle as a necessary extension of the mystery of the incarnation of God. For it is only within a family that we become human! With a mother and a father and - if we are lucky - with brothers and sisters. For this reason Christian artists have always portrayed the face of Jesus referring to his mother's, and vice versa. Because if God is the father of Jesus, his face should  and can only look like hers. And it is this most ancient face that today in an almost miraculous way has returned to  Santo Spirito in Sassia, that face which seems to be almost identical to the face of the Divine Mercy which has been venerated here for more than two decades.

It is a copy of that ancient original that Pope Innocent III showed the pilgrims and which for four hundred years was kept in Abruzzo, on the Adriatic, in an outlying area of Italy, which today for the first time has been brought back to where its public worship began. From here, countless copies brought all over the world the true face of God that Christians knew. Precisely in this lies the deeper meaning of this moment. Before coming to Rome, the Holy Veil was kept in Constantinople, earlier in Edessa and even before in Jerusalem. It is not possible, in fact, that this face could be the property, could be the treasure of anyone, not even of the Pope. It is the signature of Christians. Only we know that God has a face - how and who he is. For this reason, the face of Christ is the first, the most noble and most precious treasure of all Christendom, even more: of all the earth. Omnis Terra! Before this face we ought to open ourselves again and again. Always as pilgrims; always to the outlying areas; and always having before our eyes one goal: that moment when we will be before him face to face.

translated from the original Italian 


Rev. Daren J. Zehnle Reporting on Veronica Pilgrimage Procession

Edward Pentin of National Catholic Register on Holy Face Procession

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Replica of the Holy Face close to its former home in St. Peter's basilica, in the former St. Mary's Chapel, where Michelangelo's Pietà stands today.
(Photo by Edward Pentin/NCRegister.Com)

Edward Pentin writing in his blog at National Catholic Register.com 

"Pilgrims from the Italian town of Manoppello, home of the Shrine of the Holy Face, retraced an ancient procession for the first time in 808 years in Rome on Saturday, carrying a replica of the sacred image which scholars believe to be the Veil of Veronica (vera icona "true icon")."

Read more: http://www.ncregister.com/blog/edward-pentin/historic-step-as-holy-face-procession-returns-to-rome/#ixzz3xcRjvySn



photo by Edward Pentin/NCRegister.com



Joan Lewis of EWTN "Visiting an Icon in Rome"

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photo by Joan Lewis



Joan Lewis, EWTN Rome bureau chief, writes on her blog:
https://joansrome.wordpress.com/2016/01/17/visiting-an-icon-in-rome/

"Today I went to see the replica of the Holy Face of Manoppello during its presence this weekend in the Rome church of Santo Spirito, Holy Spirit. This church, just blocks from St. Peter’s Basilica, is principally dedicated to Divine Mercy and is crowded just about every day of the week, often at the 3 pm time of the Hour of Divine Mercy."

"I got to the church exactly at 4 pm (not that I had planned such a precise arrival) and I discovered that a Mass for Polish pilgrims had just begun. I was a lector at Mass last evening with the Santa Susanna community so this second Sunday Mass was a special joy, especially given the presence of the Holy Face (about which I wrote in my Friday, January 15 column).
Polish pilgrims come often to Santo Spirito because, as you know it was a Polish nun, St. Faustina Kowalska, who spread the devotion to Divine Mercy and a Polish Pope, John Paul II, who instituted Divine Mercy Sunday, the Sunday after Easter."
There are more photos of Santo Spirito in Joan's posting.






Some Holy Face Pilgrimage Photos by Paul Badde

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Entering St. Peter's Basilica


Entering Holy Door at St. Peter's


At Pieta in St Peter's

On the Way to Santo Spirito from St. Peter's




















Archbishop Georg Ganswein at Mass at Santo Spirito



















At Santo Spirito



















































































Archbishop Edmond Y. Farhat's Homily at Santo Spirito for the Concluding Mass of Holy Face Pilgrimage Procession

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from left Fr. Carmine Cucinelli, O.F.M., Cap., Archbishop Edmond Y. Farhat, Mons. Americo Ciani (photo by Paul Badde)



Homily of His Excellency The Most Reverend

Edmond Y. Farhat

Apostolic Nuncio Emeritus to Austria



The Second Sunday in Ordinary Time – Cycle C
"Omnis Terra"
 

17 January 2016



Pilgrimage of the Holy Face from Manoppello to Rome

Church of Santo Spirito in Sassia




We have accompanied the icon of the Holy Face of Manoppello with hymns, songs, invocations and thanksgiving to venerate it and through this to praise the Lord Jesus Christ for his marvelous deeds. The Holy Mass is celebrated. The people of God have prayed, the priests and ministers have offered thanksgiving, prayers, and petitions.

photo by Antonio Bini




In the Face of Christ, impressed on the veil of Veronica, preserved in the sudarium of Manoppello, we venerate the Lord God of mercy, Savior of the world.
 
Archbishop Farhat gives a blessing with the Holy Face (photo by Paul Badde)
 

Today, brothers and sisters, right now, we return to the temple of the Holy Spirit to venerate the Holy Face and all it means. We celebrate the Eucharist, we confess our sins, and we announce the Good News.

The Good News of today is the invitation to the wedding at Cana. Jesus was invited, invited by his Mother because the guests were friends of his mom. She invited her Son, and at a certain point, said, “They have no wine.” “My hour,” responded the Son, “has not yet arrived.” “Do that which he says,” said his mom. Jesus, obedient to his Mother, saved face for the groom and his family.

The feast was beautiful and the joy was great. They drank and sang. The feast was transformed into a unique occasion. It was the occasion of the first sign of his manifestation, of the manifestation of his divinity. It was the beginning of the signs carried out by Jesus, because of which they believed in him. Better still, it is the first sign that reveals his personality. He came that they might have life, and have it in abundance. At Cana, Jesus manifested his authority. “Fill the jars,” and they filled them. Cana was the very first sign of the divine authority of Jesus, this authority that developed during his mission until it became known in the passion and in a true image, living, in the hands of Veronica.

Cana was the first visible sign of the divinity of Jesus. It is a provocative sign now, the icon of Manoppello that is a definitive sign. Cana was the first, and the face of the sudarium is the definitive sign. It is a provocative sign and insignificant, discrete and quiet, but most eloquent, always old and always new. Discussed and venerated, look at it with your eyes, accompany it, follow it, and let it guide your gaze. It is a concrete sign, but it is not made by man; it is created, but no one knows its origin, its formation.

It is not an object of another time; it is the icon of the eternal face, the face of goodness and of friendship, of mercy and of peace. The face that speaks, that examines, that asks, that awaits a response. It seems to say: “Look at me, you who are tired. Come to me and I will give you rest.” They have not seen, they did not have to suffer humiliation, the men of our time, as the friends of Mary did not have to suffer humiliation at Cana. He had to reach out.

They do not have faith, the men of our time, but, as at the wedding at Cana: “Have mercy on them,” Mary says [to her Son], “and contemplate the face bequeathed to you” [to the men of our time]. And we contemplate the face of Jesus. It speaks to us and nods to us, it is good, it is merciful. Therefore, we have brought it from Manoppello to here, because his expression [word missing] a wider goodness and mercy in this year of grace in which God reveals himself with the name of mercy, as the Holy Father Francis teaches. Therefore, we display it in the church of the Holy Spirit so that the Spirit may speak to the heart, and suggest intentions of wisdom and hope. Therefore we place it in the church looked after by Saint Faustina because she has been able to perceive the dimensions of his face.

There are moments in which, in an even stronger way, we are called to keep our look fixed on mercy to become effectively inserted into the action of the Father, as Pope Francis says in his exhortation.

This, dear brothers and sisters, is a privileged moment. We fix our gaze on the Holy Face and we will be transformed by God’s mercy. The sign is not an end in itself; the sign is a pointer on the way of the return, the return to the Father. The sudarium [word missing] of Christ. Christ is Jesus that has transformed the water into wine to participate in the joy of his friends and relations. The transformation requires a change. Our transformation and our conversion from pointless spectators to collaborators in the work of Jesus and Mary, who kept all these things in her heart, and no one knows the son and Lord like her. She guides us on the journey to encounter her Son, through his face that we can physically contemplate.

Yesterday we took it and venerated it to give thanks for so many benefits; today we greet it and honor it, asking him to accompany us on our new journey, the journey to the wedding of the Lamb, full of grace and mercy.

We hold impressed in our minds and in our heart his image that speaks to us and examines us. It is the image of the Word become Incarnate so that we might have life. It accompanies us on our way so that we might always remember that God is mercy. His mercy accompanies us. We remember that the people of God, going up to Jerusalem, in the Old Testament, always repeated during their pilgrimages: “God is good, he has given us goodness; he has given us faith because his mercy is eternal, because his mercy is eternal.”

We from this Eternal City, city of saints, of Faustina; city of John Paul II, of Paul VI, of John XXIII, of popes and saints; we turn our thoughts to the Jerusalem of Jesus, to the Jerusalem of Mary; and we ask peace for Jerusalem, peace to all the people of Palestine and of Jerusalem, of the Middle East and of the Mediterranean. There is room for everyone; mercy has no limits. ** Eternal is the mercy of God, because he is good; he is great, may his face guide us, accompany us, and we will not be lost.
**The final appeal for peace was repeated by Archbishop Edmond Y. Farhat also in Hebrew and Arabic
thanks to Paul Badde and Fr. Carmine Cucinelli, O.F.M,, Cap. for the transcript, Paul Badde and Antonio Bini for the photos and Fr. Daren J. Zehnle for the translation of Archbishop Farhat's homily

Prayers Requested for Paul Badde's Speedy Recovery from Surgery

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photo by Paul Badde



Prayers are requested for our friend the author and journalist Paul Badde who is recovering from  heart by pass surgery. Paul has been so faithful and untiring in witnessing to the Holy Face of Manoppello and making the Face of Jesus known throughout the world through his articles, books and photographs multiplied by his person to person ministry to so many of us. Paul was instrumental in bringing about the recent Pilgrimage Procession of the Holy Face from Manoppello to St. Peter's and Santo Spirito in Rome.
Ellen Badde, Fr. Heinrich Pfeiffer, S.J. and Paul Badde at Santo Spirito Church on January 17, 2016 (photo by Antonio Bini)

Paul Badde with Pope Benedict XVI in Manoppello on Sept. 1, 2006 surrounded by Archbishop Bruno Forte,
Fr. Andreas Resch, Fr. Heinrich Pfeiffer and Sr. Blandina Paschalis Schlomer




St. Padre Pio and St. Leopold Mandic Pray for Us

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Mortal Remains of St. Padre Pio and St. Leopold Mandic at the Church of San Lorenzo  (photo taken from Avvenire)

As part of the celebration of the Holy Year of Mercy the mortal remains of St. Padre Pio and St. Leopold Mandic have arrived in Rome at the Church of San Lorenzo in Verano from San Giovanni Rotondo and Padua respectively. These two  Capuchin friars of the twentieth century throughout their lives were renowned for their holiness and for their tireless devotion to the Sacrament of Reconciliation, spending long hours in the confessional.  Pope Francis has chosen them to be among the patron saints of the jubilee year of Mercy and personally decided to have their incorrupt mortal remains brought to St. Peter's Basilica where they will be venerated by the faithful from February 5 to 11.
 Here is reporting on the arrival in Rome of the mortal remains of the two saints.
http://www.avvenire.it/Chiesa/Pagine/padre-pio-leopoldo-mandic.aspx


Here is found a very inspirational talk about St. Leopold Mandic given by Pope John Paul I

https://popejpi.org/index.php/st-leopold-mandic-and-gods-mercy/

Holy Face of Manoppello Visiting Two Neighboring Towns

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translation of article in Il Centro Newspaper March 12, 2016 describing the visit of the Holy Face of Manoppello to Tocco da Casauria and Turrivalignani.  The visit to Tocco da Casauria concluded last Sunday March 20 Palm Sunday.  Thanks to Antonio Bini for alerting me to the article and for the photos

http://ilcentro.gelocal.it/pescara/cronaca/2016/03/12/news/doppia-trasferta-per-il-volto-santo-di-manoppello-1.13117586



By Walter Teti

MANOPPELLO. After the great trips to the United States, Canada and the Philippines, the Holy Face will make two “zero kilometer” trips given that the transfers of the Holy Icon are scheduled starting tomorrow (March 13) for a week in Tocco da Casauria and after Easter in Turrivalignani.  Of course, as has been done at other times, it is a reproduction of the Veil which will be transported.

As soon as the news spread it raised some alarm because it was thought that it would be the actual Monstrance containing the Image of the Lord which would be transported, so that the police wanted an explanation directly from the Rector of the Holy Face Basilica, Father Carmine Cucinelli. The initiative was included in the program of religious activities dedicated to the Jubilee of Mercy proclaimed by Pope Francis. And what religious relic can embody the true meaning of Mercy, if not the face of the risen Christ?

 At Tocco, for the first time in history, the Veil will arrive tomorrow (March 13) at 4pm, and will be welcomed at the entrance of the town by the parish priest Fr Michele Persichitti who, together with the faithful, will carry it in procession to the church of San Domenico. This will begin a weeklong intensive program of vigils, prayers, meetings, and adoration. 

Veneration of the Holy Face at the Church of San Domenico in Tocco da Casauria


Each day will have a particular theme to address topics such as the Holy Face and Goodness, the Holy Face and Mercy, the Holy Face and Love understood as the Church understands it -- the universal and concrete love that completes and surpasses hope alone and the faith itself. A week that will see the town be a destination of pilgrimages from neighboring towns and which is preparing to welcome pilgrims in the best of ways.

"Being involved in this event," says Mayor Luciano Lattanzio, "will make a significant mark on our community which will have in its own house what has become the most sought-after, representative and beloved icon of Christianity. We will be present and available to offer the best of ourselves."

The return of the Holy Image to Manoppello is scheduled for the evening of Palm Sunday, conducted by the faithful of Tocco who, at its conclusion, will participate in a Mass in the Manoppello Basilica.


R.I.P. Paul MacLeod

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The Australian Catholic journalist Paul MacLeod died Holy Saturday at 3pm Australian time.  For many years Paul spread the devotion to the Holy Face of Manoppello far and wide especially in Australia and Oceania.

As a tribute to him here is a tile which he had shared with many around the world just in the last few days showing the face of Jesus from ancient Edessa (modern day Sanliurfa) which exhibits the characteristics of the Holy Face of Manoppello.





May Paul MacLeod rest in peace with the vision of the face of Jesus forever.





Holy Face to be Enthroned at Church of St. Bede the Venerable in La Canada, California on Divine Mercy Sunday

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One of the fruits of the September 2015  Mission of the Holy Face of Manoppello to Los Angeles will take place this coming Sunday April 3, Divine Mercy Sunday when the Holy Face will be enthroned during a Holy Massat 9:00 A.M.The enthronement is coordinated by Lydia F. Cruz, Ludi Herrera, and Msgr. Antonio Cacciaputi, Pastor of St. Bede Church in La Canada, Flintridge, California. The reliquary containing the Holy Face at St. Bede is the very one that was brought to the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in Los Angeles last September 9, 2015 for one week veneration. 

Holy Face Illuminated Carving Shadowbox

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Jared Ergo has created a beautiful work of art based on a photograph by Paul Badde of the Holy Face of Manoppello.

It is the Holy Face Illuminated Carving Shadowbox.  The Holy Face is carved into a piece of porcelain and comes alive when the small interior bulb is turned on (shown in picture with light on).  The porcelain is framed in a dark stained wooden shadow box.  Its approximately 6in x 5.25in x 2.125in in size.  It comes with a 6ft power cord and is operated by a small on/off rocker switch.  The shadow box can be mounted on a wall or rest nicely on a desk or prayer table.     

It is available for purchase at https://www.facebook.com/CatholicInfused 
They are made in small quantities so please be patient with ship times.

The artist posted on  March 17 the following:  "We were inspired to create the Holy Face of Manoppello illuminated carving after encountering the Face through a book by Paul Badde, "The Face of God". The history and significance of the Holy Face is very interesting. In short, the Veil of Manoppello is thought to be the actual head burial cloth of Jesus Christ. It is known as "Acheiropoieta" or not made by human hands. The actual image is imprinted on a very rare material called byssus or mussel silk. The history of the veil's journey is long and storied, and believed to have once inhabited the Vatican before it found its way to the small village of Manoppello, Italy.
In recent years, thanks to authors like Paul Badde and Father Heinrich Pfeiffer, the image has become more popular. Research by Father Heinrich Pfeiffer and Sister Blandina Paschalis Schloemer strongly suggest a matching alignment between the Shroud of Turin and the Face of Manoppello. In 2006 Pope Benedict XVI visited the church in Manoppello and elevated it into a Basilica shortly after."
and also "One of our hopes is to translate the Face of Manoppello into a reflective and meditative tool to support prayer life, while also raising awareness of this relatively unknown icon. Our prayer life is the foundation of our personal relationship with Jesus and therefore God. At the prompting of the Holy Spirit we feel the need to contemplate the Life that Jesus brings thereby strengthening our relationship with the Father. Spending time with Jesus is the proper response to His infinite Love for us. His Love becomes our love, and by sharing this love back with Jesus we partake in His eternal Life.
Contemplative prayer is not just for the clergy, consecrated or very "holy" lay person. We are all called to contemplative prayer. We are called to contemplate the Life of Christ in prayer.
“Life without prayer has no meaning or points of reference” - Pope Benedict XVI
“Listening, meditating and remaining in silence before the Lord is an art”.” - Pope Benedict XVI
“Contemplative prayer in my opinion is nothing else than a close sharing between friends; it means taking time frequently to be alone with Him who we know loves us.” - St. Teresa of Avila"

The Holy Face in Poland

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by Ewa Pasko




                                                                   Katowice

The city of Katowice - located in southern Poland, 80 km from Krakow (beloved city of Pope John Paul II), 80 km from the Polish-Czech border and 1000 km from Italy-  has three hundred thousand inhabitants. It is the capital of the Silesia region, the most industrialized part of the country and a region full of mines and ironworks, of hard work but also of very strong faith as well as a region full of shrines dedicated to Our Lady (Jasna Góra in Częstochowa, Piekary Śląskie, Pszów, Leśniów, Gidle etc.). The people of Silesia love the Mother of God and often come to visit her in her many shrines.






The Church of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary is the oldest catholic church in Katowice. It is located in the historic center of the city and was built in 1870 in a neo-Gothic style, on the plan of the Latin cross, according to the project of the architect Alexis Langer. With its height of 71 meters it is one of the greatest and most beautiful monuments  in Katowice. Inside the church on both sides of the nave there are paintings by Joseph Unierzyski, under the title "The Marian cycle" and the stained glass windows of Adam Bunsch, disciples of Mehoffer. In its unique chapel, calleded the Adoration Chapel  of the Blessed Sacrament, is the monstrance carved in stone - like a large flower (from the artistic project of Teresa Michalowska Rauszer) - made for the Second Eucharistic Congress  and for the third visit of Pope John Paul II to Poland in 1987.

                                           Parish of the Immaculate Conception

Every day the faithful are here to worship Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament. In 2001 the Metropolitan Archbishop of Katowice Mons. Damian Zimon appointed Fr Andrea Suchoň pastor of the parish of the Immaculate Conception of Holy Mary. Don Andrea also serves as the dean of the center of Katowice, as the director of the Faculty of Catholic Social Science and as a member of the Council of Priests. In 2010 he obtained the dignity of a papal chaplain. Don Andrea cares for the church with great heart, continually renewing its furnishings. But he also take great care of  the parishioners, especially the poor families, organizing the day care center for poor children and the annual holiday for them. For many years a kitchen for the poor and homeless has prepared hot meals for 200 people every day. Don Andrea Suchoň is really a good and caring shepherd


 In 2007 Fr Andrea and numerous parishioners participated in the pilgrimage of the Silesian people to Rome. Thousands of pilgrims met in Rome having the sole purpose - to celebrate the 750th anniversary of the death of Hyacinth Odrowąż - a Polish saint born in Silesia. He is the only Polish saint whose stone carving is located on the Bernini colonnade in St. Peter's Square in Rome and a great Apostle of Europe - to whom Northern and Eastern Europe owes the reinforcement of Christianity and therefore of her identity and the possibility of development. After the solemn three day ceremonies in Rome the Polish bishops, the parish priest Andrea Suchoň and all the pilgrims have visited some Italian sanctuaries. Among them were San Giovanni Rotondo, Monte San Angelo, Lanciano and  Manoppello. At that time, the parishioners of St. Mary in Katowice (including our family) saw for the first time the miraculous Image of Jesus in Manoppello. This was the beginning of our many contacts. Since that time every year many pilgrims from the Silesia region come to the Shrine of the Holy Face. And therefore our parish wanted to obtain a copy of the Image of the Holy Face  and have the opportunity to worship it in our church. The copy of the Holy Face arrived in Katowice  and our parish obtained the miraculous image thanks to the courtesy and friendship on the part of the Capuchin Fathers of Manoppello.

                                     The Copy of the Holy Face Arrives in Katowice

In the month of July 2015 during his visit to Poland which included  the Divine Mercy Center in Krakow Lagiewniki Father Carmine Cucinelli Rector of the Basilica of the Holy Face also brought the special gift for our parish - a copy of the Holy Face image. Starting in September 2015 preparations were begun for its enthronement. Don Andrea Suchoň oversaw the work of the architect for its surroundings and of the artists. Everything was well done.

                                                             The Enthronment

 The enthronement was a very important day for our parish during which the Holy Face was enthroned in our church of the Immaculate Conception. On November 29 a week long Holy Mission began. Sunday, December 6, 2015 starting at 5:30pm there took place the ceremony  for the closing of the Holy Mission and of the enthronement of the Holy Face - with the participation of the Archbishop of Katowice Mons. Damian Zimon. The ceremony began with prayers, with the breaking open of the Gospel, the religious song on the cross of Christ and the word preached by the Oblate Fathers Missionaries of Mary Immaculate - to conclude the Holy Mission. The missionary father recalled the inauguration of the Holy Mission and the moment of the receiving of the key to the parish church - and turns to our parish priest Don Andrea Suchoň. Then begins the procession around the church in the direction of the new mission cross. The faithful sing "In the cross there is suffering, in the cross there's salvation," and recite the Chaplet of Divine Mercy. Then Katowice Archbishop Mons. Damian Zimon consecrates the new missionary cross. The faithful renew their baptismal promises and then all the priests kiss the cross.  Archbishop Damiano speaks and reminds all those gathered of the history of the parish. He recalls the nineteen sixties when the communist government wanted to tear down the missionary cross located between the church and the street. The cross was saved (situated closer to the church). The Archbishop  also recalls the parish priest, Father Emilio Szramek deported in 1939 to the concentration camp of Dachau in Germany where he died in 1942. On June 13, 1999 Don Emilio Szramek and 107 martyrs of World War II were beatified by Pope John Paul II.

Now the procession takes place around the church - to the adoration chapel of the Blessed Sacrament. All are gathered waiting for the start of the Enthronement of the Holy Face. Archbishop Damian Zimon, Don Andrea Suchoň and all together look with emotion and veneration upon the Holy Face in the reliquary of the image with its well-decorated frame, placed on the plinth in front of the large stone monstrance in the shape of a flower. After a few minutes of silence  Fr Andrea Suchoň and a representative of the parish, Ewa Pasko, begin to speak presenting the meaning of the Holy Face and the history of the cult.






 (Text) There are important places in the world where God has left us the great miracles - to strengthen us. The images are not made by human hand. The first is located in the Sanctuary of Guadalupe in Mexico. In 1531, Our Lady appeared to Juan Diego. On the cloak of Juan Diego there appeared the image of Mary. There are no traces of paint and despite the passage of time the colors on the mantle are not faded. The second image not made by human hand is located in the Cathedral of Turin, in Italy. The Holy Shroud of Turin - the cloth in which was wrapped Christ's body after being taken down from the cross. On the cloth you can see the body of the Crucified with all traces of His wounds. And finally the third image - kept in the Shrine of Manoppello, in Italy. The transparent as muslin cloth shows the face of Christ at the time of the Resurrection. Yet there are seen signs of wounds on his forehead, a swollen cheek and a broken nose but also the eyes of the living Lord who looks at us.  There are no traces of paint on the material of which the Veil is made. The third image, not made by human hand, is preserved in Manoppello since 1506.   Saint Padre Pio said that "for Christians today the Holy Face is the biggest miracle that we have". Padre Pio was right, it is really a miracle --Why here we can see the true face of Jesus. And Jesus said, "Whoever sees me, sees the Father." Thus seeing his face we see the face of God!  At Manoppello are many pilgrims who see the face of the Risen Lord. For some years there have been also many Polish pilgrims who represent more than half of all pilgrims who come from outside Italy. Therefore the Capuchin fathers of the sanctuary of Manoppello have decided to offer to our parish a copy of the miraculous image of the Holy Face of Jesus- and our beloved parish priest Don Andrea decided to accept it and put it in our church. Now not only those who go on pilgrimage to Italy but also all who come to our church will look upon the face of the Risen Lord and seek strength in his face. Our parish is the first in Poland to hold a solemn enthronement of the Holy Face.  Similar ceremonies took place in other parts of the world, including in Canada, the Philippines and the United States. The Capuchins of Manoppello have told us that the Lord Jesus in his Face comes to churches dedicated to his mother. And so our church of the Immaculate Conception of Mary received a copy of the Miraculous Face of Manoppello. We are happy to look at it, pray and implore grace. And we will invite our dear Father Carmine Cucinelli Rector of the Basilica of our parish so that we can learn more about the miraculous Face of Jesus, the history of the Sanctuary and the visit of Pope Benedict XVI on 1 September 2006. 


Finally the time comes for the most important moment - Katowice Archbishop consecrates the Face of Jesus






Now Don Andrea recites the prayer of Pope Benedict XVI of September 1, 2007:

Lord Jesus as the first apostles whom you asked, "What do you seek?", accepted your invitation to "Come and see", recognizing you as the Son of God, the promised Messiah for the world's redemption, we too, your disciples in this difficult time, want to follow you and be your friends, drawn by the brilliance of your Face, much desired yet hidden. Show us we pray you your Face ever new, that mirror, mystery laden, of God's infinite mercy. Grant that we may contemplate it with the eyes of our minds and hearts, the Son's face, radiance of the Father's glory and the imprint of his Nature, the human face of God that has burst into history to reveal the horizons of eternity. The silent Face of Jesus suffering and risen, when loved and accepted changes the heart and life. "Your Face, Lord, do I seek, do not hide your face from me". How many times through the centuries and millenia has not resounded the ardent invocation of the Psalmist among the faithful! Lord, with faith we too repeat the same invocation: "Man of suffering, as one from whom others hide their faces", Do not hide your Face from us! We want to draw from your eyes, that look upon us with tenderness and compassion, the force of love and peace which shows us the way of life and the courage to follow you without fear or compromise so as to be witnesses of your Gospel with concrete signs of acceptance, love and foregiveness. O Holy Face of Christ, Light that enlightens the darkness of doubt and sadness, Life that has defeated forever the force of evil and death, o inscrutable gaze that never ceases to watch over men and people, Face concealed in the Eucharistic signs and in the faces of those that live with us, make us God's pilgrims in the world, longing for the Infinite and ready for the final encounter when we shall see you Lord "face to face" and be able to contemplate you forever in heavenly Glory. Mary, Mother of the Holy Face, help us have "innocent hands and a pure heart", hands illumined with the truth of love and enraptured by divine beauty, that transformed by the encounter with Christ, we may give ourselves to the poor and the suffering whose faces reflect the hidden presence of your Son Jesus who lives and reigns forever and ever. Amen!



The Mass begins with the final sermon of the Oblate missionaries. The missionary Father Andrea says it so beautifully: "We have followed the road from the cross to the image of the Holy Face. The road from the crucifixion to the resurrection "



After the Mass and singing  of the Te Deum Fr Andrea Suchoň thanked Msgr. Damian Zimon for the consecration of the Holy Face and at the end of the ceremony all received the blessing from the Archbishop .... Before leaving the church the participants of the ceremony stopped at the chapel of adoration. All feel in their hearts the joy and emotion. The Lord in His Face - Face of the Risen - is present in our church and every day we see Him, and we worship Him.




Many people tell us today that by praying before the Blessed Sacrament and looking at the image of the Holy Face with the eyes of the Lord filled with goodness - that they feel more strongly his closeness and his love. The parish priest, Father Andrea Suchoň, priests and parishioners - the whole community of the Parish of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Katowice thank from the depths of their heart Father Carmine Cucinelli Rector of the Shrine of the Holy Face and all the dear Capuchin Fathers of Manoppello for their precious gift.

THE WAY OF THE HOLY FACE - 2016 Edition

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by Antonio Bini

During the coming month of May there will take place the second edition of the Way of the Holy Face (Cammino del Volto Santo), starting in Rome on May 3 and finishing the 13th of the same month at the Shrine of the Holy Face (Pescara), just before the third Sunday in May on which takes place the annual feast of the Holy Face.

The Way aims to retrace the path that a mysterious pilgrim likely followed to bring the sacred image to Manoppello,  safely preserving it - probably - from the destruction and looting of the Sack of Rome (1527).

It should also be recalled that on January 16 and 17, 2016 a pilgrimage from Manoppello to Rome, promoted by an agreement between the shrine of Manoppello and that of Santo Spirito in Sassia, revived the ancient rite of the sacred image's procession instituted by Pope Innocent III in 1208. During two solemn celebrations, the Archbishops Georg Gänswein, Prefect of the Papal Household (January 16) and Edmond Y. Farhat, Canon of St. Peter's (January 17), drew the deep historical and spiritual significance of this re-enactment, which appropriately returned  in the extraordinary Jubilee celebration of Mercy.

The Way will develop in stages, for a total of 300 kilometers, taking inspiration from the route of the Tiburtina-Valeria consular road that connected Rome with Abruzzo up to Ostia-Aterni (now Pescara), along ancient trails through medieval villages and historical abbeys, traveled in the past, in whole or in part, by saints including St. Francis of Assisi, Blessed Thomas of Celano, St. Peter of Morrone (Celestine V), Saint Camillus de Lellis, and St. Stephen del Lupo. The Way is part of a broader tradition of pious pilgrimages on foot which until the nineteen sixties reached Manoppello from various parts of the region to participate in the feast of May.

During the various stages the travelers will be accommodated in facilities provided by a network of municipalities, thanks to the collaboration of associations and volunteers in the area. People may also wish to participate in individual sections of the Way.

During the first edition of the journey the participants were met with congeniality, making them also a sign of opportunities for fraternity and sincere hospitality.

The Shrine of the Holy Face supports the initiative expressing the hope that the new edition of the Way will reinforce this experience of friendship, solidarity and faith, following the example of the medieval pilgrimage, in the spirit of the Jubilee of Mercy, with the involvement of local communities in which there is no shortage of devotees of the Holy Face. To this end, the rector of the Shrine in recent weeks has addressed a cordial invitation to all parish priests of the towns through which the Way will pass.

Enthronement of the Holy Face at St. Bede Church in La Canada, Los Angeles, California on Divine Mercy Sunday

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Photo by Ludi Herrera

this photo and all below by Manny Evaldez




The first Enthronement of the Holy Face of Manoppello in a church in the USA took place on  Divine Mercy Sunday, April 3, 2016 with Msgr. Antonio Cacciapuoti, the Pastor of St. Bede the Venerable Church who celebrated the 9:00 A.M. Mass followed by the Enthronement of the Holy Face at 10:15 A.M. Mrs. Lydia Cruz, the person most responsible for the Enthronement writes "Fr. Cacciapuoti gave a short talk saying that we are blessed to have the Holy Face at St. Bede. Msgr. Antonio also said  'the students at St. Bede Elementary School (parochial school)  keep on asking me how Jesus looks. Now, I have a picture to show the Holy Face.' Msgr. Cacciapuoti led the faithful in the prayer of Pope Francis for the Holy Year of Mercy. With blessing, incensing, music and picture takings after, the whole event lasted for about 40 minutes in order to provide for the next Mass at 11:00 A.M. The Enthronement was a very successful event with  many people in attendance." 

Msgr. Cacciapuoti, Pastor of St. Bede's together with some of those gathered for the Enthronement of the Holy Face

Merla Tabora Canoy, who was such a big part of organizing the Mission of the Holy Face to Southern California in September 2015, was present at the Enthronement and writes:

"Our apostolate Friends of the Holy Face in the USA are blessed by the overwhelming passion, support and sponsorship of Dr Leonard and Mrs.Lydia Cruz and Monsignor Antonio Cacciapuoti and his parish community of St. Bede who made it all happen to welcome the Holy Face of Jesus with a permanent devotional chapel for everyone to come, visit and pray.


Dr. and Mrs. Cruz, Fe and Ludi Herrera

The chapel is located at the church entrance on the right, adorned by a wall mosaic of St Anthony, 2 multi tiered candle offering stands, a kneeler , and a built in wall sofa facing the Holy Face. The Holy Face is encased in a bullet proof glass cabinet case and bolted to the wall. A nice glass table for flowers and candles surround the Holy Face cabinet. Inside the cabinet of the Holy Face stand is an 8x 11 gold plated engraved print of the Prayer to the Holy Face, so that when kneeling one can read the prayer composed by Pope Benedict XVI. On the wall is a framed print of the  authenticity certificate of this Holy Veil signed by Fr. Carmine Cucinelli, OFM, Cap., Rector of the Shrine of the Holy Face.  St. Bede's image of the Holy Face was personally blessed by Fr. Cucinelli at the original framed relic of the Holy Face in Manoppello , Italy 




Near the entrance door to St. Bede's is a wooden stand and a book to sign in names for prayer petitions and guests names too. Monsignor Antonio gathered some of the children to show them and answer their questions " how does God look like" His benediction was very solemn with a little background soft music by the parish choir. It is truly a perfect spot for Holy Face because all incoming parishioners and pilgrims are able to access the little chapel at any time the church is open . We cannot thank Mrs Lydia Cruz enough for her passion and dedication to sponsor this project and make it happen just a few weeks after Monsignor Antonio and his parish community at St Bede said yes, they welcome the Holy Face!

We will continue to pray to this parish community of St Bede and to all pilgrims who want to visit and seek the miracle and gift of His Holy Face. WE will continue to spread the word on the devotion to the Holy Face, that the Human Face of God exist , He lived with us for 33 years, that we can feel this holy connection as long as we open our hearts,our mind in total surrender , He is here always in our hearts.
Thanks to all your prayers and blessings dear Fr Carmine, our apostolate friends of the Holy Face always meeting as complete strangers as the lord Jesus always leads us at the start of our every mission since it began in 2013 , will always be united by our faith, love and devotion to the the Holy Face of Jesus and to the Blessed Mother Mary..
All for the honor and greater glory of God,
All praises and thanks be to God. Amen 
Msgr. Cacciapuoti along  with Ludi and Fe Herrera, Lynda Cabigas, Merla Canoy, Elle Esperanze, Joe and Ana Sayas,
Dr. and Mrs. Cruz 





Mrs. Cruz with Fr. Tony Marti, OFM, Cap., President of St. Francis High School, La Canada
A video of the Enthronement Ceremony is available on the Facebook page edited by Merla Tabora Canoy -- Friends of the Holy Face of Jesus - SHFJ Intl https://www.facebook.com/Friends-of-the-Holy-Face-of-Jesus-SHFJ-Intl-572875599519193/?fref=nf

Special English Language Edition of Il Volto Santo di Manoppello Now Available Online

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After 110 years of publication the official organ of the Shrine of the Holy Face of Manoppello, Il Volto Santo di Manoppello, under the direction of Fr. Carmine Cucinelli, OFM, Cap., Rector of the Shrine, has produced a special edition in English during the Holy Year of Mercy entitled "The Holy Face, from Manoppello to the World".  This groundbreaking edition contains 30 articles written by Antonio Bini which have appeared in english translation on this blog over the past eight years.  The articles include many important reports on the shrine's recent activities regarding  the Holy Face in Italy, news on the Missions of the Holy Face to the Philippines, USA and Canada  as well as  historical essays on the image of the Holy Face, the Abruzzo pilgrimage tradition to Manoppello, and the cause for beatification of Fr. Domenico da Cese, the Capuchin friar known as the Apostle of the Holy Face.  It was Fr. Domenico who began to spread devotion to the precious Manoppello image of the Holy Face  beyond the confines of Abruzzo.  I am thrilled to be able to share this record of Antonio Bini's beautiful testimony to the Holy Face of Manoppello with you.  It is available by clicking on the link below

Special English Language Edition of Il Volto Santo di Manoppello

More than an Abraction -- The Volto Santo (Holy Face) and the Jubilee by Rev. Daren J. Zehnle

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photo by Paul Badde


I am very grateful to Rev. Daren J. Zehnle who has given me permission to post his entire scholarly address on the relationship of the Holy Face of Manoppello to the tradition of Jubilee in the Church and to the current extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy.  Fr. Daren is a priest of the diocese of Springfield in Illinois studying canon law at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.  His address is arguably the best and most comprehensive article to date on the Holy Face of Manoppello originating from the english speaking world and was first posted on his blog Servant and Steward.  



This past Wednesday May 11 I (Fr. Daren) had the pleasure of giving another conference for the Sisters of St. Francis of the Martyr St. George at the Mater Divinae Gratia Convent here in Rome. The title of my address was, "More Than an Abstraction: The Volto Santo [Holy Face] and the Jubilee, the text of which here follows:



The opening words of the Bull of Indiction of His Holiness Pope Francis for this Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy highlight with great subtlety – and almost certainly unintentionally – the history of the first Holy Years: “Jesus Christ is the face of the Father’s mercy.”[1] This theme of looking upon the face of Jesus, of gazing upon mercy, runs like a golden thread throughout the entire text of Misericordiae vultus and points even to the very origin of the Christian jubilee, as we shall see.

Pope Francis tells us that “we need constantly to contemplate the mystery of mercy” and that “at times we are called to gaze even more attentively on mercy so that we may become a more effective sign of the Father’s action in our lives.”[2] The Father’s action in our lives is to conform us ever more closely to the image of his Son, so much so that when people look upon us they see not us, but Christ Jesus. It is, after all, the saints who “show the true Face of God who is Love and, at the same time, the authentic face of man.”[3] Moreover, “Christ invites us to imitate him, to become similar to him, so in every person the Face of God shines out anew.”[4]

But how is it possible for us to gaze now upon Jesus Christ, upon him who “is the face of the Father’s mercy”? We can do so by gazing upon “the napkin which had been on his head” the Apostles Peter and John found in the tomb of Christ “not lying with the linen cloths but rolled up in a separate place by itself” (John 20:7).
 
This napkin, the holy sudarium, is now housed at the Shrine of the Holy Face in Manoppello, Italy – some two hours east of Rome - where it is known as il Volto Santo(the Holy Face). This mysterious piece of byssus (sea silk) was called the Veronica when he it was kept in Rome in the Basilica of Saint Peter.

Whoever looks upon the Holy Face cannot but consider his own sins and how closely his life resembles that of Jesus. I have often thought that looking upon the veil which covered his face in the tomb is something like a foretaste of how Benedict XVI described the experience of purgatory:

Before his gaze all falsehood melts away. This encounter with him, as it burns us, transforms and frees us, allowing us to become truly ourselves. All that we build during our lives can prove to be mere straw, pure bluster, and it collapses. Yet in the pain of this encounter, when the impurity and sickness of our lives become evident to us, there lies salvation. His gaze, the touch of his heart heals us through an undeniably painful transformation “as through fire”. But it is a blessed pain, in which the holy power of his love sears through us like a flame, enabling us to become totally ourselves and thus totally of God.[5]

Indeed, elsewhere Benedict XVI said the face of Jesus “is the Face of mercy, the Face of pardon and love, the Face of the encounter with us.”[6] Pope Francis explains what happens when we look upon the face of mercy with his customary simplicity: “with our eyes fixed on Jesus and his merciful gaze, we experience the love of the Most Holy Trinity.”[7]

When we experience this love, we cannot help but realize that the love we give – both to God and to our neighbor – is not equal to the love we receive. This is a cause of sorrow for us, because we know we have not attained purity of heart; at the same time, however, it is also a cause of great joy, because we know the Lord pours out his mercy upon us. To know that my life is not yet fully conformed to that of Jesus - to know that I am not yet as merciful as he is and that his face is not always reflected in mine - is indeed painful, but it is, as the Pope emeritus said, truly a blessed pain because it spurs those who look upon the Face of Mercy to strive all the more earnestly to be able to say with Saint Paul: “It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me” (cf. Exodus 34:29Galatians 2:20). It is within this context that Pope Francis turns his attention to the liturgical year, exclaiming, “How many pages of Sacred Scripture are appropriate for meditation during the weeks of Lent to help us rediscover the merciful face of the Father!”[8]

In a particularly way, we also find this theme of looking upon the face of Jesus in the Bible in the prayer the Holy Father composed for this extraordinary jubilee. Addressing the Lord Jesus, Pope Francis echoes the words of the Psalmist Asaph, “Show us your face and we will be saved” (cf. Psalm 80:4).[9] It is a plea we find repeated throughout the Scriptures. King David sang, “Many say, ‘May we see better times! Lord, show us the light of your face’” (Psalm 4:7)! In another Psalm, King David sang, “Let your face shine on your servant; save me in your mercy” (Psalm 31:17). Another of the psalmists sang, “May God be gracious to us and bless us; may his face shine upon us” (Psalm 67:2). In a psalm of the Korahites, we sing, “Show us, Lord, your mercy; grant us your salvation” (Psalm 85:8).

The Pslamists continually prayed to look upon the face of God, yet the Lord God said to Moses, “you cannot see my face, for no one can see me and live” (Exodus 33:20). This is why Hagar, after speaking with “the Lord’s angel,” asked, “Have I really seen God and remained alive after he saw me” (Genesis 16:11, 13)? Jacob, too, after wrestling with the angel, marveled that “I have seen God face to face … yet my life has been spared” (Genesis 32:31). Moses, too, spoke to the Lord “face to face, as a person speaks to a friend” (Exodus 33:11). Still, this was a privilege granted only to a few; God had not yet revealed himself fully.

Considering these verses, we might say that the Father’s mercy is his face. Is it not his mercy that moves the Lord to reveal himself? After all, at the beginning of his Gospel, Saint John tell us, “No one has ever seen God. The only Son, God, who is at the Father’s side, has revealed him” (John 1:18). Is this not why “the Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us” (John1:14)? Indeed, it is in the very act of showing his face to us that Jesus reveals the Father’s mercy. This is why Jesus said to the Apostle Philip, “Whoever has seen me has the seen the Father” (John 14:9).

Pope Francis highlights this dimension of the Incarnation - of the enfleshment of mercy - when he reminds us that God “does not limit himself merely to affirming his love, but makes it visible and tangible. Love, after all, can never be just an abstraction.”[10] It is, then, something of an understatement when Pope Francis says, “mercy, once again, is revealed as a fundamental aspect of Jesus’ mission.”[11]

For this reason, Pope Francis urges us to seek the intercession of the Mother of God through the Salve Regina, “a prayer ever ancient and new, so that she may never tire of turning her merciful eyes towards us, and make us worthy to contemplate the face of mercy, her Son Jesus.”[12] Pope Benedict XVI offered a similar encouragement when he said:

It is first all necessary to let the Blessed Virgin take one by the hand to contemplate the Face of Christ: a joyful, luminous, sorrowful, and glorious Face. Those who, like Mary and with her, cherish and ponder the mysteries of Jesus assiduously increasingly assimilate his sentiments and are conformed to them.[13]

Truly, much as in the Holy Rosary, we see the life of Jesus in his Holy Face and become like him as we ponder its mysteries.

How can we fail here to remember the blessing of Aaron, so beloved of Saint Francis of Assisi? Invoking the blessing of God, the high priest prayed, “The Lord bless you and keep you! The Lord let his face shine upon you, and be gracious to you! The Lord look upon you kindly and give you peace” (Numbers 6:24-26)! Yes, it is Jesus who is “the visible face of the Father, of the God who manifests his power above all by forgiveness and mercy.”[14] At the heart of this Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy is the desire to look upon the face of Jesus, but to be able to do so he must first turn his face upon us, even as he looked upon Peter (cf. Luke 22:61). We, too, must be purified by the gaze of Jesus to be “a credible witness to mercy.”[15]

The Apostle Saint John tells us in his Revelation, “They will look upon his face” - upon the face of the Lamb of God, upon the face of Jesus, the face of the Father’s mercy – “and his name will be on their foreheads” (Revelation 22:4). But must we wait until the Last Judgment until we attain the Beatific Vision and look upon the face of God? Given our recent celebration of the Ascension of the Lord when “a cloud took him from their sight,” - “not to distance himself from our lowly state but that we, his members, might be confident of following where he, our Head and Founder, has gone before” – it seems so (Acts 1:9).[16] He has gone before us, yes, but he has not abandoned us or left us without reminders of himself because, as Pope Francis reminds us, “love can never be just an abstraction.”[17]

In his first letter, Saint John tells us “we shall see him as he is” and Saint Paul tells us we will see him “face to face” (I John 3:3I Corinthians 13:12). More importantly, Jesus himself tells us the clean of heart “will see God” (Matthew 5:8). Each of these texts speak of a vision in the future, but if we have not seen the face of Jesus, how will we recognize him when we stand before him “in his glory, and all the angels with him” (Matthew 25:31)?

An empty tomb?

We often speak of the tomb of Jesus as being empty on the morning of Easter, but a close examination of the accounts of the Resurrection - such as they are - reveal something quite different. Regarding the burial of the Lord, Saint Matthew tells us “Joseph wrapped [the body of Jesus in] clean linen and laid it in his new tomb,” a detail also recorded by Saint Mark and Saint Luke (Matthew 27:59Mark 15:46Luke 23:53). Saint John, however, refers to “burial cloths” - in the plural - used to bind the body of Jesus “according to the Jewish burial custom” (John 19:40).

Saint Luke, however, adds a curious detail, not recorded by Matthew and Mark, when he describes what Saint Peter saw when he entered the tomb: “But Peter got up and ran to the tomb, bent down, and saw the burial cloths alone” (Luke 24:12). Whereas before he referred only to one cloth, now he speaks of more than one cloth. The tomb, then, was not empty; there were cloths inside!

To this important detail, Saint John adds a few additional specifics that, at first glance, might seem unimportant:

When Simon Peter arrived after [John], he went into the tomb and saw the burial cloths there, and the cloth that covered his head, not with the burial cloths but rolled up in a separate place. Then the other disciple also went in, the one who had arrived at the tomb first, and he saw and believed” (John 20:7-8).

We have, then, several cloths used for the burial of Jesus, but what were – or are – these cloths?

The most famous of these cloths, of course, is the Shroud of Turin, an inexplicable image depicting the body of a dead man, a man who suffered greatly and whose body shows signs of having been crucified. Christians throughout the ages have believed this cloth to be the piece of linen referred to by the Evangelists and see in it the image of Jesus, lying dead in the tomb. Some even try to use it to prove the Resurrection of the Lord, but this is not possible. The image very clearly shows a dead man. The Shroud of Turin can prove that a man died a horrible death. It cannot be the Shroud that caused the beloved disciple to believe because he already knew Jesus was dead and he certainly needed no further proof of this. Still, the Shroud of Turin is not important, for it is, as Paul Badde calls it, “the map of sufferings,” it does not prove the Lord lives.[18]

There is another cloth held in Oviedo, Spain, which is called the Santo Sudario, the Holy Napkin, where it has been preserved since the eighth century. This cloth bears no image, but contains stains of blood and water found on both sides of the cloth. These stains correspond to the dimensions of the lower half of a man’s face.

After investigating the history of the Santo Sudario and after speaking with forensic experts, Paul Badde describes the story contained within these “death blood” stains:

As this man was dying, an edema must have formed in the lungs. When he died, he had spouted blood from his mouth and nose. There was such an enormous gush of it that the hand of some nearby pious Jew – for Romans were not so squeamish in such matters – must have quickly seized this cloth and pressed it against the face and the mouth of the dead. He had wrapped it over again, doubled, because the dead man had been bleeding so freely, and then wrapped it around the back of the man’s head before tying the whole cloth in place… The nose had been broken.[19]

If we compare the dimensions of the head on the Shroud of Turin and the dimensions of the dead man hidden in the Santo Sudario, the dimensions are the same; these two cloths once covered the same body. Once touched to his face, the Santo Sudarioh was not moved about to clean the face, but was bound over the face beneath the Shroud of Turin. Here, then, is a second burial cloth.

Since 1239, a cap has been housed in Cahors, France – it was in Constantinople before – that is said to have been used during the burial of Jesus and bears traces of blood on the inside. Such caps are known to have been used in Jewish burial practices to keep the mouth closed in death. It seems this cap would have been used to keep the Santo Sudario in place before the anointing of the body. We have, then, three burial cloths from the tomb, but what of that other cloth that covered his head, the one found not with the burial cloths but “rolled up in a separate place.”

In the tiny and remote village of Manoppello, Italy, there is housed a cloth utterly unique in the entire world. It is now calledil Volto Santo, the Holy Face, though it has gone by several different names in the past, perhaps most memorably as the Veronica. It was certainly in Manoppello by 1636, and possibly even more than a century earlier, having been taken from Rome during the sack of 1527. This cloth bears the image of a man whose nose has been broken and who has a bruised cheek. His beard and mustache are thin and sparse, as if plucked. He has shoulder-length hair which is parted in the middle, with a small tuft above the forehead. His eyes are open and he his mouth is slightly open, as if to smile or speak. His expression seems to be that of a man who has just woken peacefully from sleep. In this Holy Face, we see that God’s love is “visceral,” that it “gushes forth from the depths naturally, full of tenderness and compassion, indulgence and mercy.”[20] In the face of Jesus left for us on this veil, we find “a wellspring of joy, serenity, and peace.”[21]Everyone who has looked upon this face, who has looked into those eyes and allowed those eyes to search their souls, knows that “everything in [Jesus] speaks of mercy,” that “nothing in him is devoid of compassion.”[22]

It is said that this cloth also came out of the tomb of Jesus, that it was the last cloth placed upon his face. This is the cloth John saw in the tomb and because of which he believed in the Resurrection. Saint Peter held up this cloth in the early morning light and saw the face of Jesus looking back at him in the dawn. This cloth proves that Jesus is not dead but risen even as he said! This is the face of Jesus which rests on a piece of byssus, a marvelous material made from the silk of mollusks and which changes with the light; sometimes his face disappears altogether and sometimes his face cannot be missed. Curiously, when we compare the dimensions of the Volto Santo, we find it is the exact same face as that of the Shroud of Turin and of the Santo Sudario.

If the Volto Santo is the face of Jesus, then the Volto Santo is themisericordiae vultus, the face of mercy upon which Pope Francis urges us to direct our gaze throughout this extraordinary jubilee. What is more, this cloth, this face of mercy, is responsible for the first Jubilee of 1300 and played a significant and central role in the first jubilees.

The Holy Face and the Jubilee

The ceremonies marking the opening of a Jubilee – consisting of the knocking down of a brick wall erected in front of the Holy Doors – strikes the modern observer as something perhaps rather odd. It seems the rite itself is the product of the mind of John Burchard, master of ceremonies to Pope Alexander VI met with the ordinary Penitentiaries to discuss the indulgence granted for the Jubilee of 1500. Burchard records a meeting he had with the Holy Father on 18 December 1499:

…I took the opportunity to show his Holiness the place in the chapel of St. Veronica which the Canons of the Basilica declare to be the so-called golden door which was wont to be opened by the Sovereign Pontiffs upon each hundredthyear of the Jubilee, which I had also frequently heard said and maintained in common talk (in vulgo). His Holiness was of opinion that it ought to be opened in the same way at the time of the inauguration of the Jubilee, and he gave directions to have blocks of marble arranged and cut for the adorning of the said door to such height and width as the contour of the door showed on the inside, giving orders also that the walls in front and at the side of the said chapel should be entirely removed, that the people might pass through more freely.[23]

It was in the St. Veronica Chapel, built by Pope John VII in 705 in the space now occupied by Michelangelo’s Pieta, that the sacred image of the Volto Santo was housed until the early 1500s when it was brought to the village of Manoppello. Nestled and beloved in the Abruzzo region of Italy, it was almost forgotten by the outside world for more than four centuries.[24]

We know that “…no relic was more famous in the Middle Ages, and none gave rise to such enthusiastic manifestations of devotion” than theVolto Santo,” then called the Veronica. [25] It was to this image that Dante Alighieri referred when he wrote:

Of one
Who haply from Croatia wends to see
Our Veronica, and the while ‘tis shown,
Hangs over it with never sated gaze
And allt hat he has heard revolving, saith
Unto himself in thought: “And dids’t though look
E’en thus, O Jesus, my true Lord and God?
And was this semblance thine?[26]

Dante began his work on the Paradiso around 1308 and completed it in 1320.

A century earlier Pope Innocent III, who carried the Volto Santo in an annual procession from the Basilica of Saint Peter to the church of Santo Spirito, wrote a hymn in its honor, the Salve Sancta Facies:

Hail holy face of our Redeemer,
on which shines the appearance of divine splendor
impressed upon a little cloth of snowy radiance
and given to Veronica as a standard of love.

Hail, beauty of the ages, mirror of the saints,
which the spirits of the heavens desire to see.
Cleanse us from every stain of sin
and guide us to the fellowship of the blessed.

Hail, our glory amidst this hard life,
so fragile and unstable, quickly passing away.
Point us, O happy figure, to the heavenly homeland
to see the face that is Christ indeed.

Hail, O sudarium, noble encased jewel,
both our solace and the memorial
of him who assumed a little mortal body –
our true joy and ultimate good![27]

Innocent III composed these verses in the year 1216. In doing so, he attributed the gift of the image to a legendary woman. As Herbert Thurston explains:

All that we can say of believing that Veronica, i.e., Berenice (Beronike – the medieval Greek pronuniciation of this word is practically identical with Veronica), may really have been an historical personage, though there is no sort of early authority for her meeting our Savior on the way to Calvary. Evidence, however, may be quoted for believing that the woman healed by our Lord of an issue of blood was named Berenice, and that she erected a statue in honor of her heavenly Physician at Paneas, in Syria, representing the scene of her own cure. The widely diffused notion that the name Veronica has something to do withvera ikon (true image) is a fallacy.[28]

Father Thurston may be right about the etymology of the word, but what then seems to be an accidental renaming of this woman could be providential, for the cloth – which has been wrongly attributed to her since the time of Innocent III – does indeed bear the true image of the Lord. But what does this image have to do with the jubilee?

The Jubilee of 1300

Pope Boniface VIII (of Unam Sanctam fame) proclaimed the first Christian jubilee in 1300. A thorough historian, Herbert Thurston, S.J., rightly notes, in his comprehensive study The Holy Year of Year, that

…it is interesting to find that the Bull of Boniface VIII, when prescribing the conditions of the Jubilee, makes no mention of the Sudario or Scala Santa or any other more or less doubtful relic as objects to be venerated during the pilgrimage – these were matters left to the pious devotion of the faithful; but it enjoins only a series of visits to the Basilicas of the Apostles, to wit, the Church of St. Peter at the Vatican, and the Church of St. Paul outside the walls.[29]

Nonetheless, Diana Webb notes in her study of Pilgrims and Pilgrimage in the Medieval West that “the exhibition of the Veronica, which had been growing in celebrity in the course of the thirteenth century, had, however, been a feature of the 1300 Jubilee.”[30] Giovanni Villani tells us in his Nuova Cronica, “for the consolation of the Christian pilgrims, every Friday and solemn feast-day the Veronica or sudario of Christ was shown in St. Peter’s.”[31]

We know the Veronica was shown to pilgrims in Rome on 17 January 1300. While the image was exposed, Pope Boniface VIII, while making his way to the Vatican basilica, encountered a 107-year-old man from Savoy being carried by his sons who was also on his way to St. Peter’s. Boniface VIII asked the frail man why he made such a difficult journey and received this response:

I remember that at the beginning of the last century my father who was a labourer, came to Rome and dwelt here as long as his means lasted, in order to gain the Indulgence. He bade me not to forget to come at the beginning of the next century, if I should live so long, which he did not think I should do.[32]

Seemingly unware of such an indulgence, the Holy Father asked the man what indulgence he sought. “A hundred days’ Indulgence every day of the year,” he answered. Other pilgrims confirmed they shared the same hope as the old man.

Finding no written record of any such indulgence, the Pope sent his cardinals out to inquire what indulgences people hoped to receive through a visit to the Basilica of St. Peter. This oral testimony of anticipated indulgences in connection with a centennial year led to the issuance on February 22, 1300, of the papal bull proclaiming the Jubilee of 1300, which he said had already commenced on Christmas Day of 1299.

Here it is good to remember that the Veronica was enshrined in the Vatican Basilica. Almost a century early, in 1208, Pope Innocent III proclaimed an annual procession with the Volto Santa from the Vatican basilica to Santo Spirito in Sassia. He also granted an indulgence to those who prayed before the Veronica.[33] The succeeding pontiffs added additional indulgences to whomever prayed before the Volto Santo. Could these be the indulgences the pilgrims told the Cardinals about? Rather than being a feature of the jubilee, the we might say theVolto Santo was the cause of the jubilee.

Indeed, the importance and inclusion of the Volto Santo in the first jubilee seems to have been foreseen, if not planned. The parchment on which the papal scribe Leo wrote to explain more precisely the requirements for obtaining the jubilee indulgence contains a curious work of art. At the top of the letter is an image of the face of Jesus (which bears a striking resemblance to the Volto Santo), flanked by Saints Peter and Paul. We find the same image at the bottom of the page, only it is upside down (and not reversed), a seeming reference to the fact that the Volto Santo is visible from both sides of the cloth. This suggests that, though looking upon the Volto Santo was not required per se to obtain the indulgence of the Jubilee of 1300, it was nonetheless of great importance for the pilgrims to Rome. Indeed, by the next jubilee, the pilgrims at least thought they were required to look upon the Holy Face as a condition of the indulgence.

The Jubilee of 1350

When Pope Boniface VIII established the Holy Year of Jubilee as a perpetual institution, he decreed that a jubilee should be celebrated every one hundred years. Pope Clement VI thought differently, though, and proclaimed and celebrated the second jubilee just fifty years after that of Boniface VIII in 1350.  While Clement VI was at Avignon in 1349, it is said that a man holding two keys – presumably Saint Peter - appeared to him in a vision saying, “Open the door, and send fire forth from it, by which the whole world may be warmed and illuminated.”[34] So it was that Pope Clement VI proclaimed the Jubilee of 1350.

Whereas during the Jubilee of 1300 the Volto Santo was shown to pilgrims every Friday and feast day, throughout this second Jubilee, the faithful were given the opportunity to look upon the Volto Santo in the Basilica of St. Peter every Sunday, and every feast day. The number of the faithful desiring to look upon the Holy Face was so great “that many were suffocated or trampled to death.”[35] The same would happen, as we shall see, one hundred years later.

So important was the viewing of the Holy Face to the pilgrims that Alberic a Rosate quotes a document he says is a Jubilee Bull of Pope Clement VI describing the veneration of the Volto Santo as the culmination of the Jubilee pilgrimage. Though the authenticity of the document is of dubious origin, he “implies that to receive the blessing given with the Sudario was one of the necessary conditions for gaining the Indulgence.”[36] Indeed, Thomas de Burton writes that “thesudarium of our Lord Jesus Christ would be shown to those arriving at the said holy city, and having seen this they would be absolved of their sins, and would have indulgence of them, restoring them to the state they were in on the day on which they received holy baptism.”[37]Apparently, it was considered sufficient only to look upon the Volto Santo to have your sins forgiven. After all, looking on the Volto Santo is looking on the face of mercy.

Petrarch, too, composed a sonnet commemorating the visits of pilgrims to the Volto Santo:

The palmer bent, with locks of silver grey,
Quits the sweet spot where he has passed his years,
Quits his poor family, whose anxious fears
Paint the loved father fainting on his way;
And trembling on his aged limbs slow borne,
In these last days that close his earthly course,
He in his soul’s strong purpose finds new force.
Though weak with age, though by long travel worn:
Thus reaching Rome, led on by pious love,
He seeks the image of that Savior Lord
Whom soon he hopes to meet in bliss above:
So, oft in other forms I seek to trace
Some charm, that to my heart may afford
A faint resemblance of thy matchless grace.[38]

In one of his letters, Petrarch again referred to the Holy Face, saying,

How well it is for the Christian soul to behold the city [Rome] which is like a heaven on earth, full of the sacred bones and relics of the martyrs, and bedewed with the precious blood of these witnesses for truth; to look upon the image of our Saviour, venerable to all the world.[39]

Indeed, it seems that many opportunities were given for the faithful to venerate the Volto Santo even in 1399, before the Jubilee of 1400 began.[40]

Ser Luca Dominici visited Rome in the autumn of 1399 and in the spring of 1400. In his diary entry for the 7th through the 15th of September, he writes, “The Pope has shown the Sudario every day and given his blessing, and all the beautiful and precious things there are in Rome have been exhibited, and all the relics they can, even things that have not been shown for a hundred years past.”[41] On October 3rd, he writes again that “the Pope showed the Sudario every day.”[42]

Even if there was not an official jubilee in 1400, pilgrims still came to Rome to see the Volto Santo. Ser Luca writes that on April 4th “we received the papal benediction three times, and we saw the Sudario three times and the heads of Sts Peter and Paul twice, and all the fine things of Rome, and we entered by the Porta Santa sixteen times.”[43]

The Jubilee of 1450

Living in Rome during the Jubilee of 1450, Paolo di Benedetto di Cola dello Mastro has left us a description of the principle events of that Holy Year. He writes:

I recollect that even in the beginning of the Christmas month a great many people came to Rome for the Jubilee. The pilgrims had to visit the four principle churches – the Romans for a whole month, the Italians for fourteen days, and the Ultramontanes [those coming from across the mountains] for eight. Such a crowd of pilgrims came all at once to Rome that the mills and bakeries were quite insufficient to provide bread for them. And the number of pilgrims daily increased, wherefore the Pope ordered the handkerchief of St. Veronica to be exposed every Sunday, and the heads of the Apostles, St. Peter and St. Paul every Saturday; the other relics in all the Roman churches were always exposed. The Pope solemnly gave his benediction at St. Peter’s every Sunday.[44]

He continues speaking of the number of pilgrims who came to the Eternal City for the jubilee. They were of such great numbers that accommodations could not be found for them until. Paolo dello Mastro tells us, “When the Pope gave his solemn blessing, all spaces in the neighborhood of St. Peter’s, even the surrounding vineyards, from which the Loggia of the benediction could be seen, were thick with pilgrims, but those who could not see him were more numerous than those who could, and this continued until Christmas.”[45]

Looking at the diary of Stefano Infessura, we can infer that the showing of the Volto Santo and the papal blessing occurred at the same time. “In the said year [1450], on the 19th of December, which was a Saturday,” he says, “the sudario was shown to the pilgrims who were in Rome, and the pope gave his blessing to all the Christian people who were [in] the piazza of St. Peter’s.”[46] Stefano goes on to tell us that a great tragedy happened after the blessing as the people left St. Peter’s Square.

Curiously, Paolo di Benedetto di Cola dello Mastro recounts that the tragedy occurred not because the Volto Santo was shown that day, but because word went round about 4:00 p.m. that Pope Nicholas V wouldnot give his customary benediction that evening and the pilgrims would not be shown the Volto Santo. Consequently, the pilgrims left the basilica by way of the Ponte Sant’Angelo. How we are to reconcile this discrepancy is uncertain.

Either way, we know that a great mass of people left the area of the basilica at the same time and made to cross the Tiber over the Ponte Sant’Angelo. Paolo di Benedetto di Cola dello Mastro recounts that mules and horses became frightened and blocked the bridge, causing many pilgrims to be trampled underfoot or even pushed into the Tiber River. This led the castellan of the Castel Sant’Angelo to close the gate to the bridge. Even so, the fatal blockade lasted for an hour.[47]

Two chapels were constructed across the Tiber, one dedicated to Saint Mary Magdalene and the other to the Holy Innocents, where the Holy Mass was offered every day for the souls of the 172 victims who died in the stampede. These chapels were later replaced with statues of Saints Peter and Paul by Pope Clement VII (d. 1534) and remain there today.

Though the Volto Santo was housed in the Basilica of St. Peter, it seems its veneration was not restricted to the Vatican Basilica. Giovanni Rucellai, a merchant from Florence who was in Rome for the Jubilee of 1450, writes that after the opening of the Holy Door of the Basilica of St. John Lateran – the cathedral of the Bishop of Rome – at Christmas pilgrims from across the mountains took the bricks homes as relics. Once the Holy Door was cleared of the rubble, “the face of our Lord Jesus Christ, which is placed at the tribune of the High Altar of that church, passed through that door; and out of devotion every one who gains the Indulgence passes through that door, which is walled up again as soon as the Jubilee is ended.”[48]

A Tangible and Visible Reminder

In his Dialogue Concerning Heresies, which he wrote in 1528, Saint Thomas More suggests that Jesus

was pleased to leave the holy veronica, also an express image of his blessed face, as a keepsake to remain in honor among those who loved him, from the time of his bitter Passion to this day. Just as by the miracle of his blessed, holy hand it was imprinted and left on the sudarium, so by a similar miracle has it been, in that thin, corruptible cloth, kept and preserved uncorrupted these fifteen hundred years, fresh and easy to make out, to the inward comfort, spiritual rejoicing, and greatly increased fervor and devotion of the hearts of good Christian people.[49]

Why do we need such a keepsake? Moreover, why leave four different burial cloths behind?

The answer is simple: We need them so we can remember what the Lord suffered for us and, more importantly still, so we can remember that he is truly risen from the dead. We need such a keepsake to remember the depths of the Lord’s merciful love. In these cloths, and above all in the Volto Santo, we see that, as Pope Francis writes inMisericordiae vultus“the Cross of Christ is God’s judgment on all of us and on the whole world, because through it he offers us the certitude of love and new life.”[50]

In the Volto Santo, we see the signs of the Lord’s Passion, of his beatings and sufferings; but we also his love shining forth through the gentleness of his expression, in his mouth forming in a smile, and in his eyes so full of love. In the Volto Santo, we see again that God “does not limit himself merely to affirming his love, but makes it visible and tangible. Love, after all, can never be just an abstraction.”[51]

For the medieval people, however, such keepsakes were not enough. They longed to look upon the Volto Santo, it is true, but they wanted keepsakes of their own; they wanted visible and tangible reminders - early souvenirs, if you like - to commemorate their pilgrimage to the Face of God. Much as pilgrims to the shrine of the Apostle Saint James in Compostela, Spain returned home wearing the pilgrim shell, pilgrims to the Volto Santo returned home wearing patches bearing the Holy Face. Some even returned home with woodcuts of the image and still others with painted copies of the Holy Face.[52]

Among the many souvenirs produced for the Jubilee celebrations were various medals struck in commemoration of the Holy Year. One such medal is said to be from the 1400s but seems to have been made in the early 1500s. Be that as it may, the image on the medal is of great interest to us. On the one side is the bust of Pope Boniface VIII, who opened the first Jubilee in 1300. On the reverse side is “a doorway with a bust or face of our Savior above it, and two candles burning on either side.”[53]

The Volto Santo and the Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy

We have seen the central – and, dare we say, crucial – role the Volto Santo played in the first several jubilees of the Church and with what devotion people longed to upon the Holy Face. Once the Volto Santowas taken from Rome, however, its importance in the jubilees faded from memory, even to the present day. Through Pope Francis, however, the Volto Santo seems to be calling out to pilgrims once more, calling them to “gave even more attentively on mercy so that [they] may be become … more effective sign[s] of the Father’s action in [their] lives.”[54]

In effort to commemorate – and perhaps even restore – this central role of the Volto Santo in the jubilee – a copy of this remarkable relic was recently brought from Manoppello to Rome. It was taken in procession through St. Peter’s Square, through the Holy Door, to the chapel of thePieta (where the original was once held), through the basilica to the pillar of Saint Veronica, and to the church of Santo Spirito in Sassiawhen it was venerated by many pilgrims.

Photo: Paul Badde
In his homily marking this historic celebration, His Excellency the Most Reverend George Ganswein called theVolto Santo “the distinctive sign of Christians” and “the first, the most noble, and the most precious treasure of all Christianity” and of all the earth.”[55] The following day, His Excellency the Most Reverend Edmond Farhat called the Volto Santo “the definitive sign” of Jesus’ divinity.[56]In this Jubilee of Mercy, how can we fail to look upon this sign and so, “with our eyes fixed on Jesus and his merciful gaze,” experience the fullness of his love?[57]

If we turn our eyes upon the Volto Santo and ponder this mysteries of the Face of Mercy, we can ponder, as Saint Anthony of Padua says, “how great will be the glory of standing before the Creator’s face, with the blessed spirits, with them to praise without end, and with him who is Life ever to live, and continuously to rejoice with an inexpressible joy.”[58] By gazing upon his face here in this life, may we come to see him face to face. Amen!



[1] Pope Francis, Misericordiae vultus, 1.
[2] Ibid., 2, 3.
[3] Pope Benedict XVI, Angelus Address, 9 August 2009.
[4] Pope Benedict XVI, Wednesday Audience Address, 29 April 2009.
[5] Pope Benedict XVI, Spe salvi, 47.
[6] Pope Benedict XVI, Address to theClergy of Rome, 22 February 2007.
[7] Pope Francis, Misericordiae vultus, 8.
[8] Ibid., 17.
[10] Ibid., Misericordiae vultus, 9.
[11] Ibid., 20.
[12] Ibid., 24.
[14] Pope Francis, Prayer for the Jubilee of Mercy.
[15] Ibid., Misericordiae vultus, 25.
[16] Preface I, Mass of the Ascension of the Lord.
[17] Pope Francis, Misericordiae vultus, 9.
[18] Paul Badde, The True Icon: From the Shroud of Turin to the Veil of Manoppello, trans. Michael J. Miller (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2012), 18.
[19] Ibid., The Face of God: The Rediscovery of the True Face of Jesus, trans. Henry Taylor (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2010), 244.
[20] Pope Francis, Misericordiae vultus, 6.
[21] Ibid., 2.
[22] Ibid., 8.
[23] In Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee: An Account of the History and Ceremonial of the Roman Jubilee (Westminster, MD: The Newman Press, 1949), 31.
[24] See especially Paul Badde, The Face of God, 69-144 and The True Icon, 88-96. See also Eugenio di Giamberardino, The Holy Face of Manoppello: Tradition, History, Science and Devotion, 21-25 and Heinrich Pfeiffer, Il Volto Santo di Manoppello, 2d ed. (Pescara, Italy: Carsa Edizioni, 2012), 16-23.
[25] Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 153.
[26] Dante, Paradiso, XXXI.11.103-108. Translation in Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 153.
[27] Translation in Herbert Thurston, S. J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 58-59.
[28] Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 154.
[29] Ibid., 140.
[30] Diana Webb, Pilgrims and Pilgrimage in the Medieval West (London: I.B. Tauris Publishers, 1999), 66.
[31] Giovanni Villani, Nuova Cronica, 9.36. In Diana Webb, Pilgrims and Pilgrimage in the Medieval West, 117.
[32] In Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 13.
[33] Cf. Paul Badde, The Face of God, 135-136.
[34] Thomas de Burton, Chronica Monasterii de Melsa, ed. E. A. Bond in Rolls Series 42, 88-89. In Diana Webb, Pilgrims and Pilgrimage in the Medieval West, 78.
[35] Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 58.
[36] Ibid., 58.
[37] Thomas de Burton, Chronica Monasterii de Melsa, ed. E. A. Bond in Rolls Series 42, 88-89. In Diana Webb, Pilgrims and Pilgrimage in the Medieval West, 78.
[38] In Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 58-59.
[39] Petrarch, Epist. De Rebus Famil., xii.7. In Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 139.
[40] There is some question as to whether a jubilee was actually held in 1400. Cf. Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 63.
[41] Ser Luca Dominici, Cronache di Ser Luca Dominici, ed. G. C. Gigliotti (2 vols, Pistoia: 1993), 175-176. In Diana Webb, Pilgrims and Pilgrimage in the Medieval West, 158.
[42] Ibid., 180-181. In ibid., 159.
[43] Ibid., 233. In ibid., 160.
[44] Paolo di Benedetto di Cola dello Mastro, Cronache Romane, 16-20. In Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 66-67.
[45] Ibid., 18. In Ludwig Pastor, The History of the Popes: From the Close of the Middle Ages, Vol. II. Frederick Ignatius Antrobus, ed. (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, Ltd., 1949), 89.
[46] Diario della Citta di Roma di Stefano Infessura, 5. In Diana Webb, Pilgrims and Pilgrimage in the Medieval West, 121.
[47] Paolo di Benedetto di Cola dello Mastro, Cronache Romane, 18. In Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 69.
[48] In Guiseppe Marcotti, Il Giubileo dell’anno 1450, in Archirio di Storio Patria, iv., 569-570. Quoted in Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 39.
[49] Saint Thomas More, Dialogue Concerning Heresies, ___. Mary Gottschalk, ed. (_____: Scepter Publishers, 2006), ___.
[50] Pope Francis, Misericordiae vultus, 21.
[51] Ibid., 9.
[52] Cf. Diana Webb, Pilgrims and Pilgrimage in the Medieval West, 128.
[53] Herbert Thurston, S.J., The Holy Year of Jubilee, 40.
[54] Pope Francis, Misericordiae vultus, 3.
[55] Archbishop Georg Ganswein, Homily at Santo Spirito in Sassia, 16 January 2016.
[56] Archbishop Edmond Y. Farhat, Homily at Santo Spirito in Sassia, 17 January 2016.
[57] Pope Francis, Misericordiae vultus, 8.
[58] Saint Anthony of Padua, Sermon for the Ascension of the Lord, 5. In Sermons for Sundays and Festivals, Vol. IV: Sermons for Festivals and Indexes, trans. Paul Spilsbury. (Padua: Aedizioni Messaggero Padova, 2010), 251.
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