Pilgrimages to our Center
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Experiences of some of our pilgrim
guests....
We would like to share with you the
testimony that was recently given to us by a young
American woman, at the end of her pilgrimage to the
Holy Land.
"Israel is a beautiful, fascinating country worthy
of a visit by all. But, for serious Christians, whose
circumstances allow, a trip to the Holy Land should be
a required act of faith. Nothing has had as powerful
a positive influence on my faith (trips to Rome included)
as my recent visit to Jesus’ home on earth.
We are living at a time when it is
increasingly difficult to live our faith in a profound manner.
We are also living at a time when it has
never been easier to make a pilgrimage to the Holy
Land, where graces to help us live during this difficult
time abound. As Regnum Christi members, we are particularly blessed,
because we recently were given a ‘home’ in Jerusalem. The
Legion of Christ now oversees the Notre Dame Pilgrimage Center,
with some 150 rooms, located right outside the walls of
the Old City, and only 10 minutes by foot to
the Holy Sepulcher. Three Legion of Christ priests and four
consecrated Regnum Christi ladies live and work at Notre Dame.
One of their main missions is to provide spiritual guidance
to pilgrims. For Regnum Christi members, there has never been
a more opportune moment to visit the Holy Land.
I spent nine days in the Holy Land, visiting Galilee
in the north of Israel, where Jesus spent much of
his life on earth, passed through ‘Samaria’, and spent much
of my stay in Jerusalem. What surprised me most about
Israel was how physically beautiful and green it is. I
had expected a stark, almost unwelcoming desert. Somehow, it gave
me great comfort to know that God, as Man, saw
and experienced on earth the great beauty of His own
creation.
Nothing can perfectly describe the sensation of physically
walking in the footsteps of Jesus. It was like personally
living the Rosary. Never before had I felt so close
to its mysteries: being at the site of the annunciation,
where it all started, in Nazareth, kneeling in front of
Jesus’ birth place inside a 4th century basilica in Bethlehem,
walking the streets of Cana where Jesus performed his first
miracle, dipping my feet into the sea of Galilee, at
the foot of the mount where Jesus preached the Beatitudes,
standing in the Upper room, where Jesus instituted the Eucharist,
praying in front of the Blessed Sacrament in the garden
of Gethsemane under 2,000 year old olive trees, attending Mass
on Calvary, and again in the tomb where Christ was
resurrected.
On one special morning, I visited a small
town outside Jerusalem, where the Virgin Mary visited her cousin,
Elizabeth, after the annunciation. The location was striking for two
reasons. It was located 2-3 hours, by car, from Nazareth.
Being there, made me realize how long and difficult this
trip was for Mary, magnifying for me the act of
charity that Mary performed. What also struck me about this
special place was its sheer beauty. The town is set
amidst rolling, lush hills, covered with flowers and trees. I
could just imagine Mary and Elizabeth enjoying this beautiful setting
as they sewed or prepared meals. While Mary’s sacrifice was
great in performing this act of charity, the earthly ‘reward’
was also great. Visiting the Holy sites where these historic
experiences occurred intensified them for me, converted them from black
and white to vivid color.
My visit to the
dungeon, where Jesus spent much of the night after being
arrested in the Garden of Gethsemane, represented a much sadder
note. The stone, underground chambers were tiny and damp. One
could only imagine how much worse they were with no
light. I had never seriously contemplated this part of Jesus’
Passion. It made me appreciate even more the beautiful scene
in Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ, when Christ’s
mother lies down on the stones above the dungeon in
order to accompany Him more closely during His great sacrifice.
It is difficult to fully appreciate the intense psychological
pain Jesus endured in Gethsemane, or the extreme physical pain
He endured at His scourging and crucifixion. However, I think
most of us can grasp well the loneliness and isolation
Jesus must have felt alone in that cold, dark, dank
jail cell.
Being in the Holy Land makes one
more fully appreciate how linked the Old and New Testaments
are, both physically and theologically. To cite an example, Jerusalem’s
great temple, which was the cornerstone of Jewish life during
Jesus’ life, was built upon the burial site of Adam,
which is also the spot where Abraham nearly sacrificed his
son on the bequest of God.
There were many
layers of physical barriers leading to the inner sanctuary of
the Temple and, ultimately, only a very select few could
enter this innermost sanctuary. This is made very apparent when
one visits the Temple Mount in Jerusalem and studies reconstructions
of how the Temple looked 2000 years ago. Jesus’ entire
ministry was oriented towards His final entry into Jerusalem. The
physical Temple was destroyed after Jesus’ crucifixion. But, because of
Christ’s resurrection, we all have the possibility of being living
sanctuaries. After spending time in Jerusalem, I asked myself the
question: How many barriers have I erected preventing the Holy
Spirit from more fully inhabiting that innermost sanctuary of my
heart? " |
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