Since the National Pilgrimage of 1888, the great
pilgrimages of Lourdes presented a peculiar characteristic: a
Eucharistic demonstration in which the Divine Sacrament causes Its glory
and Its power to shine more strikingly. Of course Jesus Our Savior was
never forgotten amidst the pious homage tendered by the crowds to His
Most Holy Mother.
It must also be remembered that if Mary worked
miracles upon souls and bodies, it was always through the omnipotent
virtue of Her Son—Who is God, the sole Author of all these wonders. But
that year, as the Journal de Lourdes remarks: "It has pleased our good
Mother to efface Herself that Her Divine Son might shine forth in the
Eucharist."
The 21st of August, 1888, was for the National Pilgrimage a
day of trial: there were few cures, and towards evening a terrible
storm prevented the torch-light procession from taking place. At the
sight of the saddened, though not discouraged, pilgrims an inspiration
from Heaven had suddenly dawned in the heart of a pious ecclesiastic.
Why should not the Blessed Sacrament receive a triumphant ovation? And
as the God of the Eucharist was being carried among the sick, why should
not the multitude address Him with the same acclamations, the same
prayers which in the days of yore had obtained the miracles which
occurred during the mortal life of the Savior? This plan was, of
course, favorably accepted.
The next day, at four o’clock in the afternoon, Jesus in
the Blessed Sacrament was leaving the Basilica preceded and followed by a
great number of the Faithful bearing tapers in their hands. After
Benediction, given in the Grotto, the invocations began, with an
animation, a stress, an enthusiasm quite indescribable. A spirit of
Heaven-sent rapture descended upon the crowd. From all the pallets,
from all the beds, from all the vehicles where human infirmity lay prone
and suffering, something heart-rending, supplicating, came forth; and
as though by a unanimous impulse, the crowd called upon the Son of the
Immaculate, as of yore did the paralytic and the blind man of Jericho,
"Lord! if Thou wilt, Thou canst heal me!"
But now, behold! in front of
the Grotto eight of the sick have arisen! How describe such things?
When the Magnificat was intoned, triumphant, prodigious, no one could
restrain his tears. And every year after, in the numberless processions
that unwind themselves near the blessed Grotto, the same enthusiastic
faith bursts forth; the same ardent prayer on the part of the Faithful,
the same prodigies of merciful power on the part of Jesus Christ present
in the Blessed Sacrament take place. It is Mary at Lourdes who has
really prepared the Eucharistic triumph of Her Son. (Les Miracles historiques du Saint Sacrement, par le P. Eug. Couet)
Modern "science" has for a long time sought the secret of
the cures in the waters of the spring at Lourdes. The temperature of
the water, its composition, all has been brought forward. "How do we
know," said one 'scientist', "that in certain circumstances a bath in
ice water might not save a consumptive?" And so it happens that, by one
of those seeming whims of Providence, the original plan of Lourdes
seems abruptly modified; a new appeal makes itself felt.
It is not only in the baths, where the patient is
surrounded by a certain mystery—it is during the procession of the
Blessed Sacrament, in the full light of day, under the eyes of a
thousand witnesses that the cures take place.
They
wanted to keep our God a silent Prisoner, enclosed in the Tabernacle.
Behold! He comes forth. He passes through the crowds, His divine rays
more resplendent than gold and precious stones, dazzle our eyes, bring
back life to those who are dying on their beds, leading them after Him
triumphant and transformed; they penetrate the crowds and warm hearts
and souls frozen and benumbed for years. Miraculous cures, miraculous
conversions! Who can enumerate them?
It is interesting to study these manifestations which have
been spreading since the year 1888. With them, all that constitutes
the real life of the pilgrimages is developed; the crowds are greater;
the Communions are more frequent, for that is the hearth from which
supernatural life draws nourishment.
It was in 1888 that for the first time we kept statistics
of the cures which occurred where the Blessed Sacrament passed. That
year they reached a proportion of sixteen per cent—about a sixth; seven
cures at the processions to forty at the baths. A great number of cures
remained unreported as to place and manner. Often a cure begins at the
baths and terminates at the procession; more rarely, a cure begins at
the procession and is completed at the baths.
In a great number of
cases where there had been no results at the baths, the cure took place
before the Blessed Sacrament instantly.
The first cure mentioned to us was that of Nina Klin, a
young woman of twenty-two, just out of the Paris hospitals. A container
holding 25 pints of sulphuric acid had been spilled over her and she
had been deeply burned. The nerves of the leg had been compressed in
the scar, and for ten months she had been unable to move at all. Every
treatment had been tried in vain—massage, electricity—no results had
been obtained. Nina Klin had come with the National Pilgrimage. She
was twice immersed in the baths, but felt no improvement.
On August 22
she was lying on a mattress in front of the Grotto when the Blessed
Sacrament passed beside her. She was suddenly lifted up by a violent
impulsion, and jumping from her bed she broke through the litters that
surrounded her and followed the procession with an assured step.
Since 1888 the proportion of cures which have taken place
at the passing of the Blessed Sacrament has continually increased at
Lourdes. They rose rapidly from one-sixth to one-fifth, one-quarter,
one-third, and at last to one-half, which was exceeded in 1894 and in
1898. We find, in this last year, forty cures at the procession as
against thirty-five at the baths. There were a few fluctuations in
1891, 1892 and 1895, but as an average during those ten years the cures
at the processions increased to sixty per cent.
The sick, however, did not wait for our statistics to
notice these coincidences. They hasten to come and group themselves in
the Esplanade of the Rosary. They prefer to come there during the
pilgrimages to take part in the great Eucharistic manifestations, for
they know that many cures will be incontestably proved during these
ceremonies.
In 1889 we find some very interesting cures. Here is a
young blind girl, Mary Louise Horeau, nineteen years old, who does not
distinguish the day from the night. She has to be both led and fed.
She had suffered from recurrent Keratitis, deeply seated eye trouble,
her eyes having lost their clarity. She has not been able to get near
the Grotto, so she waits by the baths, having begged her friend to
notify her the moment Our Lord comes near her.
The Blessed Sacrament
arrives surrounded by the acclamations of the crowd. "Here He comes!"
says the friend of the poor blind girl. The sick one falls upon her
knees. "Lord," she cries, "if Thou wilt, Thou canst cure me! Lord,
make me see!" Instantly a blinding light crosses her line of vision;
she feels a very acute pain, and her eyes are opened. She distinguishes
the Grotto, the kneeling crowd—and Jesus, radiant with glory, Who has
blessed her. Her sight is restored; she can see the finest, most
delicate objects. We examine her eyes; they are limpid and perfectly
clear.
Mrs. Facq, from Pont-à-Mousson, mother of ten children,
forty-four years old, who had been paralyzed for five years: she was
carried to the baths in a fainting condition—dying. Should they bathe
her while in such a state? But there is no hope, the Sisters say, if
the Blessed Virgin does not cure her! Eight of the Lady Helpers go to
work. They undress the poor patient. She is immersed in the water.
Once in, the hiccoughs begin; her lips grow livid. It is the agony—the
end. The prayers for the dying are recited. At that moment the little
bell announcing the approach of the Blessed Sacrament is heard.
Quickly
they carry the patient along the way of Its passage, under torrents of
rain. The Lady Helpers fall on their knees around the patient and try
to raise her head. Vain efforts, the head falls back and the eyes
remain closed. At this moment the Blessed Sacrament arrives. All of a
sudden the patient raises herself; her eyes open and become fixed on the
ostensorium. She rises, she stands, she walks to meet the Blessed
Sacrament. She falls on her knees at His feet. The ostensorium is
placed on her head. She rises at once, and bare-footed, in the mud, her
face beaming with joy, she walks behind the dais and it is with great
trouble that she is prevented from climbing thus far as the Basilica; it
is only in front of the Pilgrim's Asylum that she can be stopped.
We
could also recall the cure of young Guy, from Montpelier. He had been
cared for in the hospital for a long time without results. He had a
lifeless, paralyzed, atrophied arm—the discolored cuticle came off in
patches. With his good hand he raised the splint which held his bad arm
and touched the ostensorium. Immediately he felt a violent shock and
heat, power and life returned instantly to the paralyzed member. He
removed the apparatus to find himself absolutely cured.
Beside him was a twelve-year-old child who had never
walked; affected with suppurative tubercular hip disease. When the
Blessed Sacrament passed before him, he seized the humeral veil with
both hands and held back the priest who carried the ostensorium. In
vain did they try to make him loose his hold. "No," he said, "I will
not give in until I can get up cured!" And after struggling a few
moments, he surely did rise before the wondering crowd, which rushed
after him and carried him triumphantly.
I have said that we had reached sixty per cent for cures
at the passing of the Blessed Sacrament; this proportion has been
exceeded. In 1898 the pilgrimage from Arras found that all its
patients were cured during the procession. For ten or twelve years, the
great rendezvous where the deepest homage has been paid to the
Eucharist is Lourdes.
These manifestations, which at first were limited to the
National Pilgrimages, have been adopted by all the pilgrimages. They
are loved by all peoples and form for the future a part of all great
religious ceremonies. In the footsteps of our missionaries, with the
devotion to Our Lady of Lourdes, they have reached and penetrated the
most remote places.
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