Testimonies of
Eucharistic Miracles
- The Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist
So Jesus said to them, 'Truly, truly, I
say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink
his blood, you have no life in you; he who eats my flesh and
drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the
last day. For my flesh is food indeed, and my blood is drink
indeed. (John 6:53-55)
Throughout Christian history, our Lord has shown us that he
is really present as the Blessed Sacrament. Interestingly, many
Eucharistic miracles have occurred during times of weakened
Faith. For instance, many Eucharist miracles have taken place as
a result of someone doubting the Real Presence. Included on this
page are descriptions of just a few of these miracles. All of
them have received full approval by the Church.
Most Eucharistic miracles involve incidences in which the Host
has "turned into human flesh and blood". Of course we as
Catholics believe that the consecrated Host is the Body, Blood,
Soul, and Divinity of our Lord, only under the appearances of
bread and wine. Therefore, Jesus, through these miracles, merely
manifests His Presence in a more tangible way.
Lanciano,
Italy -- 8th century
Ancient Anxanum, the city of the Frentanese, has contained for
over twelve centuries the first and greatest Eucharistic Miracle
of the Catholic Church. This wondrous Event took place in the
8th century A.D. in the little Church of St. Legontian, as a
divine response to a Basilian monk's doubt about Jesus' Real
Presence in the Eucharist.
During Holy Mass, after the two-fold consecration, the host was
changed into live Flesh and the wine was changed into live
Blood, which coagulated into five globules, irregular and
differing in shape and size.
The Host-Flesh, as can be very distinctly observed today, has
the same dimensions as the large host used today in the Latin
church; it is light brown and appears rose-colored when lighted
from the back.
The Blood is coagulated and has an earthy color resembling the
yellow of ochre. Various ecclesiastical investigation
("Recognitions") were conducted since 1574.
In
1970-'71 and taken up again partly in 1981 there took place a
scientific investigation by the most illustrious scientist Prof.
Odoardo Linoli, eminent Professor in Anatomy and Pathological
Histology and in Chemistry and Clinical Microscopy. He was
assisted by Prof. Ruggero Bertelli of the University of Siena.
The analyses were conducted with absolute and unquestionable
scientific precision and they were documented with a series of
microscopic photographs. These analyses sustained the following
conclusions:
- The Flesh is real Flesh. The Blood is real Blood.
- The Flesh and the Blood belong to the human species.
- The Flesh consists of the muscular tissue of the heart.
- In the Flesh we see present in section: the myocardium,
the endocardium, the vagus nerve and also the left ventricle
of the heart for the large thickness of the myocardium.
- The Flesh is a "HEART" complete in its essential
structure.
- The Flesh and the Blood have the same blood-type: AB
(Blood-type identical to that which Prof. Baima Bollone
uncovered in the Holy Shroud of Turin).
- In the Blood there were found proteins in the same normal
proportions (percentage-wise) as are found in the sero-proteic
make-up of the fresh normal blood.
- In the Blood there were also found these minerals:
chlorides, phosphorus, magnesium, potassium, sodium and
calcium.
The preservation of the Flesh and of the Blood, which were
left in their natural state for twelve centuries and exposed to
the action of atmospheric and biological agents, remains an
extraordinary phenomenon.
Bolsena-Orvieta, Italy, 1263
In 1263 a German priest, Peter of Prague, stopped at Bolsena
while on a pilgrimage to Rome. He is described as being a pious
priest, but one who found it difficult to believe that Christ
was actually present in the consecrated Host. While celebrating
Holy Mass above the tomb of St. Christina (located in the church
named for this martyr), he had barely spoken the words of
Consecration when blood started to seep from the consecrated
Host and trickle over his hands onto the altar and the corporal.
The priest was immediately confused. At first he attempted to
hide the blood, but then he interrupted the Mass and asked to be
taken to the neighboring city of Orvieto, the city where Pope Ur
ban IV was then residing.
The Pope listened to the priest's account and absolved him.
He then sent emissaries for an immediate investigation. When all
the facts were ascertained, he ordered the Bishop of the diocese
to bring to Orvieto the Host and the linen cloth bearing the
stains of blood. With archbishops, cardinals and other Church
dignitaries in attendance, the Pope met the procession and, amid
great pomp, had the relics placed in the cathedral. The linen
corporal bearing the spots of blood is still reverently
enshrined and exhibited in the Cathedral of Orvieto.
It is said that Pope Urban IV was prompted by this miracle to
commission St. Thomas Aquinas to compose the Proper for a Mass
and an Office honoring the Holy Eucharist as the Body of Christ.
One year after the miracle, in August of 1264, Pope Urban IV
introduced the saint's composition, and by means of a papal bull
instituted the feast of Corpus Christi.
After visiting the Cathedral of Orvieto, many pilgrims and
tourists journey to St. Christina's Church in Bolsena to see for
themselves the place where the miracle occurred. From the north
aisle of the church one can enter the Chapel of the Miracle,
where the stains on the paved floor are said to have been made
by the blood from the miraculous Host. The altar of the miracle,
which is surmounted by a 9th- century canopy, is now situated in
the grotto of St. Christina. A reclining statue of the saint is
nearby.
In August of 1964, on the 700th anniversary of the
institution of the feast of Corpus Christi, Pope Paul VI
celebrated Holy Mass at the altar where the holy corporal is
kept in its golden shrine in the Cathedral of Orvieto. (His
Holiness had journeyed to Orvieto by helicopter; he was the
first pope in history to use such a means of transportation).
Twelve years later, the same pontiff visited Bolsena and
spoke from there via television to the 41st International
Eucharistic Congress, then concluding its activities in
Philadelphia. During his address Pope Paul Vl spoke of the
Eucharist as being ". . . a mystery great and inexhaustible."
Betania,
Venezuela, 1991
This miracle occurred during Mass in Betania, Venezuela, on the
feast of the Immaculate Conception in 1991. A Consecrated Host,
truly the flesh of Our Lord, began to bleed. A subsequent
medical team concluded that the material extruded from the Host
was blood of human origin. The local bishop declared it a sign
of transubstantiation saying, "God is trying to manifest to us
that our faith in the consecrated Host is authentic."
Amsterdam, Holland 1345
In 1345, a man who was a devout Catholic became very ill. He
told his family he would like to receive Holy Viaticum. The
family notified the pastor of the then known Old Church. The
priest, after administering the sacrament, advised the family,
if the ill man threw up (which he was known to do after taking
nourishment) they were to empty the contents in the fire. The
man threw up and the family did what they were advised to do by
the priest, they threw the contents in the fire in the sick
room. This incident occurred on March 12th.
Early the next morning, one of the women went to rake the fire
and she noticed in the middle of the grate, the Blessed
Sacrament in the form of host. A light surrounded it. The woman
became upset and immediately put her hand in the fire to rescue
the host. This she did without any ill effects to herself. She
did not burn her hand. The woman was surprised to find the host
was cold! She immediately called in a neighbor and asked her to
take the Sacred Host to her home. The neighbor took a clean
cloth, placed the host on it and locked it in a box. She then
took it home. When the husband of the woman who found the host
heard what had taken place, he requested to see it. He tried to
lift it off the white cloth it rested on but the Sacred Particle
resisted as if to say it did not want to be touched by this
man's hands.
A priest was then summoned who took the host and placed it in a
pyx. When he went to wash the cloth which held the Blessed
Sacrament and return it to the original box, he noticed the pyx
was upset and the host was gone!
The next morning the neighbor returned for her original box and
cloth. When she opened the locked box she once again found the
Sacred Host in it! There was then no doubt that Our Lord wanted
this miracle to made known! The priest notified the clergy of
Amsterdam and a procession was held to carry the host to the
church.
The home of the sick man soon became a chapel and as early as
1360 public processions and pilgrims traveled to the site of the
miracle.
On May 25, 1452, a large conflagration broke out which left
three fourths of the city in ruins. It was during this time, the
chapel known as the Holy Room became subject to the flames.
Strangely, the monstrance containing the Miraculous Host, (which
had been brought over to the chapel from the old church) was
spared. In 1456, a new Holy Room was built surrounded by a
beautiful church.
Many pilgrims went to visit the shrine seeking cures and
spiritual help. One pilgrim, archduke Maximilian, later a Roman
Emperor, came seeking a cure in 1480. God heard his prayer and
he was cured. In thanksgiving, the archduke dedicated a
beautiful window to the Holy Room.
By the second half of the sixteenth century, Catholics in
Amsterdam fell under persecution of the Protestants. The Holy
Room fell under Protestant rule. In 1910, rather than sell the
property to the Catholics, the chapel was torn down. However,
devotion to this Eucharistic Miracle still takes place on March
12th at the church nearest the site.
Blanot,
France, 1331
The village of Blanot is situated in a long, narrow valley
surrounded by picturesque mountains. Inconspicuous because of
its location, it was nevertheless favored by God, who honored it
with a Eucharistic miracle. The physical evidence of this event
is still preserved in the church in which it occurred.
Before relating the miracle, it would be best to recall the
manner in which Holy Communion was distributed in the 14th
century (and in many places yet today). During Holy Mass, when
the time approached for the distribution of Communion, the
communicants would approach the altar railing which separated
the body of the church from the sanctuary. Taking their places
side by side along the length of the railing, they would kneel.
At about the same time, two altar boys would approach the
railing and take their places one at each end. Reaching down for
a long linen cloth that hung the length of the railing on the
side facing the sanctuary, each would take his end of the cloth
and flip it over the top of the railing. The communicants would
then place their hands beneath the cloth. The priest, holding
the ciborium containing the consecrated Hosts, would approach
one end of the railing and distribute the Hosts as he moved
along its length. At the time of the miracle this was the way in
which Holy Communion was received at Blanot.
The miracle occurred on Easter Sunday, March 31, 1331, at the
first Mass of the day, which was offered by Hugues de la Baume,
the vicar of Blanot. Because of the solemn occasion, two men of
the parish named Thomas Caillot and Guyot Besson were also
serving in addition to the altar boys. At Communion time the two
men approached the altar railing, took their places at each end
and turned the long cloth over the railing. The parishioners
took their places, held their hands under the cloth and waited
for the approach of the priest.
One of the last to receive was a woman named Jacquette,
described as being the widow of Regnaut d'Effour. The priest
placed the Host on her tongue, turned, and started walking
toward the altar. It was then that both men and a few of the
communicants saw the Host fall from the woman's mouth and land
upon the cloth that covered her hands. As the priest was then
placing the ciborium inside the tabernacle, Thomas Caillot
approached the altar and informed him of the accident. The
priest immediately left the altar and approached the railing;
but instead of finding the Host, he saw a spot of blood the same
size as the Host, which had apparently dissolved into blood.
When the Mass was completed, the priest took the cloth into the
sacristy and placed the stained area in a basin filled with
clear water. After washing the spot and scrubbing it with his
fingers numerous times he found that, far from becoming smaller
and lighter, it had actually become larger and much darker. On
removing the cloth from the basin he was surprised to find that
the water had turned bloody. The priest and his assistants were
not only astonished, but also frightened, and exclaimed, "This
is the Precious Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ!" The priest then
took a knife and, after washing it, cut from the cloth the piece
bearing the bloody imprint of the Host. This square piece of
cloth was reverently placed in the tabernacle.
Fifteen days later, an official of the Archdiocese of Autun,
Jean Jarossier, journeyed to Blanot to initiate an
investigation. With him was the Cure' de Lucenay, a monsignor of
Autun, and an apostolic notary. The interrogation of witnesses
was conducted in the presence of Pierre Osnonout, the Cure' of
Blanot. The results of this investigation were sent by
Archbishop Pierre Bertrand to Pope John XXII, who pronounced a
favorable verdict and accorded indulgences to those who would
celebrate Mass in the parish church of Blanot. Copies of the
documents are still kept in the City Hall of Blanot and are
described as being in an ancient style which is difficult to
read.
The Hosts that remained in the ciborium after the distribution
of Holy Communion on that Easter Sunday were never used, and
were carefully reserved in the tabernacle. The reason for this
is not known, although one might speculate that the priest
wished to avoid a possible repetition of the prodigy. In 1706
these Hosts, preserved in good condition after 375 years, were
taken in a five-hour procession around the parish of Blanot in
observance of the anniversary of the miracle. Taking part in the
ceremony were many prelates and a great many people of the
parish and the surrounding areas. At the conclusion of the
procession, the silver ciborium holding the Hosts was returned
to the golden box in which it was kept. This was carefully
placed in the main tabernacle of the church.
For many years there were commemorative processions and special
observances, but these were discontinued at the start of the
French Revolution when violent fanatics were desecrating
Catholic churches and taking objects of value.
On December 27, 1793, a group of revolutionaries entered the
church and boldly opened the tabernacle. The bloodstained cloth,
now encased in a crystal tube, was actually handled by one of
them, but fortunately was rejected as being of little value.
After this desecration of the church, the relic was entrusted to
the safekeeping of a pious parishioner, Dominique Cortet. While
it was in his home it was venerated and given all respect, yet
despite this care, the tube was cracked on both the top and
bottom. One of the injuries was caused by M. Lucotte, the Cure'
of Blanot, who often kissed it and put it on the eyes of the
faithful. The other end was accidentally cracked while it was
hidden in the drawer of an armoire.
Following the Revolution, when peace was again restored, many
persons were questioned about the authenticity of the cloth
within the crystal tube. All agreed that it was the same one
that had been kept in the church. After ecclesiastical officials
were satisfied as to the relic's authenticity, it was solemnly
returned to the church and placed in a box covered with velvet
which, in turn, was placed within the tabernacle.
Sometime later a new crystal tube was designed for the relic. At
either end are rings of gold and copper, with a cross
surmounting the top. The tube, with the cloth clearly visible,
is sealed and kept within a special ostensorium. This is adorned
at its base with four enamel panels which depict events in the
history of the relic.
Each year on Easter Monday, according to ancient custom, the
relic is solemnly exposed in the church of Blanot.
Cascia,
Italy, 1300
A priest took a Consecrated Host and placed it irreverently
between the pages of his breviary. When he opened the book, he
saw that the Host had turned red with fresh blood and was
impregnated with the two pages between which it had been placed!
He took the two pages, putting one in a tabernacle in Perugia
and keeping the other in Cascia. The miracle is particularly
commemorated each year on the Feast of Corpus Christi in Cascia
up to today, 2002..
There are those that look at the bloodstained page and see the
image of Christ.
Bagno di Romagna, Italy
This
Eucharistic miracle occurred in the small Italian town of Bagno
di Romagna as a priest was celebrating Mass and having great
doubts about the True Presence of Our Lord in the Eucharist.
After consecrating the wine, he looked into the chalice and was
shocked to see wine turned to blood. It began to bubble out of
the chalice and onto the corporal. Shaken by the event, the
priest prayed for forgiveness. He eventually was given the title
Venerable because of the pious life he led after the miracle.
In 1958 an investigation confirmed the corporal contained human
blood and still retained properties of blood nearly 600 years
later.
Perhaps the blood was bubbling to show us that Jesus is alive in
the Eucharist. We reflect on how we need to change after
receiving Him, letting Jesus become alive in us and filling us
with the power of the Holy Spirit.
Eucharistic
Miracle in Sienna, Italy 1730
The second Eucharistic miracle of Sienna has roots in the 13th
century when special services and festivities were introduced in
honor of the feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
These observances became traditional and were still conducted at
the time of the miracle. So it was that on August 14, 1730,
during devotions for the vigil of the feast, while most of the
Sienese population and the clergy of the city were attending
these services, thieves entered the deserted Church of St.
Francis. Taking advantage of the friars' absence, they made for
the chapel where the Blessed Sacrament was kept, picked the lock
to the tabernacle and carried away the golden ciborium
containing consecrated Hosts.
The theft went undiscovered until the next morning, when the
priest opened the tabernacle at the Communion of the Mass. Then
later, when a parishioner found the lid of the ciborium lying in
the street, the suspicion of sacrilege was confirmed. The
anguish of the parishioners forced the cancellation of the
traditional festivities for the feast of Our Lady's Assumption.
The Archbishop ordered public prayers of reparation, while the
civil authorities began a search for the consecrated Hosts and
for the scoundrel who had taken them.
Two days later, on August 17, while praying in the Church of St.
Mary of Provenzano, a priest's attention was directed to
something white protruding from the offering box attached to his
prie dieu. Realizing that it was a Host, he informed the other
priests of the church, who in turn notified the Archbishop and
the friars of the Church of St. Francis.
When the offering box was opened, in the presence of local
priests and the representative of the Archbishop, a large number
of Hosts were found, some of them suspended by cobwebs. The
Hosts were compared with some unconsecrated ones used in the
Church of St. Francis, and proved to be exactly the same size
and to have the same mark of the irons upon which they were
baked. The number of Hosts corresponded exactly to the number
the Franciscan friars had estimated were in the ciborium -- 348
whole Hosts and six halves.
Since the offering box was opened but once a year, the Hosts
were covered with the dust and debris that had collected there.
After being carefully cleaned by the priests, they were enclosed
in a ciborium and placed inside the tabernacle of the main altar
of the Church of St. Mary. The following day, in the company of
a great gathering of townspeople, Archbishop Alessandro
Zondadari carried the Sacred Hosts in solemn procession back to
the Church of St. Francis.
During the two centuries that followed it has sometimes been
wondered why the Hosts were not consumed by a priest during
Mass, which would have been the ordinary procedure in such a
case. While there is no definite answer, there are two theories.
One explanation is that crowds of people from both Sienna and
neighboring cities gathered in the church to offer prayers of
reparation before the sacred particles, forcing the priests to
conserve them for a time. The other reason the priests did not
consume them might well have been because of their soiled
condition. While the Hosts were superficially cleaned after
their discovery, they still retained a great deal of dirt. In
such cases it is not necessary to consume consecrated Hosts, but
it is permitted to allow them to deteriorate naturally, at which
time Christ would no longer be present.
To the amazement of the clergy, the Hosts did not deteriorate,
but remained fresh and even retained a pleasant scent. With the
passage of time the Conventual Franciscans became convinced that
they were witnessing a continuing miracle of preservation.
Fifty years after the recovery of the stolen Hosts, an official
investigation was conducted into the authenticity of the
miracle. The Minister General of the Franciscan Order, Father
Carlo Vipera, examined the Hosts on April 14, 1780, and upon
tasting one of them he found it fresh and incorrupt. Since a
number of the Hosts had been distributed during the preceding
years, the Minister General ordered that the remaining 230
particles be placed in a new ciborium and forbade further
distribution.
A more detailed investigation took place in 1789 by Archbishop
Tiberio Borghese of Sienna with a number of theologians and
other dignitaries. After examining the Hosts under a microscope,
the commission declared that they were perfectly intact and
showed no sign of deterioration. The three Franciscans who had
been present at the previous investigation, that of 1780, were
questioned under oath by the Archbishop. It was then reaffirmed
that the Hosts under examination were the same ones stolen in
1730.
As a test to further confirm the authenticity of the miracle,
the Archbishop, during this 1789 examination, ordered several
unconsecrated hosts to be placed in a sealed box and kept under
lock in the chancery office. Ten years later these were examined
and found to be not only disfigured, but also withered. In 1850,
61 years after they were placed in a sealed box, these
unconsecrated hosts were found reduced to particles of a dark
yellow color, while the consecrated Hosts retained their
original freshness.
Other examinations were made at intervals over the years, the
most significant being that of 1914, undertaken on the authority
of Pope St. Pius X. For this inquiry the Archbishop selected a
distinguished panel of investigators, which included scientists
and professors from Sienna and Pisa, as well as theologians and
Church officials.
Acid and starch tests performed on one of the fragments
indicated a normal starch content. The conclusions reached from
microscopic tests indicated that the Hosts had been made of
roughly sifted wheat flour, which was found to be well
preserved.
The commission agreed that unleavened bread, if prepared under
sterile conditions and kept in an airtight, antiseptically
cleaned container, could be kept for an extremely long time.
Unleavened bread prepared in a normal fashion and exposed to air
and the activity of micro-organisms would remain intact for no
more than a few years. It was concluded that the stolen Hosts
had been both prepared without scientific precautions and kept
under ordinary conditions which should have caused their decay
more than a century before. The commission concluded that the
preservation was extraordinary, ". . . e la scienza stessa che
proclama qui lo straordinario."
Professor Siro Grimaldi, professor of chemistry at the
University of Sienna and director of the Municipal Chemical
Laboratory, as well as the holder of several other distinguished
positions in the field of chemistry, was the chief chemical
examiner of the holy particles in 1914. Afterward, he gave
elaborate statements concerning the miraculous nature of the
Hosts, and wrote a book about the miracle entitled Uno
Scienziato Adora (A Scientific Adorer). In 1914 he declared:
The holy Particles of unleavened bread represent an example of
perfect preservation ... a singular phenomenon that inverts the
natural law of the conservation of organic material. It is a
fact unique in the annals of science.
In 1922 another investigation was conducted -- this one in the
presence of Cardinal Giovanni Tacci, who was accompanied by the
Archbishop of Sienna and the Bishops of Montepulciano, Foligno
and Grosseto. Again the results were the same: the Hosts tasted
like unleavened bread, were starchy in composition and were
completely preserved.
In 1950 the miraculous Hosts were taken from the old ciborium
and placed in a more elaborate and costly one, which caught the
eye of another thief. Thus, despite the precautions of the
clergy, another sacrilegious theft occurred on the night of
August 5, 1951. This time the thief was considerate enough to
take only the container and left the Hosts in a corner of the
tabernacle. After counting 133 Hosts, the Archbishop himself
sealed them in a silver ciborium. Later, after being
photographed, they were placed in an elaborate container which
replaced the one that had been stolen.
The miraculously preserved Hosts are displayed publicly on
various occasions, but especially on the 17th of each month,
which commemorates the day they were found after the first theft
in 1730. On the feast of Corpus Christi the Sacred Hosts are
placed in their processional monstrance and triumphantly carried
in procession from the church through the streets of the town,
an observance in which the whole populace participates.
Among many distinguished visitors who have adored the Hosts was
St. John Bosco. They were likewise venerated by Pope John XXIII,
who signed the album of visitors on May 29, 1954, when he was
still the Patriarch of Venice. And although unable to visit the
miraculous Hosts, Popes Pius X, Benedict XV, Pius Xl and Pius
Xll issued statements of profound interest and admiration.
With a unanimous voice, the faithful, priests, bishops,
cardinals and popes have marveled at and worshiped the holy
Hosts, recognizing in them a permanent miracle, both complete
and perfect, that has endured for over 250 years.
By this miracle the Hosts have remained whole and shiny, and
have maintained the characteristic scent of unleavened bread.
Since they are in such a perfect state of conservation,
maintaining the appearances of bread, the Catholic Church
assures us that although they were consecrated in the year 1730,
these Eucharistic Hosts are still really and truly the Body of
Christ. The miraculous Hosts have been cherished and venerated
in the Basilica of St. Francis in Sienna for over 250 years.
Bologna,
Italy, 1933
The Lord gave to Imelda Lambertini a special gift at age 9 on
the Feast of the Ascension in 1333. While praying, a Host
appeared suspended in mid-air in front of her. The priest was
called and he gave her Holy Communion. She went into ecstasy and
never awakened. She died while receiving her First Holy
Communion!
Blessed Imelda’s incorrupt body lies in the church of San
Sigismondo near the University of Bologna. Pope St. Pious X
named her Protectress of First Holy Communicants.
Santarem,
Portugal, 1247
A strange case: A host brought to a sorceress started to
bleed... Fear overcame her and she went home and put the Host in
a trunk, wrapped in her handkerchief and covered with clean
linen.
During the night she and her husband were awakened by a bright
light coming from the trunk which illuminated the room. The wife
told her husband of the incident and that the trunk contained a
Consecrated Host. Both spent the night on their knees in
adoration. A priest was called and took the Host back to the
church and sealed it in melted beeswax.
The miracle, 750 years old in 1997, was celebrated with much
festivity in Santarem.
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