Jesus Christ is our God and King, and yet… He is also very much hidden and unknown, except through the eyes of Faith. He is a King who chooses to come to us in the most humble form of bread and wine in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
We are surrounded on every side by invisible, supernatural realities which require the gift of Faith. But God comes to our aid in our weakness, even in our own time, there have been Eucharistic Miracles; the extraordinary manifestations of the invisible reality of Christ’s Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity being truly present in the Eucharist.
Vilakannur Miracle. Priest holds carefully in his hands the Holy Eucharist on which the Face of Christ Miraculously appeared during Mass.
It was Pope St. John Paul II who first coined the phrase “Eucharistic Face of Christ.” These words from the fourth Psalm were the inspiration for him to place the millennium under “the radiant sign of the Face of Christ:”
“Many are saying ‘Who will show us anything good?’ Lift up the light of Your Face upon us, LORD!” (Ps. 4:6)
St. Pope John Paul II “In the Eucharist, the Face of Christ is turned towards us.”
Dr. Brant Pitre, writes in his book “Jesus and the Jewish Roots of the Eucharist, that the Eucharist was prefigured by the manna that God gave to Moses: “When the Israelites saw it, they said to each other, “What is it? For they did not know what it was. Moses said to them, “it is the bread the LORD has given you to eat.” (Exodus 16:15) The Eucharist was also prefigured by the mysterious “Bread of the Presence” also known as the “Bread of the Face of God” mentioned in Exodus. On special feasts, the Bread of the Presence would be brought out for pilgrims to see, and the priests would declare, “Behold God’s love for you!”
St. Pio at the moment of Consecration, when the bread and wine become the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ.
Paten viewed through the Veil of the Holy Face of Manoppello. (Photo: Paul Badde)
Jesus said to them, Amen, Amen, I say to you, it was not Moses who gave the bread from Heaven; my Father gives you the true bread from heaven. For the bread of God is that which comes down from heaven and gives life to the world… I am the bread of life; whoever comes to me will never hunger and whoever believes in me will never thirst.” (John 6: 32-35) “I am the living bread that came down from heaven; whoever eats this bread will live forever; and the bread that I will give is My flesh for the life of the world.” (John 6:51)
We should use whatever means at our disposal to share this good news to draw souls to Christ Our King.
Therefore, I would like to share a beautiful and powerful short film, “The Real Presence: The Mass” to awaken hearts to the truth of the Eucharist and reveal what is really happening at every Catholic Mass. This 28-minute video reveals the unseen spiritual reality behind the Catholic Mass– through scenes from an actual Mass, and the use of artistically augmented reality–the “unseen spiritual reality” such as the participation of the angels and saints, and the mystical beauty of the liturgy is portrayed in the film — including the Real Presence of Jesus Christ, Our King, Who heals, forgives and transforms us into His own Image — Our King, Who is truly present in the Eucharist.
The film also features commentary from Nationally recognized Catholic theologians and speakers such as: Deacon Harold Burke-Sivers, Dr. Scott Hahn, Sr. Bethany Madonna of the Sisters of Life, Curtis A. Martin, Sr. Briege McKenna, His Eminence Christophe Cardinal Pierre, Bishop Erik T. Pohlmeier, Fr. Mike Schmitz, Fr. Robert Spitzer, and Bishop David L. Toups.
Please share this excellent film with others!
(To read more about Eucharistic miracles: “Behold God’s Love for You” (St. Carlo Acutis’s passion to share miracles of the Eucharist through a website.) And “A Relic of Divinity”. (The recently approved Eucharistic Miracle in Kerala, India; the Face of Jesus Christ appearing on a Host during the Consecration of the Mass.)
Msgr. Walter Amaducci presents a copy of his book on the Holy Face of Manoppello to Pope Leo XIV
English edition of Msgr. Amaducci’s book “The Holy Face.”
First, some good news: This October, Msgr. Walter Amaducci, Episcopal Vicar for Pastoral Care in the Diocese of Cesena in Emilia-Romagne, was received in a private audience by Pope Leo XIV. During their cordial meeting, Msgr. Amaducci presented the Pope with a copy of his book on the Holy Face of Manoppello. Msgr. Amaducci, who was once a skeptic of the relic veil known as “Il Volto Santo,” has now become its ardent defender, recognizing in the remarkable history, its importance for this millennium–dedicated to the Face of Christ by Pope St. John Paul II.
During his meeting with Pope Leo XIV, the gracious Msgr. Amaducci also advised the Holy Father to seek further information about the relic from Cardinal Louis Antonio Tagle, who has been personally involved in spreading the good news of the Holy Veil of Manoppello for many years.
Padre Carmine Cucinelli, the former Rector of Basilica Sanctuary of the Holy Face and Cardinal Tagle (2017)
On his first visit to see the Holy Face of Manoppello, on May 20, 2017, Cardinal Tagle, shared his experience: (Translation from the original Italian interview, which may be seen here.) — “I saw the Holy Face under the changing of the light, not only a Face of tenderness, but of welcoming. I saw a Face smiling at me, almost saying, “Welcome Luis Antonio!” It is a Face that speaks, it is alive, yes, it is the message, the Word is the Face. It is also a Face turned towards me, but I did not feel fear; fear in front of a judge, or of a face which condemns. A Face of Truth, and the Truth is love; love wins out over fear. I thought this afternoon perhaps this is the Last Judgement–it is not a judgement full of fear and dread, but in front of pure love–I do not want to hide myself. There is no reason to hide myself, but, there is only the reason to open my heart in front of a Face open to love, open to welcoming, open to pardoning my mistakes. It is an experience of liberation, and religious experience for me.”
Cardinal Tagle elevating the Body of Christ at the Basilica Shrine of the Holy Face of Manoppello, Italy (Photo: Paul Badde/EWTN)
At the closing of Cardinal Tagle’s homily the next day, May 21, 2017, he said: “We see the Face of Jesus because He reveals His Face to us, the Face of the loving God. His is the Face of God turned towards us and not centered on Himself. His is the Face of the One who fulfilled the commandment of love. As we see and hear His Face may our faces be transformed into His Holy Face. Through the testimony of our faces, may the suffering people of the world know that Jesus sees them, listens to them, cares for them and loves them.”
A Blessed Encounter with the Holy Face of Jesus
(Photo: Patricia Enk)
Cardinal Tagle has also said, “What we have seen and heard we must share with others.”
Mountain “The Catholic Traveler” Butorac stands next to the Relic Veil of the Holy Face in the Basilica Shrine of Il Volto Santo in Manoppello, Italy. (Photo: Patricia Enk)
And so, I would like to share with tremendous gratitude in my heart, that I have just returned from a Jubilee Year of Hope pilgrimage, which brought me back to Rome, Assisi, Loreto and especially to Manoppello after far too many years–thanks to Mountain Butorac, a.k.a. “The Catholic Traveler.”
Earlier this year Mountain had led my husband and I on an exceptional pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and so now we have a great deal of confidence in the gifts and talents that God has given him to make even the most daunting pilgrimage journey happen–with as few bumps along the way as possible–and many joyful and holy surprises as well.
And speaking of joy and holy surprises… we saw the Pope!
Pope Leo XIV recognizing some very happy & shouting pilgrims from the “Windy City.” (Photo: Patricia Enk)
My last visit to the Basilica Shrine of “Il Volto Santo” was in the Jubilee Year of Mercy, in 2016–which we had traveled to on our own over nine years ago: (Pilgrimage — A Journey Toward the Face of God, Part 1 – Manoppello.) Much had happened in the following nine years which prevented our return; some good and some bad; including the loss of my eyesight for over a year, and after several surgeries–a gradual recovery–thanks be to God!
Sr. Petra-Maria, Cynthia Krystyna Simla reverencing the Holy Face relic. (Photo: Patricia Enk, 2016)
For this pilgrimage journey, our small group of fellow pilgrims were a continual source of unexpected blessing, help, and inspirations at each step along the way. Mountain shouldered the stress whenever “the best laid plans of mice and men” went a little astray, but with the end result always turning out even better than originally planned: such as the day that the Sistine Chapel was going to be closed to the public when we had been scheduled to visit. The reason was the historic meeting of King Charles with Pope Leo XIV. The King the the Pope would be praying together for the first time in 500 hundred years, under the backdrop of Michelangelo’s “Last Judgement.” Only a few hours before that grand event, after strolling peacefully alone through the Vatican Museum, we were surprised when our group had been allowed to enter the Sistine Chapel with no one else present–except some very diligent cleaning ladies preparing for the Pope and King, and a handful of very Vatican official-looking men in suits. (No photos in the Sistine Chapel, of course.)
Biographer of Carlo Acutis, and custodian of his relics, Mons. Anthony Figueiredo, gave the group a wonderful talk on St. Francis connecting to the spirituality of St. Carlo Acutis.
Miracles do happen! And there were many more to come… a surprise blessing with the relics of St. Carlo Acutis in Assisi, Mass in the dark silence of the Holy House of Loreto, the sight of the oldest Eucharistic Miracle of Lanciano…and for myself; the tremendous grace to see, through grateful tears once again, the great gift the human Face of my Risen Lord on the Holy Veil of Manoppello, and with renewed Hope in the power of the Resurrection of Christ.
Pope St. John Paul has said: “Contemplation of Christ’s Face cannot stop at the image of the Crucified One. He is the Risen One!” The Holy Face of Manoppello is the Face of the Risen Christ; it is believed to be the “Cloth that Covered His Head” in the tomb.
“Those who gaze on it [the relic Veil of the Holy Face] are never satisfied with contemplating it, and wish to always have it before their eyes. And when they eventually leave it, with heavy sighs full of love, they are forced to leave Him their hearts, bathed in tears.” –Capuchin Donato da Bomba 1646. (Paul Badde’s beautiful photo of Il Volto Santo of Manoppello)
Continuing his catechesis on the Jubilee theme of Jesus Christ, Our Hope, Pope Leo XIV asks us “to consider how the Resurrection of Jesus fulfills the desires of every human heart. Our lives are marked by conflicting situations that reveal limitations and our desire to overcome them. We seek worldly recognition and whether we receive it or not, we still feel empty. This reveals that we are not truly satisfied with achievements and passing certainties of the world. This is because we are created in the image and likeness of God, and through the power of the Holy Spirit, we recognize an inexhaustible longing in our hearts for something more. It is only the Resurrected Jesus who can give the only true and lasting peace that sustains and fills us. In a world struggling with fatigue and despair, let us be signs of hope, peace, and joy in the Risen Lord!” (Pope Leo XIV, October 15, 2025 Audience)
(Photo: Jerry Christopher) Entering the Holy Door Deo Gratias!
“Abruzzo is a great producer of silence, wrote Georgio Manganelli.” Manoppello, Italy–hidden deep in the Abruzzo Mountains–had kept a secret: a holy relic veil of the Face of Jesus, treasuring and protecting it through five tumultuous centuries; effectively preventing it from being destroyed many times over. But now, in God’s Providence, the secret has come to light with the dawn of the millennium, which was dedicated to the Face of Christ by Pope St. John Paul II.
An eminent scholar, Fr. Heinrich Pfeiffer, uncovered the secret of Abruzzo and, at a great personal cost, presented his theses to the world. The news was embraced by some; and of course, rejected by others–there is nothing new in that. Opinions are like noses–everyone has one. We all make our own choices, for good or bad; but to make a choice, to believe or disbelieve, we first need an informed conscience, and the desire to know the truth in the first place.
For this reason Antonio Bini has published a free e-book (which is embedded below) which presents the background of the re-discovery of the relic of the Holy Veil of Manoppello bearing an image of the Face of Christ: “Heinrich Pfeiffer, The Scholar Who Recognized the Veronica in the Holy Face”. This essay commemorates Father Heinrich Pfeiffer (1939-2021), professor of Christian art history at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome and one of the leading contemporary scholars of the Church’s cultural heritage, who passed away in Berlin on November 26, 2021. With his studies on the Holy Face of Manoppello, which he identified as “the Veronica” (True Image).
Pope Benedict XVI contemplates the Face on the Veil of Manoppello. September 1, 2006. (Photo: Paul Badde/EWTN)
Pfeiffer was met with distrust and hostility from scholars and Church hierarchies for questioning centuries-old silences and beliefs regarding Christ’s burial cloths. The book reconstructs the author’s encounter with Fr. Pfeiffer, the background to the international press conference held in Rome on May 31, 1999, in which the scholar supported his theses. These attracted the interest of the media and many pilgrims to the sanctuary of Manoppello, which until then had been relatively unknown. Among these Pope Benedict XVI, This visit effectively confirmed the validity of Fr. Pfeiffer’s theses. The German Pope was impressed by his encounter with the Holy Face, immediately elevating the church to a basilica and dedicating an intense prayer a year after his visit.
References to the Sack of Rome are also included, when the Veronica disappeared from Rome, as the Vatican press office later admitted in 2011. The photographic and documentary material, much of it previously unpublished, is noteworthy. By the author’s wish, the book, a testimony to the events, is being distributed free of charge in English to promote broader knowledge of the Holy Face among the many interested in the recent history of the mysterious image.
“O Lord, wealth of the poor, how admirably You can sustain souls, revealing Your great riches to them gradually and not permitting them to see them all at once. When I see Your great Majesty hidden in so small a thing as the Host, I cannot but marvel at Your great wisdom.” –St. Teresa of Jesus
The video above was posted on YouTube over eleven years ago of a Eucharistic Miracle that occurred on Friday, November 15, of 2013, at Christ the King Church in Vilakannur, Kerala, India. After twelve years of investigation, the Vatican has recently announced the approval of this “Relic of Divinity.” This is a powerful sign for our times at the beginning of this millennium dedicated by Pope St. John Paul II to the Holy Face of Jesus Christ. It seems as though Our Lord invites us to come to the banquet of His Love.
“The Face of Christ is the supreme revelation of Christ’s Mercy.”–Pope Benedict XVI gazing at the Eucharistic Face of Christ. (photo:Paul Badde/EWTN)
The Eucharist is the visible sign of the of the veiled presence of the invisible Face of God. In God’s great humility, mercy, and love, the grandeur of His Divine Presence is veiled in the Eucharist so that we may not fear to draw near and come into His Presence in the Bread of Life.
“Being Christian,” Pope Benedict XVI wrote, “is not the result of an ethical choice or a lofty idea, but an encounter… a Person, which gives life a new horizon and a decisive direction.” As often as we encounter the person of Christ, present Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity, in the Eucharist, we are being transformed into His Image. While He is the “Divine Prisoner” He is longing and waiting for us to come to Him.
Jesus is “the Divine Prisoner.” God points us to His Holy Face on the miraculous Veil of Manoppello. (photo: Patricia Enk)
Come and see that “Truth is a Person…a Presence, a Face: Jesus Christ.” — Pope St. John Paul II
Are you sorrowful, lonely, sick or fearful? Come to Him. Do you feel alienated, rejected, remorseful and in need of forgiveness? Come to Him. Are you angry and frustrated? Come. If your faith is little, come; if you long for Love Himself, come; if you are losing Hope, come.
Come, come, come! Your presence is requested.
Jesus waits for you. Come.
Paten viewed through the Veil of the Holy Face of Manoppello. (Photo: Paul Badde/EWTN)
Vilakannur Miracle. The Priest carefully holds in his hands the Holy Eucharist on which the Face of Christ miraculously appeared during Mass.
“On November 15, 2013, a face resembling that of Jesus appeared on the host during Mass at the Christ the King Church, Vilakkannur, a parish under the Syro-Malabar Archdiocese of Tellicherry in the southern Indian state of Kerala.
The “Miracle” Host was sent to Rome for scientific study on January 10, 2020, through Apostolic Nuncio Archbishop Giambattista Diquattro who had come to the Syro-Malabar headquarters in Kochi, some 330 km south of Vilakkannur.
Devotion to the Holy Face of Jesus can be a helpful means to lead us to an encounter with Jesus in our life-long journey–enabling us to recognize Him–and He, to recognize us. This devotion is comprised of three elements–as characterized by Pope Benedict XVI: Discipleship, Images of the wounded Face of Christ , and the Eucharist.
Pope Benedict XVI writes, “The first element [of devotion to the Holy Face] is discipleship and the orientation of one’s life toward an encounter with Jesus in the face of those in need. In order to do this, believers first need to become better acquainted with Jesus through the Eucharist.
The second element is relating to the Passion of Jesus, and the suffering expressed by the images of the wounded Face of Jesus, relating this to the Eucharistic experience.
The third element, the Eucharist is woven between the other two. The eschatological element then builds on awakening to Christ by contemplating his face in the Eucharist.“
The Eucharistic Face of Jesus is central to the devotion of the Face of Christ! Clearly, the grace and strength flowing from worthy reception of the Sacrament of the Eucharist is vital to encountering Jesus in the faces of our brothers and sisters in need, as well as for the prayerful contemplation of Christ’s Face in images of His Passion. In Novo Millenio Ineunte, Pope St. John Paul II wrote, “And it is the Church’s task to reflect the light of Christ in every historical period, to make His face shine also before the generations of the new millennium. Our witness, however would be hopelessly inadequate if we ourselves have not first contemplated his face.”
Contemplation of the Face of Jesus is the veil of devotion, with which we may ‘wipe His bruised and wounded Face, ‘woven’ together with “discipleship, and the Eucharist,” which can lead Christians to “the love of God and love of neighbor” that will enable us to see Christ’s Face when He comes again in glory on the final day.
“The invisible Face of Christ,the son of God, is manifest in His Body an Blood in the simplest and, at the same time, the most exalted way possible in this world.
The ecclesial community responds to people in every age who ask perplexed: “We wish to see Jesus” (Jn 12,21), by repeating what the Lord did for the disciples of Emmaus: He broke the bread. In the breaking of the bread, the eyes of those who seek Him with a sincere heart are opened. In the Eucharist, the intuition of the heart recognizes Jesus and His unmistakable love lived “to the end” (Jn 13,1). And in Him, in that gesture, it recognizes the Face of God!“— Pope St. John Paul II
“Thou art all fair, my love, there is no spot in thee.” (Song of Solomon 4:7)
“From the greatness and beauty of created things comes a corresponding perception of their Creator,” “for the author of beauty created them.” (Wisdom 13: 3, 5)
The spiritual beauty of God is reflected most perfectly in the woman He created to be His Mother. No stain of sin would mar the beauty of His reflection in her soul. Never for one instant would she be under the power of the devil. “The Blessed Virgin Mary, in the first instance of her conception, by a singular grace and privilege granted by Almighty God, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the human race, was preserved free from all stain of original sin.” (Dogma of the Immaculate Conception) Mary herself proclaims, “My spirit has rejoiced in God my Savior.” (Luke 1:47)
As the Immaculate Conception, Mary bears in herself the most perfect reflection of the face of God. Pope St. John Paul II wrote, “The Blessed Virgin saw shining upon her, as no other creature, the face of the Father, rich in grace and mercy.” What in Heaven and on earth could be more beautiful than the Mother of God? It is God who has willed that Mary be beautiful, not only fair in face, but in the fullness of grace. Yet, beauty has a purpose, and that is to draw us by the beauty of the graces God has given her towards the Beatific Vision–the Face of God. Mary has no greater desire than that we turn towards the Face of her Son, as she does, with eyes of love.
Strangely, there are some who see the Blessed Mother not as a gift from God who leads us to her Son, but as an obstacle. They want to separate the Mother from the Son, even resorting to violence of smashing statues and slashing paintings of her, mistakenly thinking that somehow this could be pleasing to God, but it is only pleasing to the devil. It is blasphemy. When we separate ourselves from Mary, we separate ourselves from Christ. In The Everlasting Man G.K. Chesterton tells a story from his childhood, many years before he became a Catholic, which left a deep impression on his soul:
“When I was a boy a more Puritan generation objected to a statue upon my parish church representing the Virgin and Child. After much controversy, they compromised by taking away the Child. One would think that this was even more corrupted with Mariolatry, unless the mother was counted less dangerous when deprived of a sort of weapon. But the practical difficulty is also a parable. You cannot chip away the statue of a mother from all round that of a newborn child. You cannot suspend the new-born child in mid-air; indeed you cannot really have a statue of a newborn child at all. Similarly, you cannot suspend the idea of a newborn child in the void or think of him without thinking of his mother. You cannot visit the child without visiting the mother, you cannot in common human life approach the child except through the mother. If we are to think of Christ in this aspect at all, the other idea follows I as it is followed in history. We must either leave Christ out of Christmas, or Christmas out of Christ, or we must admit, if only as we admit it in an old picture, that those holy heads are too near together for the haloes not to mingle and cross.”
Jesus alone is “the Way” that leads to the Father, but Mary is the most beautiful image and likeness of Christ, which will lead us to Him. Dostoevsky once said that “Beauty will save the world!” Mary has a spiritual beauty to share with the world that attracts and expresses what is beyond words, in the depths of her heart, the love of a mother for her Savior and Son.
“Our Lady, in whose face – more than any other creature – we can recognize the features of the Incarnate Word.” –Pope Benedict XVI Madonna and Child from the Robert Lehman Collection, Metropolitan Museum of Art
A Little Litany by G.K.Chesterton
When God turned back eternity and was young, Ancient of Days, grown little for your mirth (As under the low arch the land is bright) Peered through you, gate of heaven – and saw the earth.
Or shutting out his shining skies awhile Built you about him for a house of gold To see in pictured walls his storied world Return upon him as a tale is told.
Or found his mirror there; the only glass That would not break with that unbearable light Till in a corner of the high dark house God looked on God, as ghosts meet in the night.
Star of his morning; that unfallen star In the strange starry overturn of space When earth and sky changed places for an hour And heaven looked upwards in a human face.
Or young on your strong knees and lifted up Wisdom cried out, whose voice is in the street, And more than twilight of twiformed cherubim Made of his throne indeed a mercy-seat.
Or risen from play at your pale raiment’s hem God, grown adventurous from all time’s repose, Of your tall body climbed the ivory tower And kissed upon your mouth the mystic rose.
Miraculous Image of Our Lady of Guadalupe “I am your merciful Mother.”
“Look Closely – Our Lady of Guadalupe – Not Made by Human Hands” click here.
When he placed the New Millennium under “the Radiant sign of the Face of Christ” Pope St. John Paul II wrote, “To contemplate the Face of Christ, and to contemplate it with Mary, is the ‘program’ which I have set before the Church at the dawn of the third millennium…It is the Church’s task to reflect the light of Christ in every historical period, to make His Face shine also before new generations of the new millennium. Our witness, however, would be hopelessly inadequate if we ourselves had not first contemplated His Face.” The Rosary is a traditional Christian prayer directed to the contemplation of Christ’s Face. “Without contemplation, the Rosary is a body without a soul,” says Pope St. John Paul II, “and runs the risk of becoming a mechanical repetition of formulas, in violation of the admonition of Christ.”
Contemplation is a gift, a grace, from God. It is a communion in which God transforms a soul into His likeness. To put it more simply, as St. Teresa of Jesus says, contemplation is “a close sharing between friends…taking time frequently to be alone with Him who we know loves us.” Contemplation is not something beyond our reach however–we have an incomparable model in Mary; the eyes of her heart were always turned toward His Face. To dispose our souls to receive this great gift of God we need only reach for a Rosary and pray it with humility, listening attentively in the Spirit together with Mary, in silent love–that veil of mystery–to the Father’s voice. When we contemplate the scenes or mysteries of the Rosary in union with Mary, the Rosary becomes an unceasing praise of God; a way to learn from her about her son, Jesus, to discover His secrets and understand His message for us.
To recite the Rosary, which can be called a compendium of the Gospel, Pope St. John Paul II says, “is to contemplate the Face of Christ in union with, and at the school of, His Most Holy Mother…Against the background of the words of the Ave Maria the principal events of the life of Jesus Christ pass before the eyes of the soul. They take shape in the complete series of the joyful, [luminous,] sorrowful and glorious mysteries, and they put us in living communion with Jesus through–we might say through the heart of his Mother…The Rosary belongs among the finest and most praiseworthy traditions of Christian contemplation…To look upon the Face of Christ, to recognize its mystery amid the daily events and sufferings of His human life, and then to grasp the divine splendor definitively revealed in the Risen Lord, seated in glory at the right hand of the Father; this is the task of every follower of Christ and therefore the task of each one of us. In contemplating Christ’s Face we become open to receiving the mystery of Trinitarian life, experiencing ever anew the love of the Father and delighting in the joy of the Holy Spirit. St. Paul’s words can then be applied to us ‘Beholding the glory of the Lord, we are being changed into His likeness, from one degree of glory to another; for this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit.'” (Rosarium Virginus Mariae)
“The contemplation of Christ’s Face cannot stop at the image of the Crucified One. He is the Risen One!”~ Pope St. John Paul II
The entire month of October is dedicated to the Holy Rosary and October 7th is celebrated as the feast of Our Lady of the Rosary. The feast, originally named for Our Lady of Victory, commemorated the stunning victory, against all odds, obtained by Our Lady in the Battle of Lepanto through the prayer of the Rosary–which saved Christendom on October 7th, in 1571. By keeping our eyes fixed on the Face of Jesus as we pray the Rosary, together with Mary, through her maternal intercession, we too may obtain great victories through the heart of her Son Jesus, who obtained for all mankind the greatest victory over sin and death by His Resurrection.
“Through her, may we see Him. Made sweeter, not made dim. And her hand leaves His light, sifted to suit our sight.” ~ Gerard Manley Hopkins (Painting of the Blessed Mother and the Child Jesus by Margaret Farr)
“Once while some Israelites were burying a man, suddenly they saw a band of raiders; so they threw the man’s body into Elisha’s tomb. When the body touched Elisha’s bones, the man came to life and stood up on his feet.” (2 Kings 13:21)
4th century fresco of the King of Edessa, who was healed of leprosy after being brought a miraculous face cloth of Jesus by St. Jude, according to one legend.
“So extraordinary were the mighty deeds God accomplished through the hands of Paul that when face cloths or aprons that touched his skin were applied to the sick, their diseases left them and the evil spirits came out of them.” (Acts 19: 1-12)
“A woman suffering hemorrhages for twelve years came up behind him [Jesus] and touched the tassel on his cloak. ‘She said to herself, ‘If only I can touch his cloak, I shall be cured.’ Jesus turned around and saw her, and said, ‘Courage, daughter! Your faith has saved you.'” (Mat 9:20-22)
The Catholic Church is often criticized for its veneration of relics, but who would not like to touch the “face cloth” mentioned in the Bible that St. Paul may have once used to wipe his brow, or touch the hem of Jesus’s garment? A letter written by Pope Pelagius II in the sixth century declared that any common object placed in contact with the grave of a saint would acquire its sanctifying power. St. Helena discovered the True Cross when God used that relic to bring a dead man from death to life the moment his body came in contact with it.
“How do we know if a relic is true?”
That is a question often heard regarding purported relics. Skeptics often cite the many dubious relics that were forged; such as the “heads” or “teeth” of St. John the Baptist that abounded in the Middle Ages. While the Church wants to treasure and preserve what is genuine, it also seeks answers to the question, “How do we know…?” How does the Church determine the authenticity of a relic? Outside of a miracle, today there are many forms of scientific research, such as carbon dating, that are now available. Naturally, this is a very controversial subject, as testing done the wrong way could degrade or destroy the relic itself. It may also be a very risky business spiritually, with a potential to do something far worse: Disputes over a relic’s authenticity or errors in testing have caused scandal, resulting in the loss of faith of many individuals.
Then, there are also many classes of relics to be considered: Relics are divided into three classifications. A first class relic is a body part of a saint, such as a bone, blood, or flesh. Second class relics are possessions that a saint owned, and third class relics are objects that have been touched to a first or second class relic or to the saints himself or herself. In verifying relics, there is also the great risk to be considered in exposing what may be a very precious ancient relic to invasive tests that could further degrade the relic. Great care must be taken, not only to preserve and protect the Church’s treasures, but also the souls of the faithful. This is why the Church sometimes moves so slowly in these matters.
Digital scan of the Face of Christ on the Shroud of Turin
Despite the many scientific advances in carbon dating, and other testing, errors have been made in the past which have led to false results causing a great deal of harm; as was the case in the false carbon dating of the Shroud of Turin to medieval times, which made front page news at the time, labeling the Shroud of Turin a medieval fraud. It was later proven that the sample for the carbon dating of the Shroud was actually taken from a repair patch, and not the original shroud, which, when re-tested, was then dated to the first century–making the back page news, of course.
Face of Jesus known as the “Uronica” in the “Holy of Holies Chapel of Sancta Sanctorum in Rome.
Recently, the testing of relics is once more in the news. Most people who have traveled to Rome are familiar with the “Scala Sancta” or the “Holy Stairs,” near St. John Lateran. They are twenty-eight marble steps that were brought from Jerusalem that lead up to a chapel known as “Sancta Santorum or Holy of Holies.” Named for the original place in Jerusalem that contained the ark of the covenant, the chapel is said to contain the some of the holiest relics in Christendom, including relics of the earliest martyrs, and the “Uronica,” an “acheiropoieta,” not made by human hands, of Jesus, Ruler of the Universe, attributed to St. Luke–which, “according to legend,” was finished by the angels. In 816, Pope Leo III placed the reliquary box under the altar of the chapel. The relics remained hidden there, until 1903, when Pope Leo XIII permitted experts to examine them. It turned out to be an arduous task, and, unfortunately, later important data was lost due to a rivalry between French and German scholars. To protect the relics from falling into the wrong hands, they were eventually moved to the Vatican Library, and then, to the Vatican Museum.
Barbara Jatta, head of the Vatican museums, recently gave a press conference, on May 23, 2024, on the Catholic Church’s attempt to bring some “clarity and provenance” to two of the ancient relics that had been kept for centuries in the “Holy of Holies” chapel: the relic tunics of St. Peter and St. John the Evangelist. Jatta announced a new permanent exhibition that will display these two purported relics and the tests they have undergone that have shed light on which of the two may be authentic: EWTN Vatican has a good article by Matthew Santucci summarizing the conference: “The Tunics of St. Peter and St. John, Two Extraordinary Relics of the Sancta Sanctorum.” The Vatican Museum should be applauded for this admirable work that has been carefully carried out in pursuit of the truth.
Note the distinctive folds of the veil in this painting detail.
“The Veronica Veils” and the question of which relic is true?
One hopes that the Vatican Museum will continue to seek the truth in the case of other controversial relics, by whatever reasonable means are available, to discover their origins. The issue of testing relics has increasingly been brought up in the case of two “Veronica Veils:” one, held at the Vatican, and another, known as the “Veil of Manoppello.” Acrimonious debates that have erupted in recent decades regarding the two veils have caused division among many Catholic devotees of the Holy Face. Some claim as well that the authority of the Church on the subject the devotion to the Holy Face ended with Pope Leo XIII; thus, passing over what has been been uncovered or written about regarding the devotion since that time, including: the discoveries and research on the Shroud of Turin, or writings by Pope St. John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI, or Pope Francis; thus, making it very difficult to enter into dialog on the subject. It will ultimately be for the Church to decide whether or not to investigate the relics to help provide the “clarity and provenance” needed to confirm their authenticity.
Fresco of ciborium that existed in 708 containing sudarium of the “Veronic” True Icon
The authenticity of the Vatican relic of the “Veronica Veil” has come into question due to the abundant historic research that points to the relic “Veil of Manoppello” as being the original “proto-image” for icons, frescos, and paintings of the face of Jesus, as seen in so many of the earliest works of art depicting the “Veronica”; such as the “Liber Regulae Sancta Spiritus in Saxia,” or in other more ancient works, such as the “Godescic Manuscript” of 781, both pictured below:
Godescic Manuscript, 781
This illustration of the first public procession of the “Veronica” on the feast of “Omnis Terra” (All the Earth), depicts Pope Innocent III, in 1207, carrying the crystal reliquary displaying the “Veronica Veil” (from “Liber Regulae Sancti Spiritus in Saxia” manuscript ,1350).
The Vatican “Veronica veil” is displayed at a great distance during Holy Week. No face can be discerned on the darkened cloth that is displayed in a face-shaped frame.
A closer look at the Veronica Veil being presented for veneration at the Vatican, April 7, 2019. Photo: Daniel Ibanez
First, in order to explain anything about the images known as “Veronicas,” it must be understood that the Church has a very rich 2,000 year history, and that there are hundreds, if not thousands, so-called “Veronicas” representing the true image of the Face of Christ in museums, churches and basilicas. Secondly, the term “Veronica” refers to the image itself, and not a Saint called Veronica. The various legends of a St. Veronica did not appear until the Middle Ages. There a many, many earlier legends that name other persons such as woman named Hypatia, who drew the miraculous image from a well; or a woman named Bernice, whose name is associated with the woman with the hemorrhage in the Gospels; or St. Jude; who was said to bring the Holy Face Veil to the King of Edessa to cure him.
The Veronica, Hans Memling, 1479
“These pious traditions cannot be documented, but there is no reason why the belief that such an act of compassion did occur should not find expression in the veneration paid to one called Veronica.” —The Catholic Encyclopedia
Pope St. John Paul II explored the deep meaning behind these legends before he dedicated the millennium to the Face of Christ (Found here) and has written beautifully on the compassionate woman who is known as “Veronica” and what the significance the Image of the Face of Christ on the veil has for Christians. Most “Veronica” images are copies of an original or “proto-image,” others are imaginative, and a few are believed to be of Divine origin, that is, “made by God’s Hand.” Only one, however, can be the original and true image.
For centuries following the first time the Veil was publicly displayed and processed by Pope Innocent III in 1207 any pilgrim could see for themselves the Holy Face of Jesus on a Veil from either side of the sometimes transparent veil. Artistic works also called “Veronicas” were produced at that time for the many pilgrims who flocked to Rome to gain an indulgence by seeing the relic Veil for themselves…and take home a souvenir, of course, of a copy for themselves, or for their local Church. That was up until the Sack of Rome in 1527, when it was feared that the Veronica Veil had been stolen:
The broken crystal frame that displayed the Veronica, from the Vatican Museum
“A letter written to the Duchess of Urbino by her representative, Urban, dated May 21, 1527, reads, ‘Holy relics have been thrown out onto the streets. The Veronica has been stolen and passed around in taverns from person to person without a word of protest‘”
The large reliquary framed that was created to display the miraculous image from both sides, between two large crystal panes, was found broken. (It is now on display in the Vatican Museum.) When the dust settled, following the Sack of Rome, the image was no longer displayed publicly. Pope Paul V, in 1616, prohibited any copies to be made of the Veronica without permission, and later Pope Urban VII ordered that all copies of the Veronica be handed in to a local priest or bishop under pain of excommunication. In 1629, a noticeably different image with a death-like face was placed in the newly completed Veronica Altar in St. Peter’s basilica–covered with another outer veil–and a notice was placed nearby stating that anyone who removed the veil covering the Holy Face without papal approval would be excommunicated. Some have speculated that the “outer veil” mentioned may have been what remained after the Sack of Rome, and put in the place of the original, or possibly another of the many copies was put in its place–but that is only speculation. The facts were that from then forward, the darkened image was then only shown rarely, once a year from a distance of 20 meters, and its appearance was quite different than what was seen and copied by artists previously. In fact, the difference between early and later depictions of the “Veronica” was shocking. Not surprisingly, the interest in the Veronica and therefore devotion to the Holy Face soon dwindled.( More detail found in “Four Stories–One Face”)
Veronica’s Veil 1420 as it was depicted in paintings prior to the Sack of Rome.
BERTRAM, Holy Face c. 1390-1400
Painting made after the Sack of Rome, in 1617, by Pietro Strozzi
Painting of Veronica Veil which bears strong resemblance to the Holy Veil “Il Volto Santo” of Manoppello, Italy.
Which is the original “true image?” The two relic veils now in question are the Vatican “Veronica Veil” and the “Il Volto Santo” Holy Face Veil of Manoppello, both claiming to be the original Veil of the Face of Christ:
The Vatican “Veronica Veil” which is housed in St. Peter’s Basilica’s “Veronica Pillar” is a darkened brown cloth, in a frame shaped like a face. Pilgrims are now only permitted to see this relic from a great distance. The cloth does not appear to be transparent, and is only shown from one side.
The Vatican Veil Being displayed for veneration
During the exile of the Pope Pius IX at Gaeta in 1849, he ordered that the Veronica Veil be exposed, at a time of crisis, for public prayer and veneration, from Christmas to Epiphany. On the third day of exposition, the Veil, which had darkened to the point that a face could no longer be discerned, became visible, as if it were illuminated by a soft light. The Pope invited artists to make copies of the miraculous image, which were later touched to the relic of the veil, as well as the relics of the Passion, held in the Veronica Pillar at the Vatican.
This image is often associated with the revelations of of Sr. Marie St. Pierre, who died in 1848, and so had never seen the drawings. The “Epiphany Miracle,” as it was called, was regarded by some as a confirmation of her revelations regarding her devotion to the Holy Face. Although many of the prayers related to her revelations were approved, her writings as a whole were not. Sometime later, a layman, Leon Du Pont, who was a friend of Sr. Marie St. Pierre, placed an oil lamp before a reproduction of the image in his home. “The Holy Man of Tours,” as he was known, prayed for the sick there, and anointed them with oil from the lamp. It was said that hundreds of cures were obtained through his intercession before the image. St. Therese of the Child Jesus and the Holy Face had a copy of the image pinned to her bed curtains as she lay dying. She and her family had a great devotion to the Face of Jesus, and belonged to the Archconfraternity of the Holy Face that was in existence at that time, and into the 20th century, but no longer exists today.
“Vera Effigies” drawing of the wounded Holy Face, depicting closed, weeping eyes, and slightly parted lips. The upper forehead and other artistic elements were an imaginative addition to what was originally viewed by witnesses.
The Holy Face on the Veil of Manoppello (Photo: Paul Badde)The distinctive lock of hair, and folds on the veil may be seen in this photo.
Transparent Veil of Manoppello
The other “Veronica” relic is the Holy Veil of Manoppello. It is not a painting; the image is truly present in a mysterious way on a sheer veil, made of a precious sea-silk called byssus. The Veil and Image itself are a “miracle of light:” the delicate veil, held between two panes of glass, can appear transparent. The image of the Face appears and changes according to light and the direction from which it can be viewed from either side. The veil closely matches centuries-old artwork and written accounts of those witnesses who made pilgrimages to Rome when the “Veronica” was publicly displayed–including written accounts and works of art dating to the early Church–before the veil was known as “the Veronica,” but was known by other names such as the Camulia, or the Edessa, or the Mandylion. The veil was once much larger, but was trimmed down over the centuries. The wounded, yet peaceful countenance of Jesus is visible with open eyes and parted lips, sparse beard, wavy hair, and a distinctive lock of hair at the center of the forehead, which is often depicted in many eastern icons, and paintings of the face of Jesus through the centuries. The Manoppello Veil is not a painting, but an “achieropoieta”–an image not made by human hands.
Hand seen from the other side of the Veil of the Holy Face of Manoppello–which is so sheer a newspaper can be read through it. Photo: Paul Badde
Copy of the “Veronica” from 1373 painted on an altarpiece with the distinctive lock of hair at the center of Jesus’ forehead…
…Also seen in this beautiful depiction of the Veronica that is in the Getty Museum…
…as well as this manuscript and many others.
In this remarkable “Meister of St. Laurenz” painting of the Holy Trinity, the faces of both God the Father and the Son are portrayed similarly, each bearing a strong resemblance to the face on the Holy Veil of Manoppello. Photo taken in Cologne, Germany by Paul Badde.
The late, highly respected Heinrich Pfeiffer S.J. was an eminently qualified teacher of art history and Christian iconography at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. He was also an expert “sindonologist.” Sindonology is the study of the Shroud of Turin, which is its own branch of science. In the course of his many years of research he traveled to the Shrine of the Holy Face in Manoppello. Upon seeing the Veil for himself, he immediately recognized it as the “proto-image” or original from which most icons, paintings, and other representations of “the Veronica” had been derived. The incredible “Veronica” of Manoppello was believed to be the veil that covered the Face of Jesus in the tomb. (Author Paul Badde has written much about this search for the “rediscovered face” in his books: The Face of God – the Rediscovery of the True Face of Jesus, The True Icon: From the Shroud of Turin to the Veil of Manoppello, and The Holy Veil of Manoppello: The Human Face of God.)
Christ’s Face being covered with a sheer veil or sudarium in the tomb.
When, as a scholar, Fr. Pfeiffer joyfully and dutifully reported the fruits of his research, “all hell broke loose.” Instead of being met with rejoicing over the historic discovery of the “proto-image” of the Veronica–a miraculous image that corresponds to historic accounts and countless works of art in museums and churches around the world–Fr. Pfeiffer was roundly vilified by persons who, while accusing him of perpetrating fraud, also refused to look at his evidence. Any requests that Fr. Pfieffer or other scholars and researchers made to look into the authenticity of the relic veil held in the Vatican were declined by bureaucrats.
The indisputable abundance of centuries of art history, that even a child can see, points to the Veil of Manoppello as the original proto-image. But piles of comparisons are not enough to satisfy the outraged critics. Fr. Pfeiffer’s vast research that led him to Manoppello continues to be rejected out of hand, and ignored by those who refuse to look at the data. Unless the relic at the Vatican is examined, the controversy between the two relics of the Face of Jesus will remain at a stalemate, and continue to be a unhappy source of division in the Body of Christ. It was the cause of much suffering for Fr. Pfeiffer in his lifetime, but he was committed to speaking and writing about what he had discovered until he died in 2021.
Pope Benedict XVI greets Sr. Blandina Paschalis Schlomer, an expert in iconography, renown for her expertise and forensic comparisons of ancient images of the Face of Christ. Looking on are Fr. Heinrich Pfeiffer S.J., and Paul Badde, author of many books about the Holy Veil of Manoppello (September 1, 2006).
Pope Benedict XVI gazes at the ‘Veronica’s Veil’ during a visit to the Holy Veil in Manoppello, Italy (September 1, 2006).
Streams of pilgrims, from the greatest to the least, have travelled the world to visit the Basilica Shrine of the Holy Face Veil in Manoppello, to see for themselves and experience the grace and peace flowing through their encounter with the Face of Christ. Hopefully, one day the Church will see the way clear to safely examine the relics, as it has done in the case of the relics of Sancta Santorum, to bring light, peace and truth once again to the faithful through their devotion to the Face of Jesus.
“To contemplate The Face of Christ, and to contemplate it with Mary, is the ‘program’ which I have set before The Church at the dawn of the third millennium.” — Pope St. John Paul II
“From contemplation of the Face of God are born, joy, security, PEACE”–Pope Benedict XVI
PAX ET BONUM!
UPDATE: Stunning results of testing on the Veil of Manoppello in November, 2024 conclude that the Holy Veil radiates light energy — May be read here.
On New Years Eve, beneath the shadow of the Cologne Cathedral in Germany, one of the most important places of pilgrimage in Europe, about 1,000 drunk and aggressive men of Arab or North African appearance, surrounded groups of young women in order to molest, rob and rape. The young women, who no doubt felt they were safe in the company of friends, were separated by the “men” (the cowardly vermin who attacked those who are weaker) whose primary objective was to perpetrate violence and sexual assault, and to degrade and dehumanize the young women. A video soon surfaced, which originated from the attackers themselves, bragging about their rape of “a virgin” by several of the “men,” some of whom spit upon her as she lay on the ground beaten and bleeding, covered in filth.
To add to the humiliation of the victims, the mayor pointed a finger of blame at the women of the city. The police were blamed for failing in their duty to defend and protect. The men of Germany were equally blamed for not protecting their woman. While politicians avoided blaming the actual perpetrators, there were actually those who would blame God for not protecting the innocent from the wicked.
But it is God Himself who suffers. He suffers in the young women, made in His image, who were assaulted and spit upon. It is God Himself who is blasphemed, either directly or indirectly by those who have malice toward Him, by acts of hatred carried out in the name of their religion.
“You are no God who loves evil; no sinner is your guest. The boastful shall not stand their ground before your Face. You hate all who do evil: you will destroy all who lie. The deceitful and bloodthirsty man the Lord detests.” (Psalm 5)
It is not a coincidence that the violence took place in the shadow of the Holy Cathedral. It is also no coincidence that the attack was upon women. Satan hates “the woman” who is Mary, the Mother of God and directs his attacks upon on all women. “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers. He will strike at your head, while you strike at his heel.” (Gen 3:15) “When the dragon saw that he had been hurled to the earth, it pursued the woman who had given birth to the male child.” (Rev. 12:13) Thus, all women are the special object of his hatred, so we see in our culture a flood of pornography, abortion, and degradation of women, not only by degenerate men, but even by other women.
So, what is the answer to this violence and contempt expressed in blasphemy against other human beings made in God’s image, blasphemy which is ultimately against the Face of God? Wringing our hands over the news and at the culture that has permitted the evil is not the answer. We are not entirely helpless and we have the means in our power to fight against evil: the opposite of blasphemy would be praise of God, the sole object of our exalted esteem, honoring and extolling His Holy Name publicly, to make reparation before the Holy Face of Jesus, who became man and whose Face can be seen, in His images, in our neighbor and in the Eucharist. Blasphemy can also be countered by honoring and reverencing the Virgin Mary, as He has given her the greatest honor and dignity by choosing her to be the mother of His Son, Jesus.
On February 9th, 2016, the “Feast of The Holy Face”will be celebrated. My parish, along with many other Catholic parishes, will be having evenings of Prayer and Adoration on this day. This feast day coincides each year with “Mardi Gras Day,” the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday. It is an opportunity to make reparation for blasphemy by coming before the Face of Jesus to honor Him. Beginning January 31st, I will post each day the Novena to the Holy Face leading up to the Feast of the Holy Face and Act of Consecration. Please join in the Novena or read the prayers of reparation (here) if you are able. They are powerful weapons against those who would spit in the Face of God!
Eternal Father I offer you the Most Holy Face of Your Beloved Son Jesus, covered with blood, sweat, dust and spittle, in reparation for the crimes of communists, blasphemers, profaners of the Holy Name and of the Holy Day of Sunday. (Miraculous Limpias Crucifix)
Eternal Father, turn away Your angry gaze from our guilty people whose face has become unsightly in your eyes. Look instead upon the Face of Your Beloved Son, for this is the Face of Him in Whom You are well pleased. We now offer You this Holy Face, covered with shame and disfigured by bloody bruises in reparation for the crimes of our age in order to appease Your anger, justly provoked against us. Because Your divine Son, Our Redeemer, has taken upon His Head all the sins of His members, that they might be spared, we now beg of You, Eternal Father, to grant us Mercy. Amen.