Anne Catherine
Emmerich
From 1802 until her death, she bore the wounds
of the Crown of Thorns, and from 1812, the full stigmata of Our Lord, including
a cross over her heart and the wound from the lance. |
Anne
Catherine Emmerich was told by Our Lord that her gift of seeing the past, present,
and future in mystic vision was greater than that possessed by anyone else in
history. Born at Flamske in Westphalia,
Germany, on September 8, 1774, she became a nun of the Augustinian Order at Dulmen.
She had the use of reason from her birth and could understand liturgical Latin
from her first time at Mass. During the last 12 years of her life, she could
eat no food except Holy Communion, nor take any drink except water, subsisting
entirely on the Holy Eucharist. From 1802 until her death, she bore the wounds
of the Crown of Thorns, and from 1812, the full stigmata of Our Lord, including
a cross over her heart and the wound from the lance.
Anne Catherine Emmerich possessed the gift of reading hearts, and she saw, in
actual, visual detail, the facts of Catholic belief which most of us simply have
to accept on faith. The basic truths of the catechism--angels, devils, Purgatory,
the life of Our Lord and the Blessed Mother, the Real Presence of Christ in the
Eucharist, the grace of the Sacraments--all these truths were as real to her as
the material world. Her revelations make the hidden, supernatural world come
alive. Below are some of the most enthralling of these revelations:
She
saw that each parish and diocese, each city and country has its own particular
and powerful guardian angel.
She saw that the Church never has allowed children of Catholics to be raised outside
her fold, and that as soon as solidly established, she banned mixed marriages.
She saw
how the various indulgences we gain actually remit specific punishments which
otherwise would await us in Purgatory.
She revealed that to gain an indulgence we must approach the Sacraments with true
repentance and a firm purpose of amendment--or we do not gain it.
She deposes that it is more holy to pray for the Poor Souls in Purgatory than
for sinners who are still alive.
She
describes the nature, extent and power of victim souls, and their role in the
life of the Church. She describes the condition of St. Lydwine of Schiedam, a
victim soul during the time of "three popes," and how her body came
apart into three pieces, joined only by the slenderest of sinews. She saw only
6 victim souls in her time working like herself on behalf of the Universal Church,
and about 100,000 Catholic people worldwide who were great in their faith.
She revealed that saints are particularly powerful on their feast days and should
be invoked then.
She saw that many saints come from the same families, the
antiquity of which often extends far back into the Old Testament.
She saw the strong link--even long after their deaths--between holy souls in Heaven
and their descendants here on earth, lasting even centuries.
She saw that the Garden of Eden, with all it contained, was a perfect picture
of the Kingdom of God.
She revealed that Enoch and Elias are in Paradise where they await their return
to the world to preach at the End of Time.
She
revealed that Our Lord suffered from the wound in His shoulder more than from
any other.
She continually saw a false church, and wicked men scheming against
the Catholic Church and doing much harm--both in her own time and in the future.
She saw in a vision the enemies of the Church tearing it down and trying to build
a new one on strictly human plans--but none of the saints would lend a hand. Later,
this church of men is destroyed and the saints of God join in to rebuild the true
Church of God, which becomes more glorious than ever before.
She saw the revival of the priesthood and the religious orders after a period
of great decadence.
She describes in detail her visions of heaven, which
she saw as "the Heavenly Jerusalem."
Quotes
from Ven. Anne Catherine Emmerich:
"The Church is the only one, the Roman Catholic! And if there were left upon
earth but one Catholic, he would be the one, universal Church, the Catholic Church,
the Church of Jesus Christ against which the gates of Hell shall never prevail."
"Then I had the sweet assurance that Mary is the Church; the Church, our
mother; God, our father; and Jesus, our brother."
"O who can tell the beauty, the purity, the innocence of Mary! She knows
everything, and yet she seems to know nothing, so childlike is she. She lowers
her eyes and, when she looks up, her glance penetrates like a ray, like a pure
beam of light, like truth itself! It is because she is perfectly innocent, full
of God, and without returns upon self. None can resist her grace."
"All over the world I saw numberless infusions of the Spirit; sometimes,
like a lightning-stroke, falling on a congregation in church, and I could tell
who among them had received the grace; or again, I beheld individuals praying
in their homes, suddenly endowed with light and strength. The sight awoke in me
great joy and confidence that the Church, amid her ever-increasing tribulations,
will not succumb; for in all parts of the world I saw defenders raised up to her
by the Holy Ghost. Yes, I felt that the oppression of the powers of this world
serves but to increase her strength."
"There is no created good so lightly esteemed, so carelessly trifled away
by an immense majority of human beings as the fugitive moments of this short life
so rapidly flying toward eternity."
"Man's value before God is estimated by the dispositions of his heart, its
uprightness, its good-will, its charity, and not by keenness of intellect or extent
of knowledge."
"If the Church is true, all in her is true; he who admits not the one, believes
not the other."
"What
the Pilgrim [Clement Brentano, her self-appointed secretary] gathers he will bear
far away, for here there is no desire to have it. But it will produce fruit where
he goes, and that same fruit will one day return and make itself felt even here."
"From
the lips of those that pray I see a chain of words issuing like a fiery stream
and mounting up to God, and in them I see the disposition of the one who prays,
I read everything. The writing is as varied as the individuals themselves."
"I
saw Adam's bones reposing in a cavern under Mt. Calvary deep down, almost to water
level, and in a straight line beneath the spot on which Jesus Christ was crucified."
"Mass
badly celebrated is an enormous evil. Ah! it is not a matter of indifference how
it is said! . . . I have had a great vision on the mystery of Holy Mass and I
have seen that whatever good has existed since creation is owing to it."
"Were
man and the earth in perfect harmony, there would be paradise here below. Prayer
governs the weather . . . I see the life of nature intimately connected with that
of the soul."
"She
said what is most painful for me to repeat, that if only one priest offered the
Unbloody Sacrifice as worthily and with the same sentiments as the Apostles, he
could ward off all calamities from the Church."
"I can never grieve for a person who dies resignedly, nor for a child suffering
patiently; for patient suffering is the most enviable state of man."
"Now, for all who are not in living union with Jesus Christ by faith and
grace, nature is full of Satan's influence."
"Owing to the spirit of the world and tepidity, if the Savior returned to
earth today to announce His doctrine in person, He would find as many opponents
as He did among the Jews."
"Now I saw clearly by this that the dear God looks only at the heart in time
of prayer."
"No grace, no degree of sanctity surpasses in intrinsic dignity and grandeur
the sacerdotal [priestly] character."
"The poor souls suffer inexpressibly."
"Many stay a long time in purgatory who, although not great sinners, have
lived tepidly."
"The prayer most pleasing to God is that made for others and particularly
for the poor souls. Pray for them, if you want your prayers to bring high interest."
[See/view] The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ online.
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