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The early morning sun beat down on me as I prayed at
St. John the Evangelist’s tomb located on a hill in the ruins of the
Basilica devoted to him outside the city of Ephesus, Turkey. (See
photo1). John wrote his Gospel and his letters in Ephesus and he often
walked through the ancient city and up the mountain to Mary’s House
where she lived for the last nine years of her life, died, was buried
and from where she was assumed into heaven.
I walked in the footsteps of St. John down from his
Basilica and west to the City of Ephesus. I stopped there for a visit at
the ruins of St. Mary’s Basilica. (See photo 2) This was the first
church in the world that was dedicated to Mary. The Council of Ephesus
was held there in 431. It proclaimed the first Marian dogma that Mary is
the Mother of God.
After a refreshing drink of water, I continued through
the magnificent ruins of Ephesus (see photo 3) and up Nightingale
Mountain from which I could see the powder blue sky, the cobalt blue
Aegean Sea and the Island of Samos glistening like a diamond in the sea.
As I climbed the road up the
mountain, I passed a huge statue of Mary that overlooked the valley below. It
seemed like an invitation to keep climbing to her House.
Three and a half hours after I left St. John’s
Basilica, I reached a plateau hidden in the back of the mountaintop. As the
sweat poured off my face I stood before Mary’s House nestled in the
mountainside. (See photo 4). The House is made of stone and it’s been there for
almost 2000 years. This House was the fountain of grace from which sprang the
dogma of Mary Mother of God and the great basilicas of Ephesus dedicated to Mary
and to St. John.
The Flight to Ephesus
In the year 42 AD a persecution
against the new Christians broke out in Jerusalem under King Herod Agrippa I,
grandson of Herod the Great who slaughtered the innocent babies of Bethlehem.
St. Peter was imprisoned and St. James the Great was beheaded. He was St. John’s
brother. Jesus entrusted St. John to His Mother at the foot of the Cross. (See
Jn 19:27).
From that day, St. John had taken
Mary into his home and his heart. After the persecution broke out they fled
Jerusalem and he brought her to safety far away from the reach of King Herod.
John and Mary sailed on a coastal schooner from Jerusalem up the Mediterranean
and Aegean coasts to the city of Ephesus. There were no cabins on these
schooners. They were merchant ships and any passengers had to sleep and eat on
deck with the rough sailors.
When John and Mary docked at the
harbor at Ephesus they looked up the magnificent marble - paved and colonnaded
Harbor Road that led to the southern end of the city and the great amphitheater
built into the hillside with a seating capacity for 25,000 spectators. (See
photo 5). Ephesus was the rich center of the Roman Empire in the East with a
population of a quarter million. Mary temporarily lived in the city while John
built her a little stone house on nearby Nightingale Mountain. A tiny Christian
community lived there in peace and Mary soon joined them. Later Ephesus became
the center of Christianity in the East.
Mary lived in her House tended by a maidservant.
She ate vegetables grown on the plateau and drank water from a spring that is
still there. Up the mountainside behind her House Mary built the first Stations
of the Cross with the same distances between them as she had measured out the
original ones in Jerusalem. Here she prayed and fasted for our salvation. Here
she died around 48 AD at the approximate age of 63. Here she was buried and from
here her body and soul were assumed into heaven.
I walked up behind her House and prayed on the path of
Mary’s Stations and at the likely place of her burial and Assumption. I
reflected on the history of her House that lay here in ruins for almost 1900
years little known by the world except for local venerators.
Mystical Vision of Mary’s House
In the early 1820s, Sister
Catherine Emmerich saw a vision of Mary’s House. She was a German mystic nun who
was bed-ridden with the stigmata. She never left Germany. She described her
vision in detail to her secretary. He wrote it in a book that was read by a
priest in Turkey. The priest was curious to see whether he could confirm Sister
Catherine’s description from the evidence on the ground. So he went up the
mountain with another priest in the summer of 1891. They followed Sister
Catherine’s description of the mountain and its views and came upon the ruins of
Mary s House.
To their wondrous surprise, the
location of the house exactly matched Sister Catherine’s description. Later it
was discovered that the foundations of the House dated to the first century. The
original soot-blackened hearthstones were discovered beneath the existing floor
at the exact place where Sister Catherine said that a fireplace was located. The
House was restored and soon a trickle of pilgrims began to go there.
The original House was shaped
like a T. The upper left top was a cloakroom that was not restored. The upper
right top was Mary’s bedroom. The front measures 20’ wide by 50’ deep and the
attached bedroom measures 12’x12’.
The Church Rules
Archbishop Timoni of Ismir
convened a commission to investigate the discovery in the late nineteenth
century. He composed a lengthy document that was signed by every member of the
commission. It listed in detail the priests’ findings and showed how they
conformed exactly to the descriptions of Sister Catherine. The document
concluded, “The ruins are truly the remains of the House inhabited by the Virgin
Mary.”
In 1981
Pope John Paul II formally re-opened the cause for the canonization of Sister
Catherine. Today pilgrims of all faiths come to Mary’s House, especially
Moslems. They have a great devotion to Mary who is mentioned several times in
the Koran. Chapter 3 verse 40 says, "Mary, God gives the good tidings of
a word from him whose name is Messiah, Jesus, Son of Mary, high honored shall
she be in this world and the next, near stationed to God."
Pope Pius XII said, “The holy
House should be a Marian center which is unique throughout the world, a place
where Christians and Moslems of all rites and denominations and of all
nationalities can meet each other to venerate the Mother of Jesus, and make true
the prophecy, ‘All Generations will call me blessed’.” (L’Osservatore Romano,
April 24, 1954).
Pilgrim’s Apparition of Mary
Mrs. Elizabeth Fraser of Vermont
made a pilgrimage to Mary’s House in 1959. She was temporarily living in Greece
across the Aegean Sea from Turkey. During Mass in Mary’s House she prayed for
her sister and her sister’s disabled child and for all those who suffer. As she
did so, Mary spoke to her in locution.
Mary said, “We love them,
dear. Why, the reward for suffering is so great that even if you were told you
wouldn’t know. Your minds aren’t meant to know. . . .This life is no more than a
short wave of the hand . . .with no more than a veil between.” Mrs. Fraser
could hardly wait to go to her sister and tell her this wonderful news. She
thought that she’d be happy to know how truly blessed are children who are
handicapped. But she was distracted by brilliant light shining in from the left
of the altar.
She looked at the light and
mentally answered as if in reply to a wish of Our Lady, “All right, Mary! How do
you look in your little House?” Then Our Lady appeared to her from the other
side of the altar and Mrs. Fraser began a prayerful conversation with her.
Mary’s hair was black instead of
light. Because of this Mrs. Fraser said, “Of course you look like this; you were
Jewish.” Then she looked at her eyes. Because of having heard that Mary’s smile
was the most beautiful thing about her appearance, she continued saying,”
They’re wrong. It’s your cheek that is most beautiful!” Then she looked at her
mouth. Her lips were parted as if she were about to speak. “No,” she said, “it’s
your mouth that is most beautiful.” Mary then smiled broadly. “Oh yes,” she
said, “They are right! It’s your smile that is most beautiful.” Mary looked to
the altar and Mrs. Fraser said to her, “Oh, you are so pleased that we came to
visit and that Mass is being said in your little House.”
Mary’s hair was loose around her
forehead. She wore a sheer veil, pale in color, which seemed to be folded back
on her head and to fall longer than her shoulders. Mrs. Fraser remembered so
well thinking of those beautiful amber eyes, so very round and full that all
creation could be seen in them. She simply couldn’t take her eyes from Mary’s
face and so she was unable to describe anything else that Mary wore. (See photo
6).
While Mrs. Fraser admired Mary’s
beauty, Mary continued speaking to her in locution. “Don’t worry so, dear.
You aren’t meant to understand. We know! And we know that you don’t know, that
is why God is so merciful. Everything is as it should be according to God’s
plan. We are with them.”
Mary’s consoling message to Mrs. Fraser reminds us of her message to
Saint Juan Diego, “Listen and let it
penetrate your heart, my dear little son, do not be troubled or weighed
down with grief. Do not fear any illness or vexation, anxiety or pain.
Am I not here who am your Mother?”
After
Mass, Mrs. Fraser walked up to the altar. She was ready to remark how
pretty it was with the sun shining in from the left and she looked up to
see the window through which she thought the sun had shone. But there
was no window. It was a solid wall!
Mary’s
Image
Mary looked like Our Lady
of Guadalupe who imprinted her image on Saint Juan Diego’s cloak. She
didn’t imprint her image on Mrs. Fraser’s clothing but on her mind and
memory. Mrs. Fraser described the image in great detail and an image was
painted of her vision according to her description.
As I entered Mary’s House to pray, I saw this image displayed in
the entranceway. Mary looks like a happy Jewish mother. A mosaic
of this Image is displayed for veneration in the National Basilica
Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington DC.
This is best summed up by a poem written by a relative of Mrs.
Fraser:
By M. Laura Leddy
Little House of Our Lady
Restored and standing anew
From centuries’ devastation
On a mountainside she knew.
She came to you for haven
From a land beset with strife
Far from the stress and tumult
That threatened her holy life.
You sheltered
her in her sorrows
Quietly soothing her fears
Filling the lonely hours
Throughout her declining years.
Warmth from your hearthstone fire
Its light on the walls aglow
Brought to her peace and comfort
That only she could know.
Little House she still remembers
Your gracious and loving care
And comes on light rays from heaven
To the dim lit chapel there.
Eyes have beheld her beauty
Minds have been freed from all fear.
Hearts rejoice in the message
Of Our Lady standing near.
Our
Lady of Ephesus.
Image installed in Basilica Shrine
At a time of tension between the United
States and Turkey and the war in nearby Iraq, a beautiful mosaic image
of Our Lady of Ephesus, Turkey was solemnly blessed in the Basilica of
the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington D.C. on
April 4, 2003.
The Image is
installed in a small oratory. The writing on the left wall of the
oratory explains the dogma defined at the Council of Ephesus that Mary
is the Mother of God. The writing on the right wall quotes chapter 19 of
the Gospel of John that he took Mary into his home. The tradition is
that John built Mary’s House in Ephesus.
Cardinal McCarrick of Washington D.C. and Archbishop
Giuseppe Bernardini of Izmir, Turkey concelebrated a special Mass in
honor of Our Lady of Ephesus. In his post-Communion remarks, Archbishop
Bernardini expressed his great joy for the installation of the Image. He
said, “I would like to leave this oratory as a gift from my diocese in
Turkey for the people of the United States. At Mary’s House different
faiths and cultures pray together. The Blessed Mother receives and
embraces all of mankind. It is the spirit of the mother who receives
everyone without distinction as to race, language or culture. The spirit
of reconciliation and peace is the spirit of Our Lady of Ephesus,
especially today with war in Iraq. May Our Lady of Ephesus bring peace
to the world.”
After the Mass, the Archbishop and myself
discussed the similarities between Our Lady of Ephesus with Our Lady of
Guadalupe. Each asked for a house to be built. St. John the apostle
build one for Our Lady of Ephesus while his namesake, St. Juan Diego,
built one for Our Lady of Guadalupe. Both bring reconciliation and
peace. Both images are real images of Our Lady.
I joined in the Archbishop’s prayer that
Our Lady of Ephesus would bring reconciliation and peace to the world.
Dan
Lynch is the Director of the apostolates of The Missionary Image of Our
Lady of Guadalupe and The Jesus King of All Nations Devotion. He is a
retired Judge, author, video and audio producer and a public speaker. He
has appeared many times on radio and television and has spoken at
conferences throughout the world.
For information on images of Our Lady of Ephesus, a video
and a pilgrimage to Ephesus
Call toll-free 1-888-834-6261 or
Write to him at 144 Sheldon
Road, St. Albans, Vermont 05478.
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