Anonymous ID: fec949 May 23, 2023, 5:57 p.m. No.18893184   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3197 >>3199 >>3202 >>3207 >>3237 >>3240

https://denvercatholic.org/a-miracle-in-missouri-body-of-benedictine-sisters-foundress-thought-to-be-incorrupt/

 

A miracle in Missouri? Body of Benedictine Sisters’ foundress thought to be incorrupt

 

By Catholic News Agency

May 23, 2023

 

Hundreds of pilgrims have descended on a Benedictine monastery for religious sisters in rural Missouri in recent days after news began to spread on social media last week that the recently exhumed remains of the contemplative order’s African American foundress appear to be incorrupt, four years after her death and burial in a simple wooden coffin.

 

Sister Wilhelmina Lancaster, OSB, founded the Benedictine Sisters of Mary, Queen of the Apostles — best known for their chart-topping Gregorian chant and classic Catholic hymn albums — in 1995 at the age of 70, leaving the Oblate Sisters of Providence, her community of over 50 years, to do so.

 

Known for her devotion to the Traditional Latin Mass and her faithfulness to Benedictine contemplation and the Liturgy of the Hours, she died at age 95 on May 29, 2019, on the vigil of the solemnity of the Ascension.

 

Roughly four years later, on the solemnity of the Ascension in the Latin rite, the abbess and sisters decided to move her body to a final resting place inside their monastery chapel, a long-standing custom for founders and foundresses.

 

Expecting to find bones, the Benedictine Sisters instead unearthed a coffin with an apparently intact body, even though the body was not embalmed and the wooden coffin had a crack down the middle that let in moisture and dirt for an unknown length of time during those four years.

 

“We think she is the first African American woman to be found incorrupt,” the current abbess of the community, Mother Cecilia, OSB, told EWTN’s ACI Group on Saturday. As the head of the monastery, it was her role to examine what was in the coffin first.

 

The body was covered in a layer of mold that had grown due to the high levels of condensation within the cracked coffin. Despite the dampness, little of her body and nothing of her habit disintegrated during the four years.

 

The shock was instant for the community who had gathered to exhume her.

 

“I thought I saw a completely full, intact foot and I said, ‘I didn’t just see that,’” the abbess said. “So I looked again more carefully.”

 

After she looked again, she screamed aloud, “I see her foot!” and the community, she said, “just cheered.”

 

“I mean there was just this sense that the Lord was doing this,” she said. “Right now we need hope. We need it. Our Lord knows that. And she was such a testament to hope. And faith. And trust.”

 

The Catholic Church has a long-standing tradition of so-called “incorruptible saints,” more than a hundred of whom have been beatified or canonized. The saints are called incorruptible because years after their death parts of or even the entirety of their bodies are immune to the natural process of decay. Even with modern embalming techniques, bodies are subject to natural processes of decomposition.

 

According to Catholic tradition, incorruptible saints give witness to the truth of the resurrection of the body and the life that is to come. The lack of decay is also seen as a sign of holiness: a life of grace lived so closely to Christ that sin with its corruption does not proceed in typical fashion but is miraculously held at bay.

Anonymous ID: fec949 May 23, 2023, 5:59 p.m. No.18893199   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3212 >>3224

>>18893184

>>18893184

>A miracle in Missouri? Body of Benedictine Sisters’ foundress thought to be incorrupt

 

‘A beautiful sign’

 

Rumors of a flood cracking open the grave and the sisters’ examining the coffin by flashlight in the middle of the night are highly exaggerated, the abbess told the ACI Group.

 

“I had to have the flashlight because you can’t really see in a dark crack even with the sunshine. I thought I saw a foot, but I just paused because, you know, it’s not every day you look into a coffin,” she recounted. “So there’s kind of a sense of a little bit of hesitation — what am I going to see?”

 

Mindful of the crack and the dirt in the coffin, the sisters carefully removed the body.The skeletal remains should have weighed about 20 pounds. Instead, the sisters were lifting what they estimated to be a body weighing “between 80-90 pounds,”the abbess said.

 

The sisters have since produced a fact sheet to answer questions about the exhumation.

 

“Not only was her body in a remarkable preserved condition, her crown and bouquet of flowers were dried in place; the profession candle with the ribbon, her crucifix, and rosary were all intact,” the sisters reported.

 

“Even more remarkable was the complete preservation of her holy habit, made from natural fibers, for which she fought so vigorously throughout her religious life. They synthetic veil was perfectly intact, while the lining of the coffin, made of similar material, was completely deteriorated and gone.”

 

Abbess Cecilia stressed that the preservation of the habit is a large part of what she sees as miraculous, because the habit is “a beautiful sign that this life is not all there is.”

 

“People see us and it’s like ‘Oh, she’s a sister, oh she’s wearing that because she’s giving her life, she believes in God. Maybe I should think about God,’” she said, noting that the habit is “a sign of the things to come, of the supernatural and of our last end: heaven, hell, purgatory.”

 

“This is not possible,” she said of the incorruptible sister’s body. “God is real.He protected that body and that habit to enkindle our faith, to rekindle it, to bring people back to the faith.”

Anonymous ID: fec949 May 23, 2023, 6 p.m. No.18893202   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18893184

>Expecting to find bones, the Benedictine Sisters instead unearthed a coffin with an apparently intact body, even though the body was not embalmed and the wooden coffin had a crack down the middle that let in moisture and dirt for an unknown length of time during those four years.

Anonymous ID: fec949 May 23, 2023, 6:01 p.m. No.18893212   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18893199

>“Not only was her body in a remarkable preserved condition, her crown and bouquet of flowers were dried in place; the profession candle with the ribbon, her crucifix, and rosary were all intact,” the sisters reported.

 

>“Even more remarkable was the complete preservation of her holy habit, made from natural fibers, for which she fought so vigorously throughout her religious life. They synthetic veil was perfectly intact, while the lining of the coffin, made of similar material, was completely deteriorated and gone.”

Anonymous ID: fec949 May 23, 2023, 6:02 p.m. No.18893225   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18893207

>This is also why Jesus had serious issues with the pharisees.

His problem with the Pharisees is that they could not see the Truth in front of them.

They didn't want to relinquish their power.

 

Also, as He said, they come from a different Father, their father is the father of lies

Anonymous ID: fec949 May 23, 2023, 6:07 p.m. No.18893248   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18893237

wow

 

so many don't want to see what is right in front of them.

Instead of seeing the news for its value, they criticize the writing style, the gramar, and their actions.

bunch of pharisees in here tonight.

I guess you can't help it because you are not able to see Truth

Anonymous ID: fec949 May 23, 2023, 6:11 p.m. No.18893274   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18893159

>If Ron Desantis promises to finish what Donald Trump couldn’t, will you vote for him?

 

>THINK before you answer.

 

your premise sucks as does your question

Anonymous ID: fec949 May 23, 2023, 6:19 p.m. No.18893328   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3332 >>3368 >>3409

>>18893315

many try to say it's cannibalism, but it is impossible to be cannibalism.

Millions of people eat his body and drink his blood day after day after year after year after century after century.

 

There is not enough of one man's body and blood to 'feed' that many people if it is cannibalism.