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Located on the top of the "Bulbul" mountain 9 km ahead of
Ephesus, the shrine of Virgin Mary enjoys a marvelous atmosphere
hidden in the green. It is the place where Mary may have spent her
last days. Indeed, she may have come in the area together with St.
John, who spent several years in the area to spread Christianity.
Mary preferred this remote place rather than living in crowded
place. The house is a typical Roman architectural example, entirely
made of stones.
In the 4th century AD, a church, combining her house and grave, has
been built. The original two-stored house, which consisted of an
anteroom (where today candles are proposed), bedroom and praying
room (Christian church area) and a room with fireplace (chapel for
Muslims). A front kitchen fell into ruins and has been restored in
1940's. Today, only the central part and a room on the right of the
altar are open to visitors.
From there one can understand that this building looks more like a
church than a house. Another interesting place is the "Water of
Mary", a source to be found at the exit of the church area and where
a rather salt water, with curative properties, can be drunk by all.
Paul VI was the first pope to visit this place in the 1960's. Later,
in the 1980's, during his visit, Pope John-Paul II declared the
House of Virgin Mary has a pilgrimage place for Christians. It is
also visited by Muslims who recognize Mary as the mother of one of
their prophets. Every year, on August 15th a ceremony is organized
to commemorate Mary's Assumption. Especially on August 15th, 2000,
an organization has planned to celebrate also Jesus' 2000th
birthday.
The visions of Sister Emmerich, as recorded by Brentano, occupy
several volumes and are mostly concerned with events from the life
of Christ and of Mary. Only a few are devoted to Mary's final day in
Ephesus, and those few follow no logical or even chronological
sequence, tending to be circular rather than linear, creating and
then clarifying ambiguities, so that in highly condensed version
that follows we have taken the liberty of reorganizing and
summarizing Sister Emmerich's visions to help you see more clearly
exactly what she saw.
THE LOCATION OF THE HOUSE
"Mary did not live in Ephesus itself, but on a hill to the left of
the road from Jerusalem... Narrow paths from Ephesus lead southwards
to it... It is a very lonely place, but has many fertile slopes as
well as rock caves where several Christian families and friends of
Mary already lived... St. John had a house built for her here...
It is on an uneven plateau near the top of the hill, overgrown with
trees and wild bushes... There were Jewish as well as Christian
settlers here, living in caves fitted out with woodworks or in huts
or tents... It was like a scattered village... Mary's house was the
only one built of stone... A little way behind it was the summit of
the hill, from which one could see Ephesus and also the sea with its
many islands... Near here is a castle inhabited by a king who seems
to have been deposed... Behind the house Mary had built a Way of the
Cross soon after her arrival...
It had twelve Stations... Mary paced out the measurements herself...
At each Station she set up memorial stones - eight smooth stones
with many sides, each resting on a base of the same stone... The
stones and their bases were all inscribed with Hebrew letters...
These Stations were all in little hollows, except the Station of
Month Calvary which was on a hill... The Station of the Holy
Sepulcher was in a little cave over this hill..."
THE HOUSE ITSELF
"It was built of regular stones, rounded at the back, and had a
spring running under it... The windows were high up near the flat
roof... The main part of the house was divided into two by the
fireplace in the middle of it, sunk into the ground, facing the
door... There was a deep channel in the wall, like half of a
chimney, which carried the smoke up an opening in the ceiling...
Behind the fireplace, the apse of the room was curtained off and
formed Mary's oratory... In a niche in the center of the wall there
was a receptacle like a tabernacle and in it stood a cross about the
length of a man's arm...
To the right and left of the fireplace were doors which led into the
black part of the house... The door to the right led to the
bedchamber of the Blessed Virgin, which ended in a semi-circle...
Her couch, which was placed against a niche in the wall, was the
length and breath of a narrow plank... Through the door to the left
of the oratory was a small room were Mary's clothes and other
belongings were kept... She lived here quietly with her maidservant,
a younger woman who fetched what little food they needed... St. John
would visit them when he was not away on his travels..."
MARY'S DEATH AND BURIAL
"I saw her lying on a low, very narrow couch in her little sleeping
alcove... Her head rested on a round cushion... She was very weak
and pale. The assembled Apostles held a service in front part of the
house... Peter stood in priestly vestments before the altar, with
the others behind him as if in a choir...
I saw the Blessed Virgin being lifted up several times a day by the
women to be given a spoonful of juice which had been pressed from a
bunch of yellow berries... Newcomers tenderly embraced those who
were already there... After their feet had been washed, they
approached Mary's couch and greeted her with reverence... She could
only say a few words to them... Towards evening she realized that
her end was approaching and said farewell to the Apostles, disciples
and women who were present... She lay back on her pillows, pale and
still... Peter gave her Holy Communion... She died after the ninth
hour, at the same time as Our Lord...
Matthew and Andrew then followed Mary' Way of the Cross until the
last Station, half and hour's journey from the house, which was the
cave representing the Holy Sepulcher... Here they worked to enlarge
the tomb and to built a door with which to close the entrance...
Women came to the house to prepare the body for burial, bringing
with them clothes as well as spices to embalm the body... The house
was closed and they worked lamplight... Two women washed the holy
body... St. John carried a vessel with ointment...
Peter dipped a finger of his right hand into it and anointed the
breast, hands and feet of the Blessed Virgin, praying as he did
so... Bunches of myrrh were laid in the armpits and bosom and in the
spaces between the shoulders and the neck, chin and cheeks... They
wrapped the holy body in a great grave-cloth and placed it in the
wicker coffin which stood near... On her breast was laid a wreath of
red, white and sky-blue flowers...
The coffin was then taken to the cave where she was buried." The
date of Mary's death perhaps fades in importance when Sister
Emmerich tells us that after Mary's entombment St. John took St
Thomas, who had arrived late, to see the Virgin one last time. Once
inside the cave, they knelt and St. John opened the lid of the
coffin. Mary's body was not in the burial shroud, but the shroud
remained intact. They carefully covered up the entrance to the cave
and left. |