Call & Times

Christian pilgrims go digital

Virtual tour to Lourdes follows a tradition of innovation

- 6DPXHO / %R\G

Virtual tours of Lourdes attracting the faithful

8niversity of Colorado Boulder

The Catholic Church held what is being termed as the first online pilgrimage to the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Lourdes in France. Earlier this spring, for the first time in its 162-year existence the shrine was closed as part of measures to stem the spread of the coronaviru­s.

This online pilgrimage included many elements of the actual journey such as traditiona­l prayers and communion, but recreated for a virtual experience. Prayers and services were offered in both English and Spanish. Participan­ts were shown scenes of the healing waters, taken on a virtual tour of the cave and heard music that is part of the normal, in-person experience.

As a scholar of the Bible, Judaism and Christiani­ty, I know the importance of pilgrimage­s. But rituals have often been adapted in the face of difficult circumstan­ces.

The pilgrimage of Lourdes

In 1858, 14-year old Bernadette Soubirous, the oldest of nine children born to a local miller and laundrywom­an in southweste­rn France, claimed to have had a series of visitation­s of an apparition of a woman in a cave in Lourdes.

Four years later, in 1862, local Catholic authoritie­s confirmed that the visions were of the Virgin Mary. The confirmati­on process was based on both interviews with Soubirous as well as through the investigat­ion of events at the grotto that were deemed miraculous.

Ever since, the site has been a pivotal place for pilgrimage rites, particular­ly on July 16, commemorat­ing the last visitation of Mary to Soubirous.

Some of these rites involve immersion in, or drinking from, waters in Lourdes, which are believed to hold healing powers. In 1879, a woman from the 8nited States named Mary Hayes, who suffered from severe headaches, wrote a letter to Father Alexis Granger about the healing powers of the water.

Granger was originally from France but at that time was the pastor of the Church of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart at the 8niversity of 1otre Dame. He had given Hayes some of the water from Lourdes to help with her ailments. Hayes reported that the healing waters of Lourdes had a restorativ­e effect, stating that “I have more faith in” the waters “than in all the doctors of the world.”

As rumors of healing miracles at the pools of the grotto in Lourdes became more numerous in the 19th century, the pilgrimage­s every July to commemorat­e the appearance of Mary to Soubirous became much more important in Catholic religious practice.

A place for God’s dwelling

During a pilgrimage, people visit a place, often where a significan­t religious event occurred. According to the Bible, locations where God appeared to humans could become special sites where regular pilgrimage­s could happen.

For example, the book of Deuteronom­y, part of the Bible

called the Torah and traditiona­lly believed to have been written by Moses, commands ancient Israelites to come three times in a year to the place where God “causes his name to dwell,” thought to be Jerusalem.

The significan­ce of this pilgrimage clearly played an important role in ancient Israelite religion. Archaeolog­ical excavation­s have revealed ancient routes attesting to journeys of pilgrims to Jerusalem. Parts of the book of the Psalms in the Bible may also have been ancient songs, called “psalms of ascent,” that pilgrims sung on their routes.

While most translatio­ns of the book of Deuteronom­y indicate that pilgrims “appear before the Lord,” evidence exists that the original text suggests that pilgrims would actually see God.

Deuteronom­y makes it clear that such visitation­s to the holy site will bring tangible benefits in agricultur­al produce.

Spiritual experience

Despite the mandate in the Bible for pilgrimage, such journeys had limited value in the earliest centuries of Christiani­ty. For many Christians during this time, physical places like Jerusalem were more valuable as spiritual concepts than actual destinatio­ns for pilgrims.

Karen Armstrong, author of many books on religion and history, observes that Origen, a third century A.D. Christian scholar, visited Jerusalem and its environs in order to understand where certain events in the Bible occurred.

Such a visit, however, was not a pilgrimage, and, according to Armstrong, Origen “certainly did not expect to get a spiritual experience by visiting a mere geographic­al location, however august its associatio­ns.”

The importance of pilgrimage changed and occupied a more central place in Christiani­ty beginning in the fourth century A.D. when the Roman emperor Constantin­e converted to Christiani­ty.

His mother Helena visited Jerusalem and Israel, following the footsteps of the life, trial and death of Jesus.

It was a general belief in the ancient world that anywhere God or a divine emissary made themselves visible to humans could become a holy space. Materials from such divine visitation could become holy relics around which stories of miracles and shrines, objects of pilgrimage destinatio­ns, could be constructe­d.

Martin of Tours, a prominent figure in Christian monasticis­m in the sixth century A.D., saw a destitute man and, rememberin­g Jesus’ words in the Gospel of Matthew that caring for the poor is like caring for God, Martin gave the poor man his cloak.

The destitute man revealed himself to be Jesus himself, and portions of that “little cloak,” or capella in Latin, were housed in small churches. The origins of the word “chapel” was derived from capella – spaces that, at least in some cases, would become destinatio­ns for pilgrimage­s.

Quarantine and disruption­s

While pilgrimage has a long history, such practice can adapt to changing circumstan­ces.

The Bible, in the Old Testament book of Leviticus chapters 13 and 14, requires that individual­s showing evidence of exposure to a highly infectious skin disease be separated from the larger community.

This passage provides the platform for the belief that quarantine is necessary during the outbreak of an infectious disease. As such, for many priests and pastors these chapters allow a biblical warrant for innovation.

Indeed, for many years, the healing waters of Lourdes have been packaged and distribute­d worldwide for those who can’t go on the pilgrimage.

The pilgrimage undoubtedl­y remains an important journey for many Christians, even when taken online. It attests to transforma­tions of the ritual in the face of difficult circumstan­ces. In fact, social media estimated that participat­ion was five times greater than normal viewership in a pilgrimage.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has caused unpreceden­ted disruption­s to many religious activities. But the adaptation­s to the pilgrimage to Lourdes in 2020 show that adaptation and innovation can play a key role in observing rituals.

 ??  ??
 ?? Photo by Alexis Mons ?? The Catholic Church recently held what is being termed as the first online pilgrimage to the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Lourdes in France.
Photo by Alexis Mons The Catholic Church recently held what is being termed as the first online pilgrimage to the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Lourdes in France.
 ?? Fr. Lawrence Lew, O.P. ?? This statue of the Immaculate Virgin stands in the Grotto at Lourdes where she appeared to St Bernadette in 1858.
Fr. Lawrence Lew, O.P. This statue of the Immaculate Virgin stands in the Grotto at Lourdes where she appeared to St Bernadette in 1858.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States