The plaque there reads:
"The Hill of Crosses is a unique place in terms of both its scale and its history. At present some 200,000 crosses of various sizes adorn the hill. By continually putting up crosses there people express their devotion to Christ, pray for his help and mercy, and identify Lithuania as a Christian land. The site is a reflection of the nation's spontaneous religiousness and is probably the place in Lithuania that is most often visited by pilgrims today. The Hill of Crosses gained immense significance in the lives of Lithuanian believers during the Soviet era as a sign of resistance to the totalitarian regime. After the re-establishment of independence new life has been breathed into the Hill of Crosses and it has become a symbol of the entire nation's unshakeable faith, its past suffering and hope. The Hill of Crosses gained fame throughout the world on 7 September 1993 when Pope John Paul II visited it and celebrated the Holy Mass for 100,000 people who gathered there. In 1994 a cross was put up on the site using the crucifix that Pope John Paul II gave to Lithuania. The cross blessed by Pope Benedict XVI was added in 2006. At the foot of the Hill of Crosses stands a Franciscan monastery built with the encouragement of Pope John Paul II and consecrated in 2000. The Feast of the Hill of Crosses, reinstated in 1997, draws large crowds each year on the last Sunday of July."
We have a wall of crosses in our Narthex. People have picked them up from travel, from the homes of loved ones now deceased, from deployments to the Middle East, from stores, and made themselves. It remains a popular place in our facility. People new to our parish and those who have been there forever come to stand and gaze, think, remember, and pray. It is not nearly so grand, but majestic in its own way as the cross always is. What a blessed image that points us to the the very purpose of our Lord's coming and the very center of the Church's proclamation. The wood of the manger is not long remembered but then it becomes the wood of the cross and this will never be forgotten...
What an inspiring arrangement!
ReplyDeleteVery cool -- I'd never heard of this place before...
ReplyDeleteEvery time I read about this hill, or see the picture, I am simply awestruck! Blessed be the name of God!
ReplyDeleteI've been there several times and I would call this places the Eruption of Antichrist rather nor the Hill of Crosses...
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