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History Of The Stations of the
Cross
(Also called
Way of the Cross, Via Crucis, and Via Dolorosa). These names are
used to signify either a series of pictures or tableaux representing
certain scenes in the Passion of Christ, each corresponding to a
particular incident, or the special form of devotion connected with
such representations.
Taken in the
former sense, the Stations may be of stone, wood, or metal,
sculptured or carved, or they may be merely paintings or engravings.
Some Stations are valuable works of art, as those, for instance, in
Antwerp cathedral, which have been much copied elsewhere. They are
usually ranged at intervals around the walls of a church, though
sometimes they are to be found in the open air, especially on roads
leading to a church or shrine. In monasteries they are often placed
in the cloisters. The erection and use of the Stations did not
become at all general before the end of the seventeenth century, but
they are now to be found in almost every church. Formerly their
number varied considerably in different places but fourteen are now
prescribed by authority. They are as follows:
-
Christ
condemned to death;
-
the cross
is laid upon him;
-
His first
fall;
-
He meets
His Blessed Mother;
-
Simon of
Cyrene is made to bear the cross;
-
Christ's
face is wiped by Veronica;
-
His second
fall;
-
He meets
the women of Jerusalem;
-
His third
fall;
-
He is
stripped of His garments;
-
His
crucifixion;
-
His death
on the cross;
-
His body is
taken down from the cross; and
-
laid in the
tomb.
The object of
the Stations is to help the faithful to make in spirit, as it were,
a pilgrimage to the chief scenes of Christ's sufferings and death,
and this has become one of the most popular of Catholic devotions.
It is carried out by passing from Station to Station, with certain
prayers at each and devout meditation on the various incidents in
turn. It is very usual, when the devotion is performed publicly, to
sing a stanza of the "Stabat Mater" while passing from one Station
to the next.
Inasmuch as
the Way of the Cross, made in this way, constitutes a miniature
pilgrimage to the holy places at Jerusalem, the origin of the
devotion may be traced to the Holy Land. The Via Dolorosa at
Jerusalem (though not called by that name before the sixteenth
century) was reverently marked out from the earliest times and has
been the goal of pious pilgrims ever since the days of Constantine.
Tradition asserts that the Blessed Virgin used to visit daily the
scenes of Christ's Passion and St. Jerome speaks of the crowds of
pilgrims from all countries who used to visit the holy places in his
day. There is, however, no direct evidence as to the existence of
any set form of the devotion at that early date, and it is
noteworthy that St. Sylvia (c. 380) says nothing about it in her "Peregrinatio
ad loca sancta", although she describes minutely every other
religious exercise that she saw practised there. A desire to
reproduce the holy places in other lands, in order to satisfy the
devotion of those who were hindered from making the actual
pilgrimage, seems to have manifested itself at quite an early date.
At the monastery of San Stefano at Bologna a group of connected
chapels were constructed as early as the fifth century, by St.
Petronius, Bishop of Bologna, which were intended to represent the
more important shrines of Jerusalem, and in consequence, this
monastery became familiarly known as "Hierusalem". These may perhaps
be regarded as the germ from which the Stations afterwards
developed, though it is tolerably certain that nothing that we have
before about the fifteenth century can strictly be called a Way of
the Cross in the modern sense. Several travellers, it is true, who
visited the Holy Land during the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth
centuries, mention a "Via Sacra", i.e., a settled route along which
pilgrims were conducted, but there is nothing in their accounts to
identify this with the Via Crucis, as we understand it, including
special stopping-places with indulgences attached, and such
indulgenced Stations must, after all, be considered to be the true
origin of the devotion as now practised. It cannot be said with any
certainty when such indulgences began to be granted, but most
probably they may be due to the Franciscans, to whom in 1342 the
guardianship of the holy places was entrusted. Ferraris mentions the
following as Stations to which indulgences were attached: the place
where Christ met His Blessed Mother, where He spoke to the women of
Jerusalem, where He met Simon of Cyrene, where the soldiers cast
lots for His garment, where He was nailed to the cross, Pilate's
house, and the Holy Sepulchre. Analogous to this it may be mentioned
that in 1520 Leo X granted an indulgence of a hundred days to each
of a set of scuptured Stations, representing the Seven Dolours of
Our Lady, in the cemetery of the Franciscan Friary at Antwerp, the
devotion connected with them being a very popular one. The earliest
use of the word Stations, as applied to the accustomed
halting-places in the Via Sacra at Jerusalem, occurs in the
narrative of an English pilgrim, William Wey, who visited the Holy
Land in 1458 and again in 1462, and who describes the manner in
which it was then usual to follow the footsteps of Christ in His
sorrowful journey. It seems that up to that time it had been the
general practice to commence at Mount Calvary, and proceeding
thence, in the opposite direction to Christ, to work back to
Pilate's house. By the early part of the sixteenth century, however,
the more reasonable way of traversing the route, by beginning at
Pilate's house and ending at Mount Calvary, had come to be regarded
as more correct, and it became a special exercise of devotion
complete in itself. During the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
several reproductions of the holy places were set up in different
parts of Europe. The Blessed Alvarez (d. 1420), on his return from
the Holy Land, built a series of little chapels at the Dominican
friary of Cordova, in which, after the pattern of separate Stations,
were painted the principal scenes of the Passion. About the same
time the Blessed Eustochia, a poor Clare, constructed a similar set
of Stations in her convent at Messina. Others that may be enumerated
were those at Görlitz, erected by G. Emmerich, about 1465, and at
Nuremburg, by Ketzel, in 1468. Imiations of these were made at
Louvain in 1505 by Peter Sterckx; at St. Getreu in Bamberg in 1507;
at Fribourg and at Rhodes, about the same date, the two latter being
in the commanderies of the Knights of Rhodes. Those at Nuremburg,
which were carved by Adam Krafft, as well as some of the others,
consisted of seven Stations, popularly known as "the Seven Falls",
because in each of them Christ was represented either as actually
prostrate or as sinking under the weight of His cross. A famous set
of Stations was set up in 1515 by Romanet Bofin at Romans in
Dauphine, in imitation of those at Fribourg, and a similar set was
erected in 1491 at Varallo by the Franciscans there, whose guardian,
Blessed Bernardino Caimi, had been custodian of the holy places. In
several of these early examples an attempt was made, not merely to
duplicate the most hallowed spots of the original Via Dolorosa at
Jerusalem, but also to reproduce the exact intervals between them,
measured in paces, so that devout people might cover precisely the
same distances as they would have done had they made the pilgrimage
to the Holy Land itself. Boffin and some of the others visited
Jerusalem for the express purpose of obtaining the exact
measurements, but unfortunately, though each claimed to be correct,
there is an extraordinary divergence between some of them.
With regard
to the number of Stations it is not at all easy to determine how
this came to be fixed at fourteen, for it seems to have varied
considerably at different times and places. And, naturally, with
varying numbers the incidents of the Passion commemorated also
varied greatly. Wey's account, written in the middle of the
fifteenth century, gives fourteen, but only five of these correspond
with ours, and of the others, seven are only remotely connected with
our Via Crucis:
-
The house
of Dives,
-
the city
gate through which Christ passed,
-
the
probatic pool,
-
the Ecce
Homo arch,
-
the Blessed
Virgin's school, and
-
the houses
of Herod and Simon the Pharisee
When Romanet
Boffin visited Jerusalem in 1515 for the purpose of obtaining
correct details for his set of Stations at Romans, two friars there
told him that there ought to be thirty-one in all, but in the
manuals of devotion subsequently issued for the use of those
visiting these Stations they are given variously as nineteen,
twenty-five, and thirty-seven, so it seems that even in the same
place the number was not determined very definitely. A book entitled
"Jerusalem sicut Christi tempore floruit", written by one
Adrichomius and published in 1584, gives twelve Stations which
correspond exactly with the first twelve of ours, and this fact is
thought by some to point conclusively to the origin of the
particular selection afterwards authorized by the Church, especially
as this book had a wide circulation and was translated into several
European languages. Whether this is so or not we cannot say for
certain. At any rate, during the sixteenth century, a number of
devotional manuals, giving prayers for use when making the Stations,
were published in the Low Countries, and some of our fourteen appear
in them for the first time. But whilst this was being done in Europe
for the benefit of those who could not visit the Holy Land and yet
could reach Louvain, Nuremburg, Romans, or one of the other
reproductions of the Via Dolorosa, it appears doubtful whether, even
up to the end of the sixteenth century, there was any settled form
of the devotion performed publicly in Jerusalem, for Zuallardo, who
wrote a book on the subject, published in Rome in 1587, although he
gives a full series of prayers, etc., for the shrines within the
Holy Sepulchre, which were under the care of the Franciscans,
provides none for the Stations themselves. He explains the reason
thus: "it is not permitted to make any halt, nor to pay veneration
to them with uncovered head, nor to make any other demonstration".
From this it would seem that after Jerusalem had passed under the
Turkish domination the pious exercises of the Way of the Cross could
be performed far more devoutly at Nuremburg or Louvain than in
Jerusalem itself. It may therefore be conjectured, with extreme
probability, that our present series of Stations, together with the
accustomed series of prayers for them, comes to us, not from
Jerusalem, but from some of the imitation Ways of the Cross in
different parts of Europe, and that we owe the propagation of the
devotion, as well as the number and selection of our Stations, much
more to the pious ingenuity of certain sixteenth-century devotional
writers than to the actual practice of pilgrims to the holy places.
With regard
to th particular subjects which have been retained in our series of
Stations, it may be noted that very few of the medieval accounts
make any mention of either the second (Christ receiving the cross)
or the tenth (Christ being stripped of His garments), whilst others
which have since dropped out appear in almost all the early lists.
One of the most frequent of these is the Station formerly made at
the remains of the Ecce Homo arch, i.e. the balcony from which these
words were pronounced. Additions and omissions such as these seem to
confirm the supposition that our Stations are derived from pious
manuals of devotion rather than from Jerusalem itself. The three
falls of Christ (third, seventh, and ninth Stations) are apparently
all that remain of the Seven Falls, as depicted by Krafft at
Nuremburg and his imitators, in all of which Christ was represented
as either falling or actually fallen. In explanations of this it is
supposed that the other four falls coincided with His meetings with
His Mother, Simon of Cyrene, Veronica, and the women of Jerusalem,
and that in these four the mention of the fall has dropped out
whilst it survives in the other three which have nothing else to
distinguish them. A few medieval writers take the meeting with Simon
and the women of Jerusalem to have been simultaneous, but the
majority represent them as separate events. The Veronica incident
does not occur in many of the earlier accounts, whilst almost all of
those that do mention it place it as having happened just before
reaching Mount Calvary, instead of earlier in the journey as in our
present arrangement. An interesting variation is found in the
special set of eleven stations ordered in 1799 for use in the
diocese of Vienne. It is as follows:
-
the Agony
in the Garden;
-
the
betrayal by Judas;
-
the
scourging;
-
the
crowning with thorns;
-
Christ
condemned to death;
-
He meets
Simon of Cyrene;
-
the women
of Jerusalem;
-
He tastes
the gall;
-
He is
nailed to the cross;
-
His death
on the cross; and
-
His body is
taken down from the cross.
It will be
noticed that only five of these correspond exactly with our
Stations. The others, though comprising the chief events of the
Passion, are not strictly incidents of the Via Dolorosa itself.
Another
variation that occurs in different churches relates to the side of
the church on which the Stations begin. The Gospel side is perhaps
the more usual. In reply to a question the Sacred Congregation of
Indulgences, in 1837, said that, although nothing was ordered on
this point, beginning on the Gospel side seemed to be the more
appropriate. In deciding the matter, however, the arrangement and
form of a church may make it more convenient to go the other way.
The position of the figures in the tableaux, too, may sometimes
determine the direction of the route, for it seems more in
accordance with the spirit of the devotion that the procession, in
passing from station to station, should follow Christ rather than
meet Him.
The erection
of the Stations in churches did not become at all common until
towards the end of the seventeenth century, and the popularity of
the practice seems to have been chiefly due to the indulgences
attached. The custom originated with the Franciscans, but its
special connection with that order has now disappeared. It has
already been said that numerous indulgences were formerly attached
to the holy places at Jerusalem. Realizing that few persons,
comparatively, were able to gain these by means of a personal
pilgrimage to the Holy Land, Innocent XI, in 1686, granted to the
Franciscans, in answer to their petition, the right to erect the
Stations in all their churches, and declared that all the
indulgences that had ever been given for devoutly visiting the
actual scenes of Christ's Passion, could thenceforth be gained by
Franciscans and all others affiliated to their order if they made
the Way of the Cross in their own churches in the accustomed manner.
Innocent XII confirmed the privilege in 1694 and Benedict XIII in
1726 extended it to all the faithful. In 1731 Clement XII still
further extended it by permitting the indulgenced Stations to all
churches, provided that they were erected by a Franciscan father
with the sanction of the ordinary. At the same time he definitely
fixed the number of Stations at fourteen. Benedict XIV in 1742
exhorted all priests to enrich their churches with so great a
treasure, and there are few churches now without the Stations. In
1857 the bishops of England received faculties from the Holy See to
erect Stations themselves, with the indulgences attached, wherever
there were no Franciscans available, and in 1862 this last
restriction was removed and the bishops were empowered to erect the
Stations themselves, either personally or by delegate, anywhere
within their jurisdiction. These faculties are quinquennial. There
is some uncertainty as to what are the precise indulgences belonging
to the stations. It is agreed that all that have ever been granted
to the faithful for visiting the holy places in person can now be
gained by making the Via Crucis in any church where the Stations
have been erected in due form, but the Instructions of the Sacred
Congregation, approved by Clement XII in 1731, prohibit priests and
others from specifying what or how many indulgences may be gained.
In 1773 Clement XIV attached the same indulgence, under certain
conditions, to crucifixes duly blessed for the purpose, for the use
of the sick, those at sea or in prison, and others lawfully hindered
from making the Stations in a church. The conditions are that,
whilst holding the crucifix in their hands, they must say the "Pater"
and "Ave" fourteen times, then the "Pater", "Ave", and "Gloria" five
times, and the same again once each for the pope's intentions. If
one person hold the crucifix, a number present may gain the
indulgences provided the other conditions are fulfilled by all. Such
crucifixes cannot be sold, lent, or given away, without losing the
indulgence.
The following
are the principal regulations universally in force at the present
time with regard to the Stations:
-
If a pastor
or a superior of a convent, hospital, etc., wishes to have the
Stations erected in their places he must ask permission of the
bishop. If there are Franciscan Fathers in the same town or city,
their superior must be asked to bless the Stations or delegate
some priest either of his own monastery or a secular priest. If
there are no Franciscan Fathers in that place the bishops who have
obtained from the Holy See the extraordinary of Form C can
delegate any priest to erect the Stations. This delegation of a
certain priest for the blessing of the Stations must necessarily
be done in writing. The pastor of such a church, or the superior
of such a hospital, convent, etc., should take care to sign the
document the bishop or the superior of the monastery sends, so
that he may thereby express his consent to have the Stations
erected in their place, for the bishop's and the respective
pastor's or superior's consent must be had before the Stations are
blessed, otherwise the blessing is null and void;
-
Pictures or
tableaux of the various Stations are not necessary. It is to the
cross placed over them that the indulgence is attached. These
crosses must be of wood; no other material will do. If only
painted on the wall the erection is null (Cong. Ind., 1837, 1838,
1845);
-
If, for
restoring the church, for placing them in a more convenient
position, or for any other reasonable cause, the crosses are
moved, this may be done without the indulgence being lost (1845).
If any of the crosses, for some reason, have to be replaced, no
fresh blessing is required, unless more than half of them are so
replaced (1839).
-
There
should if possible be a separate meditation on each of the
fourteen incidents of the Via Crucis, not a general meditation on
the Passion nor on other incidents not included in the Stations.
No particular prayers are ordered;
-
The
distance required between the Stations is not defined. Even when
only the clergy move from one Station to another the faithful can
still gain the indulgence without moving;
-
It is
necessary to make all the Stations uninterruptedly (S.C.I., 22
January, 1858). Hearing Mass or going to Confession or Communion
between Stations is not considered an interruption. According to
many the Stations may be made more than once on the same day, the
indulgence may be gained each time; but this is by no means
certain (S.C.I., 10 Sept., 1883). Confession and Communion on the
day of making the Stations are not necessary provided the person
making them is in a state of grace;
-
Ordinarily
the Stations should be erected within a church or public oratory.
If the Via Crucis goes outside, e.g., in a cemetery or cloister,
it should if possible begin and end in the church.
In conclusion
it may be safely asserted that there is no devotion more richly
endowed with indulgences than the Way of the Cross, and none which
enables us more literally to obey Christ's injunction to take up our
cross and follow Him. A perusal of the prayers usually given for
this devotion in any manual will show what abundant spiritual
graces, apart from the indulgences, may be obtained through a right
use of them, and the fact that the Stations may be made either
publicly or privately in any church renders the devotion specially
suitable for all. One of the most popularly attended Ways of the
Cross at the present day is that in the Colosseum at Rome, where
every Friday the devotion of the Stations is conducted publicly by a
Franciscan Father. |