Certificate silver valuable

Certificate silver valuable

Certificate About Us Links Downloads Contact Us Terms of use SiteMap
Certificate silver valuable
Certificate silver valuable

 

You are here: HomePage >>Certificate silver valuable

Certificate silver valuable article lists.

Certificate silver valuable

The road to Compostela: a doctor takes stock



Beneath the high altar of the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, in the wind-worn province of Galicia, Spain, lies a silver sarcophagus containing the relics of St. James the Greater. For a thousand years, pilgrims have been walking a path to his bones. The most fabled trail follows the Camino Frances, which stretches nearly five hundred miles from east of the Pyrenees to Santiago. In 2002, nearly seventy thousand people completed the journey and so earned a certificate, or compostela, from the Archdiocese of Santiago. The numbers will quadruple this year when the feast day of St. James (July 25) falls on a Sunday (a so-called Xacobean Holy Year). Penitent travelers can expect a full discount on their purgatorial bill instead of the usual half off. The popularity of the pilgrimage is hardly new; in fact, it peaked in the eleventh and twelfth centuries, when some years over a half million souls traveled a route already serviced by a system of hostels and military outposts.

Who was James, and why has he become a posthumous celebrity in Spain? The Gospels say that he was the son of Zebedee and brother of John. They were fishermen by trade until Jesus summoned them. James belonged to the apostolic inner circle and witnessed the raising of the daughter of Jairus, the Transfiguration, and the agony in the garden of Gethsemane. His martyrdom is the first--and only one--among the Apostles to be recorded in Scripture. He was beheaded by Herod Agrippa in A.D. 44, and his body was thrown to the animals. Friends stole it away on a stone boat bound for Spain, where it lay quietly in a Roman mausoleum for over 750 years. In 813 the monk Pelayo discovered it, Bishop Tiomidoro authenticated it, and King Alphonse II built a modest cathedral over the grave of Spain's new patron saint.

Pilgrims--now as always--walk the camino to Santiago for mixed reasons [see Paul Moses, page 26]. Gone is the medieval angst over "salvation," though the vast majority of today's hikers acknowledge some spiritual intent. The militant nationalism that helped end Moorish occupation of the peninsula in the fifteenth century has been replaced by national and European pride. Modern walkers love to travel, and many long for the diversion of strange lands and foreign tongues. Some simply value the physical exercise, while many just need a holiday. Still, the notion of pilgrimage suggests something more. People of all faiths and in every age have responded to the restless desire for theophany by walking to where holy men and women lived and were martyred in the service of a god.

The mortal remains of the saints--revered by Catholics as relics--belong to the fleshy fabric of the Catholic tradition. We respond to the power of touch, and to "seeing with our own eyes." We literally race with Simon Peter to Christ's empty tomb, and we side with Thomas, who needed to probe the wounds of the risen Lord. Catholics still queue for candles crossed at our necks on the feast of St. Blaise, wear the smudge of Ash Wednesday, and kiss the wood on Good Friday. We bless ourselves with holy water and take Communion under both species, to more fully experience the Real Presence.

Relics lend a tacit proof of someone's holiness. They encourage recollection, prayer, even pilgrimage. We are even inclined to acknowledge someone's holiness if she lies incorrupt in a glass case. Bones prove not only that the saint once lived, but that she still mingles in the traditions and triumphs of the church. They reconnect us to that first, unmarred moment when our faith was potent, undoubting, alive. They unite us worldwide through their being imbedded in every consecrated altar, a practice tied to the early Christians who celebrated Mass over the bones of the martyrs in the catacombs of Rome.

Last October, I became another thread in the still-unfolding tapestry of camino history. With three friends, I spent twenty days walking the pilgrimage route to Santiago. Our itinerary reflected the times: we flew to Madrid, rented a car, and spent the first night in the monastery of Santo Domingo de Silas, where we adjusted to jetlag and treated ourselves to the sounds of ancient chant. The following day we hopped a train from Burgos to Sahagun, and began to hike the Camino Frances. All our efforts to prevent swollen limbs and bubbling blisters quickly failed, and we were required to hire a taxi to make up lost time. This fall from grace is forgiven in a common camino prayer: "Blessed are you, pilgrim, if what concerns you most is not arriving, but arriving with the others. Blessed are you, pilgrim, if you discover that a step backward to help another is more valuable than one hundred forward without awareness of those at your side."

A typical day began before 7 a.m. in an open dormitory. Life would stir and release its shadows, as we rolled from our bunks and hobbled to the water closet. Little lights would dart, sinuses snort, and suddenly the whole amebic mass was moving, whispering, packing, walking to start the new day. I dressed in layers of nylon, polyester, blended wool, fleece. Soon we would gather on the tarmac and brace ourselves against the morning chill, looking for a directional arrow or a pilgrim just ahead as our guide.

By midmorning, we usually wound around a tiny table in a smoky bar, sipping the life force that is cafe con leche grande. Then we circled in prayer and were off again. We walked until early afternoon. On a stone fence or mat of grass, we would unpack our picnic booty--bags of apples, oranges, bread, cheese, ham, juice, and chocolate--and savor the still and the weightlessness of the moment. Then having molted a layer of clothing, we swung on our packs and trudged further westward. By late afternoon the sky had darkened, and we hurried to the nearest albergue (hostel), had our certificates stamped, paid the suggested offering of three euros, and staked out a bunk with our backpacks. Chores followed: a shower, washing clothes, nap, and journal entry. If we were lucky, there was a cold San Miguel or Mahu beer waiting in a nearby bar. Luckier still, we might find a vespers service at 7 p.m., and a much anticipated pilgrims' meal in a local restaurant. The menu del dia usually consisted of white bean or tripe soup, green beans, or egg and potato omelet. The second course was a choice of trout, hake, veal, or chicken, garnished with French fries. Dessert invariably included fruit, flan, or yogurt, and all for six euros! Before dinner was even served, we had devoured a basket of chewy bread and a bottle of unlabeled wine. We laughed, lounged, unwound from our day as we planned the next.

By ten o'clock we had collapsed on our bunks and set weary thoughts adrift on the tidal snores resounding through the hall. We dreamed pilgrim dreams of hot showers, painless feet, and warm breezes to dry our dripping laundry.

Pilgrims accept a new denominator: Their sole purpose is to walk, and to walk toward Compostela. With a fresh simplicity they soon come to their senses. Days are drenched in the strong scent of cigarette smoke, all-purpose soap, cow manure, eucalyptus leaf, espresso coffee, and the bouquet of our toil and sweat. Our meditation is punctuated by crunching gravel, barking dogs, crowing roosters, lowing cows, screeching espresso machines, honking bread trucks, and the dim whine of traffic on nearby national highways.

The camino is like a moving monastery, but one where you can laugh out loud. Everywhere, crucerios (stone crosses) rise along the roadside, chapels dot the deserted hills, church bells toll, and parish priests wave as if in benediction. My personal devotion became placing a pebble on the official camino monuments that bear a scallop emblem, and offering the Jesus Prayer: "Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy on me a sinner." Oriented by yellow arrows and concrete markers, we joined the sure, unbroken line of pilgrim ants.

As a foreigner, I was aware of my vulnerability, and grateful for my good fortune. There is an often-repeated saying on the camino: the tourist demands; the pilgrim gives thanks. In Spain, a pilgrim is never made to feel a stranger. The look and smell of him seem to provide comfort to those he encounters. No one questions his intentions or his sacrifice. By his walking stick, scallop shell, and backpack, he is known and respected, greeted and received as a blessing. This marriage of giving and receiving has worked for a millennium, and is working still. It is one of the great consolations of the pilgrimage, and one deeply missed when it is over. For what does the world really know of the pilgrim? Only that he is walking, walking toward Compostela.

Certificate silver valuable Related Links
1899 series silver certificateBuying silver certificate
Silver certificate historyAward certificate
Free award certificateFree printable award certificate
Free award certificate templatePrintable award certificate
Award certificate templateBlank award certificate
Sample award certificateKid award certificate
Basketball award certificateSports award certificate
Create award certificateDownloadable award certificate
Student award certificateMilitary award certificate
Funny award certificateFree basketball award certificate
Achievement award certificateChild award certificate
Award certificate exampleFree sports award certificate
Award certificate free sampleMaking award certificate
Make award certificateAward certificate paper
Child printable award certificateAward certificate form
Free award certificate bordersFree award certificate for kid
Award certificate to printService award certificate
Certificate award borderSchool award certificate
Pinewood derby award certificateEmployee award certificate
Online award certificateAward certificate download
Free blank award certificateAward certificate free to print
Free award certificate for a teacherSoccer award certificate
Award certificate golfAward certificate software
Hockey award certificateFree downloadable award certificate
Award certificate free holiday kidFree online award and certificate
 
©2005 All Rights Reserved   HomePage