Post by Messenger on Apr 15, 2008 16:32:33 GMT -5
www.visionsofjesuschrist.com/weeping594.htm
January 31, 2005 Reported in tampabays10.com. Written by Preston Rudie. Clearwater Florida bullet-proof glass has been installed to protect a Clearwater building which many believe contains the image of the Virgin Mary. Shepherds of Christ Ministries spent $55,000 to have the protective glass installed this weekend. Last year, a teen destroyed part of the image when he shot out 3 of the building's window panes. The group hopes this move will prevent any future vandalism.
www.visionsofjesuschrist.com/weeping378.htm
For Mary's faithful, a shattering loss
For MARY's faithful? What about Jesus? Did MARY die for their sins? Or did JESUS?
Look at the sections I have underlined here, & try telling me that the feeling expressed DON'T resemble idolitrous behavior:
March 3, 2004 - Reported in the sptimes.com. Written by Chris Tisch. Nearly every day for the last eight years, Sam and Jean Meo have sat beneath the image of the Virgin Mary that adorned the glass windows of a Clearwater office building. The iridescent figure became an international religious icon that drew hundreds of thousands of people after it was first noticed in 1996. Some, like the Meos, find a miraculous healing power beneath it.
You want to tell me that they don't consider this an idol?
Jean, 80, was expected to die after lung cancer surgery. Sam, 81, has endured three open-heart surgeries. "I pray for her, she prays for me," said Sam. "Prayer has been keeping me alive." But on Monday morning, the Meos looked up at their sacred Virgin to see she had been beheaded. The three windows that once held her face and veil had been knocked out.
Inside the building, the windows had been reduced to a pile of glass pebbles that glistened like sequins of purple, green and yellow. "My heart just sank when I saw it," said Rosie Reed, site leader for Shepherds of Christ Ministries, which owns the building. "It's irreplaceable." Clearwater police said someone shot three small ball bearings at the windows early Monday morning. Police do not think the objects were shot with a gun, but also find it unlikely the ball bearings were thrown with such power by hand.
Investigators suspect a slingshot may have been used. Detectives planned to review video from a surveillance camera aimed at the figure each night. The video is streamed onto an Internet site 24 hours a day and recorded inside the building at night, though the tape may have run out before the vandalism occurred. With no arrests or suspects, police were unsure if the damage was caused by juvenile pranksters or by vandals who targeted the figure for religious or cultural reasons. If it's the latter, the suspects could be prosecuted for a hate crime. "We don't know who did it or why they did it," said police spokesman Wayne Shelor.
Religion experts said the vandalism could have been an attack on Catholics, who view the mother of Christ as their intercessor with God. "It'd be like someone attacking the American flag," said Darrell Fasching, a professor in the department of religious studies at the University of South Florida. "It's something that means a great deal to people, in this case religious rather than political. The attack on the image of the Virgin is an attack on God's mercy and an attack on the religion." Some who visited Monday think it was motivated by hate because of the precision of the shots. "Somebody meant to do this - because of the head," said Largo resident Mary Pardy. "How they did it is beyond me."
Some wondered if the vandalism might have been stirred by the film The Passion of the Christ. "For me, it's the reason," David Gaurin, 32, of Tampa, said of the Mel Gibson film. "Somebody doesn't have any hope. Nothing. People need to respect her, the mother of God." By Monday night, more than 100 people, some in tears, had come to the site. They lit candles, sang songs and prayed. For some, the image is a curiosity. For others, it is a religious icon. To most, it should be respected.
"I'm not a religious person. I just think it is terrible that someone would destroy something that gives others so much hope," said Michelle Goossen, 36, of Clearwater, who was crying as she took photos of the busted image Monday evening. "People have come here from all over the world." Ministry leaders said they planned to board up the broken windows Monday night, then possibly install new ones. Though some visitors expressed hope that God would redraw the Virgin Mary image on the windows, ministry leaders said they don't expect that to happen.
"I think people will still come and hopefully they'll pray more," Reed said. "Six panes of the glass are still here. As long as she's here, we're here." The image was discovered in December 1996 when a customer of Seminole Finance Corp. noticed the rainbow-hued shape on the two-story building at U.S. 19 and Drew Street. When a TV station ran a story, the parking lot filled with believers. Within three weeks, police estimated almost a half-million people had come to see the Virgin. Over the years, the number of visitors slowed to a couple hundred a day.
In the summer of 1998, Cincinnati-based Shepherds of Christ Ministries leased the 22,000-square-foot building, then bought it for more than $2-million and called it "Our Lady of Clearwater." The image also is meaningful to Florida's Hispanic community because it evokes the Virgin of Guadalupe, the patron saint of Latin America, and, according to locals, the protector of the 20,000 or so Mexicans living in Clearwater. "The Mexican community is going to be devastated," said Sonia Morales, a volunteer nurse at La Clinica Guadalupana, a clinic in Clearwater. "They are very spiritual and connected to the Virgin Mary."
Every year on Dec. 12, several thousand Central and South Americans gather on the site to celebrate the feast of the Virgin of Guadalupe, which last year drew 6,000 people. "I feel a personal attack ... symbols like that are very important for us," said Jose Vidales, who helps organize the event. "This is a symbol we left behind in Mexico and we found something very similar in Clearwater." The damage was discovered about 6:30 a.m. by a woman who is usually one of the first to the building every morning. She didn't immediately report the broken windows because she believed ministry leaders knew about it.
Word eventually reached Reed, who at first tried to call the ministry president in Cincinnati. No one called police until 9:31 a.m., and that call came from someone out of state who saw the broken windows on the streaming-video Web site. Police believe the ball bearings didn't immediately shatter the glass, but rather caused the windows to splinter and spider-web, then gradually collapse in pieces from their frames. Two ball bearings were found on the ground outside the building.
This wasn't the first time the building has been the target of vandals. In May 1997, someone threw an unknown liquid onto the windows, defacing the glass panels. The next month, two days of heavy thunderstorms washed away the blemishes, and the image of Mary remained. Some visitors said even the defacing of such a precious religious icon should prompt people to search their hearts for forgiveness. "I hope God forgives them," said Arlene Livingston, 69, of Largo. Others weren't so gracious.
"I think whoever did this should be struck by lightning," said Jim Sarelas, 78, a visitor from Illinois. Whatever happens, the regulars said they would continue to visit. That includes Sam and Jean Meo. Jean fell a few years back and fractured three bones in her back. She uses a walker these days and has to lie in bed for a while when she gets home. During her lung cancer surgery three years ago, she grasped in her right hand a white rosary she received at the Virgin Mary. "They can do what they want, they're not going to make us weak," Sam said of the vandals. "They're not going to break my religion down."
NOT idolitrous behavior?
Are you honestly going to try telling me that they are NOT worshipping this?
I think not!
www.visionsofjesuschrist.com/weeping286.htm
Dec 25, 2003 - Reported in the TBO.com Written by David Sommer - Clearwater FL. For seven Christmas seasons, the faithful have been drawn to a former bank building on U.S. 19. But the massive crowds that flocked to see the image of the Virgin Mary upon its discovery in December 1996 have not returned in recent years.
Instead, a small but steady stream of faithful flows to the corner of Drew Street and U.S. 19 to lay flowers, say prayers and light candles in front of the 60-foot image that mimics the shape of Our Lady of Guadalupe, the Catholic patroness of the Americas who left her image on the frock of a Mexican peasant in 1531.
"When I come here, it gives me happiness," Gennet Tekelhaimanot said this week as she visited what has become known as "Our Lady of Clearwater." The Ethiopian immigrant credits the image with answering her prayers to help her mother recover from a stroke. "My mom was sick, so I went to pray and I got an answer from God," Tekelhaimanot said. "It is a miracle. God is good."
Tony Cipolla said one visit to the Virgin Mary's image was enough to change his life. En route from Pennsylvania to the Florida Keys, where he planned to retire, Cipolla said he made a detour to Clearwater after hearing about the Madonna image.
Now, Cipolla has retired to Pinellas Park and visits daily to help maintain the hundreds of candles and dozens of flower arrangements that adorn the side of the former bank building. "That was a sign in itself," Cipolla said of his decision to retire here rather than in the Keys. Long Nguyen, a Vietnamese immigrant, credits the Virgin Mary image with curing illnesses he and his wife, Phuc, suffered.
"This is faith healing, " Nguyen said. "We feel like we are blessed, and we come see her every day. "Clara Yon, who lives in Miami but has relatives in Clearwater, said she makes it a point to visit the image: "very time we are passing through." "This was a parking lot for a bank, but now it's almost a church," Yon said.
Thousands Once Visited
The evolution of the Virgin Mary site has been gradual but dramatic.
Within days of the image's discovery by a bank customer, tens of thousands of people began flocking to the site. Nearby merchants began hawking T-shirts and trinkets, Clearwater police assigned a squad of officers to direct foot and vehicle traffic, and the city formed a Miracle Management Task Force to deal with the crush of unexpected visitors.
When the holiday season ended, police estimated that more than 400,000 people had visited the Virgin Mary image. The city had spent more than $40,000 on police overtime, a temporary signal light on Drew Street, and amenities such as portable toilet rental.
Meanwhile, visitors donated more than $30,000 that was distributed to local charities and All Children's Hospital in St. Petersburg. Over the years, detractors contend the rainbow-tinted shape that suggests a stylized image of the Virgin Mary was nothing more than a water stain from an irrigation sprinkler that blew out its nozzle and showered the glass-paneled south side of the bank building.
But the image proved resilient.
In 1997, vandals sprayed the image with an acidic liquid, staining it badly and obscuring a large portion of the face and left shoulder. But a month later, a downpour washed away that stain and the image re- emerged.
The following year, the Cincinnati-based Shepherds of Christ Ministries began renting the building, which the bank had vacated. The group, which prays for Catholic priests, bought the property in December 2000, said Rosie Reed, the ministries' site leader.
Also in 1998, work began on a 21-foot-tall, 1 1/2-ton wooden crucifix that now dominates the shrine built around the glass image. Texas artisan Felix Avalos said God told him [See here] to take a giant cedar log to Clearwater and to carve the crucifix. It took Avalos 2 1/2 years to finish his work, which for that period of time stayed hidden behind a blue shroud. It was unveiled in July 2001.
In A Word, 'Cool'
Now, Shepherds of Christ Ministries stages a prayer service at 6:30 p.m. daily, Reed said. A prayer room is set up behind the image in the old bank building, and Reed's group sells religious items, prayer candles and on-the- spot framed photographs of visitors to raise money to pay the mortgage, she said.
On Monday, 12-year-old Chris Toney, vacationing from New York, paid a visit to the Virgin Mary image along with other family members. "I heard all my family members talking about it and saying we should come and see it," Toney said. "It's nice. Really cool."
KEY DATES
DECEMBER 1996: The faithful turned out in droves to see a 60-foot image that mimicked the shape of Our Lady of Guadalupe at a bank building on U.S. 19. 1997: Vandals sprayed the image with an acidic liquid, staining it badly, but the image recovered. 1998: Cincinnati-based Shepherds of Christ Ministries began renting the building, which was empty had been vacated. Also, work began on a 21-foot-tall, 1 1/2- ton wooden crucifix. 2001: Wooden crucifix was unveiled.
Bill
January 31, 2005 Reported in tampabays10.com. Written by Preston Rudie. Clearwater Florida bullet-proof glass has been installed to protect a Clearwater building which many believe contains the image of the Virgin Mary. Shepherds of Christ Ministries spent $55,000 to have the protective glass installed this weekend. Last year, a teen destroyed part of the image when he shot out 3 of the building's window panes. The group hopes this move will prevent any future vandalism.
www.visionsofjesuschrist.com/weeping378.htm
For Mary's faithful, a shattering loss
For MARY's faithful? What about Jesus? Did MARY die for their sins? Or did JESUS?
Look at the sections I have underlined here, & try telling me that the feeling expressed DON'T resemble idolitrous behavior:
March 3, 2004 - Reported in the sptimes.com. Written by Chris Tisch. Nearly every day for the last eight years, Sam and Jean Meo have sat beneath the image of the Virgin Mary that adorned the glass windows of a Clearwater office building. The iridescent figure became an international religious icon that drew hundreds of thousands of people after it was first noticed in 1996. Some, like the Meos, find a miraculous healing power beneath it.
You want to tell me that they don't consider this an idol?
Jean, 80, was expected to die after lung cancer surgery. Sam, 81, has endured three open-heart surgeries. "I pray for her, she prays for me," said Sam. "Prayer has been keeping me alive." But on Monday morning, the Meos looked up at their sacred Virgin to see she had been beheaded. The three windows that once held her face and veil had been knocked out.
Inside the building, the windows had been reduced to a pile of glass pebbles that glistened like sequins of purple, green and yellow. "My heart just sank when I saw it," said Rosie Reed, site leader for Shepherds of Christ Ministries, which owns the building. "It's irreplaceable." Clearwater police said someone shot three small ball bearings at the windows early Monday morning. Police do not think the objects were shot with a gun, but also find it unlikely the ball bearings were thrown with such power by hand.
Investigators suspect a slingshot may have been used. Detectives planned to review video from a surveillance camera aimed at the figure each night. The video is streamed onto an Internet site 24 hours a day and recorded inside the building at night, though the tape may have run out before the vandalism occurred. With no arrests or suspects, police were unsure if the damage was caused by juvenile pranksters or by vandals who targeted the figure for religious or cultural reasons. If it's the latter, the suspects could be prosecuted for a hate crime. "We don't know who did it or why they did it," said police spokesman Wayne Shelor.
Religion experts said the vandalism could have been an attack on Catholics, who view the mother of Christ as their intercessor with God. "It'd be like someone attacking the American flag," said Darrell Fasching, a professor in the department of religious studies at the University of South Florida. "It's something that means a great deal to people, in this case religious rather than political. The attack on the image of the Virgin is an attack on God's mercy and an attack on the religion." Some who visited Monday think it was motivated by hate because of the precision of the shots. "Somebody meant to do this - because of the head," said Largo resident Mary Pardy. "How they did it is beyond me."
Some wondered if the vandalism might have been stirred by the film The Passion of the Christ. "For me, it's the reason," David Gaurin, 32, of Tampa, said of the Mel Gibson film. "Somebody doesn't have any hope. Nothing. People need to respect her, the mother of God." By Monday night, more than 100 people, some in tears, had come to the site. They lit candles, sang songs and prayed. For some, the image is a curiosity. For others, it is a religious icon. To most, it should be respected.
"I'm not a religious person. I just think it is terrible that someone would destroy something that gives others so much hope," said Michelle Goossen, 36, of Clearwater, who was crying as she took photos of the busted image Monday evening. "People have come here from all over the world." Ministry leaders said they planned to board up the broken windows Monday night, then possibly install new ones. Though some visitors expressed hope that God would redraw the Virgin Mary image on the windows, ministry leaders said they don't expect that to happen.
"I think people will still come and hopefully they'll pray more," Reed said. "Six panes of the glass are still here. As long as she's here, we're here." The image was discovered in December 1996 when a customer of Seminole Finance Corp. noticed the rainbow-hued shape on the two-story building at U.S. 19 and Drew Street. When a TV station ran a story, the parking lot filled with believers. Within three weeks, police estimated almost a half-million people had come to see the Virgin. Over the years, the number of visitors slowed to a couple hundred a day.
In the summer of 1998, Cincinnati-based Shepherds of Christ Ministries leased the 22,000-square-foot building, then bought it for more than $2-million and called it "Our Lady of Clearwater." The image also is meaningful to Florida's Hispanic community because it evokes the Virgin of Guadalupe, the patron saint of Latin America, and, according to locals, the protector of the 20,000 or so Mexicans living in Clearwater. "The Mexican community is going to be devastated," said Sonia Morales, a volunteer nurse at La Clinica Guadalupana, a clinic in Clearwater. "They are very spiritual and connected to the Virgin Mary."
Every year on Dec. 12, several thousand Central and South Americans gather on the site to celebrate the feast of the Virgin of Guadalupe, which last year drew 6,000 people. "I feel a personal attack ... symbols like that are very important for us," said Jose Vidales, who helps organize the event. "This is a symbol we left behind in Mexico and we found something very similar in Clearwater." The damage was discovered about 6:30 a.m. by a woman who is usually one of the first to the building every morning. She didn't immediately report the broken windows because she believed ministry leaders knew about it.
Word eventually reached Reed, who at first tried to call the ministry president in Cincinnati. No one called police until 9:31 a.m., and that call came from someone out of state who saw the broken windows on the streaming-video Web site. Police believe the ball bearings didn't immediately shatter the glass, but rather caused the windows to splinter and spider-web, then gradually collapse in pieces from their frames. Two ball bearings were found on the ground outside the building.
This wasn't the first time the building has been the target of vandals. In May 1997, someone threw an unknown liquid onto the windows, defacing the glass panels. The next month, two days of heavy thunderstorms washed away the blemishes, and the image of Mary remained. Some visitors said even the defacing of such a precious religious icon should prompt people to search their hearts for forgiveness. "I hope God forgives them," said Arlene Livingston, 69, of Largo. Others weren't so gracious.
"I think whoever did this should be struck by lightning," said Jim Sarelas, 78, a visitor from Illinois. Whatever happens, the regulars said they would continue to visit. That includes Sam and Jean Meo. Jean fell a few years back and fractured three bones in her back. She uses a walker these days and has to lie in bed for a while when she gets home. During her lung cancer surgery three years ago, she grasped in her right hand a white rosary she received at the Virgin Mary. "They can do what they want, they're not going to make us weak," Sam said of the vandals. "They're not going to break my religion down."
NOT idolitrous behavior?
Are you honestly going to try telling me that they are NOT worshipping this?
I think not!
www.visionsofjesuschrist.com/weeping286.htm
Dec 25, 2003 - Reported in the TBO.com Written by David Sommer - Clearwater FL. For seven Christmas seasons, the faithful have been drawn to a former bank building on U.S. 19. But the massive crowds that flocked to see the image of the Virgin Mary upon its discovery in December 1996 have not returned in recent years.
Instead, a small but steady stream of faithful flows to the corner of Drew Street and U.S. 19 to lay flowers, say prayers and light candles in front of the 60-foot image that mimics the shape of Our Lady of Guadalupe, the Catholic patroness of the Americas who left her image on the frock of a Mexican peasant in 1531.
"When I come here, it gives me happiness," Gennet Tekelhaimanot said this week as she visited what has become known as "Our Lady of Clearwater." The Ethiopian immigrant credits the image with answering her prayers to help her mother recover from a stroke. "My mom was sick, so I went to pray and I got an answer from God," Tekelhaimanot said. "It is a miracle. God is good."
Tony Cipolla said one visit to the Virgin Mary's image was enough to change his life. En route from Pennsylvania to the Florida Keys, where he planned to retire, Cipolla said he made a detour to Clearwater after hearing about the Madonna image.
Now, Cipolla has retired to Pinellas Park and visits daily to help maintain the hundreds of candles and dozens of flower arrangements that adorn the side of the former bank building. "That was a sign in itself," Cipolla said of his decision to retire here rather than in the Keys. Long Nguyen, a Vietnamese immigrant, credits the Virgin Mary image with curing illnesses he and his wife, Phuc, suffered.
"This is faith healing, " Nguyen said. "We feel like we are blessed, and we come see her every day. "Clara Yon, who lives in Miami but has relatives in Clearwater, said she makes it a point to visit the image: "very time we are passing through." "This was a parking lot for a bank, but now it's almost a church," Yon said.
Thousands Once Visited
The evolution of the Virgin Mary site has been gradual but dramatic.
Within days of the image's discovery by a bank customer, tens of thousands of people began flocking to the site. Nearby merchants began hawking T-shirts and trinkets, Clearwater police assigned a squad of officers to direct foot and vehicle traffic, and the city formed a Miracle Management Task Force to deal with the crush of unexpected visitors.
When the holiday season ended, police estimated that more than 400,000 people had visited the Virgin Mary image. The city had spent more than $40,000 on police overtime, a temporary signal light on Drew Street, and amenities such as portable toilet rental.
Meanwhile, visitors donated more than $30,000 that was distributed to local charities and All Children's Hospital in St. Petersburg. Over the years, detractors contend the rainbow-tinted shape that suggests a stylized image of the Virgin Mary was nothing more than a water stain from an irrigation sprinkler that blew out its nozzle and showered the glass-paneled south side of the bank building.
But the image proved resilient.
In 1997, vandals sprayed the image with an acidic liquid, staining it badly and obscuring a large portion of the face and left shoulder. But a month later, a downpour washed away that stain and the image re- emerged.
The following year, the Cincinnati-based Shepherds of Christ Ministries began renting the building, which the bank had vacated. The group, which prays for Catholic priests, bought the property in December 2000, said Rosie Reed, the ministries' site leader.
Also in 1998, work began on a 21-foot-tall, 1 1/2-ton wooden crucifix that now dominates the shrine built around the glass image. Texas artisan Felix Avalos said God told him [See here] to take a giant cedar log to Clearwater and to carve the crucifix. It took Avalos 2 1/2 years to finish his work, which for that period of time stayed hidden behind a blue shroud. It was unveiled in July 2001.
In A Word, 'Cool'
Now, Shepherds of Christ Ministries stages a prayer service at 6:30 p.m. daily, Reed said. A prayer room is set up behind the image in the old bank building, and Reed's group sells religious items, prayer candles and on-the- spot framed photographs of visitors to raise money to pay the mortgage, she said.
On Monday, 12-year-old Chris Toney, vacationing from New York, paid a visit to the Virgin Mary image along with other family members. "I heard all my family members talking about it and saying we should come and see it," Toney said. "It's nice. Really cool."
KEY DATES
DECEMBER 1996: The faithful turned out in droves to see a 60-foot image that mimicked the shape of Our Lady of Guadalupe at a bank building on U.S. 19. 1997: Vandals sprayed the image with an acidic liquid, staining it badly, but the image recovered. 1998: Cincinnati-based Shepherds of Christ Ministries began renting the building, which was empty had been vacated. Also, work began on a 21-foot-tall, 1 1/2- ton wooden crucifix. 2001: Wooden crucifix was unveiled.
Bill