Blood and oil weeping Icons Belarus,
Russia
March 9, 2005
- Reported in Spirit
Daily.com online newspaper. From
united press international. Written
by Paul Goble Eye
on Eurasia: Weeping icons of Belarus. Tartu,
Estonia - Visitors to a Russian Orthodox Church in a small town
near the Belarusian capital report that icons there are now
weeping blood, a development that the local clergy say reflects
God's sadness at the rising tide of evil in the world and may point
to impending disaster in that country.
According to an article published in "KP v Belorussii" and
posted
online late
last month approximately a dozen icons in an Orthodox church
in Dzerzhinsk began to weep
myrrh about a month ago, something that attracted the attention of the local
community.
But in the last two weeks of February, more than 80 of the holy images in that
church have begun to shed what appear to be tears of blood, as a picture featured
in the article on the Web site shows. That in turn has attracted more people
to the church and prompted the media attention that resulted in the "KP
v Belorussii" report.
The priest and his wife were not shy about showing the icons to that paper's
skeptical reporter, Natalya Artemchik. And they were not restrained in explaining
to her what they believe this phenomenon points to: an effort by God to "remind
us about Him," in the words of Father Aleksandr.
The priest's wife, Svetlana, told Artemchik that the tears on one icon reflected
the fact that "people and especially men drink too much." She said
that those on another represented divine concern about the sad reality that
so many people have ceased to believe and have fallen away from the church.
Noting that "blood in a church is a bad sign," Mother Svetlana pointed
out that icons had bled in Moscow churches just before the Kursk submarine
disaster. And crossing herself three times; she expressed her own fear that
something equally tragic might take place in Belarus in the near future. And
he pointedly told the "KP v Belorussii" reporter, "It
is already time to think about one's soul, especially since the Lenten fast
is
beginning."
Whether the tears on the icons of the Dzerzhinsk church are a miracle, as
the priest and his wife believe, or whether they are something else entirely,
this
unusual development may very well have a serious impact on those in Belarus
who learn about it.
Many Belarusians, like people in neighboring countries, continue to be much
affected by such signs and draw on them to interpret events. For many in
that region, the Chernobyl nuclear accident in 1986 was made all the more
horrible
because the name itself is used in the Apocalypse of St. John to designate
the bitter wormwood connected with the end of the world.
The story of the weeping icons in the Dzerzhinsk church is unlikely to have
an equally dramatic impact on the way people in Belarus think about their
lives and their future in one of the most authoritarian and repressive countries
at the edge of Europe.
Visit the Church
of the Protection of The Theotokos
in Dzerzhinsk website
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