5
Saints Who Totally Had Superpowers
God acts in mysterious ways. That
truth is made particularly evident in the types of things he does with those
who are especially close to him.
Here are a few saints who totally
had superpowers:
1)
St. Joseph of Cupertino: Flying.
Called “the flying saint,” we’re
not talking about a few stories claiming St. Joseph of
Cupertino flew in private or just for a few people. We’re talking about
him regularly flying in front of large groups of people.
Whether it was during Mass,
Liturgy of the Hours, or just at the mention of the name of Jesus or a saint,
Joseph would involuntarily go into ecstasy and start levitating. This
apparently happened once during a public procession in front of the whole
town, and once even during an audience for the pope.
His constant, uncontrollable
levitating actually became a problem. His religious superiors deemed the
phenomenon disruptive. At the end of his life, he was transferred to different
monasteries and kept in cells by himself.
But he kept on levitating at the
name of Jesus anyway
2)
Christina the Astonishing: Indestructibility.
Though she is not an officially
canonized saint in the Church, she was considered a saint in her own lifetime
(12th and 13th centuries), and has some pretty interesting stories nonetheless,
all of which display the fact that she was basically indestructible.
For starters, she appeared to die
of a seizure in her early 20s. Her body was prepared for burial and a funeral
was held, but in the middle of the funeral she got up, full of
energy. She said she had had a supernatural experience of heaven, hell, and
purgatory. She told her family and friends that the sole reason she had
returned was to suffer for the relief of those in purgatory and for the
conversion of sinners still on earth.
That’s when she started to do
some pretty intense things.
First, she fasted and deprived
herself of any bodily comforts pretty severely. But that wasn’t enough. She also
would regularly throw herself into burning furnaces, but leave them without
burns. In the dead of winter, she would go swimming in a nearby icy river,
sometimes staying in the water for days or even weeks at a time. Sometimes, she
would even allow herself to be sucked into a mill that was operating on
the river, and would be whirled around by the mill wheel. She would also
allow herself to be ravaged by dogs, or would go running through thorns. But
through all of these things, she would always come away unscathed.
Despite all of these things, she
lived to be 74 years old.
3)
St. Catherine of Alexandria: Jedi Mind Trick.
St. Catherine was a princess in
Egypt in the 3rd century and received a good education. Though raised as a
pagan, when she was a teenager she claimed that the Blessed Virgin Mary
appeared to her, told her that she had been wed to Christ in a mystical
marriage, and she was converted to the Christian faith.
Soon after, she got a personal
audience with Roman Emperor Maxentius and tried to convince him to stop
persecuting Christians. The emperor brought out his best philosophers and
rhetoricians to debate Catherine – but, amazingly, she won their debate.
Several of her interlocutors were so impressed, they converted to Christianity.
Furious, the emperor had her
imprisoned. But her persuasiveness just continued in prison. Among those she
met in prison and those who visited, 200 people were converted by her
evangelism. When she refused to stop converting people to the Christian faith
despite being tortured, the emperor tried to persuade her to stop by asking her
to marry him. She refused, and he sentenced her to death. But when she
touched the the spiked breaking wheel that was going to be used to kill her, it
shattered spontaneously. Finally, the emperor ordered her to be beheaded, which
successfully ended her life.
4)
St. Vincent Ferrer: Bringing People Back from the Dead.
St. Vincent Ferrer is most famous
for his missionary work, preaching, and theology. But he also had a pretty
amazing supernatural ability: he could bring people back from the dead. And he
apparently did this on several occasions.
According to one story, Vincent
entered a church with a corpse inside. In front of a number of witnesses,
Vincent simply made the Sign of the Cross over the corpse, and the person came
back to life.
In one particularly impressive
story, Vincent happened upon a procession for a certain man to be executed by
hanging for committing a grievous crime. Somehow, Vincent knew that the person
was innocent, and he pleaded with the government officials, but to no use.
Coincidentally, a corpse was being carried by on a stretcher. Vincent asked the
corpse, “Is this man guilty? Answer me!” The dead man immediately came back to
life, sat up, and said, “He is not!” The man then laid back down on the
stretcher. When Vincent offered the man a reward for helping to vindicate the
innocent man, the man said, “No, father, for I am assured of my salvation.” And
so he died again right then.
5)
St. Padre Pio.
A famous saint who lived in the
20th century, St. Padre Pio had just about every superpower you can think of:
there are claims that he could bi-locate (be in more than one place at a time),
read people’s minds (usually in the confessional – he was a priest), levitate,
and heal sick people.
In one story, a professional
mathematician was confessing his sins to Pio in the confessional, though the
fact that he did not tell Pio that he was a mathematician. When he was a
bit vague on how many times he had committed a particular sin, Pio responded
firmly: “You’re a mathematician, leave the confessional and comeback when you
know how many times you did that.”
In 1950, Pio was once seen
attending the funeral of a monk in Milwaukee, Wisconsin – but without ever
having left his own monastery in Italy. Regarding his ability to bi-locate, one
person reports that Pio once said, “I can do three thing at once: pray,
confess, and go around the world.”
Jonathan Fabian Ginunggil,
Pelayan Atasan Tertinggi / Most High Servant,
Yesus, Maria, Yusuf Pelayanan Kasih / Jesus, Mary, Joseph Ministry of Love
(Blessed and Saints and the Nine Choirs of Angels)
My vocation is Blessed and Saints.
"I am the most humble of all the Saints in Heaven" Mary, Mother of God."
"I am the handmaid of the Lord, said Mary ‘let what you have said be done to me."
Mother Mary is the most humble Saint in Heaven and she is also the Mother of God for us all
(Luke 1:38)
No comments:
Post a Comment