The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ eBook

Anne Catherine Emmerich
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 439 pages of information about The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ eBook

Anne Catherine Emmerich
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 439 pages of information about The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

Joseph of Arimathea returned home late from the supper-room, and he was sorrowfully walking along the streets of Sion, accompanied by a few disciples and women, when all on a sudden a band of armed men, who were lying in ambuscade in the neighbourhood of Caiphas’s tribunal, fell upon them, and laid hands upon Joseph, whereupon his companions fled, uttering loud cries of terror.  He was confined in a tower contiguous to the city wall, not far from the tribunal.  These soldiers were pagans, and had not to keep the Sabbath, therefore Caiphas had been able to secure their services on this occasion.  The intention was to let Joseph die of hunger, and keep his disappearance a secret.

Here conclude the descriptions of all that occurred on the day of the Passion of our Lord; but we will add some supplementary matter concerning Holy Saturday, the Descent into Hell, and the Resurrection.

CHAPTER LIV.

On the Name of Calvary.

Whilst meditating on the name of Golgotha, Calvary, the place of skulls, borne by the rock upon which Jesus was crucified, I became deeply absorbed in contemplation, and beheld in spirit all ages from the time of Adam to that of Christ, and in this vision the origin of the name was made known to me.  I here give all that I remember on this subject.

I saw Adam, after his expulsion from Paradise, weeping in the grotto where Jesus sweated blood and water, on Mount Olivet.  I saw how Seth was promised to Eve in the grotto of the manger at Bethlehem, and how she brought him forth in that same grotto.  I also saw Eve living in some caverns near Hebron, where the Essenian Monastery of Maspha was afterwards established.

I then beheld the country where Jerusalem was built, as it appeared after the Deluge, and the land was all unsettled, black, stony, and very different from what it had been before.  At an immense dept below the rock which constitutes Mount Calvary (which was formed in this spot by the rolling of the waters), I saw the tomb of Adam and Eve.  The head and one rib were wanting to one of the skeletons, and the remaining head was placed within the same skeleton, to which it did not belong.  The bones of Adam and Eve had not all been left in this grave, for Noah had some of them with him in the ark, and they were transmitted from generation to generation by the Patriarchs.  Noah, and also Abraham, were in the habit, when offering sacrifice, of always laying some of Adam’s bones upon the altar, to remind the Almighty of his promise.  When Jacob gave Joseph his variegated robe, he at the same time gave him some bones of Adam, to be kept as relics.  Joseph always wore them on his bosom, and they were placed with his own bones in the first reliquary which the children of Israel brought out of Egypt.  I have seen similar things, but some I have forgotten, and the others time fails me to describe.

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The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.