Do we lie to our children when we tell them fairytales, parents may ask?
Indeed not!
No fairytale matches what in reality God can do and will do for those
who trust His omnipotence. Thus, fairytales are a way of “wetting the
appetite” of children for the marvelous, wonder-filled world of God’s
miracles, and, finally Heaven.
In my Catholic home, as I graduated from fairytales to the lives of
the saints, I was pleasantly surprised to find amazing parallels between
their stories with the marvelous tales of my childhood.
Actually, my fairytales paled compared to the riveting miracles, God
Our Lord, and Mother Mary, true “Fairy God’s Mother”, had worked in
these saints’ lives. And then, one day, I was awe-struck on being shown a
photo of the incorrupt body of Saint Bernadette Soubirous, who saw the
Blessed Mother eighteen times in Lourdes, France in 1858.
Here was the real “Sleeping Beauty”!
The
incorruption of the bodies of some saints is a phenomenon, which
science cannot explain. Far from “mummified”, these bodies are preserved
without exterior aid, some having escaped not only the ravages of
natural decomposition, but also the added putrefying effect of humidity,
and even the corrosiveness of lime.
The first saint in Catholic history to have escaped normal decay is
the Roman virgin Saint Cecilia, martyred in 177 A.D, her integral body
discovered in 1599. Throughout history, about 250 such bodies were
exhumed and found to be in different stages of preservation.
Bernadette of Lourdes, who died at age 36, was first exhumed thirty
years after her death. Before the local bishop and other authorities,
the body was recognized to be amazingly intact with even internal organs
preserved. Because of some discoloration of the skin, a light wax cover
was placed over her face and hands for eventual public veneration.
Indeed, in life young Bernadette had been incorruptible.
Perhaps, the young visionary’s outstanding qualities were utter
simplicity, and piercing honesty. After seeing the Blessed Virgin, and
initiating the miraculous fountain of Lourdes, she remained true to
herself, despite the center of feverish attention.
Unmoved by the acclaiming public that promptly conferred saintly
stardom on her, young Bernadette answered the grueling clerical
investigators with utter transparency, disconcerting directness and
uncanny wisdom for one so young and only recently lettered.
When entering the the convent of the Sisters of Nevers, she thought it only logical that she be assigned to menial tasks.
She
lived in fidelity to her vows, pure, simple, true, and a lover of her
daily cross, her one desire to be with her “lady” who had appeared to
her and sealed her heart for heaven.
She now reposes, enshrined in a crystal urn in the chapel of St.
Gildard, Nevers, France, a true Sleeping Beauty, stung by the curse of
death, but peacefully awaiting the return of her divine Bridegroom.
So, no – fairy-tales don’t lie!
By Andrea F. Phillips
References:https://www.catholicpilgrims.com/lourdes/bb_bernadette_body.htmhttps://www.visionsofjesuschrist.com/weeping216.htmCatholic Online