Nestled in a sleepy neighborhood in the hills rising over Pittsburgh
lies a small chapel.
Inside St. Anthony’s Chapel lies a piece from the
Crown of Thorns, a tooth of St. Anthony of Padua, and more than 5,000
other verified relics, or remains, of saints from around the world.
Indeed
for the fragments from the bodies and scraps of the belongings of
countless saints, these relics continued to have earthly adventures long
after the saints’ deaths.
Many of the relics traveled across the world
to escape war, confiscation, and desecration to make it into the safe
hands of a Belgian-born physician and priest, Fr. Suitbert Mollinger,
who founded the chapel.
The chapel now holds the largest collection of relics outside of Rome.
“Fr.
Stewart Mollinger, well, he had an unusual hobby in which he liked to
acquire relics of the saints,” Carole Brueckner, chairperson of the
committee for St. Anthony’s Chapel, explained to CNA.
But
in the midst of the political and social turmoil which Europe
experienced at the end of the 19th century, this curious hobby was
crucial to saving relics from across the continent
Since the second century, Catholics have honored the relics of
saints- either pieces of body parts or cherished belongings of holy men
and women.
While theologians and Church documents clarify that relics
are not to be worshiped, nor do they hold magical powers, the teaching
adds that relics must be treated with respect, as they belong to persons
now in heaven. While relics do not have power in and of themselves, God
can continue to work miracles in the presence of the saint’s body even
after death, the Church teaches. Relics are present in, or below, many
Catholic altars.
Because of their important place in Catholic
devotion as well as their presence at Mass, relics became a target of
anti-Catholic persecution in Europe.
“It was a very chaotic
time, in a sense, for Catholics, because people were fighting for
territories and countries,” Brueckner said. During the mid- to late-
19th century the political boundaries – and also religious identities –
of regions across Europe shifted as the modern nation-states of Germany,
Italy, France, and Belgium formed, the power of the nobility and the
Church ebbed, and secular governments arose.
Many nobles and
religious “were afraid that their governments or the monarchies under
which they lived would commit and confiscate the relics from them,” she
explained. In some regions, Brueckner continued, authorities even
“desecrated the relics and on occasion they would put someone in prison
for having a relic in their possession.”
“Due to what was
happening in Europe, this was an opportune time for Father to enrich
upon his own personal collection of relics of the saints,” she
elaborated. While it is forbidden for Catholics to sell or purchase
relics, Fr. Mollinger was loaned or granted relics from friends in his
home country of Belgium, as well as from his travels in the Netherlands,
Italy, and elsewhere.
“Many times, his friends, who are also
religious, would write and ask him if he could take some of their relics
and keep them in safekeeping, until their countries or monarchies
became stable, and Father always responded ‘yes,’”’ she explained.
“Father also had agents that he had throughout Europe that were looking
for the relics, because in essence, he would try to rescue them from
being destroyed by governments and monarchies that existed in Europe at
this time.”
Initially, Fr. Mollinger kept the growing relic
collection in his rectory. Medical patients as well as faithful
Catholics would visit the doctor-priest for both spiritual and physical
treatment, and “they had the opportunity to venerate them those relics
when they were there.”
Many pilgrims, Brueckner said, “were cured
of their anomaly or disability” after receiving physical or spiritual
aid in the presence of the relics. As a result, “Father was gaining the
reputation as a priest-physician-healer,” she elaborated. Records of
local Pittsburgh newspapers of the time documented Fr. Mollinger’s
treatments, as well as the thousands of people who traveled to venerate
the relics.
Fr. Mollinger, however, “thought they belonged in a
beautiful church so that everybody could visit and venerate the relics,”
and thus built with his own funds a chapel to house them.
The
first section of the chapel was completed on the feast of St. Anthony in
1883, and houses the thousands of relics collected by Fr. Mollinger at
the time. The second section was also completed on the feast of St.
Anthony, nine years later in 1892, and contains the Stations of the
Cross and relics collected after the chapel’s completion. Fr. Mollinger
died two days after the last section of the chapel was completed.
Among the relics the chapel currently claims are splinters
from the True Cross and the Column of Flagellation; stone from the
Garden of Gethsemane; a nail that held Christ to the Cross; material
from Jesus, Mary and Joseph’s clothing; a “piece of bone from all of the
apostles”; and relics from St Therese of Liseux, St. Rose of Lima, St.
Faustina, St. Kateri Tekawitha.
“If I had to name all the saints, we’d be here forever,” Brueckner exclaimed.
Nearly all these relics have been verified, as well.
“When
a relic is placed within that reliquary, it is sealed and it can never
be opened again,” Brueckner said, explaining that the Church’s strict
rules guard against tampering and forgery of relics. “For a relic to be
venerated, you do need to have a document, and the document comes from
the hierarchy in the Church. That document will tell you who the saint
is, what the relic is, and it is saying that the Catholic Church has
done their research and we can say what the relic is.”
“We do have the certificates of authenticity for almost all of our relics here within the chapel.”
While
belief in the authenticity of the relics relies on a trust that “the
Catholic Church has done their research, and I’m going to believe what
the Catholic Church is saying,” Brueckner said, visitors still
experience the same presence documented by the first pilgrims to the
collection of saintly relics. “Many times when people come into the
chapel they will say that they actually feel a presence.”
“I say
that it’s like stepping into a little piece of heaven, because you are
surrounded by so many people that our Church tells us are in heaven,”
she remarked.