English/CLE Research 4
English/CLE Research 4
English/CLE Research 4
Nuestra Señora del Pilar is the patron of Spain and all Hispanic peoples. October
12, 1492, the feast of the Virgin of the Pillar, is the day Christopher Colombus
first sighted American land, and when the first Mass in the Americas was
celebrated.
History of the Virgin of Pilar
Knowing the history of the Virgen del Pilar will help us to understand the cultural
concept that has been created around it, its scope and how it has become one of
the references as a religious destination of pilgrimage and symbol in Aragon.
What is the origin of the Virgen del Pilar?
The origin of the Virgen del Pilar is an exciting story full of nuances and unique
events that are detailed below. Focusing on the historical context where the
apparition takes place, this happened in AD 40, the age at which the city of
Zaragoza was known as Cesaraugusta, named after the Roman emperor Cesar
Augustus in 14 BC.
The present history goes back to the time immediately following the Ascension of
Jesus Christ, when the apostles, endowed with the power of the Holy Spirit,
began to preach the Gospel.
The apostle James or James the Greater, born in Bethsaida, Galilee in 5 BC,
brother of John and Son of Zebedee, was entrusted with the mission of
Evangelizing the Celtiberian peoples of Hispania, then divided into the following
regions, Lusitania, Tarraconesis, and Betica.
As St. Gregory the Great records in his Magna Moraria, a document of which we
shall speak later, the apostle James, before departing to pagan lands, kissed the
Virgin’s hands and asked for his blessing, to which she replied with the following
words:
“Go, son, fulfill the command of the Master, and for him, I pray that in that city of
Spain, where more people turn to the faith, you will build a Church in my
memory, as I will show you”
Thus James proceeded to what he had known as Iberia, by his Greek
nomenclature, and having preached in the lands of the Astures and the
Galicians, he crossed the spartan plains until arriving at the city of
Caesaraugusta, where his preaching got the conversion from many pagans to
the True Faith. Finding great resistance in the conversion of souls to the Lord,
the apostle was saddened for having made only one man in the lands of the
Astures, and eight in Caesaraugusta. Without being overcome by the temptation
of unhappiness, Santiago continued to preach, seeking moments of prayer in the
company of the eight new Christians, who retired at night on the banks of the
river Ebro to rest and talk about Our Lord.
When did the appearance of the Virgen del Pilar take place?
As reflected in this copy of the Magna Moralia of St. Gregory the Great (Moralia,
sive Expositio in Job, written between the years 578 and 595, consists of about
35 volumes), dating to the thirteenth century currently preserved in the cathedral
Zaragoza, and whose original documents date from the sixth century, on the
night of January 2, 40 AD, Santiago met his disciples by the river Ebro when he
heard voices of angels singing Ave Maria, full gratia and saw the Virgin Mother of
Christ appear, standing on a jasper pillar.
The Blessed Virgin, who still lived in mortal flesh, asked the Apostle to build a
church there, with the altar around the pillar where he stood and promised that
“this place will remain until the end of time for the virtue of God work miracles
and wonders through my intercession with those who in their needs implore my
patronage. ”
This appearance has 3 fundamental distinctions with respect to any other in the
world:
The Blessed Virgin appears when she was still in mortal life in Palestine, under
the protection of the Apostle St. John: “With no nation did any such thing.”
The column or pillar was brought by the Virgin Mary herself so that the first
chapel was built on it, which would become the first Marian temple of all
Christendom.
The linking of pillar tradition with the Jacobean tradition (of the Sanctuary of
Santiago de Compostela).
This is why the Basilica of the Pillar of Saragossa and the Cathedral of Santiago
de Compostela, has constituted two fundamental axes around which has turned
for centuries the spirituality of Spain.
After the appearance disappeared the Virgin and remained there the pillar. The
Apostle James and the eight witnesses of the prodigy began to build in that
Celtiberian city called Caesaraugusta, today known as Saragossa, the first
Marian temple of Christianity, and the first in the world dedicated to the Virgin.
The original temple is said to have been built in adobe, one of the oldest and
most used building materials at that time composed of sand, straw, and clay.
Before the Church was finished, James ordained one of his disciples to the
service of the priest, consecrated it and gave it the title of Santa Maria del Pilar
before returning to Judea.
After preaching in Spain, Santiago returned to Jerusalem, where Herod Agrippa
sent him to execute around AD 44 being thus the first martyr, after which his
disciples, took his body and took it to Spain, more concretely to Iria Flavia for his
funeral.
Summary of the history of the Virgen del Pilar
On the night of January 2nd of AD 40, as quoted in Magna Moralia of St. Gregory
the Great, the Blessed Virgin Mary appeared before the Apostle James in the city
of Saragossa on a pillar or column while it still existed in mortal flesh.