
Traditional Stations
Prayers for the Stations
More on the Way of the Cross
|

|
Stations of the Cross
...also called Stations of the Cross, Via Crucis, and Via Dolorosa. These names are used to signify either a series of pictures or tableaux representing certain scenes in the Passion of Christ, each corresponding to a particular incident, or the special form of devotion connected with such representations.
Taken in the former sense, the Stations may be of stone, wood, or metal, sculptured or carved, or they may be merely paintings or engravings. Some Stations are valuable works of art, as those, for instance, in Antwerp cathedral, which have been much copied elsewhere. They are usually ranged at intervals around the walls of a church, though sometimes they are to be found in the open air, especially on roads leading to a church or shrine.
In monasteries they are often placed in the cloisters. The erection and use of the Stations did not become at all general before the end of the seventeenth century, but they are now to be found in almost every church. Formerly their number varied considerably in different places but fourteen are now prescribed by authority.
The following stations of the cross are based on those celebrated by Pope John Paul II on Good Friday 1991. They are presented here as an alternative to the traditional stations and as a way of reflecting more deeply on the Scriptural accounts of Christ's passion.
Starting the Stations:
In the name of the
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen.
Prayer Before the Crucifix
Look down upon me, good and gentle Jesus, while before your face
I humbly kneel,
and with a burning
soul pray and beseech you to fix
deep in my heart lively sentiments of
faith, hope and charity, true contrition for my
sins, and a firm purpose of
amendment,
while I contemplate
with great love and tender pity your
five wounds, pondering over them
within me, calling to mind the
words which David, your prophet, said of
you, my good Jesus:
They have pierced my
hands and feet; they have numbered all
my bones.
begin John Paul II - Station One

|