Medjugorje Pilgrimages
Medjugorje Pilgrimages


The parish of Medjugorje is situated in Herzegovina, 25 km southwest of Mostar.
Medjugorje, (the name is of Slavic origin, and signifies a region between two mounts)
with the villages of Bijakovici, Vionica, Miletina and ©urmanci, forms a Roman-Catholic
parish where today approximately 4000 inhabitants live.
The pastoral care of the parish is confided to the priests of the Herzegovinian
Franciscan Province of the Assumption of Mary. The whole region is inhabited by
Croatians who received Christianity 13 centuries ago. In historical documents, the
village was mentioned in 1599 for the first time.

The present parish was founded in 1892 and dedicated to St. James the Apostle,
protector of pilgrims. Until June 24, 1981, Medjugorje lived like all other villages of this
region: people worked on their land, planted tobacco and vineyards, produced wine and
vegetables to acquire just enough for a modest life for their families. Because of social
circumstances, many went out into the world: over the ocean and to Western European
countries, as well as into towns in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia.

When
The apparitions of Our Lady started in1981, the life of the parish changed: Our
Lady chose for her witnesses and co-workers not only the
six visionaries, but the entire
parish and its pilgrims. This was expressly told in the following message: “I have chosen
this parish in a special way and I wish to lead it.” (March 1st, 1984)
Fr Jozo Zovko O.F.M. was parish priest at this time
Rosary Beads
Click on photos to enlarge
Medjugorje
At the begining

Once you have come in contact with them, they revive in you everything that seemed
buried within your heart forever. Then you recapture a life full of joy, serenity, and
purpose. You understand the reason you are living, where you have come from, and
where you are going. You take your life back into your hands with vigour. You
rediscover a design of love in your life that trials and difficulties have buried. Then you
feel like a new person, and even others are aware that something has changed your life.

The "place" that has "marked" me and millions of other people is called Medjugorje. It is
different from other places because there is a "presence" there that you do not see but
whose effects and benefits you gather. It is a presence that manifests itself in a personal
manner for each one of us, so that all may understand that "you are important to Her,"

This Presence speaks to our hearts, It causes us to understand things that we had
forgotton, but of which we always have need.

This Presence is Holy Mary, whom Jesus consigned to us as Mother from the Cross. In
Medjugorje we discover that this Mother wants to enter our lives with all of the rights that
only She posesses. That is the reason She says to us:
"Dear children, accept me in
your lives, because I desire to bestow my love upon you."

by Luigi Ferrari
from the book: Medjugorje, A testimony
Our Ladys Apparitions
Statue of Our Lady in front  
of St James` Church
Medjugorje Pilgrimages
                    Apparition Hill                                         Our Lady Queen of Peace








Dr. Fra Slavko Barbaric
Anthropological-Biblical And Religious-Spiritual Dimensions Of A Pilgrimage, As They Apply Specifically
To Medjugorje

I. MAN IN HIS SEARCH FOR GOD
Pilgrimages are known in all religions. They are an expression of a person who searches for God in places where He
has revealed Himself in a special way; where He has offered persons the possibility to feel His presence more easily
or with particularly gifted persons, who - through their gifts - have become a special sign of God's presence. This is
why there are places of pilgrimage which attract people and where they come in their search to experience God in a
new manner, that is, to experience peace, joy, love and hope. With each pilgrimage, a person leaves behind his
everyday life, his work, his family, his friends, his security and - longing for a new encounter with God - starts on his
journey to places and to people who have proven themselves as "gifted", so as to help him in his new experience
with God.

Although the basis and the primary motive of every pilgrimage is the longing for God, leaving behind everyday life
and opening oneself to God, there certainly are secondary reasons for a modern pilgrimage - getting to know the
world, people and their customs. However, if these secondary motives become the most important, then we are
dealing with tourism. The primary as well as all possible secondary reasons are greatly helped by the curiosity of a
person, which, at the first moment, can override all other motives. Some places of pilgrimage developed because of
God's direct intervention into the lives of one or several persons. (This is how most of the Marian Shrines, associated
with apparitions, have developed). Alternatively, they developed in the course of time, often after the death of a
person especially chosen by God, or even through the charismatic engagement of individuals within the Church.

Irrespective of how a place of pilgrimage developed, a pilgrim always searches for the same thing. Because pilgrims
come out of different motives, it is the duty of those responsible for the Shrines to help each pilgrim become aware of
the true motives of his pilgrimage - the encounter with God who is waiting for each person. Every available means
should be employed in order to achieve this so that what should happen, does happen - the encounter between God
who is waiting and person who is searching. This is why one should always ask: "Who is the person? What does he
want and what answer is God offering him?" The special spirit of our pilgrimage enables us to say that - man in
himself is THE QUESTION AND SEARCHING OF THE ANSWER, WHILE GOD IS THE ANSWER AND THE
EXPECTATION OF THE SEARCHER.

II. MAN IN HIS SEARCH FOR PEACE
Man is a spiritual and a physical being. He was given an intellect, a free will and a broad spectrum of spiritual
experiences. Man carries in himself a profound longing for self-realization. He continuously seeks this realization and
what he is searching for can be explained in this manner: Man is a being who longs for peace. That is why, one can
say, without a doubt, that a persons home is where he finds 'his peace'. The search for peace is the main motive of
every human activity, and that, for his entire life. We know from experience, that man is prepared to do every good
thing, even to sacrificing his own life, when he feels 'peace' on that way. However, we also know that, if man has not
found this peace, even if he has done good and opened himself to positive human values, he will start to look for this
peace in a world of the negative and the destructive. In this way, a person seeking peace is capable of destroying
himself, others and everything around him.

If one looks at the development and growth of a person from the moment of his conception, then one realizes that he
needs peace in order to be able to develop and grow at all. When the mother is at peace, then also the child she is
carrying under her heart will enjoy this peace and will be able to develop 'happily'. But, if the peace of the mother is
disturbed for any reason while she is carrying the child under her heart, then the child no longer feels good and is
born with profound consequences of restlessness, from which he sometimes will not be able to free himself for the
rest of his life. After being born, the child wants to be accepted and loved so that he can continue peacefully with his
life on this earth. But we also know from experience, that many children feel restlessness within themselves, caused
by jealousy, as soon as they realize that their family is expecting a new child. It is only after the jealous child has
experienced that it is not being threatened, but even enriched, by the newborn and it continues to feel loved and
accepted that peace returns to the child. As he grows up and develops, nothing changes. The person only
expresses his restlessness in another manner and searches for his peace in another way - either in a positive or in a
negative way. Here we are confronted with a fundamental question: Is the person an exile who lost his "peaceful
home" a long time ago and is now trying in any way possible to find it again, or was he born with the longing in his
heart to find the peace that goes beyond all promises that the world in which he lives offers him? We do not want to
analyse all anthropological and psychological theses and questions now, since they all have one thing in common:
the concrete person, who has been given an intellect, a free will and a soul wants to live in peace; but the world,
which he experiences empirically, does not completely assure him of this peace and this is why he is tirelessly
searching for it and cannot free himself from the desire to make the realization of this peace. In order to experience
this peace and to be able to remain in his "peaceful home", all segments of the person, that is his intellect, his free
will, his mind and his soul, have to be satisfied.

In this, human beings differ fundamentally from the animal kingdom. Animals do not venture outside themselves in
order to find peace. In order for them to be at peace, it is enough that their hunger is appeased, their thirst
quenched and their instinctive needs are satisfied. Even the most bloodthirsty animals forget their aggression as
soon as their instinctive needs are satisfied. We should not forget that anthropology, psychology and sociology all try
to convince human beings that they only need a little more than the animals in order to find peace; but this 'little
more' does not surpass the horizons of this world. And again, our experience shows us: the more satisfied a person
is on a physical-instinctive level, the more restless, aggressive and dangerous he becomes towards himself and his
surroundings if his being is not permeated with the spiritual reality.

III. THE BIBLICAL IMAGE OF MAN - THE RESTLESS EXILE
The biblical image of man is transcendental. God created man in His image (cf. Gn 1,27). God gave man the
possibility to collaborate with Him and, together with Him, to find peace and happiness on this earth. Man was placed
in this earthly Paradise where, in friendship with God, he enjoyed peace. However, something happened which the
Bible defines as Original Sin. Man made a mistake by reaching for something forbidden, thus destroying his alliance
with God and their reciprocal union. He could no longer stand God's presence because His footsteps and His
presence frightened him and he, therefore, had to hide. The consequences for man were grave. He does not want to
admit his sin and puts the blame on someone else: the man, Adam, on his wife, Eve, and Eve on the serpent-Satan,
who deceived her. And man loses his peace, his existence is threatened because everything has turned against him
and he has to leave the earthly Paradise, his "peaceful home" and, as an exile, he is exposed to difficulties,
problems, hard labour and has to eat the bitter, hard earned bread (cf. Gn 3, 17-19). According to the Bible, man
once enjoyed peace, lost it and was driven out of Paradise and so became an exile. His exile became a pilgrimage
for him because God did not abandon him but gave him hope, by announcing a woman with a child, who will conquer
evil and return man to the lost Paradise, a new "peaceful home". The entire Biblical history speaks of man who
wanders in search of God who manifests Himself and who goes towards man, offering him peace.

According to the Bible, man stands between the recollection of life in Paradise and the internal need for eternal
peace, promised already on earth, but only revealed in the Eternal Kingdom of God, the kingdom of peace, justice
and truth. The prophets were continuously striving for peace, they prayed and sang about the peace that, in His
love, God will give His people. All the prophetic expectations should have been fulfilled in the Messiah, who was to
come and create new conditions for the realization of the final, messianic peace.

In the tradition of the Bible, various places of pilgrimage are mentioned; places where people come to search for
their God and an encounter with Him. Mention is also made of religious encounters, of pilgrimages. One of them is
Shechem, where God's people gathered in His Shrine and where the alliance with God was formed (cf. Jos 24,25). In
addition to Shechem, Bethel (1 Sm 10,3), Beersheba (Am 5,5), as well as Ophra and Zorah (Jgs 6,24 and 13,19f)
are also mentioned as places of gathering.

Later, all shrines were abolished and the Feast of Passover (1 Kgs 23), the Feast of Weeks and the Feast of
Tabernacles (cf. Dt 16,1-17) were introduced which are being celebrated in Jerusalem. There are two reasons for
such gatherings: to assemble the people before their God and to protect them from idolatry and heresy. So the
Temple in Jerusalem remains as the only place of pilgrimage. A multitude of people from Palestine and from the
Diaspora gathered around the Temple with the same goal: that the people may maintain the right faith and not
wander away from their God. Those were days of prayer and adoration of the true God, days in which devotion to
the Holy City was expressed and a deep togetherness of God's people was realized. Pilgrimages are not realized
only as an actual visit to a holy place, where God manifested Himself, but are also an eschatological event. One talks
about "a day of salvation" which is envisioned as a gathering of pilgrims of all nations and of unbelievers. In Isaiah,
the Lord says, "I come to gather nations of every language; they shall come and see my glory. I will set a sign among
them; from them I will send fugitives to the nations: to Tarshish, Put and Lud, Mosoch, Tubal and Javan, to the
distant coastlands that have never heard of my fame, or seen my glory; and they shall proclaim my glory among the
nations. They shall bring all your brethren from all the nations as an offering to the Lord, on horses and in chariots,
in carts, upon mules and dromedaries. To Jerusalem, my holy mountain..." (Is 66, 18-20). And the prophet Micah
writes, "It is the day; and they shall come to you from Assyria and from Egypt, from Tyre even to the River, from sea
to sea, and from mountain to mountain" (Mi 7,12).

Here it is sufficient to recall Psalms 120 to 134 in order to fully understand the meaning of a pilgrimage for the people
of Israel:

"I rejoiced because they said to me,
'We will go up to the house of the Lord.'
And now we have set foot within your gates, O Jerusalem -
Jerusalem, built as a city with compact unity.
To it the tribes go up, the tribes of the Lord,
According to the decree for Israel,
to give thanks to the name of the Lord.
In it are set up judgment seats,
seats for the house of David.
Pray for the peace of Jerusalem!
May those who love you prosper!
May peace be within your walls,
prosperity in our buildings.
Because of my relatives and friends I will say,
'Peace be within you!'
Because of the house of the Lord, our God,
I will pray for your good."
(Ps 122, 1-9)

Biblical revelation makes it clear, that man is called upon to do everything on his part in order to accept what God, in
His love, has prepared for him. For this reason, man is called to conversion, as a way to peace, on which he leaves
everything behind that is hindering him from experiencing and living peace. In order to succeed in this conversion,
which means to abandon this world and its promises and to open oneself to God, who is peace, an individual, a
family and, from time to time, also the entire people did not only have to pray but also to fast, to believe and love, to
reconcile and forgive, to finally overcome all difficulties and to find the peace which God promises. And all this occurs
in a special way on a pilgrimage.

Pope John Paul II writes about the pilgrimage of Israel in the document Pilgrimage in the Great Jubilee 2000, No. 8:
"To the people of God, the victims of discouragement who are burdened with unfaithfulness, the Prophets also
proclaim a messianic pilgrimage of salvation, open to the eschatological horizon, where all peoples of the world will
gather on Sion, the place of the Word of God, the place of peace and hope. Reliving once more the experience of
Exodus, the people of God must permit the Spirit to liberate them from a heart of stone and give them a heart of
flesh. On their life's journey, they must express justice and a jealous faith. They must become a light for all people
until the day, when the Lord God will offer 'a banquet for all people' on the holy mountain."

IV. JESUS, THE PILGRIM
Through history, in the fullness of time, God Himself becomes man through His Son, Jesus Christ, and goes towards
man whom He wants to bring back into the "peaceful home". So, one can say that Jesus Christ is also a pilgrim;
however, with different connotations. During his pilgrimage on earth, He did not search for God but for man and
offered him the divine, simple way to peace, which comes from God, because He gives peace (cf. Jn 14,27). His
incarnation is the beginning of a pilgrimage which continued at the moment when Mary and Joseph brought Him to
the Temple to present Him as their firstborn son, according to the Scriptures and the law, requiring each firstborn
son to be presented to the Lord (cf. Lk 2,22-26).

When he was 12 years old, Jesus continued on his pilgrimage. In accordance with the law, He went with His parents
to Jerusalem (cf. Lk 2,41) to pray in the Temple, according to the customs of the feasts, "Thrice a year shall all your
men appear before the Lord God" (Ex 23,17). From time to time, during His public life, Jesus set out on pilgrimages
on various feast days (cf. Jn 2,13; 5,1 ff). Jesus' ascent on the mountains, His fasting in the desert and His death on
the mountain outside of town are stations on His pilgrimage, which ends on the hill of Ascension (cf. Mt 5,1-2; 4, 1-
11; Jn 19,17; Acts 1,6-12).

He promised His Apostles to remain with them. He sent them to the ends of the world and He realized His presence in
His Eucharistic presence, journeying with His people through history to the end of the world and the end of time.
Reflecting on the pilgrimage of mankind, the Pope writes in the document Pilgrimage (Pellegrinaggio), No. 29: "The
journey of mankind, which encounters tensions and contradictions, is thus being led into the Kingdom of God
through this undeceivable pilgrimage which the Church has to announce and realize courageously and in complete
loyalty and perseverance because she has been called upon by her Lord to be the salt, the yeast, the light and the
city on the mountain." Only in this manner, the ways will be opened where "kindness and truth shall meet; justice and
peace shall kiss." (Ps 85,11) Every Christian is called on this pilgrimage of the Church, of the people of God and of
all mankind. "For a Christian, a pilgrimage is the celebration of his own faith - a manifestation of the cult which needs
to be lived faithful to tradition - with intense religious sentiments and as a realization of his paschal existence"
(Pellegrinaggio, No. 32)

In short, the purpose of a pilgrimage is the search for God who manifested Himself at different places, in various
ways and at various times. In order for such an encounter with God to occur on the pilgrimage journey, man has to
leave his everyday life, set out on his journey and celebrate his faith in prayer and cultic celebration, so that God can
liberate him from his old sin and evil and, to again, together with him, set out as a pilgrim on the journey towards the
Kingdom of God. That is why in places of pilgrimage, 'divine service' has to be formed which is to become a 'human
service'.

V. PILGRIMAGE - SETTING FORTH AND GOING UP
From what we have said so far, it is clear that - due to his anthropological-psychological and religious-spiritual reality
- everything has to be done in order to motivate a person to take a step forward, to open himself, to accept, to
encounter and to remain on the way towards God, who remains faithful to him. God manifests Himself in places of
pilgrimage in exceptional ways through the Bible and special people. This is what motivates a person to abandon his
everyday life and to turn towards such places. God first offers man His presence with the intention that, in his search
for this loving presence, he will find Him. In the experience of this loving presence, man will empirically experience
liberation from the burdens, which accumulated on his earthly pilgrimage as a result of his own weakness and
sinfulness, as well as the sins of the others. After one has experienced the liberation from the burden of one's sins
and their consequences, one should follow the experience of peace, joy, love, hope and trust and should accept the
presence of the Lord in one's life. One should do everything possible in order to remain in this presence, even if life
is not always easy. Even if one is separated from the divine presence, one should again begin to search for and
realize it. The more profound the experience of peace and love is, the easier it is to remain on the way with God and
to fight against everything that separates from God.

So that man can break away from the embrace of sin more easily and to free himself from its consequences, each
place of pilgrimage should offer various forms of meeting with God. According to the Bible and the experiences of the
Prophets, there is first of all a CALL to leave the city, to abandon everyday life and to search for a place of peace
and silence. In other words, to go into the desert, then to set forth and to climb the mountain where the Prophets
prayed and encountered the Lord, returning again to their place and city to continue their task. Nonetheless, in the
practice of the biblical pilgrimage, the Temple was the most important centre where the faithful gathered. At these
places where the faithful were called, they PRAYED AND FASTED. Offerings were made in the Temple, where the
cult was celebrated and where there was RECONCILIATION WITH GOD AND MAN. Following this, the faithful
returned renewed and ready to ACCEPT their tasks, to do good and to think of the orphans and widows.

In other words, on the one hand, man comes to the place of pilgrimage with his wishes, but burdened with his
difficulties and his sins and their consequences. That is why it is necessary to make it possible for him to remember
to see everything in the light of God's love and mercy and to experience the truth of Jesus' words calling all those
who labour and are burdened to come to Him, so that He can give them rest and peace (cf. Mt 11,28). The pilgrim
must be helped on his pilgrimage journey to be able to walk on the ways of the biblical pilgrim, to take the time, that
is, not to permit him to do everything hastily, as if he were a tourist looking at general points of interest. He must
pause and take his time; he must climb the mountain; in the Temple, he must meet the Lord who forgives and gives
him back his peace.

VI. MEDJUGORJE - TODAY'S OFFER
In light of what we have said so far, it is not difficult to understand what is happening in Medjugorje and what must
happen; that is, how the divine service should be formed and why it has to be formed, what form it has today and why
Medjugorje offers what it does. The fact is that no other Shrine, and thus also no other Marian Shrine, has
developed or is developing, as Medjugorje has. I also dare say that not a single one represents the ideal form of a
place of pilgrimage, taking into account man's search for God who offers Himself, as is the case in Medjugorje. (One
possible exception could be pilgrimages to the Holy Land, because there, meetings are possible in places where God
revealed Himself and where Jesus worked).

1. THE APPARITION HILL
The first apparition of Our Lady took place on the mountain Crnica, which today is called Apparition Hill. She called
us to peace, prayer and fasting, faith and love. She appeared to children, who are already adults today, whom one
can meet and with whom the pilgrims are also meeting. Everything began with the call to peace and belief in God in a
country where atheism was the official ideology. On the one hand, the government reacted vehemently against it but,
on the other hand, the crowd felt an unbelievable urge to come and see, to experience and respond.

According to his nature, man searches for peace. Through the Queen of Peace, God offers him this peace, thus
fulfilling his deepest desire as a fullness of physical, psychological and spiritual good. People began to move. In a
biblical sense, Apparition Hill is also a Bethlehem - an invitation to peace with the birth of Christ and, as a mountain, it
is an invitation to set forth and go up. On Apparition Hill, a pilgrim experiences the first call and the first opening of
his heart under those "conditions so well-prepared" for that. It is a place where man experiences joy and peace and
there is not a single pilgrim who does not visit it. For this reason, a well-organized pilgrimage must include the
"setting forth and going up" of this mountain.

On Apparition Hill, the joyful and the sorrowful mysteries of the Rosary are prayed and one remains in silence at a
place, which is marked as the place where the visionaries saw Our Lady. One must take one's time when ascending
Apparition Hill but, especially at the apparition site itself one needs much time in silence. In this silence, one should
read some of the messages of Our Lady and think about them. One should consecrate oneself to her, that is,
consciously accept her as a Mother, because it is at this particular place that she so often said that she is our
Mother. Here, one should open oneself to her blessing, as he so often repeats in her messages, "I bless you with my
motherly blessing". Here, at this same place, it is also good to make the decision to accept Mary as our Teacher,
because she teaches us and leads us to her Son.

As important as it is to come here with a group, it is equally important to come alone, to pray, to remain with Jesus
and Mary while praying the Rosary and to hear her voice calling us to peace. This is the same peace to which the
Angels called us when Jesus was born. It is particularly recommended to pray for peace at the cross opposite the
second station of the joyful mysteries because it was here that, on the third day of the Apparitions - on June 26,
1981 - Marija Pavlovic saw Our Lady with the Cross, crying and repeating: "Peace! Peace! Peace! Only Peace!
Peace between God and man and peace between men." Many pilgrims also go to Apparition Hill at night and relate
wonderful experiences in prayer. Thus, what Jesus often did is being repeated in setting out at night to pray on
mountains.

2. THE BLUE CROSS
In the course of time, another place for silent prayer has evolved, where many individuals and smaller groups also
spend time in personal prayer. Its name was given accidentally, because someone had placed a blue cross at the
spot where Our Lady appeared when the police had forbidden any gatherings on Apparition Hill. Here, Ivan's prayer
group met many times when the meeting was only for his prayer group and Our Lady would appear to Ivan during
this meeting. Also in this place, as in all other places of prayer, one should spend time in prayer, in silence and
remain in an atmosphere of prayer. Mirjana also often prays at this spot on the second of the month when she meets
with Our Lady and prays for the non-believers. All these inspire the pilgrim to "set forth" for this spot and to pray
there. There is also a practical side to this place of prayer. Those pilgrims who cannot "ascend" Apparition Hill or Mt.
Križevac because of their physical condition are often able to make it to the Blue Cross and can experience prayer
on the mountain here.

3. KRIŽEVAC
After the encounter on Apparition Hill, where the first call was heard that resounded in the hearts of the visionaries
and later in the hearts of millions of pilgrims, the biblical pilgrimage continues. The pilgrim who comes, burdened by
weaknesses and sins, wounded by the weaknesses and sins of others, must continue on the way, which is also the
way on which Jesus passed after Bethlehem. This way led Jesus over another mountain and to another ascent with
the Cross to the top of Mt. Calvary. The pilgrim who follows the pilgrim Jesus "sets forth and ascends" Mt. Križevac.
Here, one is able to encounter Jesus who suffers and dies; who passes His test as the King of Peace while on the
Cross, by accepting His suffering with love, by praying and forgiving. Mary is also here, suffering and remaining
faithful to her Son; loving as He loves, praying as He prays and forgiving as He forgives. In the light of Christ who
thus passes through the final portion of His pilgrimage, a pilgrim recognizes, on one hand, the immeasurable love
that suffers for him and on the other, the human evil, in which he recognizes himself, his own behaviour and the
behaviour of others. This realization does not leave any bitterness in his heart because Jesus also did not die in
bitterness. This realization awakens the desire to forgive and to seek forgiveness and reconciliation. In ascending Mt.
Križevac, the pilgrim comes in contact with death and life, transition and eternity, love and hate, prayer and
condemnation, reconciliation and revenge, violence and mercy, poverty and greed, weakness and power, truth and
lie, the tomb and the resurrection, the goodness and malice of man, the fall and the ascent. Through such an
encounter on Mt. Križevac, the pilgrim's heart opens toward God and is ready to repent for his sins, to forgive and to
ask for forgiveness. Here, the person understands his own way on earth with God and others. Without such an
encounter, a person would not be able to get in touch with his own suffering nor would he be able to open himself
towards God, due to his sufferings and misfortunes. In this way, his soul is being prepared for a new encounter,
which takes place in the Temple.

One should set aside a great amount of time for prayer on Mt. Križevac. Here, the Way of the Cross is prayed,
consisting of 16 Stations. The first Station shows the Garden of Gethsemane and the last, the Resurrection. One
should pray in front of each Station and reflect about Jesus and those around Him and through all that look at
oneself, one's own behaviour and those around him. If one climbs Mt. Križevac in this manner, then that which should
happen in him, does: the recognition of the redeeming love of Jesus, the recognition of one's own sin and weakness
and of the need for salvation. It is especially important to pray for faith so that everything turns to the good for those
who love God. One does not go on Mt. Križevac to liberate oneself from one's crosses, but to learn how to carry
them and to help others carry theirs. When climbing Mt. Križevac, it is particularly important to pray in silence in front
of the cross in order to consciously unite with Mary who remained under the Cross and called us also to come before
the Cross and to pray. In deep meditation before the Cross, one's own wounds and the wounds of those whom we
have wounded, as well as the sufferings of the family, the Church and the world are presented to Jesus. Especially
here, one should pray for spiritual and mental healing.

"Dear children! Today, in a special way, I invite you to take the cross in the hands and to meditate on the wounds of
Jesus. Ask of Jesus to heal your wounds, which you, dear children, during your life sustained because of your sins or
the sins of your parents. Only in this way, dear children, you will understand that the world is in need of healing of
faith in God the Creator. By Jesus' passion and death on the cross, you will understand that only through prayer you
too can become true Apostles of faith when, in simplicity and prayer, you live faith which is a gift. Thank you for
having responded to my call." (March 25, 1997)

This is a place of complete composure and spiritual seriousness. Therefore, it is not in the spirit of a pilgrimage to
talk, eat or drink on Križevac or under the Cross, as many unfortunately do at the end of their ascent. It is also in
complete contradiction to the spirit of a pilgrimage to sell or buy anything or to leave one's garbage there. One
should also descend Križevac in a composed manner, just as Mary descended from Calvary after all that she had
endured and after she had buried her Son. While descending, one could pray the Chaplet of the Seven Sorrows of
the Blessed Virgin Mary.

After such an ascent and descent from Mt. Križevac, the soul of the pilgrim is ready for new encounters. In church,
the pilgrim encounters the resurrected Lord, who gives His disciples the power to forgive sins and to nourish the
faithful with the celebration of the Holy Eucharist.

4. CONFESSION
It is not, therefore, by chance that, for many pilgrims, Medjugorje has become the place of confession, leading to
conversion. That is why it is important to help the pilgrims to thoroughly examine their conscience as preparation for
confession. Within their soul, they are already disposed for contrition, forgiveness and seeking absolution, for a
complete purification of soul and heart and for reconciliation with God and man. However, in addition to this
preparation, it is also important that priests are always at their disposal and that they consciously take enough time
for each confession. As well as listening to the confession, a priest, in the spirit of Our Lady, should not only point
out sin and motivate the pilgrim to avoid it, he should also lead him to grow in goodness because the life of a
Christian is not only a fight against sin but also a tireless fight for goodness. In other words, according to her
messages, Mary not only calls us to create a world without war and conflict, without hate and evil, but she invites us
to actively take part in the realization of peace, love and justice. Whoever does not take an active part - even if he
does not commit a sin due to a conflict - still commits a sin, because he is not sufficiently active for the good. Mary
clearly invites us to confession when she says:

"Dear children! I invite you to open the door of your heart to Jesus as the flower opens itself to the sun. Jesus
desires to fill your hearts with peace and joy. You cannot, little children, realize peace if you are not at peace with
Jesus. Therefore, I invite you to confession so Jesus may be your truth and peace. So, little children, pray to have
the strength to realize what I am telling you. I am with you and love you. Thank you for having responded to my call."
(January 25, 1995)

5. THE EVENING PRAYER PROGRAM
The first part of the evening program consists in praying the Rosary. This is the time of preparation for the Holy
Mass. Our Lady herself asked us to prepare ourselves for Holy Mass. During this time and in this atmosphere of
prayer, many faithful go to confession. Also during this time of preparation in prayer is the time of the Apparition. The
faithful gather because Our Lady is coming. She prays and blesses everyone and in this way, with her presence.
She prepares the faithful for the celebration of the Holy Eucharist.

Holy Mass is celebrated so that all faithful of various languages can participate as actively as possible in its
celebration. The gospel is read in the respective languages of the pilgrims and, in as much as it is possible, so are
the prayers of the faithful. The songs, likewise, are chosen so that the greatest number of pilgrims can participate.

After the Holy Mass, the Creed, seven Our Fathers, Hail Mary's and Glory Be's are prayed followed by the prayer for
healing. Our Lady asked us not to leave the Church immediately after Holy Mass, but to remain with Jesus. This is
the best time to pray for healing, because before Communion we said to Jesus, "Only say the word and my soul shall
be healed!" During this prayer, many inner healings occur and there have also been physical healings. Finally, the
Glorious Mysteries are prayed. They are prayed at the end of the evening program and at the end of the day so that
the soul and heart can anticipate what awaits one after death; to participate in the celebration of the Risen Lord, and
to cast one's spiritual glance towards Mary, as she is gloriously assumed into Heaven and crowned as the Queen. In
this manner, the heart and soul open to the life of God and the hope that console and give the strength and the
courage to continue on the earthly way until the final victory.

Our Lady asked for such a program. That is why it needs to be recommended to the pilgrims to participate in the
entire evening prayer program. It is not so important that every word be understood, since a mystery cannot be
understood but can only be comprehended with one's heart. Everyone who has participated in the entire evening
program knows how important this is for a pilgrim. Some pilgrims do not take part in the evening Holy Mass with the
excuse that they do not understand or that something else - a meeting or an evening meal - has been organized at
that time. There are also those who remain at the evening program but walk around the Church during Holy Mass,
waiting for the healing prayer. This must be avoided. One should remain for the entire evening program so that one
can comprehend what Our Lady desires.

6. EUCHARISTIC ADORATION
In Medjugorje, for the first time in their lives, many pilgrims have experienced the true meaning of Adoration of the
Most Holy Eucharist - the encounter with Jesus who has remained with His people in the divine bread. In all his
encounters on Apparition Hill, on Mt. Križevac and in Church, a pilgrim encounters himself in various dimensions and
speaks with God of a new beginning in his life - which is the ultimate goal of every pilgrimage.

In the tradition of the Church, there is yet another way to encounter Jesus - in Eucharistic Adoration. Our Lady asked
us to adore Jesus, her Son:

"Tonight also, dear children, I am grateful to you in a special way for being here. Unceasingly adore the Most
Blessed Sacrament of the Altar. I am always present when the faithful are adoring. Special graces are then being
received." (March 15, 1984)

She also asked the parish to have adoration every Thursday after Holy Mass. Thursday is always a special day for
the Holy Eucharist and the priesthood. Our Lady speaks about her presence during these moments and she also
asks us to fall in love with Jesus in the Holy Eucharist. Only someone who is in love has time.

"Dear children! Today I invite you to fall in love with the Most Holy Sacrament of the Altar. Adore Him, little children, in
your parishes and in this way you will be united with the entire world. Jesus will become your friend and you will not
talk of Him like someone whom you barely know. Unity with Him will be a joy for you and you will become witnesses to
the love of Jesus that He has for every creature. Little children, when you adore Jesus you are also close to me.
Thank you for having responded to my call." (September 25, 1995)

In the course of time, adoration was also introduced Wednesday and Saturday evenings and on the vigil of great
feast days. In the Adoration Chapel, many pilgrims find a moment of silence and encounter Jesus in the Holy
Eucharist. Many pilgrims have discovered adoration for the first time in Medjugorje and have taken it back into their
own prayer groups and, in due time, also into the parish community. There already exist groups of pilgrims who have
organized perpetual adoration in their parish communities. Adoration is actually an encounter with Jesus in the
Eucharistic Bread. When the pilgrim is in adoration alone, it is good to remain with Jesus in silence with as few words
as possible. Often the experience of St. John Vianney of Ars is mentioned: "I look at Him and He looks at me." To
remain in front of Jesus in silence means to enter into the mystery of His Eucharistic presence, to avoid all haste - be
it interior or exterior - and to experience eternity. If adoration takes place within a group, it is necessary to have short
meditations which help enter into the presence of Jesus, as well as meditative songs and long periods of silence.
Adoration should not be overfilled with reflections as if it were a homily. One should not pray the Rosary or the
Litanies but should use the simplest possible prayers and songs so that the soul has time to enter into the silence.

When organizing  pilgrimages to Medjugorje, one should see to it that the pilgrim does not get caught up in too many
talks, visits and the like. Instead he should be helped to also find time for this way of encountering God.

7. VENERATION OF THE CROSS
In addition to the encounter with Jesus on Mt. Križevac, where the pilgrim encounters the suffering Jesus and follows
Him on the Way of the Cross, there is in Church every Friday after Mass the Veneration of the Cross, followed by
prayers for healing. This is also another good opportunity for a pilgrim to encounter the Cross of our Lord, Jesus
Christ, from whom salvation comes and to remain in front of this sign of His love.

"Dear children! I wish to tell you that the cross should be central these days. Pray especially before the cross from
which great graces are coming. Now in your homes make a special consecration to the cross. Promise that you will
neither offend Jesus nor abuse the cross. Thank you for having responded to my call." (September 12, 1985)

This is also an important part of the pilgrimage program because it can easily happen that the average believer does
not encounter the suffering Jesus at all. A person who does not unite with the suffering Jesus will have difficulties
entering into the mystery of love, which suffers, and triumphs through the resurrection.

If one looks at the Thursday, Friday and Saturday evening programs with adoration and veneration of the cross, one
will actually recognize the three solemn days before Easter - Holy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday - with
the liturgy of the vigil and the waiting for the Easter morning. Thus, Sunday morning can be a joyful victory over evil
and sin, death and darkness, because one has gone through the sufferings with Jesus of Holy Thursday, the day of
the institution of the Holy Eucharist; of Good Friday with His death, and of Holy Saturday with the preparations for the
Resurrection.

In this way, one can discover the fullness of the school of Our Lady. She wants to lead us and help us to encounter
Jesus, who is our life and resurrection.

8. WITNESSES OF THE PRESENCE OF OUR LADY
The Medjugorje pilgrim, in addition to having an opportunity of being at the places where God has come closer to
man through the apparitions of Mary, can also meet the individuals through whom He speaks to us through her - the
visionaries. They are important witnesses and a great help on our way to encountering God. Therefore, their
testimony is of great importance. Their basic assignment is to simply transmit Our Lady's messages and to talk about
their experiences in their encounters with Mary. But both the visionaries and the pilgrims have to take care not to go
beyond the limits of the messages and their personal experiences. It would be quite dangerous if the visionaries
would become experts for all questions, giving all the answers. Then it could easily happen that the encounters with
them would turn into encounters with someone who knows everything or that they would turn into oracles, where
people only look for answers without listening to the messages. This would confuse the pilgrims because they would
not be able to distinguish between the message of Our Lady and the personal opinion of the visionary. Certainly, in
these meetings there is present a curiosity that motivates the pilgrims. In itself, curiosity is something positive, as it
motivates the pilgrim to decide more easily to "step out of his everyday life". But this curiosity has then to become the
motivation for further encounters with God, who speaks to His people in this manner. (Who would not be curious to
meet a person who claims to have daily encounters with Our Lady?) Curiosity enables a person to hear and listen
and understand more easily what God is saying. That is why it is important to continue the way across the mountain
to the encounter in the Church where one experiences the Sacramental reality.

I am convinced that it is sufficient motivation for a pilgrim who comes to Medjugorje to meet with only one visionary.
One should avoid constantly running after the visionaries and over-rating their importance. There is a danger of a
"circle of friends" being formed around the visionaries who could be tempted to take advantage of their proximity to
the visionaries, by portraying a special image and position so as to enable business and profitable gains off the
pilgrims. For example, by making a pilgrim who is staying in one of the visionaries' homes pay more or feel
particularly privileged. Such and similar dangers have to be avoided for the benefit of the visionaries, the pilgrims
and, finally, for the benefit of the messages they are transmitting.

9. SIGNS AND MIRACLES
It is a fact that many pilgrims who come to Medjugorje testify to having seen special signs in the sky or at the Cross
or to have felt the presence of Our Lady and her call with a great intensity. Although it is, of course, not easy to
assert objectively what is happening, one must still emphasize that this also constitutes an important factor of
Medjugorje pilgrimages. However, here also the rule applies that the ultimate criterion is what the pilgrim does after
having experienced the extraordinary interventions of God. Here, one can also include the spiritual, mental and
physical healings. Those who have experienced such healings, by their testimony awaken the faith and the curiosity
and inspire people to leave their everyday life and tasks and to go to the people and places, which, through the
intervention of God, have become the goal of many pilgrims.

10. BREAD AND WATER
A special sign of pilgrimages to Medjugorje is the message of Our Lady to fast with bread and water. Bread is the
basic food of man and, thus, also the symbol for life. Also water is irreplaceable in the life of man. It is above all a
symbol for spiritual cleansing. These two realities and signs already contain a message: return to life and live, come
forth from your impurity and be cleansed.

Simply stated, we are called upon consciously to live for two days only with bread and water. This is the ideal fasting.
A person who takes this literally and can live this surely only does something good for his soul and his body.
However, one must still take into account one's daily life, problems and difficulties. This call is surely an invitation,
which is to be responded to in the fullness of freedom and responsibility. Bread and water were also the staple food
of the pilgrims in the old days. One could not carry anything else when travelling by foot for several days or weeks.
Thus walking and living with bread and water, a person became cleansed and more able to encounter God. He left
his everyday life and visited the places, where God revealed Himself, and the persons to whom He appeared.

11. THE COMMUNITY "CENACOLO"
Avery important encounter for the pilgrim is for him to meet with the youth who are in the community of Sister Elvira.
They give a concrete testimony of their drug addiction and of their way out from death to life, from their complete
enslavement, from crime and atheism to the freedom and peace, that God gives when man opens himself to Him.
Here, many pilgrims, especially parents, become aware of their role and realize their possible omissions in the way
they raised their children, but they also see the hope that everything can be turned to the good. For young people,
this meeting is also very important because in the honest confessions of the addicts they recognize and understand
all the dangers of modern evils of drugs and alcohol. Individually and together they are proof of what happens to
man when he encounters God and decides for Him. After such a meeting at this community, it frequently happens
that a pilgrim wants to go to confession and have a talk with a priest because he has realized his mistakes or
because he needs advice. This station on a pilgrimage through Medjugorje helps many people: they return home,
conscious of their responsibility and of the dangers that can detain a person on his way to peace, because each
type of dependency can be recognized in that a person has become dependent, imprisoned and closed in the
horizons of this world. Here, the profound longing to continue on the way of freedom and the decision to fight against
enslavement manifests itself.

VII. THE SITUATION OF MANKIND AND THE WORLD - THE DESIRE TO FIND A WAY OUT
All this takes place and forms the place of a pilgrimage and the way of a pilgrimage with all the dimensions man has
within himself. If we consciously think about the fact that this is happening at the end of the twentieth century,
everything becomes even more interesting and more comprehensible. Today a person searching for God is
inundated with a multitude of offers in his daily life which threaten with losing the sense for life, and falling into deep
hopelessness, with suffocation and death in the end. The further he distances himself from God, the more he
searches for Him and the more sensitive he becomes to all the proposals that offer him any security and that promise
peace. More and more, a person departs from his daily routine, if not as one searching for God, then certainly as
one indulging in the intoxicating means that estrange him from himself and from all human and Christian values, thus
imprisoning him. Drugs and alcohol, sexual saturation and hedonism, the pursuit of power and money are nothing
but a "pilgrimage" away from reality into non-reality, from hope into hopelessness, from creative collaboration with
God to destructive behaviour against oneself and others. The increasing number of suicides and the legalized killing
of unborn life, even at the moment of birth, are nothing but an attempt of man to create a new space for himself
where he believes he will be able to escape the monotony of his imprisonment within the horizons of this world. The
violence, which emerges in wars and daily murders, is also proof that the framework in which man lives has become
too small and that he is searching for an appropriate space to live - but always without God.

Aside from these catastrophic attempts of man to somehow escape from his daily life, the theories of "New Age" are
emerging and are being accepted at the end of this century and millennium because they promise people salvation
and peace - but without conversion to God. Many meditative movements, which attract people and particularly the
young, promise peace and salvation, by turning to oneself and finding and activating one's own powers and
energies. While some promise a new epoch to come, others foresee catastrophes and apocalyptic events, in which
many people and many nations will be wiped out from the face of the earth and only some, or the chosen lucky ones
are to survive.

VIII. PILGRIMAGE INTO THE THIRD MILLENNIUM
Pope John Paul II tirelessly invites all Christians and all mankind to prepare themselves for entry into the third
millennium, but together with Jesus and Mary. The Encyclical Mother of the Redeemer (1987) speaks of Mary who is
on pilgrimage with the Church which is living the Second Advent, and who, as Mother, Teacher and Pilgrim, is
preparing the Church for the 2000th birthday of her Son. As the Mother and Teacher of Jesus, she is the one who
can best prepare us for the encounter with Him, as she knows Him better than any other saint.

If this word of the Pope can be applied to some place and if Mary's pilgrimage is being realized anywhere, then it is in
Medjugorje. Here she comes as a "Pilgrim" daily and has been appearing for nearly 18 years, teaching the people of
God how to pray and fast, to be a pilgrim, to find God and to return to Him wholeheartedly. In the message of August
25, 1998 (after 17 years and two months of her presence in Medjugorje), Our Lady says:

"Dear children! Today I invite you to come still closer to me through prayer. Little children, I am your mother, I love
you and I desire that each of you be saved and thus be with me in Heaven. That is why, little children, pray, pray,
pray, until your life becomes prayer. Thank you for having responded to my call."

Thus, Medjugorje is a place of pilgrimage in the real sense of the word, concerning the revelations of God, human
needs, the possibility of encountering God and also in answer to the invitations of the Pope to prepare the world for
entering the third millennium.

IX. WARNINGS AND COMMENTS
One should point out the dangers that arise at any place where many people gather. Medjugorje is no exception. On
the one hand, care has to be taken that the messages remain pure and that their concrete application to the Liturgy
be clear (prayer, mass, adoration, confession, ascent of the mountains). On the other hand, the protagonists should
remain humble and open instruments through whom God works. In any case, care should be taken that the
messages are not suffocated by materialism, a spirit of tourism, a chase after money and commercialism. Those
accompanying pilgrims should be warned that this not become a "business" for them and those who accommodate
pilgrims should not forget the reason for their coming to Medjugorje. It is obvious to everyone that, wherever there is
a chase after money and a worldly competitive spirit is present, the true spirit of a pilgrimage is in danger. One
should be particularly careful that human curiosity is not misused but channelled and directed in the right way. It can
be said without exaggeration that in Medjugorje, the spiritual aspect is still recognizable and that the above-
mentioned dangers have not succeeded in suffocating it.

X. AFTER THE PILGRIM RETURNS HOME
After returning home, pilgrims have to take care to continue to live in the same spirit and to refrain from fanaticism
and elitism, that is, not to found groups separate of the parish community. A pilgrim should decide for personal and
family prayer, he should join a prayer group and, as much as possible, create similar conditions for prayer.
Medjugorje was not given to mankind in order to know better than others, but in order to better live the Gospel of
Jesus Christ, the only Saviour.

Aside from possible exceptions, one can without exaggerating also say that everywhere there is an effort to remain in
the spirit of the messages of Our Lady and to continue to live the Gospel. Here also, Medjugorje has created
something, which is of exceptional importance. The priests of Medjugorje and also some of the visionaries partake in
encounters throughout the world, where thousands of faithful gather and are helped to remain on the right way. It is
something no other Sanctuary has.

This meeting also has no other function than to make us more conscious of our role in this magnificent divine
intercession and that we fulfil it with dignity. In the hope that through Mary, God will continue to lead us in what He
has begun here, we say with her: "Your will be done! I am ready to do everything you tell me to. Help me to
understand what it is that you ask of me.
This website is dedicated to providing information for pilgrims and details of pilgrimages to Medjugorje
Webmaster: Owen Boyle - owen@medjugorjepilgrim.com
Please
email  if you would like to link to this site or if you would like to have something displayed on this site
Medjugorje   
It is impossible for us to refrain from speaking of what we have seen and heard.
Since 1981, in a small village named Medjugorje in Bosnia-Herzegovina, The Blessed
Virgin Mary has been appearing and giving
messages to the world. She tells us that
God has sent her to this world and, these years she is spending with us are a time of
Grace granted by God. In her own words she tells us, "I have come to tell the world that
God exists. He is the fullness of life, and to enjoy this fullness and peace, you must
return to God".
Since the apparitions of Our Lady began in 1981, millions of pilgrims of all faiths, from
all over the world, have visited Medjugorje on
pilgrimage and have left spiritually
strengthened and renewed. Countless unbelievers and physically or mentally afflicted,
have been converted and
healed. You owe it to yourself and your loved ones, to
investigate with an open mind and heart the events which are occurring in Medjugorje. I
invite you to peruse the information  on this Web Site, and decide for yourself whether
you will answer
Our Lady's call.  (Extract from Medjugorje Web)

Pilgrimages from Scotland to Our Ladys Apparition site in Medjugorje,                      
Bosnia/Herzegovina can be booked on this web site. go to
Pilgrimages page
Pilgrimages to Medjugorje
Medjugorjepilgrim.com
                                  Medjugorje, the Apparitions of Our Lady, the Visionaries and Pilgrimages to Medjugorje.
Pilgrimage by Fr. Slavko
Medjugorje
There are some places and some people in life that "mark"you forever.
Pilgrimage by Fr. Slavko Barbaric

The small village of Medjugorje is situated in Bosnia- Herzegovina, Its people are Croatian and its a former
Yugoslavia republic.
It is rugged and rocky with low-lying vegetation, dense evergreen underbrush, and very little forest land.

The mild Mediterranean climate, strong sunlight, and loamy soil make Medjugorje ideal for the cultivation of
vineyards and tobacco, but few other crops, as drought is a centuries-old problem. The quality of tobacco is one of
the world’s best, but it is scarcely exported. The wines, “Zilavka and Blatina” are exported (Zilavka, whose vines
flourish only in Herzegovina, has been cultivated since the time of the Romans).  Family owns their own vineyards
and makes their own wine.

Croatia has the largest emigration in the world after Ireland.  Before world war I, extreme poverty drove the Croatian
men to other countries where they worked and sent money home to their destitute families.  After world war II, the
Communist dictatorship forced all classes of people to leave to escape persecution and to find work.  Then,
gradually, gaining hope from Our Lady’s appearances, they began to return to their homeland.  During the first 15
years of her apparitions, the population of Medjugorje increased by one third.

The present population of Medjugorje is about 3,500 people.  All are natives of Croatia, speak the Croatian
language, write with the Latin alphabet, and the majority are Catholic. The name Medjugorje is of Slavic origin and
means “between the hills.”  The name Croatia “HRVATSKA” is abbreviated as HR.  

Croatia is a small country in a political earthquake zone with a large, long, violent history that goes back more than a
thousand years. To grasp a bit of the history, scan these abbreviated facts:

600s: Croatians arrive in present-day Croatia, adopt Christianity and become a part of the Roman Civilization, a
violent period in which most of the Croatian churches are destroyed.  Following the Romans are farmers who bring
with them the Franciscan missionary priests, symbols of true faith to the Croatians.

925: Croatians establish their own independent kingdom.

1463: Croatia is occupied by Turks who destroy the Franciscan monasteries and torture and kill the priests.  The
Christians are forced into hiding for 300 years.

1699: Croatia is liberated of Turkish rule.

1892: The parish of Medjugorje is formed and is placed under the protection of St. James, patron saint of pilgrims.  
Five years later the parish builds the first St. James Church.

1918: Croatia becomes part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenians. Ten years later the name is changed
to Yugoslavia.  After WW I, Yugoslavia Communists persecute the Franciscans.  Life is brutal; people are beaten and
sentenced to years in prison because they are Croatian and Catholic.  The Communists kill 630 priests and nuns.

1941: During world war II, German and Italian forces under Communist Tito occupy Yugoslavia.

1945: The Communists kill 69 people from the Franciscans community in Herzegovina in February and May.  In the
village of Siroki Brijeg on February 7, 1945, the Communists kill 760 parishioners and 30 Franciscan priests and
brothers.  They burn the school, library, archives and church records.

1971:  Thousands of Croatians are imprisoned, killed or forced to emigrate by the Communists.

1981: Under these adverse conditions, a totalitarian and atheistic regime, the Lord sends the Blessed Mother to
Medjugorje.

1990: Communist dictatorship falls apart, and the Croatians break away from Yugoslavia, this signals the start of  
Civil War.

1995: On Dec. 14, Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia sign a Peace Pact.

Today, the people in Medjugorje believe that Our Lady protected them during Bosnia's recent bloody conflict which
came  within five miles of the village. The enemy destroyed other villages and massacred its people yet Medjugorje
remained safe and untouched by damage.  As an example, sources say that two Russian-made MIG fighter jets were
sent to destroy the village.  As the pilots approached Medjugorje on a clear and cloudless day, a dense fog suddenly
obstructed their vision and they were unable to drop their bombs on the target.  One plane went down and the other
returned to its base.  It is said that the surviving pilot defected from his military unit.  In another instance, one bomb
fell in a field near the village but failed to explode.  For a brief time, however, during the most intense time of the war,
the priests at St. James moved the Blessed Sacrament to the basement of the rectory and continued to hold Mass.

2000, the peacekeeping soldiers were stationed 75-80 miles from Medjugorje.  Some arrived in the village, strolled
around as if on holiday, shopping and snapping pictures in the courtyard of St. James Church. The peace of
Medjugorje is broken only by the church bells echoing through the mountains and the sound of roosters crowing at
dawn, greeting the pilgrims daily. They yawn and grin and try and remember the last time, if ever, they heard
roosters crow. And the pilgrims keep coming; they all want to experience this time of grace with their whole hearts,
their whole minds, to savor the spiritual richness the rest of their live
s.
Some History and Background to Medjugorje
The Visionaries
Medjugorje today

In the message of June 25, 2001, Our Lady says:
“… seek God through me …”

Seeking God, man understands that he would not seek Him, if God did not seek him first, and seek him continuously,
manifesting this seeking through the history of the Chosen People, through the calls of the prophets and saints,
through the apparitions of Mary… In this seeking, God was complete and thorough: he enclosed the past, present
and the future all within the Incarnation of Jesus Christ.

Seeking God

Originally, “seeking God” or “seeking the word of God” meant to consult God, mostly through the mediation of a
priest-Levite or a prophet. “The people come to me to consult God. Whenever they have a disagreement, they come
to me to have them settle the matter between them and make known to them God’s decisions and regulations.”
(Exodus 18,15). “Stand here by your holocaust while I go over there. Perhaps the Lord will meet me, and whatsoever
are His commands, I will tell you.” (Numbers 23,3). This way of seeking God may include a risk of superstition and a
desire to use God for one’s own goals. Who really seeks God has one deep desire: “One thing I ask of the Lord, this
I seek: to dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life… Of you my heart speaks; you my glance seeks; your
presence, O Lord, I seek.” (Psalm 27,4.8) “Seeking God” means also to venerate him in a right manner and to
oppose oneself to the cult of false gods (Deuteronomy 4,15-31).

Refusal of false gods demands conversion: it is the permanent theme of the prophets. There is no seeking of God, if
one does not seek what is right and just. Amos says: “Seek me that you may live!” (Amos 5,4s.14) Isaiah says: “Seek
the Lord while he may be found, call him while he is near… Let the scoundrel forsake his way and the wicked man his
thoughts; let him turn to the Lord for mercy; to our God who is generous in forgiving.” (Isaiah 55,6s) We have to seek
God “with our whole heart and our whole soul” (Deuteronomy 4,29; Jeremiah 29,13). Jesus says the same: “Seek
first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be given you besides.” (Matthew 6,33)

True and false seeking

Even in Israel, seeking God was stained by veneration of false gods, like Baal (2 Kings 1,2), and by other distortions:
seeking council from varoius visionaries, even invoking the dead (Leviticus 19,31; Deuteronomy 18,11; 1 Samuel
28,7; Isaiah 8,19). Many kept forgetting the fundamental conditions: they became a people who seeks justice but
forgets what is right (cf. Isaiah 58,2). This is why Isaiah says to his people: “It is your crimes that separate you from
your God” (Isaiah 59,2). The true seeking of God happens in the simplicity of the heart (Wisdom 1,1), in humility and
poverty (Zephaniah 2,3; Psalm 22,27), with a broken heart and a humble spirit (Deuteronomy 3,39s). It is then that
God allows Himself to be found (Jeremiah 29,14), and this is why the psalmist says: “See, you lowly ones, and be
glad; you who seek God, may your hearts be merry!” (Psalm 69,33)

Jesus Christ, who knows the intentions of the heart, is the point of discernment between true and false seeking of
God; from the moment He came into the world, seeking God and seeking Christ became one and the same. To know
Jesus Christ and to gain Him (Philippians 3,8.12), Paul is ready to renounce everything, first of all his own
righteousness, to allow himself to be gained by Him through faith. Seeking Christ continues after His Ascension, in
“seeking what is above” (John 13,33; Colossians 3,1).

God seeks man

In seeking God, man comprehends that God sought him first (1 John 4,19), that He attracts us to Himself by His Son
(John 6,44). In this initiative of the grace of God, we recognize the main theme traversing the whole Bible, is the
theme of LOVE, the deepest characteristic of the heart of God. God wants to speak to the heart of men (Hosea 2,15
s), and He goes Himself in search of his flock and seeks the lost sheep (Ezekiel 34,5s; 34,12.16), He loves His
spouse passionately (Song of Songs 3,1-4; 5,6; 6,3).

The Son of God showed us how far this love goes: “The Son of Man has come to seek and to save what was lost.”
(Luke 19,10) and announces that He will take to Himself those who belong to Him, “so that where I am, you also may
be” (John 14,3).

Cf: Vocabulary of Biblical Theology.
Seeking God
Medjugorje Apparition, Message &
Interview
Hear commentary from Mirjana about the
latest Church commission established to
study Medjugorje.











Fr. Bernardin Smoljan, and the parishioners completed this 8.5 meter cross of reinforced concrete on March 15,
1934.
The following words are engraved on the cross:

"TO JESUS CHRIST, THE REDEEMER OF THE HUMAN RACE, AS A SIGN OF OUR FAITH, LOVE AND HOPE, IN MEMORY OF THE 1900th
ANNIVERSARY OF THE PASSION OF JESUS."

In the center of the cross, they placed a relic of the authentic Cross of Jesus, which Christians venerate as the cross
on which Jesus was crucified. This relic was received as a gift from Rome, where the larger part of the authentic
Cross is being kept in the Church of 'Santa Croce di Gerusalemme'.
KRIŽEVAC - Cross Mountain
Beautiful Handmade Strung
Rosary Beads
A New Evangelisation
www.caseresources.org
Sunset in Medjugorje 18th July 07
The Risen Christ
Stations of the Cross & The Risen Christ
Candle Light Area
Candle lighting Area
www.Life4seekers.co.uk
Catholic Enquiry Office website; which
is for those people who are not
members of the Catholic Church but
would like to find out more
The HolyRosary
is the story of the New Testament.
Through the beads we follow the lives
of Mary and Jesus.
Eucharistic Adoration
By: Pope John Paul II
The Stations of the Cross
(or Way of the Cross; in Latin, Via
Crucis; also called the Via Dolorosa
or Way of Sorrows, or simply, The
Way)
Beautiful testimony the power of the  Rosary
Fr Don Galloways incredible testimony
Mary TV
Beautiful Handmade Strung Rosaries

EWTN
Catholic Global Network
Up to date News
from the Holy Shrine
in Medjugorje.
Link to - Medjugorje Official Web Site
In 7 Languages  (Hrvatski, English,
Français, Deutsch, Italiano, Polski,
Español)
broadcasting live audio-video
programs and photos from the
church in Medjugorje.
Monthly Message
Mothers Village
The Childrens Village

Kindergarten

Workshop

St Francis Gardens

Cenacolo
From the imagination of the Holy
Spirit, through the intuition of a
consecrated woman, Sister Elvira
Petrozzi, the Comunità Cenacolo was
started in July 1983 as the response
of the tenderness of God the Father
to the desperate cry of many youth
who are tired, disappointed,
desperate, drug addicts and
non-addicts, searching for joy and
the true meaning of life.
Medjugorje
Through the writings and tapes of
WAYNE WEIBLE

The books and tapes offered through his site
give the full story of this phenomenal gift of
grace from God

www.medjugorjeweible.com
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