On 21 OCT 07 Scott wrote BibleProbe.com:
I was reading your web site, and wanted to share this photo of a ANGEL WITH MY SON. This picture was taken the afternoon before my son was to have surgery, at the time of the picture being taken, prayers were being said for his safe recovery, the photo has been tested for 2 years by photograph professionals, and churches, and has been found to be 100% real. my son is healthy and strong now thanks to this powerful servant of GOD.
THANKS SCOTT ROCKFORD MICHIGAN .
SIFNOS ,The Island of Miracles
Once upon a time, fishermen off
of the Greek island of Siphnos noticed a glow under the Aegean Sea. When they
trolled the spot they were amazed at what their nets brought up: a statue of
the Virgin Mary.The fishermen brought the Virgin
Mary icon to Chryssopigi, a small seventeenth-century monastery church on
Siphnos located at the end of a spit of land jutting out into the sea. The
Virgin of the Golden Spring soon came to be regarded as the protector of the
island.The Virgin’s protective powers
were evidenced several years later when pirates, who regularly made life
miserable for residents of islands in the Aegean, stormed the Siphnos shore
chasing a group of nuns who were on their way to the Chryssopigi monastery. The
nuns prayed as they ran with the pirates close behind. As the nuns reached the
church containing the Virgin there was a great rumble, the neck of land
connecting the church to the main island split open, and the pirates fell into
the sea.
And that’s how Siphnos came to
be known as The Island of Miracles.
Every year the Miracle of the
Virgin is celebrated on Ascension Day, a movable feast that falls in late May
or early June. On this day the icon leaves its home in Chryssopigi and is hand
carried to the port of Kamares. Small churches on the island take turns with
the honor of caring for the icon along the way.From Kamares the icon begins its
symbolic journey home. A commercial ferry boat changes its route on this one
day in order to bring the icon back to Chryssopigi. The ferry also carries a
coterie of church dignitaries in long colorful robes.When the icon is returned it is
welcomed back by a majority of Siphnos’s 2000 residents, old men and women in
black, young children in their best clothes, wealthy Athenians and a small
handful of tourists. The crowd gathers on the bridge that today connects
Chryssopigi to the south end of Siphnos. Blue and white pennants wave from
lines strung from church roof to surrounding walls. Flowers frame the church’s
doorway. The aroma of baked lentils creeps out of the narrow dining room.
The whole of Ascension Day takes
on a vibe that’s a mix of a family reunion, celebrity-watching and a festival. The
day ends with an all-night feast and drinking party—Greeks take their religion
seriously, but not solemnly.
During the rest of the year
Siphnos (often spelled “Sifnos”) is much more quiet and laid-back. To enjoy the
peaceful island at its best arrive between September and June. In July and
August the pensiones and small hotels are filled.
More than 300 churches, chapels
and monasteries dot the island, some so small they hold only one person at a
time. The white-washed chapels with bright blue doors decorate the pastures and
rocky hillsides like snowy linen handkerchiefs dropped by a passerby.
Although the island’s road
network reached the last of the isolated seacoast fishing villages twenty years
ago, walking is still the best way to experience the island. For a true Siphnos
experience stop by the small tourist office by the ferry boat landing, buy one
of their excellent Siphnos walking path maps, and set out by foot to explore
the Island of Miracles.
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