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The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

Anne Catherine Emmerich, mystic, stigmatist, and visionary, was born in Germany in 1774 to a poor Catholic peasant family. As a child she believed that angels, saints, and the Holy Family visited and talked with her as she worked in the fields. At twenty-four, she had her first mystic vision of the sufferings of Christ, accompanied by stigmata and bleeding as if from the crown of thorns. At twenty-nine, she became an Augustinian nun and continued to have visions and stigmata. Her visions recounted scenes from the life of Christ, which she seemed to have witnessed. These phenomena brought her fame and investigation by both scientists and the Church, and were recorded and collected by Catholic contemporaries as well as in Emmerich's own journals, providing the source material for this fascinating book.

This book was one of the sources for Mel Gibson's film, The Passion of Christ.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 31, 2005
      In 2004, Mel Gibson's controversial film The Passion of the Christ explored the last hours of Christ's life in (literally) excruciating detail, despite the fact that the New Testament says relatively little about this time. How did Gibson extrapolate a full-length feature film from a few minutes' worth of biblical material? One source he drew upon heavily was the visions of the 19th-century German nun Anne Catherine Emmerich (1774-1823), which were recorded in the last years of her life by a secretary, Clemens Brentano. In her visions, Sister Catherine glimpsed scenes from Christ's Last Supper, arrest and crucifixion-including extra-biblical details like how Satan might have tempted Jesus in Gethsemane, or how Mary might have accompanied Jesus to Golgotha. Noel Griese provides a helpful and comprehensive introduction to Sister Catherine's life and the controversies surrounding her revelations, and discusses the status of the campaign to canonize her (she is currently a candidate for beatification, the first step in the canonization process). Griese also ponders the visions themselves-referring, when relevant, to their use in Gibson's movie-in sections that are informative but make the introduction nearly 100 pages long. However, readers who persevere will be rewarded with a balanced and thorough examination of the life and work of a saint-in-the-making.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      After introductory music, this production begins its nearly two hundred tracks of Roger Basick reading from THE VISIONS OF ANNE CATHERINE EMMERICH. This nineteenth-century recounting of Jesus's suffering is highly detailed, and those seeking material for Christian meditations will find much here. Basick's delivery is clear and easy to follow, but curiously calm for such pain-filled passages. While his tones are friendly and welcoming, his flat delivery drains emotion from the story, and, though it seems presumptuous to critique a mystical account, Emmerich's prose style will seem dated to the modern ear, and further limit the work's appeal. G.T.B. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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