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The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ by Anne Catherine Emmerich
APPENDIX.
Detached Account of Longinus
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ON the 15th of March 1821, Sister Emmerich gave the following detached,
account of parts of a vision which she had had the previous night
concerning St. Longinus, whose festival happened to fall upon that very
day, although she did not know it.
Longinus, who had, I think, another name, held an office, partly civil
and partly military, in the household of Pilate, who intrusted him with
the duty of superintending all that passed, and making a report of it
to him. He was trustworthy and ready to do a service, but previous to
his conversion was greatly wanting in firmness and strength of
character. He was excessively impetuous in all that he did, and anxious
to be thought a person of great importance, and as he squinted and had
weak eyes, he was often jeered at and made the laughing-stock of his
companions. I have seen him frequently during the course of this night,
and in connection with him I have at the same time seen all the
Passion, I do not know in what manner; I only remember that it was in
connection with him.
Longinus was only in a subordinate position, and had to give an account
to Pilate of all that he saw. On the night that Jesus was led before
the tribunal of Caiphas he was in the outer court among the soldiers,
and unceasingly going backwards and forwards. When Peter was alarmed at
the words of the maid-servant standing near the fire, it was he who
said once,. " Art thou not also one, of this man's disciples?"
When Jesus was being led to Calvary, Longinus, by Pilate's orders,
followed him closely, and our Divine Lord gave him a look which touched
his heart. Afterwards I saw him on Golgotha with the soldiers. He was.
on horseback, and carried a lance; I saw him at Pilate's house, after
the death of our Lord, saying that the legs of Jesus ought not to be
broken. He returned at once to Calvary. His lance was made of several
pieces which fitted one into the other, so that by drawing them out,
the lance could be made three times its original length. He had just
done this when he came to the sudden determination of piercing the side
of our Saviour. He was converted upon Mount Calvary, and a short time
afterwards expressed to Pilate his conviction that Jesus was the Son of
God. Nicodemus prevailed upon Pilate to let him have Longinus's lance,
and I have seen many things concerning the subsequent history of this
lance. Longinus, after his conversion, left the army, and joined the
disciples. He and two other soldiers, who were converted at the foot of
the Cross, were among the first baptised after Pentecost.
I saw Longinus and these two men, clothed in long white garments,
return to their native land. They lived there in the country, in a
barren and marshy locality. Here it was that the forty martyrs died.
Longinus was not a priest, but a deacon, and travelled here and there
in that capacity, preaching the name of Christ, and giving, as an
eye-witness, a history of his Passion and Resurrection. He converted a
large number of persons, and cured many of the sick, by allowing them
to touch a piece of the sacred lance which he carried with him. The
Jews were much enraged at him and his two companions because they made
known in all parts the truth of the Resurrection of Jesus, and the
cruelty and deceits of his enemies. At their instigation, some Roman
soldiers were dispatched to Longinus's country to take and judge him on
the plea of his having left the army without leave, and being a
disturber of public peace. He was engaged in cultivating his field when
they arrived, and he took them to his house, and offered them
hospitality. They did not know him, and when they had acquainted him
with the object of their journey, he quietly called his two companions
who were living in a sort of hermitage at no great distance off, and
told the soldiers that they and himself were the men for whom they were
seeking. The same thing happened to the holy gardener, Phocas. The
soldiers were really distressed, for they had conceived a great
friendship for him. I saw him led with his two companions to a small
neighbouring town, where they were questioned. They were not put in
prison, but permitted to go whither they pleased, as prisoners on their
word, and. only made to wear a distinctive mark on the shoulder. Later,
they were all three beheaded on a hill, situated between the little
town and Longinus's house, and there buried. The soldiers put the head
of Longinus at the end of a spear, and carried it to Jerusalem, as a
proof that they had fulfilled their commission. I think I remember that
this took place a very few years after the death of our Lord.
Afterwards I had a vision of things happening at a later period. A
blind countrywoman of St. Longinus went with her son on a pilgrimage to
Jerusalem, in hopes of recovering her sight in the holy city where the
eyes of Longinus had been cured. She was guided by her child, but he
died, and she was left alone and disconsolate. Then St. Longinus
appeared to her, and told her that she would recover her sight when she
had drawn his head out of a sink into which the Jews had thrown it.
This sink was a deep well, with the sides bricked, and all the filth
and refuse of the town flowed into it through several drains. I saw
some persons lead the poor woman to the spot; she descended into the
well up to her neck, and draw out the sacred head, whereupon she
recovered her sight. She returned to her native land, and her
companions preserved the head. I remember no more upon this subject.
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