Saturday, January 25, 2014

The Church of Santa Maria Maggiore, Rome, Italy


    Looking southeast, crowning the Esquiline Hill, lies the imposing hulk of the basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore. Rome is built partly on swamp and marsh, and partly on densely packed volcanic soil called, in Italian, tufa.  The tufa has two qualities; it transmits city noise easily and it absorbs the heat of the day. This has always made sleeping in Rome a challenge. Pope Liberius was having trouble sleeping one night in August of 356 A.D. It was hot (air conditioning in Italy to this day does not meet U.S. standards), and noisy. Suddenly, he had a strange experience: The Blessed Mother appeared to him and commanded that a church be built in her honor on the summit of the Esquiline, with one of the best views of RomeShe assured Liberius that she would send a sign the next day to show exactly where she wanted her church constructed. The next morning, all Rome was astounded to see that snow had fallen in August on the hill in the shape of the future basilica!

The outline of the church was pretty bigLiberius was trying to figure out what all this would cost when he received word that someone else had also had trouble sleeping the night before. A wealthy Roman businessman named John the Patrician (why dont we have names like that today?), rushed up and told an incredible story. The Holy Mother had also appeared to him in a dream, and commanded him to finance any and all construction of basilicas that the Pope might dream about! Talk about your miracles! And so the church was built, one of the most beautiful—though not the largest--of Romes basilicas. The church is unique in that it was not built to mark the site of a saints grave or to specifically house precious relics. According to the Doctrine of the Assumption, Mary, after dying, was assumed--her body intact--into heaven, leaving no physical remains behind on earth.

Now the problems begin. Near the apse is an ancient inscription naming the basilicas patron—and its not Liberius.  Santa Maria was actually built by Pope Sixtus III (432-40) according to this inscription. And if you want to know the truth, even thats not right!  It seems to have been Pope Celestine I (422-32) who first started construction. In 431, Celestine had presided over the Council of Ephesus during which a ferocious argument had occurred over the nature of Christ. A monk named Nestorius claimed that Christ contained within himself two separate natures; divine and human, the lesser nature being human, which he derived from Mary. This argument was rejected by the council, and Celestine came back to Rome determined to build a church to the divine, and greater, nature, and dedicate it to Mary, the bearer of God (Theotokos).  He began construction in 431. Good story though. Bet the part about the local businessmen having to pay for it all is true though.