18 October 2016

Nina's Profession!


Mom and I were so incredibly lucky to attend my aunt's First Profession of vows in Eichstätt, Germany this weekend! It was a fantastic and unforgettable trip, and I'm so thankful to everyone who made it possible for us to go. 


Our first flight was from Sioux Falls to Chicago. It's always fun to see the patchwork of farm fields from the airplane window. Seeing Chicago and the shore of Lake Michigan was cool, too.


We had a short layover in O'Hare, then boarded an Aer Lingus plane for the eight-hour flight to Dublin.






As we landed around five in the morning, we didn't get to see Dublin in daylight until the way back. 
The Dublin airport was very nice and we enjoyed the quiet and wifi until we boarded the next plane for Munich.


A beautiful sunrise from above the clouds.


After landing in Munich, we had to get a bus to the Munich train station, then hopped on two trains to reach the small town of Eichstätt. I took a panorama at the train station.


We stayed in the abbey guesthouse, and our rooms were beautiful. We were glad to take showers and change before eating dinner at the abbey.




The beds were super comfortable, especially after a night on an airplane!
 
We enjoyed the abundance of Baroque art at the abbey, including the famous Madonna found in many Bavarian towns. 


The entryway of the guesthouse had some beautiful things on the walls.




All the old doors were impressive. If I had thought to photograph more of them I could've made a post of just the dozens of doors.

Nina's profession was a beautiful ceremony, which took place in the small chapel of the abbey. Five priests concelebrated and we had front row pews. Besides us there were several oblates who attended.

The official photo of Sr. Martina OSB with her black veil.

After breakfast we were allowed a tour of the cloistered gardens, which were breathtaking, but I don't have any pictures of it. Check on mom's blog for those.

These doors lead to the upstairs and downstairs of the crypt, which contains the famous tomb of St. Walburga.

The stripy doors lead into a tunnel to the abbey courtyard.
We spent a good amount of time in the crypt, praying by the tomb of St. Walburga. Every year from around mid-October until her feast day in February, miraculous holy oil leaks from her tomb. There have been countless miraculous healings brought about by this holy oil, and the tomb has become a pilgrimage site. 

There isn't a set date that the oil starts flowing in October, so every day a sister goes down to check. On the day of Nina's profession, the sister discovered that the oil had begun flowing that day. On the day it starts the sisters go down into the crypt at night and sing the Te Deum. Normally this a strictly private affair, but Mother Francisca invited us to go with them. After singing the Te Deum, one sister climbed up and opened the door, and we went up one by one to see the oil that had collected in the bowls and condensed on the door.

The underground part of the crypt. 


On the upper level are statues of St. Walburga, her two saint brothers Willibald and Winibald, and their parents. The walls are covered with pictures commemorating healings or pilgrimages to the site.

They open this gold door to collect the oil.







Downstairs, the ceiling has pictures with bible verses involving oil.


I took several photos of other artwork. There are paintings everywhere in the abbey. This Madonna and St. Benedict hang on the wall of one of the guest parlors.



These are in another guest parlor, where we had breakfast with two priests on Sunday morning.

The building is centuries old, so the walls are very thick!
On Sunday after breakfast, Mom and I walked down into town to see some of Eichstätt. We visited the same museum and cathedral that we had gone to two years ago.

The door of the museum, which is the ruins of the old church, was wide open, so we just walked in.

St. Thomas Aquinas


Part of the floor was lined with tombs, so that part was roped off. 



Tombs in more detail



The ceiling had coats of arms, presumably belonging to Bavarian families.



We walked out through this door into one of the many cute plazas.



St. Willibald is the patron of Eichstätt, so there are statues of him everywhere.
The we went by the gorgeous bridge that we remembered from our last visit.




Later that day, Nina took us into the big church of the abbey, in which she would have had her Profession, but there was a diaconate ordination the same day. 
The abbey was established around 1035, but the Swedes came and destroyed Eichstätt during the Thirty Years War. The sisters begged them not to destroy the church, which they were in the process of restoring, so the church is the only building that remained intact, and they were able to complete the Baroque restoration and rebuild the rest of the abbey.


Every corridor of the abbey was a work of art and a history lesson. 


The local castle/bishop's residence, which is now a museum.

It was an amazing visit and we had such a fun time with the sisters, partaking of their otherworldly lifestyle for a weekend. We were sad to go but glad to return home.

Approaching Ireland.

Taking off from Chicago at 10:45pm.

We returned home at 1:30am after waking up at 5am in German time, and had a wonderful night's sleep. We'll never forget this trip, and I hope I'll be able to visit Nina and Eichstätt again soon!



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