The Lady of All Nations - Appendix 1
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Appendix I

The Eucharistic Miracle of Amsterdam

The Eucharistic Miracle of Amsterdam took place on March 15, 1345, exactly six hundred years before the first apparition of the Lady of All Nations. It happened in a house on Kalver Street. As the man who lived there lay in bed, sick and dying, a priest came to administer Last Rites. After Confession the sick man received Holy Communion, but soon afterward he vomited.

The woman caring for him swept it up, including the vomited Host, and threw it into the fire in the hearth. The next morning, however, after stirring the coals to rekindle the fire, she noticed the Host floating above the flames, still intact. She reverently placed the Blessed Sacrament in a clean linen cloth and put it in a linen chest. She sent for a priest, who silently brought the Host to St. Nicholas Church, now called ‘The Old Church’.

To everyone’s surprise, however, the next morning the Host was again found in the linen chest. The priest came for a second time, taking the Host back to St. Nicholas’s, yet the following day the Host was again in the chest. These unusual events made the priest realize that God did not want the miracle of the Host to be kept secret. After discussing the matter with his superiors, he had the Eucharistic Body of the Lord brought back along the same route from the house to the parish church, but this time in solemn procession with the clergy and faithful.

One year later the Bishop of Utrecht, having completed an official investigation, proclaimed the miracle’s credibility. The Solemnity of the Blessed Sacrament was then established as an annual Feast Day—not only for the Church, but for the whole town as well—including the yearly repetition of the solemn procession. The house in which the miracle occurred was made into a chapel.

In the course of time, one of the pilgrims to come to Amsterdam would be Maximilian, the Emperor of Austria, coming to pray for recovery from his illness. In gratitude for the recovery obtained, he granted the town of Amsterdam the right to include the
imperial crown in its coat of arms, which to this day is still included.

In 1578, the annual procession was forbidden by Amsterdam’s Protestant town council, and the chapel was made inaccessible to Catholics. The processions, however, continued in secrecy and silence, and thus did the so-called ‘Silent Way’ come into being. Revived in 1881, the ‘Silent Way’ procession has ever since occurred on the first Saturday night following March 15th. The people silently walk along the route of the first Miracle Procession, thus concluding the solemn festivities in commemoration of the Miracle.

Under great protest, the chapel was demolished in 1908. The Begijnhof Chapel [1] has meanwhile been designated as the place for commemorating the Miracle of Amsterdam.
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[1] See footnote 1 of Message 46.
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There are occasional references to Footnotes throughout. These are not included here but are included in the book: "The Messages of the Lady of All Nations" available from the addresses in Take Action


Messages given to Ida Peerdman from Our Lady (Mary, the Mother of Jesus):

First read an introduction, explanations and importance of the messages then read them as given to Ide Peerdman from the individual pages below. Included also are notes in the 6 Appendices, the Church's Position, The Prayer and addresses to Contact

Introduction  |  Explanations  |  The Themes & Their Importance
Final Marian Dogma  |  The Church's Position  |  Take Action

The Messages: 

1  |  2  | 3  |  4  | 5  | 6  |  7  | 8  | 9  |  10  | 11  | 12  |  13  | 14  | 15  |  16  | 17  |  18  |  19  | 20  | 21
22  |  23  |  24  | 25  |  26  | 27  | 28  |  29  | 30  | 31  |  32  | 33  | 34  |  35  | 36  | 37  |  38  | 39  | 40
                  41  |  42  |  43  | 44  |  45  | 46  | 47  |  4849  | 50  |  51  | 52  | 53  |  54  | 55  | 56

Appendix I  |  Appendix II  |  Appendix  III  |  Appendix IV  |  Appendix V  |  Appendix VI


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