Did you know that there really is a
sword in the stone and that it was put there by the first person to be declared
a saint by a formal process?
See the pictures @ http://www.churchpop.com/2014/08/14/the-real-sword-in-the-stone-belonged-to-the-rccs-first-official-saint/
In the
small Italian town of Chiusdino, there’s a small chapel near Saint
Galgano Abbey known as Montesiepi chapel. And inside you’ll find a big
slab of stone in the floor with the handle of a sword sticking out of it.
How did
it get there? Well the story goes that in the 12th century there was a knight
named Galgano Guidotti who, toward the end of
his life, decided to retire as a hermit. He then had two mystical visions: in
the first, the Archangel Michael said he would personally protect him; and in
the second, he met the Twelve Apostles and God himself. When the second vision
ended, he decided to commemorate the place with a cross. Since he had no
other materials, he stuck his sword into the ground as a cross. Immediately,
the ground hardened up around it and it’s been stuck there ever since.
Just
four years after his death, Pope Lucius III started a formal canonization
process that ended with Guidotti being declared a saint – the first such person
to be declared a saint by a formal process of the Roman Catholic Church.
Apparently “countless people have tried
to steal the sword. In the chapel you can see what are said to be the mummified
hands of a thief that tried to remove the sword and was then suddenly
slaughtered by wild wolves.”
Though
the sword is in Italy, some people think it may have influenced the
English legend of King Arthur.
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