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STATIONS OF THE See also: Pilate, (2) the reception of the See also: cross, (3) Christ's first fall, (4) the meeting with His See also: mother, (5) See also: Simon of See also: Cyrene carrying the cross, (6) See also: Veronica wiping the face of Jesus, (q) the second fall, (8) the exhortation to the See also: women of
Jerusalem, (9) the third fall, (1o) the stripping of the clothes, (II) the crucifixion, (12) the See also: death, (13) the descent from the cross, (14) the See also: burial
.
Sometimes a 15th—the finding of the cross by Helena—is added; on the other See also: hand in the diocese of Vienna, the stations were at the end of the 18th century reduced to eleven
..
They See also: form a very popular item in See also: Roman Catholic devotion
.
The representations are usually ranged round the See also: church; sometimes they are found in the open air, especially on the ascent to some elevated church or shrine
.
The devotion began among the Franciscans, who, as the guardians of the
See also: holy places in Jerusalem, sought by this means to enable Christians to make a pilgrimage at least in spirit
.
See also: Pope Innocent XII. in 1694 declared that the indulgences granted for visiting See also: Palestine might be gained by members of the See also: order who, simply visiting the stations of the cross wherever represented, exercised a devout meditation as they passed from station to station
.
These indulgences were extended by Benedict XIII. in 1726 to all the faithful, and See also: Clement XII. five years later granted the See also: privilege to churches other than See also: Francis-can, provided the stations were erected by a Franciscan
.
In 1857 the Roman Catholic bishops in See also: England received faculties, renewed quinquenially, permitting them to erect the stations with the accompanying indulgences, and they often delegate this faculty to priests
.
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