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Pilgrimage;

Pilgrimage;. A pilgrimage is a journey made by a pilgrim to a sacred place. Place of religious significance. Santiago de Compostela. Homework. Write a half a page on a place of religious significance Include why this place is significant and the actions pilgrims take part in.

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Pilgrimage;

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  1. Pilgrimage; • A pilgrimage is a journey made by a pilgrim to a sacred place.

  2. Place of religious significance Santiago de Compostela

  3. Homework • Write a half a page on a place of religious significance • Include why this place is significant and the actions pilgrims take part in.

  4. The pilgrim route is cared for by the Roman Catholic church, and is used by Christians from all denominations. We met people from different churches, and from all over the world, while walking along the way

  5. I wore a shell, the symbol of pilgrims travelling on this route. In the Middle Ages pilgrims earned their shell when they arrived at Compostela, and wore it proudly as they walked back home. They would display it on the doorpost of their house

  6. The route is way-marked with shells to show the way. • Before we set off, we were each given a Pilgrim's Passport. We had great fun getting this stamped at each church and café along the route, to show that we had been there.

  7. I've been on pilgrimage before - to Lourdes, when I wanted time and space to listen to God about whether he wanted me to serve as a Minister in his church. I use the shell from that journey when baptising, as baptism is the symbol of the start of our journey of faith in Christ.

  8. I went on the journey to Compostela to say thank-you to God for the joy of ten years serving as a Minister in his church. Each of us were also sponsored, to raise money for The Children's Society.

  9. We set off on our first day. The other people were walking, but I rode a horse, because I cannot walk very well. The horse is called 'Throno'! It was very hot, and Throno kept trying to turn around and go home. Along the way, there are a lot of wayside churches. These have been built by the pilgrims, so that they will have somewhere to sleep in on the journey, as well as somewhere to pray. The storks like to build nests on the top of these!

  10. It was very hard work riding the horse all day, so we needed to make lots of stops. In the villages there were cafés to serve refreshments to the pilgrims. • At the end of each day we celebrated the communion service together, in one of the way-side churches. We started and ended each day's journey with prayers. Pilgrimage is about travelling with God. I spent time talking and listening to him along the way. The Christian life is like a pilgrimage - we are travelling with God as we journey on

  11. Some bits of the journey were very difficult. On the second day, there was a very steep uphill climb in the hot sun. In some places, the path was so steep Throno found it hard to find a way through. Sometimes life is hard, and it is difficult to know where to go. I believe that even though we can't see him, God is always with us, to help us and show us what to do when times are hard.

  12. There was a very narrow bridge, high up over a motorway, where the traffic roared past underneath. The horse's hooves made loud noises on the metal bridge, and all the noise frightened the horse. The other pilgrims calmed and comforted him, and we all crossed safely. We all need to help each other as we go through life.

  13. On another very hot day, we found a stream running across the path, under cool, shady trees. Everybody else walked across the bridge, but I rode Throno into the stream. The horse stopped and played in the water, and I had to get off quickly, just before he rolled in it! We thought Throno had the right idea, and soon everybody was paddling in the stream. I thought about the bit in the Bible which says that God lets me rest in green meadows, and leads me beside peaceful streams (Psalm 23 verse 2).

  14. On the final day, we made a garland of hedgerow flowers to put around Throno's neck, to celebrate our arrival. We entered the cathedral square, to the traditional sound of Spanish bagpipes. We went into the cathedral for the service.

  15. We had arrived in time for the midday communion service, that celebrated the Feast of St. John the Baptist. In the service, they swung the 'Bottafumerio' - a giant incense burner. It is swung right across the cathedral, belching flames and filling the church with wonderful-smelling incense smoke

  16. From ancient times the smoke of incense has been a symbol of our prayers rising to God. You can read about this in The Bible, Psalm 141 verse 2. It took seven men, dressed in red robes, to pull the ropes which swung the Bottafumerio

  17. After the service we went to the Pilgrim's Office, to hand in our Pilgrim's Passports, and to be given our certificates. Today, these replace the shell, and show that we have finished the pilgrimage

  18. I'm really glad that I went on this pilgrimage, as it was a wonderful way of saying thank-you to God for walking with me in my life. This was a journey where I felt God very close to me. It was good to travel in a group. The friendship of the other pilgrims was wonderful. We all supported each other, as God supports us.

  19. Now I am back home,I use the shell from my pilgrimagefor baptising

  20. St James the Greater is one of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus Christ. The saints of the Christian church can often be identified by a device, known as their attribute. Here St James holds a pilgrim's staff with a drinking bottle attached. He is usually shown as a pilgrim, and often wears a hat with a cockleshell attached.

  21. During the medieval period in northern Spain, a legend developed that he had travelled to the coast of Galicia in order to convert the local population. After he was martyred in Jerusalem, his servant brought his body back to Galicia by sea. As the boat approached the shore, a startled horse threw its rider to the ground, and the man drowned. The servant prayed, and miraculously the man emerged alive from the water, covered in cockleshells, which is why James is shown with a shell.

  22. The route to Santiago Di Compostella in North West Spain, where tradition has it that the remains of the apostleSaint James are buried.

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