07 APRIL - OUR MOTHER OF PUIG (SPAIN)
Early in history the monks acquired the image of Our Mother of Puig, carved on a slab of marble, which was brought there by Angels.
In 712 AD, the monks sadly buried their treasure to hide it from desecration, along with the Church bell, under the floor of the monastery, and fled for their lives.
After five centuries, the Moors were expelled from Valencia, and the plaque of Our Mother of Puig played a part in its liberation. King Jamie I of Aragon moved on Valencia
with his armies. The Moors, in an effort to trick the Christians into sending their troops to the wrong place, moved to attack the ancient fortress of Puig. St. Peter Nolasco,
was in Puig when the battle took place. One of the soldiers came to him and reported that when he had been on night guard he had seen strange lights over the old ruined Church
of Our Mother of Puig; St. Peter suggested to the king that all the soldiers should receive the Sacraments and pray to know what God was trying to tell them.
After this had been done, he led them to the top of the hill and directed them to dig under the floor of the old monastery. Here they found the plaque and the bell,
buried for 500 years, but unharmed. The plaque was first carried to the Chapel of the castle fortress. The church built by St. Peter was called “The Angelic Chamber”
because Angels were often heard singing there in the night.
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