24 August, 2015
MessageToEagle.com - These are no ordinary places.
In order to visit these magnificent places you have to
go underground and the surrounding atmosphere makes you feel you're in almost
in a different world.

The Salt Cathedral of Zipaquirá is an underground
Roman Catholic church built within the tunnels of a salt mine 200 meters
underground in a Halite mountain near the town of Zipaquirá, in Cundinamarca,
Colombia.
Cave churches and monasteries have been around since
the beginning of the church, often as a way to seek out spiritual succor in a
remote and solitary place.
Carved into the rock, or located inside caves, they
have a raw appeal that often contrasts with urban cathedrals with stained glass
windows.
A cave monastery is a monastery built in caves, with
possible outside facilities. The 3rd century monk, St. Anthony the Great, known
as the founder of monasticism lived in a cave.

Jonas caves, Auvergne, France

Cave Church of St. Peter, Hatay, Turkey

The Hermitage Saint Antoine and his troglodyte chapel,
located at the bottom of the Gorges Galamus. The gorge is the border between
the Aude and Pyrenees-Orientales, Languedoc-Roussillon, France, Europe (P.
Eoche / Getty)

Italy, Calabria, Pizzo,
Piedigrotta church

The interior of the Panagria Hrysospiliotissa (Chapel
of Our Lady of the Cavern) in a grotto under the Temple of Dionyso, in Greece.

A general view of the Underground Serbian Orthodox
Church on May 5, 2009 in Coober Pedy, Australia. (Photo by
Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

A general view of St Samaans (Simon) Church also known
as the Cave Church in the Mokattam village, nicknamed as 'Garbage City,' is
seen on July 26, 2012 in Cairo. Once a week hundreds gather at the Cave Church
in Moqattam, after the prayer, a coptic priest performs exorcism or healing
blessing to some of the believers. With a cross and holy water he fights
spiritual entities and demons. The Monastery of St. Simon the Tanner is the
largest and it has an amphitheater with a seating capacity of 20,000 making it
the largest church in the Middle East. It is named after the Coptic Saint,
Simon the Tanner, who lived at the end of the 10th century, when Egypt was
ruled by the Muslim Fatimid Caliph Al-Muizz Lideenillah. Simon the Tanner is
the Coptic Saint who is associated with the legend of the moving of the
Mokattam Mountain. AFP PHOTO/GIANLUIGI GUERCIA

Mihalich Cave Church, Bulgaria

Chapel Of the Blessed King, Wieliczka Salt Mine,
UNESCO World Heritage Site, Krakow, Poland
You don't have to be a religious person to enjoy these
magnificent places that offer so much peace and beauty...
MessageToEagle.com.
Read more: http://www.messagetoeagle.com/articles1/incrediblerockchurches.php#ixzz3jlz2q0PI
No comments:
Post a Comment