Across 3,500 km, a straight line connects 7 ancient sanctuaries, all dedicated to Saint Michael the Archangel
From the West to the Holy Land, all perfectly aligned.
A coincidence? Or a path traced by Heaven?
The Line of Saint Michael - a🧵✝️
The first point is Skellig Michael island, in Ireland.
Medieval monks arrived here in the 7th century and built a church dedicated to Saint Michael around 950 A.D.
The next is St. Michael’s Mount, in England.
A monastery was built here in the 8th century.
But local tradition says the connection is much older.
Saint Michael was seen by fishermen here in 495 A.D.
In the year 708, Saint Michael appeared to Bishop Aubert of Avranches and ordered the construction of an oratory on a rocky island surrounded by the sea.
Thus was born the famous Mont Saint-Michel, which never fell to its enemies.
Next is the Sacra di San Michele, atop Mount Pirchiriano in Italy.
Its origin story is a vision of Saint Michael, he appeared to a hermit here in 980 A.D. and told him to build an abbey.
The next one is even older: the Sanctuary of San Michele, in southern Italy.
Saint Michael appeared here in 490 A.D., and again in 663, helping the Lombards defeat invaders in battle.
There, he consecrated a place of worship without the need for human blessing: “I myself have consecrated it.”
Then comes a Greek island named Symi.
Most of its churches are dedicated to Saint Michael, including the one in Panormitis.
It dates back to 450 A.D. and was built around a miraculous image of Saint Michael.
The final point is the Stella Maris Monastery in Israel, very near Nazareth.
It also overlooks a cliff. This is where the prophet Elijah lived, and the monastery was built over one of his caves.
Like Michael, Elijah is often depicted wielding a sword.
But how precise is the line?
When all 7 points are plotted as an arc connecting the midpoints and end, the line has a width of about 20 km, just a coincidence?
The deviation of the sites from the line ranges from 14km to 42km.
According to a 9th-century text, Mont-Saint-Michel was the exact spot where Saint Michael defeated Satan (in the form of a dragon), as described in the New Testament.
Tradition says this line represents the strike of Saint Michael’s sword, casting Lucifer from Heaven (Revelation 12,7-9).
It also symbolizes the call to penance, all the sanctuaries are located on mountaintops, places of retreat, spiritual battle, and vision.
When the Spanish Civil War broke out in 1936, revolutionary mobs stormed churches & persecuted the faithful.
One of the first things they did?
They opened fire on a statue of Jesus Christ.
Why? Because it was a war against God.
The Spanish Civil War & Christ's Victory - a 🧵🇪🇸
The Spanish Civil War wasn’t just politics.
It was a war against God.
The Republican side, dominated by communists and anarchists, launched one of the bloodiest persecutions of Christians in modern history.
Churches were burned, altars desecrated & priests tortured and killed.
Over 6,800 clergy were martyred.
Entire convents were emptied and turned into brothels.
Nuns were persecuted, paraded through the streets, and executed.
Statues of saints were dragged through the mud.
Communist slogans replaced crucifixes.
In 1627, Cardinal Richelieu, stood at the front lines of war.
A Protestant stronghold defied crown and altar.
The Church was in peril.
He wasn’t carrying a sword, but he did build a seawall across the sea.
The Siege of La Rochelle - a 🧵✝️
La Rochelle wasn’t just any city.
It was France’s most powerful Protestant stronghold, wealthy, defiant, and allied with England.
Richelieu saw it as a threat to both monarchy and Church.
To save the kingdom from fracture, he believed one faith, one king was essential.
So he acted.
Richelieu launched a massive siege.
But the Huguenots had the sea, and England’s navy, to supply them.
So the Cardinal did the unthinkable:
He engineered a seawall across the harbor.
1,500 meters long. Built with rubble, sunken ships, and cannon emplacements.
If the tale of Saint Christopher doesn't make you want to hit the gym I don't know what will.
He was a warrior who served kings, then the devil himself.
But when he met Christ, everything changed.
This is the story of Saint Christopher, the Christ-bearer - 🧵✝️
They say his name was Reprobus.
He was said to be a Canaanite, a giant in both stature and strength.
So powerful, he vowed to serve only the greatest king on earth. But that quest would take him to the edge of hell, and back.
First, he served a mighty human king.
But when that king trembled at the mention of the devil, Reprobus left him. “I will serve the devil,” he said, “for he must be mightier.” And so he did.