The Stations Of The Cross commemorate the Passion and death of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Each of the fourteen stations reminds us of an event of Jesus' Passion and death on Good Friday. A person making the Stations Of The Cross stops at each of the 14 stations to pray and meditate about the event depicted at the station.

We are judged unjustly, we fall, we find life's journey hard, we cower from the mystery of death. Images of hope offered in His passion help us face life's dark side in ourselves and in our world.

Fourteen frescoes, each  depicting a Station Of The Cross, are mounted on the side walls of the church. To make the Stations of the Cross, go to each station to pray and meditate about that particular event suffered by Jesus during His Passion and death.

Where did the Stations of the Cross come from?
After Jesus died and rose from the dead, many people reflected upon his passion and death. They began to make visits to Jerusalem and walk in Jesus' footsteps. The street Jesus walked is still called Via Dolorosa, the way of pain. People would stop along the way and remember what had happened to Jesus. They marked the places for those who came after them to follow as well. These people became known as "pilgrims."

As Christianity spread throughout the know world, distance made it nearly impossible for people to make the trip to Jerusalem. That didn't stop their need to know and remember. By the twelfth century the fervor of the Crusades and a heightened devotion to the Passion of Jesus created a demand in Europe for representations of the last events in Jesus' life.

When the Franciscans took over the custody of the shrines in the Holy Land in 1342, they saw it as their mission to encourage devotion to these places. In western Europe a series of shrines erected to help the faithful remember Christ's passion became commonplace. They were erected outside Churches and monasteries and in other places as well. For many years there was a considerable variety in the number and title of these "stations." The current number of fourteen first appeared in the Low Countries in the sixteenth century and became standard in the eighteenth century with a series of papal pronouncements.

The chief promoter of this devotion was the Franciscan Leonard of Port Maurice (died 1751), who set up more than five hundred sets of stations, the best know being the one in the Coliseum of Rome. Modern liturgists have emphasized that devotion to the Passion is incomplete without reference to the Resurrection and have thus fostered the addition of a "fifteenth station," the Resurrection of Jesus