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| Build and Beautify Your Domestic Church
This sale ends Tuesday at midnight.
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Week 2: Mantle Stations
The ideal home-based tool for Lenten prayer, the Mantle Stations of the Cross are hinged together for easy display and arrangement.
The Stations of the Cross is made up of 14 individual full-color glossy plaques, each measuring at 4"x6", hinged together accordion-style. The Stations fold together in seconds for easy storage.
The second week of Lent, March 8th-March 14th, we are offering 30% off all Mantle Stations!
Coupon Code: SACREDSPACEDIP enter this code at checkout to receive your discount |
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| | The Bertucci Stations The Bertucci Stations of the Cross set is named after the unidentified artist who painted the images in the late 18th century, thought to perhaps be the obscure Italian painter Nicola Bertucci. Characteristic of the Italian, late baroque style, the Bertucci Stations of the Cross feature lush textures and vivid coloration, particularly in the deep blue sky and the vibrant red robe worn by Christ. With the Blessed Mother taking over as the central figure in stations thirteen and fourteen, these Stations of the Cross offer an additional element of Marian devotion and meditation that is unique to this set. |
| The Emmerich Stations The Emmerich Stations of the Cross set is named after Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerich, the German nun and mystic who wrote the highly influential meditation The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ. This set of stations was painted in the German style by an unknown artist in the late 19th century. Recognizable for its illuminated golden halos around the heads of Christ and His followers, as well as for the rich contrast and shadowing throughout the set, the Emmerich Stations of the Cross convey the beauty and sacrifice of Jesus’ Passion with a blend of modern and traditional styles.
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| St. Peter's Stations A slice of Steubenville, the images of this station set are taken from the Stations of the Cross at St. Peter’s Catholic Church in downtown Steubenville. If you have ever been to our city, you likely saw the magnificent red/orange dome of St. Peter’s towering above the downtown Steubenville skyline. St. Peter’s has the honor of being Steubenville’s oldest parish and is arguably the most beautiful church in our diocese, rivaled only by its identical twin to the far south, St. Mary of the Assumption in Marietta, Ohio, which was granted the status of a Minor Basilica by Pope Francis in 2013.
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