Mission Concepcion’s Annual ‘Double Solar Illumination' Attracts Hundreds

By Morgan Montalvo 

WOAI News   

San Antonio’s Roman Catholic community turned out by the hundreds last  evening to witness an annual phenomenon that some say is an example of  creative architecture, while others consider it a manifestation of  faith: Mission Concepcion’s Double Solar Illumination.   

The event takes place when sunlight enters each of two windows and, for a  moment as the earth moves, rays simultaneously shine on a rendering of  the Immaculate Conception behind the altar and a central point on the  floor of the cross-shaped, centuries-old church.  

 Concepcion’ lay volunteer Ethel Rios said the visual leaves people in total amazement

“All you see is open mouths, dropped jaws, you know, and it gets  completely quiet,” said Rios, who has witnessed ten of the events, “a  quiet like you’ve never known. And it’s beautiful.”   

Cynthia Solis and her son drove from Killeen to see the double illumination. 

She considers the display an affirmation of faith. 

“It humbles me to know that I’m a daughter of God, and that he loves me  and that there are so many people here sharing in the fellowship of the  one Christ,” Solis said

.   A crowd estimated in excess of 500 witnessed the event, one of the  largest in recent years, says Fr. David Garcia who manages the local  missions one behalf of the San Antonio Archdiocese.   

”When you see how it illuminates the different things, it really moves  you spiritually,” said Garcia. “And that’s what the Franciscans and the  Native Americans, when they built it, that’s what they wanted.  

“It was a spiritual experience for people who would come,” Garcia said. 

Mission Concepcion was completed in 1731 under the supervision of  Catholic Franciscan friars by Spanish settlers and Native American  laborers who converted to Christianity and is considered the  best-preserved of the local missions. 

Concepcion and its sister missions  in San Antonio now are listed among United Nations World Heritage  Sites.  

The illumination, Garcia told the gathering awaiting the event, was a  way the mission's architects could incorporate the Sun, an important  celestial element in Native American worship and establish a common  spiritual reference point.   

The event also coincides with the church's annual Feast of the  Assumption of Mary, celebrated as the day of her ascension into Heaven..   

Garcia says Native American groups, many of them descendants of the  church’s builders, continue to hold events on the mission grounds,  testimony to lasting goodwill between European colonists and the area’s  original inhabitants, as well as Concepcion’s historic, cultural and  religious significance. 


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