Monday's (Feb. 11) surprising announcement by Pope Benedict XVI that he
was resigning from the papacy struck some observers like a bolt out of
the blue.
And a few hours later, an actual bolt of lightning struck St. Peter's
Basilica, the centerpiece of the Vatican and one of the holiest sites in
Christendom, NBC News reported.
Was the lightning strike, coming just hours after Pope Benedict's announcement,
evidence of God's wrath, or some ominous sign from above? Perhaps, but
it was more likely the natural result of a rainstorm that was passing
over Rome at the time.
Lightning often strikes religious symbols,
because they are usually placed high in the sky and are, in many cases,
the highest thing around. Coupled with the fact that they're often made
of metal, lightning striking religious statuary or other icons seems
quite normal.
Brazil's 130-foot "Christ the Redeemer" statue atop Rio de Janeiro's
Sugarloaf Mountain, for example, has been struck by lightning several
times since it was completed in 1931.
Secular objects are also often struck by lightning. Airplanes are struck by lightning frequently, and the Statue of Liberty, the Empire State Building and other tall buildings have all been hit.
St. Peter's Basilica is the tallest dome in the world at 448 feet (137
meters) from the floor to the cross that was added to the very top by
Pope Clement VIII in the 16th century. A lightning rod points skyward
from the top of that cross — it's likely that this is what was struck by
lightning Monday.
Source: yahoo.com
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