Many people travel great distances to visit the preserved remains of a nun who passed away in 2019 at the age of 95.

Thousands of people have been traveling to a small rural Missouri hamlet to see Sister Wilhemina Lancaster, a Catholic nun. Thereโ€™s a catch, though. Since 2019, she has passed away.

Sister Wilhemina Lancaster of the Most Holy Rosary, OSB, passed away on May 29, 2019, at the age of 95, and very little degradation has occurred in her body since then, according to the Catholic News Agency.

Sisters from the Benedictines of Mary, Queen of Apostles Monastery in Gower, Missouri, took Lancasterโ€™s remains into their chapel, which is when the shocking discovery was made.

One sister told Newsweek, โ€œWe were told by cemetery staff to expect just bones.โ€

But to their surprise, they discovered an almost entirely undamaged body.

Sister Wilhemina was interred in a wooden casket after she passed away and was not embalmed. Sister Wilheminaโ€™s remains were almost completely intact, except for a layer of mildew that had developed from a break in the casket.

โ€œI didnโ€™t just see that,โ€ the witness stated, โ€œbecause I believed I had seen a fully developed, intact foot.โ€ The residing abbess referred to Mother Cecilia, OSB. โ€œSo I took another, closer look.โ€

Everyone was stunned.

We need hope at this time.

Catholic tradition holds that โ€œincorruptible saintsโ€ have seen the afterlife and the resurrection of the body. They are referred to as incorruptible since their bodies exhibit little to no evidence of deterioration even years after death.

The absence of deterioration also represents a relationship to Christ.

Over one hundred of the reported instances of incorruptible bodies have received canonization or beatification, numbering in the several hundred ranges.

The Diocese of Kanas City-St. Joseph issued a statement acknowledging the โ€œwidespread interestโ€ and inevitable โ€œimportant questions.โ€

To enable a comprehensive inquiry, it is crucial to maintain the integrity of Sister Wilhelminaโ€™s mortal remains.

In addition to finding Sister Wilheminaโ€™s remains unharmed, the sisters also discovered that the objects she was buried with, including her clothing, were in โ€œremarkably preserved condition.โ€

Even more amazing was that her holy clothing, made of natural fibers and for which she struggled so fervently throughout her monastic life, had been completely preserved. The synthetic coffin lining was fully destroyed, constructed of a substance identical to the synthetic veil.

The sisters constructed a wax mask of Sister Wilheminaโ€™s face and hands after removing the โ€œmask of thick moldโ€ from her face. The preservation procedure and air exposure led to some deterioration, but the corpse was largely unharmed.

Since Sister Wilheminaโ€™s discovery, thousands have traveled to the small hamlet to pay their respects. According to Clinton County Sheriff Larry Fish, over the Memorial Day weekend, they anticipate anywhere between 10 and 15,000 people daily.

After several days on display, Sister Wilheminaโ€™s body was placed in a glass case close to the chapelโ€™s altar.

Itโ€™s considered a miracle by many. Some contest it. How do you feel? Please tell us in the comments.


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