Benedictine Medal - 2 Sided - Multicolor - 2 Sizes

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Benedictine Medal - 2 Sided - Multicolor - 2 Sizes

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Print Profile(8)

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A1 mini
P1S
P1P
X1
X1 Carbon
X1E
A1

1 0.2mm 30mm diameter
1 0.2mm 30mm diameter
Designer
9 min
1 plate
5.0(1)

1 0.4mm 60mm diameter
1 0.4mm 60mm diameter
Designer
17 min
1 plate

1 0.2mm multicoloured 30mm diamete
1 0.2mm multicoloured 30mm diamete
Designer
1.4 h
1 plate

1 0.4mm multicoloured 60mm diameter
1 0.4mm multicoloured 60mm diameter
Designer
33 min
1 plate
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Description

This is a 3d printable version of the Catholic sacremental, the benedictine medal.

 

The medal is a very powerful defence against demons.

 

This medal will protect you and your family, ditribute it to everyone you know with your 3d printer. One should get the specil blesing for the medal to get it blessed. Scroll down and fine the blessing here.

 

This medal will print well. However, with a 0.4mm nozzle you should not print it smaller than 50mm in diamter. With a 0.2mm nozzle no less than 25mm is permitted.

This model is 2 sized so the side that prints downwards will not be the greatests quality.

 

From Catholic.org

A medal, originally a cross, dedicated to the devotion in honour of St. Benedict.

One side of the medal bears an image of St. Benedict, holding a cross in the right hand and the Holy Rule in the left. On the one side of the image is a cup, on the other a raven, and above the cup and the raven are inscribed the words: "Crux Sancti Patris Benedicti" (Cross of the Holy Father Benedict). Round the margin of the medal stands the legend "Ejus in obitu nro praesentia muniamus" (May we at our death be fortified by his presence). The reverse of the medal bears a cross with the initial letters of the words: "Crux Sacra Sit Mihi Lux" (The Holy Cross be my light), written downward on the perpendicular bar; the initial letters of the words, "Non Draco Sit Mihi Dux" (Let not the dragon be my guide), on the horizontal bar; and the initial letters of "Crux Sancti Patris Benedicti" in the angles of the cross. Round the margin stand the initial letters of the distich: "Vade Retro Satana, Nunquam Suade Mihi Vana — Sunt Mala Quae Libas, Ipse Venena Bibas" (Begone, Satan, do not suggest to me thy vanities — evil are the things thou profferest, drink thou thy own poison). At the top of the cross usually stands the word Pax (peace) or the monogram I H S (Jesus).

 

The medal just described is the so-called jubilee medal, which was struck first in 1880, to commemorate the fourteenth centenary of St. Benedict's birth. The Archabbey of Monte Cassino has the exclusive right to strike this medal. The ordinary medal of St. Benedict usually differs from the preceding in the omission of the words "Ejus in obitu etc.", and in a few minor details. (For the indulgences connected with it see Beringer, "Die Ablässe", Paderborn, 1906, p. 404-6.) The habitual wearer of the jubilee medal can gain all the indulgences connected with the ordinary medal and, in addition: (1) all the indulgences that could be gained by visiting the basilica, crypt, and tower of St. Benedict at Monte Cassino ( Pius IX, 31 December, 1877); (2) a plenary indulgence on the feast of All Souls (from about two o'clock in the afternoon of 1 November to sunset of 2 November), as often as ( toties quoties ), after confession and Holy Communion, he visits any church or public oratory, praying there according to the intention of the pope, provided that he is hindered from visiting a church or public oratory of the Benedictines by sickness, monastic enclosure or a distance of at least 1000 steps. (Decr. 27 February, 1907, in Acta S. Sedis, LX, 246.) Any priest may receive the faculties to bless these medals.

It is doubtful when the Medal of St. Benedict originated. During a trial for witchcraft at Natternberg near the Abbey of Metten in Bavaria in the year 1647, the accused women testified that they had no power over Metten, which was under the protection of the cross. Upon investigation, a number of painted crosses, surrounded by the letters which are now found on Benedictine medals, were found on the walls of the abbey, but their meaning had been forgotten. Finally, in an old manuscript, written in 1415, was found a picture representing St. Benedict holding in one hand a staff which ends in a cross, and a scroll in the other. On the staff and scroll were written in full the words of which the mysterious letters were the initials. Medals bearing the image of St. Benedict, a cross, and these letters began now to be struck in Germany, and soon spread over Europe. They were first approved by Benedict XIV in his briefs of 23 December, 1741, and 12 March, 1742.

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1 0.2mm 30mm diameter
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