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The Professed House Despite the opposition, which the Jesuits faced, the building was completed in 1585. A part of the building was accidentally burnt down in 1663 and was rebuilt in 1783. The Church Of Bom Jesus The roof was originally tiled. The church is cruciform on plan. The flying buttresses on the northern side of the church are recent additions. |
A single-storeyed structure adjoining the church on its southern wing connects it with the professed house.
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The three-storeyed facade facing west, shows Ionic, Doric and
Corinthian Orders, and a main entrance flanked by two smaller ones,
each having Corinthian columns supporting a pediment.
Within the church are two chapels, a main altar and a sacristy besides a choir at the entrance. A belfry is at the back.
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A Blend OF Renaissance & Baroque
Styles Excepting the richly gilded altars, the interior of the church is remarkable for its simplicity. While the facade has the classical orders of the Renaissance, the altars are in Baroque style. The church is called "Bom Jesus" meaning 'good Jesus' or 'infant Jesus' to whom it is dedicated.The facade has on it, at the top, the letters, "HIS" which are the first three letters of Jesus in Greek. The two columns supporting the choir bear slabs inscribed in Portuguese and Latin recording that the construction of this Church of Jesus was commenced on 24 November 1594 and Fr. Alexia de Menezes, |
The Archbishop of Goa and Primate of India consecrated it on 15 May 1605, when it was completed.
Within The Church's Domicile
As one enters, beneath the choir, to the right is an altar of St.
Anthony and to the left is an exceedingly well-carved wooden statue of
St. Francis Xavier. In the middle of the nave on the northern wall is
the cenotaph of the benefactor of this church, Dom Jeronimo
Mascarenhas, the Captain of Cochin, who died in 1593, bequeathing the
resources out of which this church was built.
Opposite the cenotaph, projecting on the southern wall is a profusely carved wooden pulpit with a canopy on top. The pulpit has on its three sides the figures of Jesus, the four evangelists and four doctors of the church. The bottom of the pulpit depicts seven figures as though supporting it.
The Main Altar
The main altar at the end of the nave is flanked by two decorated
altars in the transept, one dedicated to Our Lady of Hope and the other
to St. Michael. The richly gilded main altar has the figure of infant
Jesus and above it is a large statue of St. Ignatius Loyola, founder of
the order of Jesuits, gazing with fervour at a medallion on which is
inscribed "HIS". Above the medallion, the Holy trinity - the Father,
the Son and the Holy Ghost are depicted. In the transept on the
northern side is the Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament.
The Chapel
On the southern side in the transept is a chapel with gilded twisted
columns and floral decorations of wood, where the sacred relics of the
body of St. Francis Xavier are kept. The interior of this chapel is
richly adorned with wooden carvings and paintings, depicting the scenes
from the life of the Saint.
The Ornate Grandeur
The rectangular base of the tomb is of jasper of reddish and purple
colours decorated with carvings in white marble. Above the basement is
another rectangular mass of slightly lesser dimensions having a plaque
in bronze on each of its four sides depicting the scenes from the life
of the saint, and two cherubs holding scrolls.
Significance
Religious
Depicting The Life Of St. Xavier Through Paintings On the southern wall
are paintings in Italian School arranged in three rows. In the bottom
row are two paintings showing St. Francis Xavier being received by
certain Portuguese noblemen and his interview with the King of Bango in
Japan. In the middle row are three paintings respectively showing
Xavier praying with fervour for cessation of plague that broke out in
Manas Island, kissing the repulsive ulcer wound of a patient in a
hospital at Venice and the Pope Paul III pronouncing his apostolic
benediction on the eve of his departure to India.
In the top row are, three paintings of Xavier as a servant of a knight, his sad demise at Sancian, an island off the coast of China and the saint in ecstasy. There are also other paintings on the remaining three sides of the chapel, fixed in decorated wooden frames depicting the scenes from his life and the miracles performed by him. A painting, in oil on canvas, of ST. Francis Xavier is mounted on the top of the wooden door at the back of the chapel
General Information
Location
Old Goa, Panjim, Goa.
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