St. John Neumann memorial

Saint John Neumann Shrine

Philadelphia should be called the City of Saints and not the City of Brotherly Love. Philadelphia and its suburbs are the final resting places of two Catholic saints. The more macabre of the two is the Shrine of St John Neumann. You can actually see the saint, or at least his well-preserved body "under glass" inside the altar in a church in the Northern Liberties section of the city.

In fact, the shrine's official website (www.stjohnneumann.org) boasts that "St. John Neumann's remains rest under the altar, where mass is offered daily." Being born and raised Catholic, my mother had taken me to the shrine a few times. I can remember being 5 or 6 years old and wondering why the heck they stuck this guy in a glass box and made an altar out of it. Twenty-five years later, I still ask myself the same question.

The other Philadelphia saint who's bones are resting near Philadelphia (Bensalem, PA) is one of the newest saints in the Catholic Church's arsenal. St. Mother Katherine Drexel founded an order of nuns who fed, clothed and educated the poor, especially the "negro and Indian children" a hundred years ago.

Mother Drexel came from a very wealthy and connected Philadelphia family. She gave up all of her family's worldly wealth, or at least that which was bequeathed her from her father's vast estate. She used her inheritance to help the less fortunate. She was also a cousin of Jackie Kennedy. You can visit her shrine online at www.katherinedrexel.org.

Whether you are Catholic, or not, these two shrines make great stops on any Roadside America trip.

[Robert Sammons, 08/18/2002