Well, in all honesty, I am not surprised you have not heard the term. I was somewhat shocked when I came across it here in this forum. The last time I had a real conversation about this was…perhaps…in the 1970s.
As I said, I have one of these. It was given to me by a Franciscan Friar years before I was ordained and back when I was a young aspirant to the priesthood. The friar was quite elderly at that point but he had been given this faculty I don’t know how many years before and he explained the sacramental very well. I can’t remember his name at this point but he had a responsibility relative to the programme.
It was an apostolate the Franciscans had. They were the great promoters, once upon a time, of the Way of the Cross because of the history of that devotion. The Way of the Cross was something I’ve always treasured and that led to this friar gifting me with this crucifix. This sacramental was something devised that allowed the housebound to gain the indulgences for the Stations of the Cross but it could be used in traveling and so forth.
Father Hardon, as I remember, was ordained just after the War so I am not surprised he knew and promoted these. It’s a perfectly lovely thing but it’s not how those who are impeded would today do the Way of the Cross…we changed all that in 1967. Anyone, anywhere, now could gain the indulgence for making the Way of the Cross without needing to possess one of these crucifixes.
There are so many things like this…sacramentals that passed out of vogue. As another example, and speaking of the Franciscans, I was a member of their Archconfraternity of the Cord of Saint Francis as well as the Guard of Honor of the Immaculate Heart. Over the course of my day, as I go about my rounds, I still say the prayers as they’re in my memory. The last time I visited the friars in Assisi, I asked and the archconfraternity is still around though the focus is really on the secular order and that’s what they direct people to nowadays. As for the Guard of Honor…the elderly friars vaguely remembered it had existed and, like here, the younger were curious as to what I was talking about. I shouldn’t be at all surprised to learn I am among the last living members…though surely Our Blessed Lady does not want for devotees of her Immaculate Heart notwithstanding.
These sorts of things exist as references in various books that are becoming ever more obscure but, as with the Station Crucifix, I think it is really more convenient if you can find someone who remembers it – at least as long as we are still among the living. I am hardly surprised at the lack of reference on the Internet about these things.
If you seriously want to learn more about the Station Crucifix, I looked in one of the old manuals for you and I have a reference you can track down. You’d have to go back to the
Acta Apostolicae Sedis of 1933…but here are the references:
*III. The Station Crucifix.
All those who are legitimately hindered from making the Stations of the Cross, can gain the indulgences of the Stations of the Cross if they hold a crucifix blessed for that purpose in their hand and say twenty Paters, Aves and Glorias, and briefly meditate or reflect on the Passion of Christ.
If on account of manual labor or any other reasonable cause the faithful are hindered from holding the Station Crucifix in their hand according to the prescribed form, they can gain the indulgences attached to it provided that when saying the prescribed prayers they carry the Station Crucifix in any manner on their person. A. A. S., 1933,
p. 502.
- Faculty to Bless the Station Crucifix: the General, all the Provincials and local superiors of the Order of Friars Minor, have by virtue of their office, and in their absence, their representatives, as specified in the General Constitutions.
Since April 1, 1933, the General of the Order of Friars Minor can delegate this faculty only to priests of the Order. However, those priests outside of the Order who had obtained this delegation prior to April 1, 1933, can still use it. A. A. S., 1933, p. 322. *