ROME, Italy — The Museo delle Anime del Purgatorio (Museum of the Holy Souls in Purgatory) is actually just a small room in a 17th-century convent within the same building as Chiesa del Sacro Cuore del Suffragio (The Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus), yet it can scare you big time.
Outside, the church designed by engineer Giuseppe Gualandi has been sometimes dubbed as “little Milan Cathedral” for its Neo-Gothic style.
But inside is the Museum of the Holy Souls in Purgatory, founded by priest Victor Jouet following an 1897 fire that burned a chapel of the church. Behind the chapel’s burned altar was an impressed image of a man with a sad face, making Jouet believe that it was a soul in purgatory asking for prayers from the living.
Determined to help the departed in such state, Jouet collected similar artifacts and put them on display. The museum’s collection includes documents, photos and actual artifacts, including charred images and imprints of hands-on books, clothes, and desk following reports of contact from the dead asking for Masses and prayers.
Not only does it house collected artifacts of what are believed to be souls in purgatory asking for help and prayers from the living; the museum is a reminder of the obligation to remember and pray for the dead.
Catholics and some Christians like C.S. Lewis believe in the purification of the elect before finally entering Heaven, through a purifying fire mentioned by St. Paul, on those who are saved in the afterlife “but only as through fire.” (1 Corinthians 3:11-15) and following the examples of Judas Maccabeus who prayed for his slain friends in 2 Maccabees.