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"Our
Lady"
Concordance
by Fred Schaeffer, SFO |
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Devotion to Our Lady, the
Mother of Jesus, and our mother, among Franciscans is legendary.
As this page is being
prepared, it is early Sunday morning, May 1, 2005 and May is Mary's
month. It is too bad that the old "May Crowning" tradition has fallen
largely by the wayside. I spent some time being educated in Latin and
Classical Greek (of which I remember absolutely nothing), some 40
years ago, at "the High School," a Capuchin-Franciscan preparatory
seminary, at Garrison, New York. This property is no longer theirs but
they do have a presence in that little town by way of a new center a
mile south along route 9D. Anyway, it was at the High School where, in
the month of May, we met outside on a sunny day, with a light Hudson
River wind keeping the temperature pleasant, to celebrate "May
Crowning."
All sixty students plus
various friars began the ceremony by singing Marian hymns, as we stood
at the base of a life-sized statue of Our Lady with the Child Jesus,
as a student placed a flower arrangement of wild roses on her head.
Then we all knelt and prayed a "May crowning prayer." This was
followed by another hymn or two and we returned to our classes
convinced that Our Lady would take care of us as long as we kept
remembering her in our prayers. And she did.
More recently, in Indiana
where I spent about six months, I used to drive by a very large and
imposing statue of Our Lady and Child. The statue, full-sized on a
tall base, at least a dozen feet high, stood in a large but otherwise
bare piece of meadow right along a well-traveled road. Whomever owned
the land must have had a wonderful devotion to Our Lady to use his
acres for her. We are blest by the faith of others.
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Pray to our beloved
Saints, for intercession and, to our long-time friend, John Paul
II. He's with all those now whom he beatified and canonized! he's
with our lady and our lord. |
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From our earliest
recollection, children in old-time Catholic families, and maybe
even now, recall our mothers speaking about Our Lady and
Jesus. Children, as they go through their first couple of years
are fascinated with blocks and colors, and when the cognitive
stage sets in, with Jesus and Mary. As I recall to my own pre-teen
years, I recall not so much any particular story as I do a great
intimacy with Jesus and Our Lady. She is part of us, and Her Son
saved us on the Cross. This belief is a mystery of our Faith, for
none of us have ever met Mary and her Son, but we know each
intimately. We go to great length to please them with our love. |
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Mary and the Child
Jesus, enjoy a very special bond. We know that when we get to
Heaven, if we do, we shall also share in this immense love. Last
month, we buried our long-time friend, John Paul II, whose
devotion to Mary was always strong and he told the world about it
through a symbol. A shield consisting of a blue background, with
the letter "M" - the sign of his "Totus Tuus" or total dedication
(All Yours) to Our Lady.
Of all the prayers
available to us, the Lord's Prayer (Our Father) and the Hail Mary,
as in the Rosary, are the most powerful prayers we can use. Let's
not forget that great gift of Mary in our daily prayers - because
they were first spoken by Mary and her son Jesus. And, as our
Faith teaches us, Mary is in Heaven. She is conceived without sin. |
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Our Blessed Mother,
Mary, is the Immaculate Conception. So we ask her to intercede for us,
to lay our needs at the feet of Jesus, at the throne of the Father, so
that our prayers are answered. In various apparitions, Mary promised
she would intercede for us.
To St. Bridget of Sweden,
in the fourteenth century, Our Lady gave her 21 powerful promises.
These promises and prayers were acknowledged by the Roman Catholic
Church in May of 1862 by Pope Pius IX.
Many people wear
scapulars. These are little pieces of cloth, often wool, attached by a
string so that when worn, the strings hang over both shoulders and one
cloth is worn on the chest, the other on the back. Religious, that is
those wearing a habit, have a scapular that often is part of the
habit. Franciscans wear either a short mantle (Conventuals and Third
Order Regular), or, a hood attached to a cloth (OFM and Capuchins).
These are considered Scapulars. They are worn over the tunic, the
garment of work.
On July 16, 1261, Our Lady
in a vision to St. Simon Stock, a dominican, said "Whosoever
dies clothed in this (scapular) shall not suffer eternal fire." Many
of us wear scapular medals because in hot climates like Florida, wool
scapulars are very uncomfortable to wear. If you look carefully at the
picture on this page, Mary is holding a scapular in her left hand.
A prayer largely forgotten
in this busy and hectic world is the "Angelus." In the old days,
farmers used to bow their heads in prayer when the Angelus bell rang
at 6 AM, 12 Noon and 6 PM. Oftentimes one could barely hear the little
church's bells. And, at the end of the day, we pray or sing the Hail
Holy Queen, the Salve Regina.
Our Lady, pray for us!
May 2,2005 |
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Biblical References to Our Lady |
Foretold in Old Testament: Is 7:14; Mic 5:2-3
Conceived without sin: Gen 3:15; Lk 1:28
A Virgin: Is 7:14; Mt 1:18-25; Lk 1:27; 34
Maintained her virginity...
Typified in: Ezek 44:2; Lk 1:34
Mother of God: Is 9:6; Mt 1:23; Lk 1:32; 35; 43;
2:11; Gal 4:4
Highly blessed: Lk 1:28; 48
Was to suffer many sorrows: Lam 1:12; Lk 2:34-35;
48; Jn 19:25 |
Meditated on Jesus' words: Lk 2:51
Pondered events in Jesus' life: Lk 2:19
Requested Jesus' first miracle: Jn 2:1-12
Given to us as our mother: Jn 19:25-27
Devoted herself to prayer: Acts 1:14
Enoch and Elijah taken (assumed) to heaven:
Gen 5:24; Heb 11:5; 2 Kings 2:1-13
Annunciation: Lk 1:28
Blessed are you among women: Lk 1:42-48
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THE MARIAN DEVOTION OF ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA
St. Anthony of Padua is one of the most famous disciples of St. Francis of
Assisi. He was a famous preacher and worker of miracles in his own day, and
throughout the eight centuries since his death he has so generously come to the
assistance of the faithful who invoke him, that he is known throughout the
world. This brief article about St. Anthony of Padua appeared in the
August/September edition of the Herald of the Immaculate , and forms part of the
Home Page of St. Francis of Assisi.
St. Anthony's Life began with Mary
St. Anthony is titled the Evangelical Doctor, Wonder-Worker and Hammer of
Heretics; but more importantly he is renowned for his personal holiness. His
sanctity and wisdom flowed from his profound, penetrating love for the
Immaculate Virgin Mary. Heroically he followed the Poverello of Assisi, St.
Francis, whose tender love for the poor, humble Virgin was comparable only to
that of Christ Himself. As a true friar minor St. Anthony praised and glorified
the Queen of the Angels from the pulpit, where with simple yet lofty doctrine he
moved multitudes to savor the sweet name of Mary. Furthermore, he imitated Her
with such perfection that he became, as it were, an extension of the Virgin
Mother on earth.
From the outset his life was markedly Marian, being born in Lisbon on the feast
of the Assumption, August 15th, 1195 A. D., and baptized in the Church of St.
Mary in Lisbon. At the age of 15 he completed his studies at the Cathedral
School of St. Mary. Appropriately his earthly life, ever pure and humble, was
brought to a close in a similar Marian tone, for when death drew nigh he longed
to be taken to the St. Mary, Mother of God Friary in Padua. After receiving
Extreme Unction he intoned his favorite hymn, "O gloriosa Domina..." (O glorious
Lady). He lived and died with the Virgin Mary on his lips and in his heart.
St. Anthony's Faith in Jesus Christ overflowed in Devotion to Mary
His devotion was founded on the solid foundation of Catholic doctrine, as all
true devotion is. Consequently he has left the Church with a wealth of
Mariological insight in his sermons. Reflecting upon the doctrines about our
Blessed Lady through the eyes of St. Anthony one realizes with him that "in Her
were gathered all the privileges of merits and rewards."
In 431 A. D. the Catholic Church at the Council of Ephesus proclaimed that since
Jesus Christ is the second Person of the most Holy Trinity, that is, a divine
Person, Mary can rightly be called "Mother of God" (Theotokos). St. Anthony
maintains that as Jesus was "designated Son of God in power according to the
spirit of holiness..." (Rm. 1:4), so Mary "is designated as Mother of God in
power according to the spirit of holiness." For him Mary was designated,
predestined from all eternity, to receive this singular grace.
"O inestimabilis Mariae dignitas! O inennarabilis gratiae sublimitas! O investigabilis misericordiae profunditas!..." "O inestimable dignity of Mary! O indescribable sublimity of grace! O incomprehensible depth of mercy! Has so much grace or mercy ever been given to an angel or man as has been given
to the Blessed Virgin, whom God the Father wished to be the Mother of His Son?" Commenting on the passage where "a woman in the crowd raised her voice and said
to Him, 'Blessed is the womb that bore You and the breasts that You sucked!'" (Lk
11:27), the holy doctor says, "Blessed, therefore, is the womb of the glorious
Virgin who for nine months was worthy to carry all goodness, the highest
goodness, the bliss of angels and reconciliation of sinners." Elsewhere he
writes that "She possessed within Her the compactness of love—for nine months
She carried Love Incarnate in Her womb." His interior wonderment and inspired
preaching regarding Mary's divine maternity ought to enkindle within all souls
the same sentiments.
St. Anthony's Devotion to the Immaculate Conception
Before She became Mother of God "the most Blessed Virgin Mary, in the first
instant of Her conception, by a singular grace and privilege granted by Almighty
God, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the human race, was
preserved free from all stain of original sin..." as Pope Pius IX infallibly
stated in 1854 A. D.. This solemn definition reflects the theological insight of
Bl. John Duns Scotus (1266-1308), a Franciscan who articulated this truth of
Mary's Immaculate Conception with clarity and force some seventy years after the
death of St. Anthony. Although the saint of Padua never explicitly preached that
the Virgin Mary was conceived without sin, he nonetheless implicitly upheld this
Marian privilege and prepared the way for Scotus and Pius IX.
He quotes and confirms St. Augustine who declared, "Where there is a question of
sin, exclude as far as I am concerned, the Blessed Virgin Mary." None of the
saints can say, "We have no sin" (1 Jn 1:8). "But," the blessed friar adds,
"from the universal confession of sin Mary among all creatures is to be excepted
for She was 'full of grace.'" This "superior," "singular" grace was bestowed
upon Her "that She might worthily bear in Her womb Him, who from the beginning
held in His hands the control of the universe." In his mind "the pure Virgin"
was "full of grace" and "free from sin" in view of the divine maternity. In
other words, he saw that it was fitting and true that the Mother of God should
be "Immaculate"—this is the basis for the Immaculate Conception. "The Father
clothed His Son Jesus in a white robe, that is, flesh without any stain of sin
conceived by the Virgin Immaculate." Therefore, St. Anthony helped to lay the
foundations for the solemn definition of 1854 by the implications of his
sermons.
St. Anthony's Faith in Mary's Perpetual Virginity
The holy doctor frequently spoke on the perpetual virginity of Mary, a doctrine
defined by the Church at the Lateran Council in 647. Our saint capsulizes this
teaching concisely: "She remained a Virgin before, during, and after the birth
(of Christ)." In one sermon, after likening St. Ann to an "olive tree, from
which came the brilliant blossom... the blessed Mary," he says, "Symbolically it
could be said that She (Mary) was 'green like an olive' in the conception and
birth of the Savior, for She remained a virgin before and after His birth."
Regarding our Lady's virginity during birth, he gives a fervent explanation:
"Christ's birth from the Virgin knows no equal among women, but is mirrored in
nature. Someone may ask how the Virgin gave birth to the Savior. She begot Him
as a blossom emanates perfume. The blossom of the vine remains incorrupt after
it has given off its perfume, and so likewise, faith leads us to believe that
the modesty of the Virgin—the modesty with which She gave birth the Savior—was
not violated. What else is the flower of virginity if not a sweet perfume?"
Furthermore, "just as a lily does not lose any of its beauty in emitting its
sweet fragrance, so too did our Lady preserve Her virginity in giving birth to
the Savior."
St. Anthony's Faith in Mary's Assumption
The humble friar, who taught and preached only under obedience, is considered
among the foremost witnesses in Church history to the mystery of the Virgin
Mary's assumption which was not solemnly defined as an article of faith until
1950 by Pope Pius XII. The Supreme Pontiff Himself quotes and applauds the
friar's testimony to this truth. "Among the holy writers who... illustrate and
confirm the doctrine of the assumption, which they piously believed, the
Evangelical Doctor St. Anthony of Padua holds a special place. On the feast day
of the Assumption, while explaining the prophet's words: 'I will glorify the
place of my feet' (Is 60:13), he states it as certain that the Divine Redeemer
had bedecked with supreme glory His most beloved Mother from whom He had
received human flesh. He asserts that 'you have a clear statement that the
blessed Virgin has been assumed in Her body, which was the place of the Lord's
feet.' Hence it is that the holy Psalmist writes: 'Arise, O Lord, into Your
resting place; You and the ark which You have sanctified.' And he asserts that,
just as Jesus Christ has risen from the death over which He triumphed and has
ascended to the right hand of the Father, so likewise the ark of His
sanctification 'has risen up, since on this day the Virgin Mother has been taken
up to Her heavenly dwelling.'" ( Munificentissimus Deus #29).
For St. Anthony there are two primary reasons for Mary's assumption and
glorification: Her election as Mother of God and Her response of humility. He
shows all of our Lady's privileges in the light of Her divine maternity. She was
assumed bodily into heaven "...because from Her He assumed flesh." She was "the
place of the Lord's feet" and the "ark of His sanctification" and was therefore
glorified. But Her exaltation was also due to Her littleness, for "in the word
of humility, 'Behold, the handmaid of the Lord' (Lk 1:38), She became the Queen
of Heaven." As a result of Her "humility of body and heart... She is brilliant
in Her heavenly splendor." She is "exalted above the choirs of angels" and "sits
upon a starry throne," crowned by Her divine Son, precisely because She humbled
Herself below any other creature.
The Queen of the Angels is also our Queen and Mother. St. Anthony declares that
"the blessed Mother will not run away from any... sinner. She is appropriately
called the Mother of Mercy since She welcomes any sinner who approaches Her,
offering solace to the afflicted and hope to the despairing." When approaching
this tender Mother and sovereign Queen with confidence "we are filled with every
good thing..., we have everything..., we are blessed." Therefore he exclaims:
"Through You, Paradise has entered our world!"
St. Anthony's Faith in Mary's Maternal Mediation
This most merciful Mother has been chosen by God to distribute all His grace to
poor sinners. Why is this? Certainly Her "Fiat" at the annunciation permitted
Christ to take on His sacred flesh in Her womb; it is, after all, through Her
that God is with us in Christ Jesus. But Her "Fiat" continued throughout Her
entire life culminating in Her assent to God's holy will on blood-stained
Calvary. The holy doctor, as previously quoted, compares our Lady to an olive,
and in that sermon he makes special mention of Her agony at the foot of the
cross. "It could be said that She was 'red as an olive' in the Passion of Her
Son, when 'Her Heart was pierced with a sword'(Lk. 2:35)." The sorrowful Mother
participated in His redemptive suffering, especially when His side was pierced
by the lance, and is often called our Co-Redemptrix with the Redeemer. "The
Blessed Virgin Mary therefore, our Mediatrix, established peace between God and
the sinner." It is through the humble Mary that God has reconciled us to Himself
in Christ Jesus and therefore She is rightly called the Mediatrix of all graces.
Commenting on the rainbow which God set in the sky after the flood (cf. Gn 9),
the saint proclaims, "The rainbow is a symbol of the peace and reconciliation
which the blessed Virgin, our Mediatrix, effected between God and man." And it
is thus that he prays, "Our Lady, our only hope, we are asking You to illumine
our souls with the brilliance of Your grace... that we may be worthy of His
glory."
St. Anthony's Devotion to the Holy Name of Mary
This glorious saint and doctor of the Church found great delight and strength in
invoking the "sweet name of Mary," the "New Eve" and "Star of the Sea," with all
Her sacred privileges. However, his devotion to the poor, humble Virgin led him
to perfectly imitate and mirror Her in Her poverty, littleness and purity of
Heart. He became, as it were, the presence of Mary in the world by his holy
life. Because he had been wholly transformed into 'another' Mary, who "always
had Her mind raised straight up to God in the contemplation of heavenly things,"
so he merited to hold and adore the divine Infant with his own arms.
The Marian doctrine and devotion of this great saint, like two wings, lifted him
up from this world and carried him into the sublime heights of holiness. May his
profound wisdom and love for the Immaculate Virgin Mother of God inspire many to
entrust themselves entirely to Her without reserve and with full confidence so
that She may illumine souls with the brilliance of Her grace.
The Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate are a Roman Catholic Religious Institute
of solemn vows headquartered at Benevento, Italy. For more information contact: Marian Friary of Our Lady Queen of the Seraphic Order POB 3003 New Bedford, MA 02741-3003
Email at: ffi@ici.net or visit their web site at: http://www.ici.net/cust_pages/ffi/index.html
Provided Courtesy of:
Eternal Word Television Network |
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