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The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
« on: August 14, 2012, 06:41:12 AM »
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  • http://www.dailycatholic.org/issue/06Oct/oct7aftt.htm

    The beautiful mystery of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary will be interspersed with Scripture verses that correlate to the mystery but not necessarily with the commentary provided. They are just good verses to have in mind when meditating on this mystery.

        On an interesting note I would like to share that while I was in the newchurch (conciliar church) I was led to believe that we do not necessarily have to believe that our Lady died before she was assumed but a reading of this encyclical as well as the commentary from Rheims seems to clarify the issue rather nicely.


    " Now there stood by the cross of Jesus, His mother and His mother's sister, Mary of Cleophas, and Mary Magdalen. When Jesus therefore had seen His mother and the disciple standing whom He loved, He saith to his mother: 'Woman, behold thy son.' After that, He saith to the disciple: 'Behold thy mother.' And from that hour, the disciple took her to his own. Afterwards, Jesus knowing that all things were now accomplished, that the scripture might be fulfilled, said: 'I thirst' (St. John 19:25-28).

        I find it interesting how in the above verses after Jesus gives the disciple whom He loved His mother, verse 28 states: Jesus knowing that all things were NOW accomplished. I believe this to be significant in that the faithful disciple whom He loves is anybody who hears the word of God and keeps His commands. We are all faithful disciples or at least we try to be and we all should take our Lord’s Mother to be our own for she is our Mother in the order of grace.

        The way I see it, Mary came and gave us her Son and then her Son left and gave us Mary. Jesus gave us EVERYTHING He had - every last drop of blood - and even His Own mother.

        This can be thought of in the light of the Holy Ghost as well in that the Holy Ghost descended upon the Virgin Mary at the incarnation to give us Jesus and when Jesus left He sent the Holy Ghost to come again at Pentecost.

        So with the assistance of Mary and the Holy Ghost we get Jesus at the Incarnation and with the Death and Ascension of Jesus and through His command we are given our Lady at the cross and the Holy Ghost at Pentecost the very same Two Who came together to give us our Lord at His Incarnation.

        But if giving us every last drop of His blood along with His mother to take as our own and the Holy Ghost is not enough we now consider how at the Last Supper Jesus made provisions to leave Himself behind when He said, "This IS My body...this IS My blood." So we get it all - even Jesus Himself - when receiving Holy Communion every day if we wish. I have heard it said, that He wanted to stay but He had to go so He stayed and went. What a great mystery this is.

        When meditating on the Assumption as well as the Fifth Glorious Mystery - the Coronation - we must first go to Church Authority that will be shown by the encyclical Munificentissimus Deus by Pope Pius XII (numbered paragraphs throughout these meditations) in this and our last meditation on the Coronation of our Lady.


    1. The most bountiful God, Who is almighty, the plan of whose providence rests upon wisdom and love, tempers, in the secret purpose of His Own mind, the sorrows of peoples and of individual men by means of joys that He interposes in their lives from time to time, in such a way that, under different conditions and in different ways, all things may work together unto good for those who love Him. And we know that to them that love God all things work together unto good: to such as, according to His purpose, are called to be saints. [1] [Romans 8: 28.]

    2. Now, just like the present age, Our pontificate is weighed down by ever so many cares, anxieties, and troubles, by reason of very severe calamities that have taken place and by reason of the fact that many have strayed away from truth and virtue. Nevertheless, we are greatly consoled to see that, while the Catholic faith is being professed publicly and vigorously, piety toward the Virgin Mother of God is flourishing and daily growing more fervent, and that almost everywhere on earth it is showing indications of a better and holier life. Thus, while the Blessed Virgin is fulfilling in the most affectionate manner her maternal duties on behalf of those redeemed by the blood of Christ, the minds and the hearts of her children are being vigorously aroused to a more assiduous consideration of her prerogatives.

    " And the third day, there was a marriage in Cana of Galilee: and the mother of Jesus was there. And Jesus also was invited, and His disciples, to the marriage. And the wine failing, the mother of Jesus saith to Him: 'They have no wine.' And Jesus saith to her: 'Woman, what is that to Me and to thee? My hour is not yet come.' His mother saith to the waiters: 'Whatsoever He shall say to you, do ye.' Now there were set there six waterpots of stone, according to the manner of the purifying of the Jєωs, containing two or three measures apiece. Jesus saith to them: 'Fill the waterpots with water.' And they filled them up to the brim. And Jesus saith to them: 'Draw out now and carry to the chief steward of the feast.' And they carried it. And when the chief steward had tasted the water made wine and knew not whence it was, but the waiters knew who had drawn the water: the chief steward calleth the bridegroom, And saith to him: Every man at first setteth forth good wine, and when men have well drunk, then that which is worse. But thou hast kept the good wine until now. This beginning of miracles did Jesus in Cana of Galilee and manifested His glory. And His disciples believed in Him" (St. John 1:1-11).

        We can definitely believe our Lady was a source of comfort, consolation and strength to the apostles. You can believe that the apostles were disheartened when their Lord left them - the One they spent their days and nights for three years with and Who loved them more than anyone ever loved them. The first person they would go to would be His mother for comfort, consolation and strength. It is believed that Saint Luke received the infancy narrative from Mary. You can bet Saint John picked her mind quite a bit while he lived with her as well. She quite probably did not want to be written about in her humility and may have requested that they write as little about her as possible. Whether this is true or not this would be a good idea because it is the Gospel of Jesus for one, and another reason why writing much about our Lady would not be prudent would be because of the possibility “Mary worship” people at this time were prone to worship almost anything they could not understand which is why Saint Paul goes to great lengths in Hebrews 1 & 2 to show the difference between Christ and the Angels for fear of the Angels being worshipped. That being said, for those with ears to hear and eyes to see, our Lady is sprinkled throughout the Old and New Testament - implicitly many times - as is her Son - more explicitly and rightfully so - because she is intimately linked with Him in salvation history - much as Eve is linked with Adam in the fall of mankind. What comes to mind here is how John begins (chapter 2) and ends (chapter 19) of his gospel with Mary.


     3. Actually God, who from all eternity regards Mary with a most favorable and unique affection, has "when the fullness of time came" But when the fullness of the time was come, God sent His Son, made of a woman, made under the law: [2] [Galatians 4:4.] put the plan of his providence into effect in such a way that all the privileges and prerogatives He had granted to her in His sovereign generosity were to shine forth in her in a kind of perfect harmony. And, although the Church has always recognized this supreme generosity and the perfect harmony of graces and has daily studied them more and more throughout the course of the centuries, still it is in our own age that the privilege of the bodily Assumption into Heaven of Mary, the Virgin Mother of God, has certainly shone forth more clearly.

    4. That privilege has shone forth in new radiance since our predecessor of immortal memory, Pius IX, solemnly proclaimed the dogma of the loving Mother of God's Immaculate Conception. These two privileges are most closely bound to one another. Christ overcame sin and death by His own death, and one who through Baptism has been born again in a supernatural way has conquered sin and death through the same Christ. Yet, according to the general rule, God does not will to grant to the just the full effect of the victory over death until the end of time has come. And so it is that the bodies of even the just are corrupted after death, and only on the last day will they be joined, each to its own glorious soul.

    5. Now God has willed that the Blessed Virgin Mary should be exempted from this general rule. She, by an entirely unique privilege, completely overcame sin by her Immaculate Conception, and as a result she was not subject to the law of remaining in the corruption of the grave, and she did not have to wait until the end of time for the redemption of her body.

        Amen! If I could create my mommy I would not let her know corruption either. This brings to mind the several centuries-old saints whose bodies are still not corrupt along with those that are only partially corrupt. These miracles serve as reminders - first that there is a God – secondly of the eternal bliss that awaits us should we try to avoid sin during our lives and die in a state of grace.


    6. Thus, when it was solemnly proclaimed that Mary, the Virgin Mother of God, was from the very beginning free from the taint of original sin, the minds of the faithful were filled with a stronger hope that the day might soon come when the dogma of the Virgin Mary's bodily Assumption into Heaven would also be defined by the Church's supreme teaching authority.

    In Acts 1:13-14 we read, "And when they were come in, they went up into an upper room, where abode Peter and John, James and Andrew, Philip and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew, James of Alpheus and Simon Zelotes and Jude the brother of James. All these were persevering with one mind in prayer with the women, and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with His brethren."

        If you can, picture the Ark of the Covenant in the Old Testament and how God would fill it with fire and cloud - symbols of the Holy Ghost - and then picture in the New Testament how the Holy Ghost will “overshadow” our Lady in much the same way He overshadowed the Ark of the Covenant and filled it with His glory. So we, being the mystical body of Christ - the family of God, have a Father Who is God and a mother who is Immaculate to care for us, as she cared for the Apostles in the early Church.

        Now let us delve into some beautiful commentary in my original Rheims Bible on the Assumption of our Lady:

    This is the last mention that is made in holy scripture, of our Blessed Lady, for though she were full of all divine wisdom, and opened (no doubt) unto the Evangelists and other writers of holy scriptures, diverse of Christ’s actions, speeches, and mysteries, whereof she had both experimental and revealed knowledge: Yet for that she was a woman, and the humblest creature living, and the pattern of all order and obedience, it pleased not God that there should be a further note of her life, doings, or death, in the scriptures. She lived the rest of her time with the Christians (as here she is peculiarly named and noted among them) and specially with St. John the Apostle, to whom our Lord recommended her. Who provided for her all necessities, her spouse Joseph (as it may be thought) being deceased before. The common opinion is that she lived 63 years in all. At the time of her death (as St. Dennis first, & after him St. Damascene De dormit, Deipara, Writeth,) all the Apostles then dispersed into diverse nations to preach the Gospel, were miraculously brought together (saving St. Thomas who came the third day after) to Jerusalem, to honour her divine departure and funeral, as the said St. Dennis witnesseth, who saith that himself, St. Timothy, and St. Hierotheus were present: testifying also of his own hearing, that both before her death and after for three days, not only the Apostles and other holy men present, but the Angels also and Powers of Heaven did sing most melodious Hymns. They buried her sacred body in Gethsemane, but for S. Thomas sake, who desired to see and to reverence it, they opened the sepulcher the third day, and finding it void of the holy body, but exceedingly fragrant, they returned, assuredly deeming that her body was assumpted into Heaven, as the Church of God holdeth, being most agreeable to the singular privilege of the mother of God, and therefore celebrateth most solemnly the day of her Assumption. And that is consonant not only to the said St. Denis, and St. Damascene, but to holy Athanasius also, who anounceth thee same, Serm in Evang. de Deipara. of which Assumption of her body, St. Bernard also wrote five notable sermons extant in his works.

    But neither these holy fathers, nor the Church’s tradition and testimony, do bear any sway now-a-days with the protestants, that have abolished this her greatest feast of her Assumption. Who of reason should at the least celebrate it as the day of her death, as they do of other Saints. For though they believe not that her body is assumpted, yet they will not deny that she is dead, and her soul in glory: neither can they ask scriptures for that, no more then they require for the deaths of Peter, Paul, John, and other, which be not mentioned in scriptures and yet are still celebrated by the protestants. But concerning the Blessed Virgin Mary, they have blotted out also both her Nativity, and her Conception: so as it may be thought the Devil beareth a special malice to this woman whose seed break his head. For as for the other two days of her Purification & Annunciation, they be not proper to our Lady, but the one to Christ’s Conception, the other to His Presentation, so that she by this means shall have no festivity at all.

    But contra-wise, to consider how the ancient Church and fathers esteemed, spoke, and wrote of this excellent vessel of grace, may make us detest these men's impiety, that can not abide the praise of her whom all generations should call blessed, and that esteem her honours a derogatio to her Son. Some of their speeches we will set down, that all men may see, that we neither praise her, nor pray to her, more amply then they did. St. Athanasius in the place alleged, after he had declared how all the Angelical spirits and every order of them honoured and praised her with the Ave, wherewith St. Gabriel saluted her: We also, saith he, of all degrees upon the earth extol thee with loud voice, saying, Ave gratia plena & c. Hail Full of grace, our Lord is with thee pray for us o Mistress, and Lady, and Queen, and mother of God. Most holy and ancient Ephrem, also in a special oration made in praise of our Lady, faith thus in diverse place thereof, Intemerata Deipar & c. Mother of God undefiled, Queen of all, the hope of them that despair, my lady most glorious, higher than the heavenly spirits, more honorable than the Cherubims, holier than the Seraphims, and without comparison more glorious than the supernatural hosts, the hope of the fathers, the glory of the Prophets, the praise of the Apostles. And a little after. Virgo ante partum, in partu, & post partum. by thee we are reconciled to Christ my God, thy Son: thou art the helper of sinners, thou the haven for them that are tossed with storms, the solace of the world, the deliverer of the imprisoned, the help of orphans, the redemption of captives. And afterward, vouchsafe me thy servant to praise thee. Hail Lady MARIE full of grace, hail Virgin most blessed among women. And much more in that sense which were too long to repeat.

    St. Cyril hath the like wonder speeches of her honour, hom. 6. contra Nestorium. Praise and glory be to thee o holy Trinity thee also be praised, holy mother of God, for thou art the precious pearl of the world, thou the candle of unquenchable light, the crown of virginity, the scepter of the Catholic faith. By thee the Trinity is glorified and adored in the world; by thee Heaven rejoiceth, Angels and Archangels are glad, devils are put to flight, and man is called again to Heaven, and every creature that was with the error of idols, is turned to the knowledge of the truth: by thee Churches are founded through the World: thee being their helper, the Gentiles come to penance. and much more which we omit. Likewise the Greek Liturgies or Masses of St. James, St. Basil, and St. Chrysostom, make most honorable mention of our Blessed Lady, praying unto her, saluting her with the Angelical hymn, Ave Maria, and their speeches, Most holy, undefiled blessed above all, our Queen, our Lady, the mother of God, MARIE, a virgin forever, the sacred ark of Christ's Incarnation, broader than the heavens that didst bear thy creator, holy mother, of unspeakable light, we magnify thee with Angelical hymns, all things pass understanding, all things are glorious in thee o mother of God. By thee the mysteries before unknown to the Angels, is made manifest and revealed to them on the earth, thou art more honorable than the Cherubims, and more glorious than the Seraphims, to thee, O full of grace, all creatures, both men and Angels do gratulate and rejoice, glory be the thee, Which art a sanctified temple, a spiritual paradise, the glory of virgins, of whom God took flesh and made thy womb to be his throne. & c.

    And St. Augustine Serm. de Santisto or (as some think) St. Fulgentius: O blessed MARIE, who can be able worthily to praise or thank thee, receive our praises, obtain us our requests, for thou art the special hope of sinners, by thee we hope for pardon of our sins & in thee o most blessed the expectation of our rewards. And then follow these words now said in the Church’s service: Sancta Maria succurre misers, iuua pusillanimes, refoue slebiles, ora pro populo, interumi pro clero, interced pro devoto soemineo sexu. Sentiant omnes tuum inuamen, quicunque celebrant tuam commemorationen. Pray thou continually for the people of God, which didst desire to bear the redeemer of the world, Who liveth and reigneth for ever.

    S. Damascene also Ser.de dorunitione Deiparae. Let us cry with Gabriel, Ave gratia plena, Hail full of grace, Hail sea of joy that can not be emptied, hail the only ease of griefs, hail holy virgin, by whom death was expelled, and life brought in. See St. Irenaeus li. 3 c. 33. and li. 5 circa medium, & St. Augustine de fide & Symbolo. & de agone Christiano. Where they declare how both the sexes concur to our salvation, the man and the woman, Christ and our Lady, as Adam and Eve both were the cause of our fall. Though Adam far more then his wife, and so Christ far more excellently and in an other sort then our Lady: Who (though his mother) yet is but his creature and handmaid, himself being truly both God and man. In all which places alleged & many other like to these, if it please the reader to see and read, and make his own eyes witnesses, he shall perceive that there is much more said of her, and to her, then we have here recited, and that the very same or the like speeches and terms were used then, that the Church useth now, in the honour and invocation of the B. Virgin: to the confusion of all those that willfully will not understand in what sense all such speeches are applied unto her. To wit, either because of her prayer and intercession for us, whereby she is our hope, our refuge, our advocate & c. or because she brought forth the author of our redemption and salvation, whereby she is the mother of mercy, and grace, and life, and whatsoever goodness we receive by Christ. (Rheims Commentary, translated from old English to less old English by me)

        Now we continue with the encyclical Munificentissimus Deus.

    7. Actually it was seen that not only individual Catholics, but also those who could speak for nations or ecclesiastical provinces, and even a considerable number of the Fathers of the Vatican Council, urgently petitioned the Apostolic See to this effect.

    8. During the course of time such postulations and petitions did not decrease but rather grew continually in number and in urgency. In this cause there were pious crusades of prayer. Many outstanding theologians eagerly and zealously carried out investigations on this subject either privately or in public ecclesiastical institutions and in other schools where the sacred disciplines are taught. Marian Congresses, both national and international in scope, have been held in many parts of the Catholic world. These studies and investigations have brought out into even clearer light the fact that the dogma of the Virgin Mary's Assumption into heaven is contained in the deposit of Christian faith entrusted to the Church. They have resulted in many more petitions, begging and urging the Apostolic See that this truth be solemnly defined.

    9. In this pious striving, the faithful have been associated in a wonderful way with their own holy bishops, who have sent petitions of this kind, truly remarkable in number, to this See of the Blessed Peter. Consequently, when we were elevated to the throne of the supreme pontificate, petitions of this sort had already been addressed by the thousands from every part of the world and from every class of people, from our beloved sons the Cardinals of the Sacred College, from our venerable brethren, archbishops and bishops, from dioceses and from parishes.

    10. Consequently, while we sent up earnest prayers to God that he might grant to our mind the light of the Holy Spirit, to enable us to make a decision on this most serious subject, we issued special orders in which we commanded that, by corporate effort, more advanced inquiries into this matter should be begun and that, in the meantime, all the petitions about the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary into heaven which had been sent to this Apostolic See from the time of Pius IX, our predecessor of happy memory, down to our own days should be gathered together and carefully evaluated.[3] [Cf. Hentrich-Von Moos, Petitiones de Assumptione Corporea B. Virginis Mariae in Caelum Definienda ad S. Sedem Delatae, 2 volumes (Vatican Polyglot Press, 1942)]

    11. And, since we were dealing with a matter of such great moment and of such importance, we considered it opportune to ask all our venerable brethren in the episcopate directly and authoritatively that each of them should make known to us his mind in a formal statement. Hence, on May 1, 1946, we gave them our letter "Deiparae Virginis Mariae," a letter in which these words are contained: "Do you, venerable brethren, in your outstanding wisdom and prudence, judge that the bodily Assumption of the Blessed Virgin can be proposed and defined as a dogma of faith? Do you, with your clergy and people, desire it?"

    12. But those whom "the Holy Spirit has placed as bishops to rule the Church of God" Take heed to yourselves and to the whole flock, wherein the Holy Ghost hath placed you bishops, to rule the Church of God which he hath purchased with His own blood. [4] [Acts 20:28.] gave an almost unanimous affirmative response to both these questions. This "outstanding agreement of the Catholic prelates and the faithful,"[5] [The Bull Ineffabilis Deus, in the Acta Pii IX, pars 1, Vol. 1, p. 615.] affirming that the bodily Assumption of God's Mother into Heaven can be defined as a dogma of faith, since it shows us the concordant teaching of the Church's ordinary doctrinal authority and the concordant faith of the Christian people which the same doctrinal authority sustains and directs, thus by itself and in an entirely certain and infallible way, manifests this privilege as a truth revealed by God and contained in that divine deposit which Christ has delivered to His Spouse to be guarded faithfully and to be taught infallibly.[6] [The Vatican Council, Constitution Dei filius, c. 4.] Certainly this teaching authority of the Church, not by any merely human effort but under the protection of the Spirit of Truth. But the Paraclete, the Holy Ghost, Whom the Father will send in My name, He will teach you all things and bring all things to your mind, whatsoever I shall have said to you [7] [St. John 14:26], and therefore absolutely without error, carries out the commission entrusted to it, that of preserving the revealed truths pure and entire throughout every age, in such a way that it presents them undefiled, adding nothing to them and taking nothing away from them. For, as the Vatican Council teaches, "the Holy Spirit was not promised to the successors of Peter in such a way that, by His revelation, they might manifest new doctrine, but so that, by His assistance, they might guard as sacred and might faithfully propose the revelation delivered through the apostles, or the deposit of faith."[8] [Vatican Council, Constitution Pastor Aeternus, c. 4.] Thus, from the universal agreement of the Church's ordinary teaching authority we have a certain and firm proof, demonstrating that the Blessed Virgin Mary's bodily Assumption into heaven-which surely no faculty of the human mind could know by its own natural powers, as far as the heavenly glorification of the virginal body of the loving Mother of God is concerned-is a truth that has been revealed by God and consequently something that must be firmly and faithfully believed by all children of the Church. For, as the Vatican Council asserts, "all those things are to be believed by divine and Catholic faith which are contained in the written Word of God or in Tradition, and which are proposed by the Church, either in solemn judgment or in its ordinary and universal teaching office, as divinely revealed truths which must be believed."[9] [Ibid., Dei Filius, c. 3.]

    13. Various testimonies, indications and signs of this common belief of the Church are evident from remote times down through the course of the centuries; and this same belief becomes more clearly manifest from day to day.

    14. Christ's faithful, through the teaching and the leadership of their pastors, have learned from the sacred books that the Virgin Mary, throughout the course of her earthly pilgrimage, led a life troubled by cares, hardships, and sorrows, and that, moreover, what the holy old man Simeon had foretold actually came to pass, that is, that a terribly sharp sword pierced her heart as she stood under the cross of her divine Son, our Redeemer. In the same way, it was not difficult for them to admit that the great Mother of God, like her only begotten Son, had actually passed from this life. But this in no way prevented them from believing and from professing openly that her sacred body had never been subject to the corruption of the tomb, and that the august tabernacle of the Divine Word had never been reduced to dust and ashes. Actually, enlightened by divine grace and moved by affection for her, God's Mother and our own dearest Mother, they have contemplated in an ever clearer light the wonderful harmony and order of those privileges which the most provident God has lavished upon this loving associate of our Redeemer, privileges which reach such an exalted plane that, except for her, nothing created by God other than the human nature of Jesus Christ has ever reached this level.

    15. The innumerable temples which have been dedicated to the Virgin Mary assumed into Heaven clearly attest this faith. So do those sacred images, exposed therein for the veneration of the faithful, which bring this unique triumph of the Blessed Virgin before the eyes of all men. Moreover, cities, dioceses, and individual regions have been placed under the special patronage and guardianship of the Virgin Mother of God assumed into Heaven. In the same way, religious institutes, with the approval of the Church, have been founded and have taken their name from this privilege. Nor can we pass over in silence the fact that in the Rosary of Mary, the recitation of which this Apostolic See so urgently recommends, there is one mystery proposed for pious meditation which, as all know, deals with the Blessed Virgin's Assumption into Heaven.

    16. This belief of the sacred pastors and of Christ's faithful is universally manifested still more splendidly by the fact that, since ancient times, there have been both in the East and in the West solemn liturgical offices commemorating this privilege. The holy Fathers and Doctors of the Church have never failed to draw enlightenment from this fact since, as everyone knows, the sacred liturgy, "because it is the profession, subject to the supreme teaching authority within the Church, of heavenly truths, can supply proofs and testimonies of no small value for deciding a particular point of Christian doctrine." [10] [The encyclical Mediator Dei (Acta Apostolicae Sedis, XXXIX, 541).]

    17. In the liturgical books which deal with the feast either of the dormition or of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin there are expressions that agree in testifying that, when the Virgin Mother of God passed from this earthly exile to Heaven, what happened to her sacred body was, by the decree of divine Providence, in keeping with the dignity of the Mother of the Word Incarnate, and with the other privileges she had been accorded. Thus, to cite an illustrious example, this is set forth in that sacramentary which Adrian I, Our predecessor of immortal memory, sent to the Emperor Charlemagne. These words are found in this volume: "Venerable to us, O Lord, is the festivity of this day on which the holy Mother of God suffered temporal death, but still could not be kept down by the bonds of death, who has begotten Your Son our Lord incarnate from herself."[11] [Sacramentarium Gregorianum. ]

    18. What is here indicated in that sobriety characteristic of the Roman liturgy is presented more clearly and completely in other ancient liturgical books. To take one as an example, the Gallican sacramentary designates this privilege of Mary's as "an ineffable mystery all the more worthy of praise as the Virgin's Assumption is something unique among men." And, in the Byzantine liturgy, not only is the Virgin Mary's bodily Assumption connected time and time again with the dignity of the Mother of God, but also with the other privileges, and in particular with the virginal motherhood granted her by a singular decree of God's Providence. "God, the King of the universe, has granted you favors that surpass nature. As He kept you a virgin in childbirth, thus He has kept your body incorrupt in the tomb and has glorified it by His divine act of transferring it from the tomb." [12] [Menaei Totius Anni.]

    19. The fact that the Apostolic See, which has inherited the function entrusted to the Prince of the Apostles, the function of confirming the brethren in the faith, But I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not: and thou, being once converted, confirm thy brethren. [13] [St. Luke 22:32.]has by its own authority, made the celebration of this feast ever more solemn, has certainly and effectively moved the attentive minds of the faithful to appreciate always more completely the magnitude of the mystery it commemorates. So it was that the Feast of the Assumption was elevated from the rank which it had occupied from the beginning among the other Marian feasts to be classed among the more solemn celebrations of the entire liturgical cycle. And, when Our predecessor St. Sergius I prescribed what is known as the litany, or the stational procession, to be held on four Marian feasts, he specified together the Feasts of the Nativity, the Annunciation, the Purification, and the Dormition of the Virgin Mary. [14] [Liber Pontificalis.] Again, St. Leo IV saw to it that the feast, which was already being celebrated under the title of the Assumption of the Blessed Mother of God, should be observed in even a more solemn way when he ordered a vigil to be held on the day before it and prescribed prayers to be recited after it until the octave day. When this had been done, he decided to take part himself in the celebration, in the midst of a great multitude of the faithful.[15] [Ibid.] Moreover, the fact that a holy fast had been ordered from ancient times for the day prior to the feast is made very evident by what our predecessor St. Nicholas I testifies in treating of the principal fasts which "the Holy Roman Church has observed for a long time, and still observes." [16] [Responsa Nicolai Papae I ad Consulta Bulgarorum.]

    20. However, since the liturgy of the Church does not engender the Catholic faith, but rather springs from it, in such a way that the practices of the sacred worship proceed from the faith as the fruit comes from the tree, it follows that the holy Fathers and the great Doctors, in the homilies and sermons they gave the people on this feast day, did not draw their teaching from the feast itself as from a primary source, but rather they spoke of this doctrine as something already known and accepted by Christ's faithful. They presented it more clearly. They offered more profound explanations of its meaning and nature, bringing out into sharper light the fact that this feast shows, not only that the dead body of the Blessed Virgin Mary remained incorrupt, but that she gained a triumph out of death, her heavenly glorification after the example of her only begotten Son, Jesus Christ - truths that the liturgical books had frequently touched upon concisely and briefly.

    21. Thus St. John Damascene, an outstanding herald of this traditional truth, spoke out with powerful eloquence when he compared the bodily Assumption of the loving Mother of God with her other prerogatives and privileges. "It was fitting that she, who had kept her virginity intact in childbirth, should keep her own body free from all corruption even after death. It was fitting that she, who had carried the Creator as a child at her breast, should dwell in the divine tabernacles. It was fitting that the spouse, whom the Father had taken to himself, should live in the divine mansions. It was fitting that she, who had seen her Son upon the cross and who had thereby received into her heart the sword of sorrow which she had escaped in the act of giving birth to Him, should look upon Him as He sits with the Father. It was fitting that God's Mother should possess what belongs to her Son, and that she should be honored by every creature as the Mother and as the handmaid of God."[17] [St. John Damascene, Encomium in Dormitionem Dei Genetricis Semperque Virginis Mariae, Hom. II, n. 14; cf. also ibid, n. 3.]

    22. These words of St. John Damascene agree perfectly with what others have taught on this same subject. Statements no less clear and accurate are to be found in sermons delivered by Fathers of an earlier time or of the same period, particularly on the occasion of this feast. And so, to cite some other examples, St. Germanus of Constantinople considered the fact that the body of Mary, the virgin Mother of God, was incorrupt and had been taken up into Heaven to be in keeping, not only with her divine motherhood, but also with the special holiness of her virginal body. "You are she who, as it is written, appears in beauty, and your virginal body is all holy, all chaste, entirely the dwelling place of God, so that it is henceforth completely exempt from dissolution into dust. Though still human, it is changed into the heavenly life of incorruptibility, truly living and glorious, undamaged and sharing in perfect life."[18] [St. Germanus of Constantinople, In Sanctae Dei Genetricis Dormitionem, Sermo I.] And another very ancient writer asserts: "As the most glorious Mother of Christ, our Savior and God and the giver of life and immortality, has been endowed with life by him, she has received an eternal incorruptibility of the body together with him who has raised her up from the tomb and has taken her up to himself in a way known only to him." [19] [The Encomium in Dormitionem Sanctissimae Dominae Nostrate Deiparae Semperque Virginis Mariae, attributed to St. Modestus of Jerusalem, n. 14.]

        I can think of no better way to meditate on the glorious Assumption of our Lady than to contemplate on His Holiness' beautiful, moving words of his encyclical.

    "I receive Thee, redeeming Prince of my soul. Out of love for Thee have I studied, watched through many nights, and exerted myself: Thee did I preach and teach. I have never said aught against Thee. Nor do I persist stubbornly in my views. If I have ever expressed myself erroneously on this Sacrament, I submit to the judgement of the Holy Roman Church, in obedience of which I now part from this world." Saint Thomas Aquinas the greatest Doctor of the Church


    Offline Neil Obstat

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    The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
    « Reply #1 on: August 15, 2012, 06:22:32 PM »
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  •         Happy Feast of the Assumption!!



    Thanks for that nice post, LoT.
    Where's Hobbles? There must be some nice artwork for this great feast day!  




    I went to a local Coptic Orthodox church one day, to talk to one of the priests, and
    I was very impressed by the graciousness and cordial welcome I received. I told
    him I was Catholic, and he didn't mind. He used the term, "Mother of God," in a
    sentence while watching my eyes for a reaction, and I suppose he got what he
    was looking for, because he immediately insisted that I have a keyring that has
    a very nice picture of Our Mother of Perpetual Help on it. He said, "she is Egyptian."

    I have tried to give this keyring away to several others who would like it, and it
    has always come back to me. I think I could say that these keys are pretty darned
    safe from being lost so long as this image is attached to them.

    I went into the church for a while to observe the artwork and say a few prayers,
    for it was very nice inside, very conducive to meditation. While I was there, I found
    a beautiful little sticker of Our Lady of Grace on the floor, which appeared to have
    been peeled off of something, perhaps by a child, I thought. So I showed the
    priest this sticker and asked him if I could keep it, and assured me that would be
    fine. I placed her on the front, blank page of my Fr. Lasance Missal, and now, after
    being between closed covers for some time, She looks like she has always been
    there.  I often open to that page and look at the image. It has a sparkly effect in
    the lines of graces coming from her hands, and the colors are rather beautiful.
    It's an image that is typically iconic and Coptic in style, but it is the image of a
    very European Lady of Grace. She appears French, actually, like Our Lady of
    Lourdes.
    .--. .-.-.- ... .-.-.- ..-. --- .-. - .... . -.- .. -. --. -.. --- -- --..-- - .... . .--. --- .-- . .-. .- -. -.. -....- -....- .--- ..- ... - -.- .. -.. -.. .. -. --. .-.-.


    Offline Gold Peak

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    The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
    « Reply #2 on: August 15, 2012, 06:42:49 PM »
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  • Most blessed day to you Neil and all the others.
    Thank you for sharing this.  I always enjoy so much what you write about and how you write.  You must be a writer??

    Offline Neil Obstat

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    The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
    « Reply #3 on: August 16, 2012, 02:28:29 AM »
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  • Thank you, Marye; the pleasure is mine.

    I heard a great sermon today on the Assumption.  

    This is one of the topics we should be well-studied in, because it is under attack
    by the enemies of God, and they often don't know that they're His enemies. But
    that is a fulfillment of Scripture, for the time will come when they think by killing
    you they are doing a service for God.

    There are several dogmas that are intimately related to the Assumption:

    ~ The divinity of Our Lord Jesus Christ
    ~ The Incarnation of the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity
    ~ The resurrection of the body
    ~ The communion of saints
    ~ The life of the world to come in eternity
    ~ The Last Judgment
    ~ The Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary
    ~ The divine Maternity of the Mother of God
    ~ The virgin birth of Our Lord
    ~ The perpetual virginity of Our Lady

    Anyone who denies the Assumption of Our Lady must also deny one or more
    of these other dogmas. Protestants, for example, must not understand the
    resurrection of the body because they deny the Assumption.
    How could the
    Mother of God be subject to corporal corruption when all the saints will be
    raised from the dead on the Last Day and assumed into heaven? Instead,
    they think there will be a "rapture" when those who are "not saved" will be
    left alive on earth and those who are "saved" will be taken up "in the air." All
    you have to say to them is one sentence: "You're not saved 'till you're dead."
    Then end the dialogue.

    They've really missed out, because Our Lady was "taken up" many centuries
    ago. And that has been a constant teaching of the Church from the earliest times.

    For Our Lady to NOT have been assumed into heaven, she would have been
    immaculately conceived, grown up as God's Own chosen one who would become
    His Mother, overshadowed by the Holy Ghost at the Incarnation, remained a
    virgin in contradiction to nature as we know it before, during and after the Nativity
    of Our Lord -- but then, at the end of her life suddenly God's singular privilege
    would have to take an abrupt change of course by denying her the same kind
    of privilege she had always received up to that point.

    There are no relics of the body of the Virgin Mary. There are, however, whole
    body relics of many of the saints. The saints of the early Church died and their
    bodies were universally revered. In order to say a licit Mass, a priest must use
    an altar stone, which contains first class relics of several saints. The Blessed
    Sacrament itself is the perfect relic of Our Lord Jesus, and all the other relics of
    the saints are poor imitations thereof. Now how could the Blessed Virgin Mary,
    the Mother of God, from whom Our Lord's body and blood are derived, die and
    her body not be revered by the Apostles? How could all the other saints' relics
    be universally treated with the utmost reverence, but the most important saint's
    relics be entirely forgotten, for nobody has ever known where to find them?

    Or, a better question for the Protestants is, how could Jesus allow his own Mother's
    body to become subject to the abuse of heretics who would centuries later go
    around collecting saints' relics, but then throwing them into a river or trampling
    them under foot in desecration? That ought to get the attention of Protestants,
    because that is what Protestants have done.

    Anyone who denies the Assumption must also deny Our Lady being the Mother of
    God, for how could God allow His Own Mother's body to see corruption or worse,
    the desecration of God's enemies?

    Anyone who denies the Assumption must also deny the perpetual virginity of
    Our Lady, because such a singular privilege is no less of a miracle than the
    Assumption, and the recipient of the miracle of perpetual virginity is no more
    honored by the Assumption -- or do these heretics also attribute nothing special
    to perpetual virginity? I guess that's one disgusting possibility. It's hard to keep
    up with all the variations of objectively contemptible errors.

    Anyone who denies the Assumption could also deny the resurrection of the body.
    How would we presume to become assumed into heaven at the Last Judgment if
    Our Lady was not Assumed into heaven at the first opportunity?

    Anyone who denies the Assumption must also deny the Immaculate Conception,
    which says that "by a singular privilege" Our Lady was preserved from the stain
    of original sin by the anticipatory redemption of the Blood of Jesus which washes
    away all sin. Only God can wash away the very arrival of sin, before it leaves any mark by preventing it from touching a new soul, with blood that has not yet
    been incarnated!!
    Maybe that one is just too broad a concept for the narrow
    mind of a heretic.

    Anyone who denies the Assumption must also be real close (if not already there)
    to denying the divinity of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

    And that is the one that takes the cake. That is where all these other errors end
    up: denying that Jesus is God.
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    Offline Nishant

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    The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
    « Reply #4 on: August 16, 2012, 02:47:43 AM »
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  • St.John Damascene, the last of the Fathers of the Greek Church, whom Pope Pius XII called the Doctor of this dogma, on the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin, or as it is called in the East, the Dormition of the Theotokos.

    Homily 1.

    Quote
    The memory of the just takes place with rejoicing, said Solomon, the wisest of men; for precious in God's sight is the death of His saints, according to the royal David. If, then, the memory of all the just is a subject of rejoicing, who will not offer praise to justice in its source, and holiness in its treasure-house? It is not mere praise; it is praising with the intention of gaining eternal glory. God's dwelling-place does not need our praise, that city of God, concerning which great things were spoken, as holy. David addresses it in these words: "Glorious things are said of thee, thou city of God" (Psalm 87.3). What sort of city shall we choose for the invisible and uncircuмscribed God, who holds all things in His hand, if not that city which alone is above nature, giving shelter without circuмscription to the supersubstantial Word of God? Glorious things have been spoken of that city by God Himself. For what is more exalted than being made the recipient of God's counsel, which is from all eternity?

    Neither human tongue nor angelic mind is able worthily to praise her through whom it is given to us to look clearly upon the Lord's glory. What then? Shall we be silent through fear of our insufficiency? Certainly not. Shall we be trespassers beyond our own boundaries, and freely handle ineffable mysteries, putting off all restraint? By no means. Mingling, rather, fear with desire, and weaving them into one crown, with reverent hand and longing soul, let us show forth the poor first-fruits of our intelligence in gratitude to our Queen and Mother, the benefactress of all creation, as a repayment of our debt. A story is told of some rustics who were ploughing up the soil when a king chanced to pass, in the splendour of his royal robes and crown, and surrounded by countless gift bearers, standing in a circle. As there was no gift to offer at that moment, one of them was collecting water in his hands, as there happened to be a copious stream near by. Of this he prepared a gift for the king, who addressed him in these words: "What is this, my boy?" And he answered boldly, "I made the best of what I had, thinking it was better to show my willingness, than to offer nothing. You do not need our gifts, nor do you wish for anything from us save our good will. The need is on our side, and the reward is in the doing. I know that glory often comes to the grateful."

    The king in wonder praised the boy's cleverness, graciously acknowledged his willingness, and made him many rich gifts in return. Now, if that proud monarch so generously rewarded good intentions, will not Our Lady, the Mother of God, accept our good will, not judging us by what we accomplish? Our Lady is the Mother of God, who alone is good and infinite in His condescension, who preferred the two mites to many splendid gifts. She will indeed receive us, who are paying off our debt, and make us a return out of all proportion to what we offer. Since prayer is absolutely necessary for our needs, let us direct our attention to it.

    What shall we say, O Queen? What words shall we use? What praise shall we pour upon thy sacred and glorified head, thou giver of good gifts and of riches, the pride of the human race, the glory of all creation, through whom it is truly blessed. He whom nature did not contain in the beginning, was born of thee. The Invisible One is contemplated face to face. O Word of God, do Thou open my slow lips, and give their utterances Thy richest blessing; inflame us with the grace of Thy Spirit, through whom fishermen became orators, and ignorant men spoke supernatural wisdom, so that our feeble voices may contribute to thy beloved Mother's praises, even though greatness should be extolled by misery. She, the chosen one of an ancient race, by a predetermined counsel and the good pleasure of God the Father, who had begotten Thee in eternity immaterially, brought Thee forth in the latter times, Thou who art propitiation and salvation, justice and redemption, life of life, light of light, and true God of true God.

    The birth of her, whose Child was marvellous, was above nature and understanding, and it was salvation to the world; her death was glorious, and truly a sacred feast. The Father predestined her, the prophets foretold her through the Holy Spirit. His sanctifying power overshadowed her, cleansed and made her holy, and, as it were, predestined her. Then Thou, Word of the Father, not dwelling in place, didst invite the lowliness of our nature to be united to the immeasurable greatness of Thy inscrutable Godhead. Thou, who didst take flesh of the Blessed Virgin, vivified by a reasoning soul, having first abided in her undefiled and immaculate womb, creating Thyself, and causing her to exist in Thee, didst become perfect man, not ceasing to be perfect God, equal to Thy Father, but taking upon Thyself our weakness through ineffable goodness. Through it Thou art one Christ, one Lord, one Son of God, and man at the same time, perfect God and perfect man, wholly God and wholly man, one substance (hypostasis) from two perfect natures, the Godhead and the manhood. And in two perfect natures, the divine and the human, God is not pure God, nor the man only man, but the Son of God and the incarnate God are one and the same God and man without confusion or division, uniting in Himself substantially the attributes of both natures. Thus, He is at once uncreated and created, mortal and immortal, visible and invisible, in place and not in place. He has a divine will and a human will, a divine action and a human also, two powers of choosing: divine and human. He shows forth divine wonders and human affections -- natural, I mean, and pure. Thou hast taken upon Thyself, Lord, of Thy great mercy, the state of Adam as he was before the fall: body, soul, and mind, and all that they involve physically, so as to give me a perfect salvation. It is true indeed that 'what was not assumed was not healed'.1 Having thus become the mediator between God and man, Thou didst destroy enmity, and lead back to Thy Father those who had deserted Him, wanderers to their home, and those in darkness to the light. Thou didst bring pardon to the contrite, and didst change mortality into immortality. Thou didst deliver the world from the aberration of many gods, and didst make men the children of God, partakers of Thy divine glory. Thou didst raise the human race, which was condemned to hell, above all power and majesty, and in Thy person it is seated on the King's eternal throne. Who was the instrument of these infinite benefits exceeding all mind and comprehension, if not the Mother, ever-Virgin, who bore Thee?


    Realise, beloved in the Lord, the grace of today and its wondrous solemnity. Its mysteries are not terrible, nor do they inspire awe. Blessed are they who have eyes to see. Blessed are they who see with spiritual eyes. This night shines as the day. What countless angels acclaim the death of the life-giving Mother! How the eloquence of apostles blesses the departure of this body which was the receptacle of God. How the Word of God, who deigned in His mercy to become her Son, ministering with His divine hands to this immaculate and divine being, as His mother, receives her holy soul. O wondrous Law-giver, fulfilling the law which He had Himself laid down, not being bound by it, for it was He who enjoined children to show reverence to their parents. "Honour thy father and thy mother," He says. The truth of this is apparent to every one, calling to mind even dimly the words of holy Scripture. If according to it the souls of the just are in the hands of God, how much more is her soul in the hands of her Son and her God. This is indisputable. Let us consider who she is and whence she came, how she, the greatest and dearest of all God's gifts, was given to this world. Let us examine what her life was, and the mysteries in which she took part. Heathens in the use of funeral orations most carefully brought forward anything which could be turned to praise of the deceased, and at the same time encourage the living to virtue, drawing generally upon fable and fiction, not having fact to go upon. How then, shall we not deserve scorn if we bury in silence that which is most true and sacred, and in very deed the source of praise and salvation to all? Shall we not receive the same punishment as the man who hid his master's talent (cf. Matthew 25.14-30)? Let us adapt our subject to the needs of those who listen, as food is suited to the body.

    Joachim and Anne were the parents of Mary.2 Joachim kept as strict a watch over his thoughts as a shepherd over his flock, having them entirely under his control. For the Lord God led him as a sheep, and he wanted for none of the best things. When I say best, let no one think I mean what is commonly acceptable to the multitude, that upon which greedy minds are fixed, the pleasures of life that can neither endure nor make their possessors better, nor confer real strength. They follow the downward course of human life and cease all in a moment, even if they abounded before. Far be it from us to cherish these things, nor is this the portion of those who fear God. But the good things which are a matter of desire to those who possess true knowledge, delighting God, and fruitful to their possessors, namely, virtues, bearing fruit in due season, that is, in eternity, will reward with eternal life those who have laboured worthily and have persevered in their acquisition as far as possible. The labour goes before, eternal happiness follows. Joachim ever shepherded his thoughts. In the place of pastures, dwelling by contemplation on the words of sacred Scripture, made glad on the restful waters of divine grace, withdrawn from foolishness, he walked in the path of justice. And Anne, whose name means grace, was no less a companion in her life than a wife, blessed with all good gifts, though afflicted for a mystical reason with sterility. Grace in very truth remained sterile, not being able to produce fruit in the souls of men.3 Therefore, men declined from good and degenerated; there was not one of understanding nor one who sought after God. Then His divine goodness, taking pity on the work of His hands, and wishing to save it, put an end to that mystical barrenness, that of holy Anne, I mean, and she gave birth to a child, whose equal had never been created and never can be. The end of barrenness proved clearly that the world's sterility would cease and that the withered trunk would be crowned with vigorous and mystical life.

    Hence the Mother of our Lord is announced. An angel foretells her birth.4 It was fitting that in this, too, she, who was to be the human Mother of the one true and living God, should be marked out above every one else. Then she was offered in God's holy temple, and remained there, showing to all a great example of zeal and holiness, withdrawn from frivolous society. When, however, she reached full age and the law required that she should leave the temple, she was entrusted by the priests to Joseph, her bridegroom, as the guardian of her virginity, a steadfast observer of the law from his youth. Mary, the holy and undefiled, went to Joseph, contenting herself with her household matters, and knowing nothing beyond her four walls.

    In the fulness of time, as the divine apostle says, the angel Gabriel was sent to this true child of God, and saluted her in the words, "Hail, full of grace, the Lord is with thee" (Luke 1.28 and ff.). Beautiful is the angel's salutation to her who is greater than an angel. He is the bearer of joy to the whole world. She was troubled at his words, not being used to speak with men, for she had resolved to keep her virginity unsullied. She pondered in herself what this greeting might be. Then the angel said to her: "Fear not, Mary. Thou hast found grace before God." In very deed, she who was worthy of grace had found it. She found grace who had done the deeds of grace, and had reaped its fulness. She found grace who brought forth the source of grace, and was a rich harvest of grace. She found an abyss of grace who kept undefiled her double virginity, her virginal soul no less spotless than her body; hence her perfect virginity. "Thou shalt bring forth a Son," he said, "and shalt call His name Jesus" (Jesus is interpreted Saviour). "He shall save His people from their sins." What did she, who is true wisdom, reply? She does not imitate our first mother Eve, but rather improves upon her incautiousness, and calling in nature to support her, thus answers the angel: "How is this to be, since I know not man? What you say is impossible, for it goes beyond the natural laws laid down by the Creator. I will not be called a second Eve and disobey the will of my God. If you are not speaking godless things, explain the mystery by saying how it is to be accomplished." Then the messenger of truth answered her: "The Holy Spirit shall come to thee, and the power of the Most High shall overshadow thee. Therefore He who is born to thee shall be called the Son of God." That which is foretold is not subservient to the laws of nature. For God, the Creator of nature, can alter its laws. And she, listening in holy reverence to that sacred name, which she had ever desired, signified her obedience in words full of humility and joy: "Behold the handmaid of the Lord. Be it done unto me according to thy word."

    "O the depth of the riches, of the wisdom, and of the knowledge of God," I will exclaim in the apostle's words (cf. Romans 11.33). "How incomprehensible are His judgments, and how unsearchable His ways." O inexhaustible goodness of God! O boundless goodness! He who called what was not into being, and filled heaven and earth, whose throne is heaven, and whose footstool is the earth, a spacious dwelling-place, made the womb of His own servant, and in it the mystery of mysteries is accomplished. Being God He becomes man, and is marvellously brought forth without detriment to the virginity of His Mother. And He is lifted up as a baby in earthly arms, who is the brightness of eternal glory, the form of the Father's substance, by the word of whose mouth all created things exist. O truly divine wonder! O mystery transcending all nature and understanding! O marvellous virginity! What, O holy Mother and Virgin, is this great mystery accomplished in thee? Blessed art thou amongst women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb. Thou art blessed from generation to generation, thou who alone art worthy of being blessed. Behold all generations shall call thee blessed as thou hast said. The daughters of Jerusalem, I mean, of the Church, saw thee. Queens have blessed thee, that is, the spirits of the just, and they shall praise thee for ever. Thou art the royal throne which angels surround, seeing upon it their very King and Lord. Thou art a spiritual Eden, holier and more divine than Eden of old. That Eden was the abode of the mortal Adam, whilst the Lord came from heaven to dwell in thee. The ark foreshadowed thee who hast kept the seed of the new world. Thou didst bring forth Christ, the salvation of the world, who destroyed sin and its angry waves. The burning bush was a figure of thee, and the tablets of the law, and the ark of the testament. The golden urn and candelabra, the table and the flowering rod of Aaron were significant types of thee.5 From thee arose the splendour of the Godhead, the eternal Word of the Father, the most sweet and heavenly Manna, the sacred Name above every name, the Light which was from the beginning. The heavenly Bread of Life, the Fruit without seed, took flesh of thee. Did not that flame foreshadow thee with its burning fire an image of the divine fire within thee? And Abraham's tent most clearly pointed to thee. By the Word of God dwelling in thee human nature produced the bread made of ashes, its first fruits, from thy most pure womb, the first fruits kneaded into bread and cooked by divine fire, becoming His divine person, and His true substance of a living body quickened by a reasoning and intelligent soul. I had nearly forgotten Jacob's ladder. Is it not evident to every one that it prefigured thee, and is not the type easily recognised? just as Jacob saw the ladder bringing together heaven and earth, and on it angels coming down and going up, and the truly strong and invulnerable God wrestling mystically with himself, so art thou placed between us, and art become the ladder of God's intercourse with us, of Him who took upon Himself our weakness, uniting us to Himself, and enabling man to see God. Thou hast brought together what was parted. Hence angels descended to Him, ministering to Him as their God and Lord, and men, adopting the life of angels, are carried up to heaven.

    How shall I understand the prediction of prophets? Shall I not refer them to thee, as we can prove them to be true? What is the fleece of David which receives the Son of the Almighty God, co-eternal and co-equal with His Father, as rain falls upon the soil? Does it not signify thee in thy bright shining? Who is the virgin foretold by Isaias who should conceive and bear a Son, God ever present with us, that is, who being born a man should remain God? What is Daniel's mountain from which arose Christ, the Corner-Stone, not made by the hand of man? Is it not thee, conceiving without man and still remaining a virgin? Let the inspired Ezechiel come forth and show us the closed gate, sealed by the Lord, and not yielding, according to his prophecy -- let him point to its fulfilment in thee. The Lord of all came to thee, and taking flesh did not open the door of thy virginity. The seal remains intact. The prophets, then, foretell thee. Angels and apostles minister to thee, O Mother of God, ever Virgin, with John the virgin apostle. Angels and the spirits of the just, patriarchs and prophets surround thee today in thy departure to thy Son. Apostles watched over the countless host of the just who were gathered together from every corner of the earth by the divine commands, as a cloud around the divine and living Jerusalem, singing hymns of praise to thee, the author of our Lord's life-giving body.

    O how does the source of life pass through death to life? O how can she obey the law of nature, who, in conceiving, surpasses the boundaries of nature? How is her spotless body made subject to death? In order to be clothed with immortality she must first put off mortality, since the Lord of nature did not reject the penalty of death. She dies according to the flesh, destroys death by death, and through corruption gains incorruption, and makes her death the source of resurrection. O how does Almighty God receive with His own hands the holy, disembodied soul of our Lord's Mother! He honours her truly, whom being His servant by nature, He made His Mother, in His inscrutable abyss of mercy, when He became incarnate in very truth. We may well believe that the angelic choirs waited to receive thy departing soul. O what a blessed departure this going to God of thine! If God vouchsafes it to all His servants -- and we know that He does -- what an immense difference there is between His servants and His Mother. What, then, shall we call this mystery of thine? Death? Thy blessed soul is naturally parted from thy blissful and undefiled body, and the body is delivered to the grave, yet it does not endure in death, nor is it the prey of corruption. The body of her, whose virginity remained unspotted in childbirth, was preserved in its incorruption, and was taken to a better, more divine place, where death is not, but eternal life. Just as the glorious sun may be hidden momentarily by the opaque moon, it shows still though covered, and its rays illumine the darkness since light belongs to its essence. It has in itself a perpetual source of light, or rather it is the source of light as God created it. So art thou the perennial source of true light, the treasury of life itself, the richness of grace, the cause and medium of all our goods. And if for a time thou art hidden by the death of the body, without speaking, thou art our light, life-giving ambrosia, true happiness, a sea of grace, a fountain of healing and of perpetual blessing. Thou art as a fruitful tree in the forest, and thy fruit is sweet in the mouth of the faithful. Therefore I will not call thy sacred transformation 'death', but 'rest' or 'going home', and it is more truly a going home. Putting off corporeal things, thou dwellest in a happier state.

    Angels with archangels bear thee up. Impure spirits trembled at thy departure. The air raises a hymn of praise at thy passage, and the atmosphere is purified. Heaven receives thy soul with joy. The heavenly powers greet thee with sacred canticles and with joyous praise, saying : "Who is this most pure creature ascending, shining as the dawn, beautiful as the moon, conspicuous as the sun? How sweet and lovely thou art, the lily of the field, the rose among thorns; therefore the young maidens loved thee. We are drawn after the odour of thy ointments. The King introduced thee into His chamber. There Powers protect thee, Principalities praise thee, Thrones proclaim thee, Cherubim are hushed in joy, and Seraphim magnify the true Mother by nature and by grace of their very Lord. Thou wert not taken into heaven as Elias was, nor didst thou penetrate to the third heaven with Paul, but thou didst reach the royal throne itself of thy Son, seeing it with thy own eyes, standing by it in joy and unspeakable familiarity. O gladness of angels and of all heavenly powers, sweetness of patriarchs and of the just, perpetual exultation of prophets, rejoicing the world and sanctifying all things, refreshment of the weary, comfort of the sorrowful, remission of sins, health of the sick, harbour of the storm-tossed, lasting strength of mourners, and perpetual succour of all who invoke thee."

    O wonder surpassing nature and creating wonder! Death, which of old was feared and hated, is a matter of praise and blessing. Of old it was the harbinger of grief, dejection, tears, and sadness, and now it is shown forth as the cause of joy and rejoicing. In the case of all God's servants, whose death is extolled, His good pleasure is surmised from their holy end, and therefore their death is blessed. It shows them to be perfect, blessed and immoveable in goodness, as the proverb says: "Praise no man before his death." This, however, we do not apply to thee. Thy blessedness was not death, nor was dying thy perfection, nor, again, did thy departure hence help thee to security. Thou art the beginning, middle, and end of all goods transcending mind, for thy Son in His conception and divine dwelling in thee is made our sure and true security. Thus thy words were true: from the moment of His conception, not from thy death, thou didst say all generations should call thee blessed. It was thou who didst break the force of death, paying its penalty, and making it gracious. Hence, when thy holy and sinless body was taken to the tomb, the choirs of angels bore it, and were all around, leaving nothing undone for the honour of our Lord's Mother, whilst apostles and all the assembly of the Church burst into prophetic song, saying: "We shall be filled with the good things of Thy house, holy is Thy temple, wonderful in justice." And again: "The Most High has sanctified His tabernacle. The mountain of God is a fertile mountain, the mountain in which it pleased God to dwell." The apostolic band lifting the true ark of the Lord God on their shoulders, as the priests of old the typical ark, and placing thy body in the tomb, made it, as if another Jordan, the way to the true land of the gospel, the heavenly Jerusalem, the mother of all the faithful, God being its Lord and architect. Thy soul did not descend to Limbo, neither did thy flesh see corruption. Thy pure and spotless body was not left in the earth, but the abode of the Queen, of God's true Mother, was fixed in the heavenly kingdom alone.

    O how did heaven receive her who is greater than heaven? How did she, who had received God, descend into the grave? This truly happened, and she was held by the tomb. It was not after bodily wise that she surpassed heaven. For how can a body measuring three cubits, and continually losing flesh, be compared with the dimensions of heaven ? It was rather by grace that she surpassed all height and depth, for that which is divine is incomparable. O sacred and wonderful, holy and worshipful body, ministered to now by angels, standing by in lowly reverence. Demons tremble: men approach with faith, honouring and worshipping her, greeting her with eyes and lips, and drawing down upon themselves abundant blessings. Just as a rich scent sprinkled upon clothes or places, leaves its fragrance even after it has been withdrawn, so now that holy, undefiled, and divine body, filled with heavenly fragrance, the rich source of grace, is laid in the tomb that it may be translated to a higher and better place. Nor did she leave the grave empty; her body imparted to it a divine fragrance, a source of healing, and of all good for those who approach it with faith.

    We, too, approach thee today, O Queen; and again, I say, O Queen, O Virgin Mother of God, staying our souls with our trust in thee, as with a strong anchor. Lifting up mind, soul and body, and all ourselves to thee, rejoicing in psalms and hymns and spiritual canticles, we reach through thee One who is beyond our reach on account of His Majesty. If, as the divine Word made flesh taught us, honour shown to servants, is honour shown to our common Lord, how can honour shown to thee, His Mother, be slighted? How is it not most desirable? Art thou not honoured as the very breath of life? Thus shall we best show our service to our Lord Himself. What do I say to our Lord? It is sufficient that those who think of Thee should recall the memory of Thy most precious gift as the cause of our lasting joy. How it fills us with gladness! How the mind that dwells on this holy treasury of Thy grace enriches itself.

    This is our thank-offering to thee, the first fruits of our discourses, the best homage of my poor mind, whilst I am moved by desire of thee, and full of my own misery. But do thou graciously receive my desire, knowing that it exceeds my power. Watch over us, O Queen, the dwelling-place of our Lord. Lead and govern all our ways as thou wilt. Save us from our sins. Lead us into the calm harbour of the divine will. Make us worthy of future happiness through the sweet and face-to-face vision of the Word made flesh through thee. With Him, glory, praise, power, and majesty be to the Father and to the holy and life-giving Spirit, now and for ever. Amen.

    "Never will anyone who says his Rosary every day become a formal heretic ... This is a statement I would sign in my blood." St. Montfort, Secret of the Rosary. I support the FSSP, the SSPX and other priests who work for the restoration of doctrinal orthodoxy and liturgical orthopraxis in the Church. I accept Vatican II if interpreted in the light of Tradition and canonisations as an infallible declaration that a person is in Heaven. Sedevacantism is schismatic and Ecclesiavacantism is heretical.


    Offline Neil Obstat

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    « Reply #5 on: August 16, 2012, 07:57:55 PM »
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  • The Assumption is the 14th Mystery of the Rosary, and a defined dogma of the
    Faith. We really ought to know how to defend it against the accusations of heretics.

    The 15th Mystery is the Coronation of Our Lady Queen of Heaven. This has not
    been defined, literally, but perhaps one day it will. This is the only Mystery of
    the Rosary that takes place outside of time, in eternity. One could say that Our
    Lady is "crowned forever" or in a way of speaking, is always in a state of being
    crowned Queen of Angels and Queen of all the saints in heaven. That's a thought
    that can keep your mind busy for the entire decade, and then some!

    We should all be prepared to defend these doctrines when challenged. If we are
    to be Catholics, we should be knights at the ready to defend Our Lady's honor.
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    Offline Sigismund

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    « Reply #6 on: August 16, 2012, 08:49:56 PM »
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  • Neil,

    While I would be perfectly happy if the coronation were dogmatically defined, I am not sure it has to be.  It flows with such inescapable logic for everything we do know dogmatically about Our Lord and Our Lady that there is no way it could not be true.  

    Protestants who actually believe in the teachings of the original "reformers" do believe in the general resurrection.  They think that The Blessed Virgin will have to wait her turn like the rest of us.  They are wrong, of course, but they are wrong about  the the early application of the general Resurrection to the Theotokos, not about the rest of it.  

    I recently had an interesting chat with am Episcopal clergyman who was a chaplain at a hospital in which a teenage cousin of mine was a patient.  The boy was upset to discover after surgery that the rosary he had brought with him was missing.  When the chaplain stopped in, my cousin asked him if he could find a rosary for him.  Much to his and his parents' surprise, the chaplain pulled one out of his pocket and gave it to him.  He said that it was an Anglican rosary, by which we later found out he simply meant that he had blessed it.  

    I came to the hospital with my son, a Byzantine rite priest, when he came to give the boy Holy Communion.  We passed the chaplain in the hall way, and he, alone among all the people in the hallway, knelt as the Sacrament passed him.  

    He came to the room later, and we had a pleasant chat.  We talked about the rosary for a bit, and he mentioned that he believed very much in the Assumption, and was saddened that it was such a "controversial" doctrine among Anglicans. My 17 year old cousin, who I didn't even realize was listening said, "Well, sir, there is a Church where that teaching is not controversial at all.  Maybe you should think about joining it.  We'd be glad to have you."  The chaplain laughed good naturally, but unfortunately a conversion was not immediately forthcoming.  


    The chaplain seems like a decent fellow, with more faith in Our Lady and the Blessed Sacrament than many Catholics.  I don't know what he thinks of the sorry state of the Episcopal Church in general, but I hope this seed will one day bear fruit.
    Stir up within Thy Church, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the Spirit with which blessed Josaphat, Thy Martyr and Bishop, was filled, when he laid down his life for his sheep: so that, through his intercession, we too may be moved and strengthen by the same Spir

    Offline Neil Obstat

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    « Reply #7 on: August 16, 2012, 11:14:07 PM »
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  • That's an interesting story, Sigismund, about the chaplain. There are a number of
    "Anglican use Catholic" parishes that have been officially accepted by Rome as of
    this year, from what I've heard. But I don't know what they're doing about the
    question of dogma with the congregation and the ministers (now priests). More
    fuel for the fires of sedes, perhaps.

    It seems to me that the Coronation is further down the road than Mary Mediatrix
    and/or Co-Redemptrix. Those two would be the obstacles to the Coronation, but
    once they're defined then after a time the Coronation could be. But as you say,
    it might not be necessary. Who knows? Who would have known in the 3rc century
    that it would be 1600 years before the Assumption would be defined by the Pope?
    In those days, the Pope wasn't really the one defining dogma. That was the work
    of oecuмenical councils. Who can say what the trials of the Church will be in 100
    more years?

    But for now, since the Assumption is a defined dogma of the Faith, we are well
    advised to study it and know how to defend it.

    As for "the reformers" thinking the Blessed Virgin Mary will have to "wait her turn
    like the rest of us," they would have to be pretty dense to try and make that square
    peg fit into the round hole of history. Maybe they don't like to think about the fact of
    the relics of the saints. How could there be no relics of Our Lady, when all the
    Apostles were there at the end of her life? Of course, since that's not contained in
    the Bible they like to say it didn't happen, even though that's not scriptural itself.

    At some point you have to back away and let them be in their unknowing. Maybe
    they like it that way. But it's great to leave them with a sense of being welcome,
    provided they abjure their errors. In the end, it's a matter of their cooperation with
    God's grace.
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    Offline Sigismund

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    « Reply #8 on: August 17, 2012, 08:52:39 PM »
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  • My son has actually tried to befriend the man, in the hopes of planting a few more seeds.  They are having lunch together next week.

    He is a member of an Anglican religious order that requires celibacy, so he is not married.  I guess it is in God's hands.  
    Stir up within Thy Church, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the Spirit with which blessed Josaphat, Thy Martyr and Bishop, was filled, when he laid down his life for his sheep: so that, through his intercession, we too may be moved and strengthen by the same Spir

    Offline Neil Obstat

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    « Reply #9 on: August 18, 2012, 07:00:26 AM »
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  • The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary                                                                  



    The 15 Mysteries of the Rosary begin with our poor world being visited by an
    angel who announces the arrival of the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity.
    Then follows 13 Mysteries regarding things that happened in this world, showing
    how God's grace touches our lives. His Holy Ghost touches the Apostles with His
    grace in the Upper Room most tellingly in the 13th Mystery, the Descent of the
    Holy Ghost upon the Apostles.

    They end with the Assumption taking our thoughts away from this poor world,
    into the eternity of paradise, where the 15th and last Mystery of the Rosary
    occurs entirely in heaven itself.

    The Assumption is therefore the last link in the Rosary to this life, which takes
    us into the next life. There are hints of that transition all throughout the Rosary in
    various ways, the most obvious being the Ascension of Our Lord, but it's also in
    the Joyful Mysteries such as the Visitation, where the conversation of Mary and
    her cousin Elizabeth transcend this temporal reality and reach into the immense
    beyond albeit vaguely. The Nativity has shepherds hearing choirs of angels who
    announce the birth of Jesus. The Presentation has Our Lord and Our Lady
    fulfilling the Law of God from all eternity, and the Finding has the Temple scholars
    getting their noses out of their dusty books and getting a peek into the infinite
    majesty of eternity.

    The Sorrowful Mysteries treat of the painful separation inherent with our departure
    from this world, focusing on the enormous price God Himself has paid for the
    forgiveness of our sins, and they touch on the eternity of pain which is the
    alternative of salvation: hell.

    Finally, the Glorious Mysteries take us literally into heaven, with the first two of
    three being Our Lord's and Our Lady's rising from this world into the next, while
    the third should be our own rising into eternity, if we do not suffer the alternative.

    The Assumption, more than any other mystery, literally takes us, "body and soul,"
    out of this world and into the next. It is the one mystery that most closely
    encompasses all the mysteries together, a sort of abbreviated summary of the 15
    decade Rosary. And it is followed by the "crowning glory" of them all: the
    Coronation, which occurs entirely in eternity. One could say that the Assumption is
    the prelude to the Coronation.

    Coming from a position of ignorance, the Rosary can seem like so much
    nonsense. What's this all about? one may ask. What's this Assumption nonsense?
    The Assumption must seem like complete fantasy to one who has no faith. And
    how about for an atheist? What do you suppose he might think?

    I find it rather impossible to imagine what an atheist might think of the
    Assumption. Perhaps that alone is an indicator of the immensity of the "great
    chaos" that divides
    the eternity of salvation from the eternity of the damned
    (Lk xvii. 26). Such a one might see something comprehensible in the first 13
    mysteries, since they occur in this world and have the trappings of our temporal
    reality about them. But the Assumption? It's not even in the Bible! And the
    Coronation?! I'll leave the expletives to your imagination.  

    These final two Mysteries are no less mysterious than the first 13. But it takes us
    13 steps to get to that point, where our minds can ascend with Our Lady into
    paradise. And there, with the saints, we can be present in eternity for the
    Coronation. That's an "event" you don't want to miss! The Rosary is all about
    preparing for that one journey that really counts: and teaches us a desire to not
    be among the ones that are "left out."





    -------------------------------------------------------cut here-----------------------------------------------------




    Quote from: Sigismund
    My son has actually tried to befriend the man, in the hopes of
    planting a few more seeds.  They are having lunch together next week.

    He is a member of an Anglican religious order that requires celibacy, so he is not married.  I guess it is in God's hands.  





    I have a hunch that if your son takes a print out of this post to his lunch with his
    Anglican friend, they might find a bit more to talk about...........
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    Offline Sigismund

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    « Reply #10 on: August 18, 2012, 09:02:05 AM »
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  • I will print it out and give it to him.  Thanks.
    Stir up within Thy Church, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the Spirit with which blessed Josaphat, Thy Martyr and Bishop, was filled, when he laid down his life for his sheep: so that, through his intercession, we too may be moved and strengthen by the same Spir


    Offline Neil Obstat

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    « Reply #11 on: August 20, 2012, 07:27:03 PM »
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  • Quote from: Neil Obstat
            Happy Feast of the Assumption!!



    Thanks for that nice post, LoT.
    Where's Hobbles? There must be some nice artwork for this great feast day!  




    I went to a local Coptic Orthodox church one day, to talk to one of the priests, and
    I was very impressed by the graciousness and cordial welcome I received. I told
    him I was Catholic, and he didn't mind. He used the term, "Mother of God," in a
    sentence while watching my eyes for a reaction, and I suppose he got what he
    was looking for, because he immediately insisted that I have a keyring that has
    a very nice picture of Our Mother of Perpetual Help on it. He said, "she is Egyptian."

    I have tried to give this keyring away to several others who would like it, and it
    has always come back to me. I think I could say that these keys are pretty darned
    safe from being lost so long as this image is attached to them.

    I went into the church for a while to observe the artwork and say a few prayers,
    for it was very nice inside, very conducive to meditation. While I was there, I found
    a beautiful little sticker of Our Lady of Grace on the floor, which appeared to have
    been peeled off of something, perhaps by a child, I thought. So I showed the
    priest this sticker and asked him if I could keep it, and assured me that would be
    fine. I placed her on the front, blank page of my Fr. Lasance Missal, and now, after
    being between closed covers for some time, She looks like she has always been
    there.  I often open to that page and look at the image. It has a sparkly effect in
    the lines of graces coming from her hands, and the colors are rather beautiful.
    It's an image that is typically iconic and Coptic in style, but it is the image of a
    very European Lady of Grace. She appears French, actually, like Our Lady of
    Lourdes.


    Hobbles showed up, finally:

    http://www.cathinfo.com/catholic.php/St-Bernards-Sermons-on-the-Blessed-Virgin-Mary


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    Offline RomanCatholic1953

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    The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
    « Reply #12 on: August 20, 2012, 10:41:18 PM »
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  • The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary was Dogmatically and Infallibly
    defined by Pope Pius XII on November 1, 1950.

    The Photo shows Cardinal Samuel Stritch Celebrating High Mass
    at the Cathedral of the Holy Name. The Tapestry above the Altar
    shows the Assumption. Not a very clear image because of the
    state of photography in 1950.

    Offline Lover of Truth

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    « Reply #13 on: August 21, 2012, 06:25:01 AM »
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  • Quote from: Neil Obstat
            Happy Feast of the Assumption!!



    Thanks for that nice post, LoT.
    Where's Hobbles? There must be some nice artwork for this great feast day!  




    I went to a local Coptic Orthodox church one day, to talk to one of the priests, and
    I was very impressed by the graciousness and cordial welcome I received. I told
    him I was Catholic, and he didn't mind. He used the term, "Mother of God," in a
    sentence while watching my eyes for a reaction, and I suppose he got what he
    was looking for, because he immediately insisted that I have a keyring that has
    a very nice picture of Our Mother of Perpetual Help on it. He said, "she is Egyptian."

    I have tried to give this keyring away to several others who would like it, and it
    has always come back to me. I think I could say that these keys are pretty darned
    safe from being lost so long as this image is attached to them.

    I went into the church for a while to observe the artwork and say a few prayers,
    for it was very nice inside, very conducive to meditation. While I was there, I found
    a beautiful little sticker of Our Lady of Grace on the floor, which appeared to have
    been peeled off of something, perhaps by a child, I thought. So I showed the
    priest this sticker and asked him if I could keep it, and assured me that would be
    fine. I placed her on the front, blank page of my Fr. Lasance Missal, and now, after
    being between closed covers for some time, She looks like she has always been
    there.  I often open to that page and look at the image. It has a sparkly effect in
    the lines of graces coming from her hands, and the colors are rather beautiful.
    It's an image that is typically iconic and Coptic in style, but it is the image of a
    very European Lady of Grace. She appears French, actually, like Our Lady of
    Lourdes.


    Thank you Neil  :cheers:
    "I receive Thee, redeeming Prince of my soul. Out of love for Thee have I studied, watched through many nights, and exerted myself: Thee did I preach and teach. I have never said aught against Thee. Nor do I persist stubbornly in my views. If I have ever expressed myself erroneously on this Sacrament, I submit to the judgement of the Holy Roman Church, in obedience of which I now part from this world." Saint Thomas Aquinas the greatest Doctor of the Church

    Offline Lover of Truth

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    The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
    « Reply #14 on: August 21, 2012, 06:26:15 AM »
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  • Quote from: RomanCatholic1953
    The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary was Dogmatically and Infallibly
    defined by Pope Pius XII on November 1, 1950.

    The Photo shows Cardinal Samuel Stritch Celebrating High Mass
    at the Cathedral of the Holy Name. The Tapestry above the Altar
    shows the Assumption. Not a very clear image because of the
    state of photography in 1950.


    Wow!  This picture must have been taken in the dark ages.  Look, they have their backs to the people and there is no table. :furtive:
    "I receive Thee, redeeming Prince of my soul. Out of love for Thee have I studied, watched through many nights, and exerted myself: Thee did I preach and teach. I have never said aught against Thee. Nor do I persist stubbornly in my views. If I have ever expressed myself erroneously on this Sacrament, I submit to the judgement of the Holy Roman Church, in obedience of which I now part from this world." Saint Thomas Aquinas the greatest Doctor of the Church