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Author Topic: The Nativity of the Blessed Virgin  (Read 418 times)

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Offline poche

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The Nativity of the Blessed Virgin
« on: September 05, 2013, 01:49:26 AM »
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  • Huge crowds started gathering in Bangalore, India, last week, as the city's novena leading up to the Nativity of Mary began with the city's archbishop raising a Marian flag in prayer.

    “The Virgin Mary is the Mother of God and also our heavenly mother, and thus people tend to venerate her motherly affection and dress her in local culture as their mother,” said Father J. Sandhayagu, administrator of St. Mary's Basilica in the capital of the south-western Indian state of Karnataka.

    The statue of Mary found in the basilica is daily dressed in an elaborate sari, often laced with gold thread and Jєωelry, offered as a fulfillment of vows.

    “The Nativity of Mary is an important feast for the Archdiocese of Bangalore,” Fr. Sandhayagu continued. He told CNA on Aug. 30 that millions of people, irrespective of culture and religion, flock to participate at the city's Marian novena.

    Archbishop Bernard Moras hoisted a Marian flag on Aug. 29 in the presence of some 15,000 devotees to initiate the novena, or nine-day period of prayer. In his homily, he reflected on the Year of Faith as an opportune time for renewal and spiritual richness.

    The novena continues through Sept. 7, the vigil of the Feast of Mary’s Nativity - or birth - and is crowned by a procession and a festive Mass celebrated on the feast day itself.

    “Over the years the numbers of devotees have tremendously increased their participation in the liturgies and in Confession.”

    St. Mary's Basilica, he said, “has been witnessing numerous miracles and healings. People receive grace, hence people of all faith, including Hindus, Muslims, and other religions, rush every day to seek blessings.”

    During the novena, Mass is said every half hour in the basilica from 5:30 in the morning until 9:00 at night, with up to 5,000 people attending each Mass.

    The government of Karnataka provides security during the novena, and ministers, bureaucrats and leaders – even those who aren't Catholic – participate in the festival and seek blessings.

    The vast presence of devotees flocking to Bangalore is “evidence of faith, and prayerful and spiritual graces,” Fr. Sandhayagu said, with pilgrims bringing offerings of flowers, candles, clothes, Jєωelry and food to the basilica.

    The basilica is the oldest church in the Bangalore archdiocese, having been consecrated in 1882 on Mary's Nativity. It was named a minor basilica by Paul VI in 1973.

    http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/marys-nativity-draws-tens-of-thousands-to-indian-basilica/



    Offline poche

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    The Nativity of the Blessed Virgin
    « Reply #1 on: September 06, 2013, 03:48:38 AM »
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  • Preparations for the Feast of the Nativity of Mary this September are already underway in the Holy Land, particularly among Indian migrant workers.

    “Mother Mary is revered with great devotion by the Indian community as a mother and a spiritual figure of maternal protection,” said Friar Jayaseellan Pitchaimuthu OFM, head of the Indian Chaplaincy in Holy Land.

    She is acknowledged as the “protector and patroness” of the Indian Chaplaincy in Holy Land because she is a “model” for the migrants, he told CNA.

    He noted that the Holy Family took refuge in Egypt for safety and settled for livelihood in Nazareth, and that Jesus carried out his apostolic mission in Judea, Galilee and Jerusalem.

    Many Indian Catholic migrant workers “seek grace and invoke (Mary's) motherly protection,” he said.

    The feast of the Nativity of Mother Mary falls on Sunday, September 8, which is a working day in Israel. Therefore, the feast is being celebrated this year the previous day, which is a weekend holiday.

    According to Friar Pitchaimuthu, the September 7 celebration is expected to draw more than 3,000 migrant workers and pilgrims to Jaffa, Israel.

    Catholics from coastal part of Western India popularly call the feast day “Monti Fest,” a time to celebrate the harvest with family and thank God for the fruits of the crops.

    As part of the celebration, a novena will begin on August 30, kicking off a week of meditations and intercessory prayers leading up to the feast day.

    A large, colorful procession will begin at 5 p.m. in Jaffa, followed by Mass celebrated by H.B. Fouad Boutros Ibrahim Twal, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem.

    “There will then be blessing of harvested new grain, followed by a fellowship dinner,” said Friar Pitchaimuthu.

    The friar explained that the Marian feast day is particularly important in the Indian context because of its relation to other faiths.

    Members of other religions, including Hindus and Muslims, “regard Marian devotions in esteem,” he said.

    Thousands of devotees – both Catholics and non-Catholics – flock every week to the Marian apparition site at Velankanni, near Chennai in South India, and other shines that have recorded various miracles, he said.

    http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/indian-migrants-in-holy-land-prepare-for-marian-feast/


    Offline poche

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    The Nativity of the Blessed Virgin
    « Reply #2 on: September 06, 2013, 03:51:00 AM »
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  • The Jєωιѕн feast of Rosh Hoshanna, their new year, corresponds approximately with the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin. When God brought the new year of our salvation with the coming of the Holy Virgin.