Notre Dame de Rouen. The façade of the Gothic Church in France. Photographer: Hippo1947. Licence: SHUTTERSTOCK.

25 May, 2026

The “Ins And Outs” Of Cricket. A Clarification.



Illustration:


What with the new Cricket Season underway, Zephyrinus thought it prudent to offer a respectful explanation of the Laws of Cricket to our North American Cousins, who, possibly, get confused about the strange regulations.

Basically, Cricket is nothing like Baseball.

Hence, the following . . .



You have two sides . . .

one out in the field . . .

and one in.


Michael Hussey takes on a delivery from Shaun Pollock 
on the second day of the Australia v South Africa 
Boxing Day Test Match in Melbourne.
Photo: 26 December 2005.
Source:
This File is licensed under the 
2.0 Generic Licence.
Author: Prescott Pym on Flickr
(Wikimedia Commons)


Each man that’s in the side that’s in . . .
goes out.

And when he’s out . . .
he comes in.

And the next man goes in . . .
until he’s out.


Australian Cricketer Charlie Macartney,
taken in the 1920s.
Illustration: CRICPIX


When they are all out . . .
the side that’s out . . .
comes in . . .

and the side that’s been in . . .
goes out.

and tries to get out . . .
those coming in.


Illustration: CRICKET


Sometimes you get men still in . . .
and not out.

When both sides have been in . . .
and out . . .

including the Not Outs . . .

the winner is declared . . .

if there is one . . .

and it hasn’t been abandoned . . .

or declared “No Result” . . .

or Drawn . . .

or Tied . . .

“Big Boy” Locomotive No. 4014 To Make Multiple Stops In North-East Ohio.




Historic Union Pacific “Big Boy” Locomotive No. 4014 
to make multiple stops in North-East Ohio. “Big Boy” Train goes Coast-to-Coast for U.S. 250th Anniversary.
Available on YouTube


To celebrate the Country’s 250th Anniversary, the 
Union Pacific’s iconic “Big Boy” Locomotive No. 4014 
is currently in the midst of a Coast-to-Coast tour across 
the Continental United States. 

As part of an agreement between Union Pacific and 
Norfolk Southern, the Steam Locomotive will be allowed 
to venture off of her home rails and into the Mid-West 
and North-East — with a multi-day trek across 
Greater Cleveland being part of the schedule.



Union Pacific “Big Boy” 4014.
A Return To The Mainline.
Available On YouTube


Union Pacific’s “Big Boy” 4014 returns to the Mainline 
in May 2019 for its first run in nearly sixty years. 

This historic journey begins in Cheyenne, Wyoming, 
home of Union Pacific’s Steam Programme.

Practice For The Time After Pentecost.



Illustration: ABE BOOKS


Text is from “The Liturgical Year”.
   By: Abbot Guéranger, O.S.B.
   Volume 10.
   Time after Pentecost.
   Book I.

The object which The Church has in view by her Liturgical Year is the leading of the Christian Soul to union with Christ, and this by The Holy Ghost.

This object is the one which God Himself has in giving us His own Son to be our mediator, our teacher, and our Redeemer, and in sending us The Holy Ghost to abide among us.

To this end is directed all that aggregate of Rites and Prayers which we have hitherto explained: They are not a mere commemoration of the mysteries achieved for our salvation by The Divine Goodness, but they bring with them the Graces corresponding to each of those mysteries; that thus we may come, as the Apostle expresses it, “to the age of the fullness of Christ”.



Illustration: BRITANNICA

As we have explained elsewhere, our sharing in the mysteries of Christ, which are celebrated in The Liturgical Year, produces in the Christian what is called in mystic theology the “illuminative life”, in which the Soul gains continually more and more of the light of The Incarnate Word, Who, by His examples and teachings, renovates each one of her faculties, and imparts to her the habit of seeing all things from God’s point of view.

This is a preparation which disposes her for union with God, not merely in an imperfect manner and one that is more or less inconstant, but in an intimate and permanent way, which is called the “unitive life”. The production of this life is the special work of The Holy Ghost, Who has been sent into this World that He may maintain each one of our Souls in the possession of Christ, and may bring to perfection the love whereby the creature is united with its God.

In this state, in this “unitive life”, the Soul is made to relish, and assimilate into herself, all that substantial and nourishing food which is presented to her so abundantly during the Time after Pentecost.



The mysteries of The Trinity and of The Blessed Sacrament, the mercy and the power of The Heart of Jesus, the glories of Mary and her influence upon The Church and Souls — all these are manifested to the Soul with more clearness than ever, and produce within her effects not previously experienced.

In the Feasts of the Saints, which are so varied and so grand during this portion of the year, she feels more and more intimately the bond which unites her to them in Christ, through The Holy Spirit.

The eternal happiness of Heaven, which is to follow the trials of this mortal life, is revealed to her by The Feast of All Saints; she gains clearer notions of that mysterious bliss, which consists in light and love.



Having become more closely united to Holy Church, the bride of her dear Lord, she follows her in all the stages of her Earthly existence; she takes a share in her sufferings; she exults in her triumphs. She sees, and yet is not daunted at seeing, this World tending to its decline, for she knows that The Lord is nigh at hand.

As to what regards herself, she is not dismayed at feeling that her exterior life is slowly giving way, and that the wall which stands between her and the changeless sight and possession of the sovereign Good is gradually falling to decay; for, it is not in this World that she lives, and her heart has long been where her treasure is.

Thus enlightened, thus attracted, thus established by the incorporation into herself of the mysteries wherewith The Sacred Liturgy has nourished her, as also by the gifts poured into her by The Holy Ghost, the Soul yields herself up, and without any effort, to the impulse of The Divine Mover.



Virtue has become all the more easy to her as she aspires, it would almost seem naturally, to what is most perfect; sacrifices, which used formerly to terrify, now delight her; she makes use of this World as though she used it not, for all true realities, as far as she is concerned, exist beyond this World; in a word, she longs all the more ardently after the eternal possession of the object she loves, as she has been realising, even in this life, what the Apostle describes where he speaks of a creature as being “one spirit with The Lord” by being united to Him in heart.

Such is the result ordinarily produced in the Soul by the sweet and healthy influence of The Sacred Liturgy. But if it seems to us that, although we have followed it in its several seasons, we have not as yet reached the state of detachment and expectation just described, and that the life of Christ has not, so far, absorbed our own individual life into itself, let us be on our guard against discouragement on that account.

The Cycle of The Liturgy with its rays of light and grace for the Soul, is not a phenomenon that occurs only once in the heavens of Holy Church; it returns each year. Such is the merciful design of God “Who hath so loved the World as to give it His only-begotten Son”, “Who came not to judge the World, but that the World may be saved by Him”.



And Holy Church is but carrying out that design by putting within our reach the most powerful of all means for leading man to his God, and uniting him to his Sovereign Good; she thus testifies the earnestness of her maternal solicitude. The Christian who has not been led to the term we have been describing by the first half of the Cycle will still meet, in this second half, with important aids for the expansion of his Faith and the growth of his love.

The Holy Ghost, Who reigns in a special manner over this portion of The Liturgical Year, will not fail to influence his mind and heart; and, when a fresh Cycle commences, the work thus begun by Grace has a new chance of receiving that completeness which had been retarded by the weakness of human nature.

Cardinal Wiseman At Maynooth, Ireland, And The Re-Establishment Of The Catholic Hierarchy In England In 1850. (Part Two).



Cardinal Wiseman.
Illustration: LIBFOCUS



“A Grand Anti-Popish Procession, demonstrative of 
the feeling existing against the Papal Aggression, took place at Eltham, Kent, on Wednesday. An immense figure of the Pope, in full Pontificals, and of Cardinal Wiseman, were carried in vans, accompanied by between forty and fifty horsemen. After perambulating the country in the neighbourhood, they burnt the two effigies at Eltham, amidst discharges of rockets and other fireworks, while a band played the National Anthem”. — 1850 Illustrated London News.


The following Text is from THE VICTORIAN WEB

Although Catholics had long enjoyed toleration in England, their Church was governed by Vicars Apostolic, rather than Bishops, and there was no Diocesan or Parish organisation. 

But, in 1850, partly to better administer the large number of Catholic Irish flocking into England after The Irish Famine, The Catholic Church re-established its full hierarchy. 

For the first time since the reign of Mary Tudor (1555-1558), Catholics now had a a full hierarchy consistent with that of Catholic countries. 

Thirteen Sees and the Archdiocese of Westminster were established.



To liberals, the re-establishment of the Catholic hierarchy in England was but a logical extension of toleration and full religious liberties, but to many other Englishmen it marked yet another disastrous concession to the “Bishop of Rome” and yet another sign that the Church of England, convulsed by the high ritualism and Anglo-Catholicism of The Oxford Movement, and still reeling from the recent conversion to Catholicism of the eminent Anglican theologian, John Henry Newman, was in retreat before its old adversary, The Catholic Church.

The appointment of Dr. Nicholas Wiseman as a Cardinal and Catholic Archbishop of Westminster (in London) also provoked a reaction, as Wiseman was considered to be a militant and extremely outspoken Catholic. 

To The Times newspaper, to choose the Capital City as the Archbishopric, and Wiseman as Archbishop, was either a “clumsy joke” or else “one of the grossest acts of folly and impertinence which the Court of Rome has ventured to commit since The Crown and the people of England threw off its yoke.” (The Times, 14 October, 1850, 4, quoted in Arnstein 45.)

The wording of his “Pastoral Letter” served as a Red Flag to those who feared that the re-establishment of the hierarchy would be the first stage in a Catholic take-over of England.


He naturally rejoiced in the new Catholic organisation in England, but did so in immoderate and provocative language: “Your beloved country”, he told his fellow Englishmen, “has received a place among the fair Churches, which, normally constituted, form the splendid aggregate of Catholic communion; Catholic England has been restored to its orbit in the ecclesiastical firmament, from which its light had long vanished.” (Quoted in Chadwick I, 291).

He went on to state that: “We govern and shall continue to govern”, he wrote, “the Counties of Middlesex, Hertford, Essex, as Ordinary, thereof, and those of Surrey, Sussex, Kent, Berkshire, and Hampshire, with the islands annexed, as Administrator, with Ordinary jurisdiction.”

Queen Victoria was purported to have reacted to these imperious words with: “ Am I Queen of England, or am I not ? ”



It should be stressed that the re-establishment of the Catholic hierarchy in 1850, did not, of course, occur in a vacuum !

There was considerable interest in England in the struggle of Italian patriots to free their Country from both foreign (Austrian) and Papal influence, and that increased anti-Roman sentiment, but, even more important, The Irish Famine resulted in the emigration to England of thousands of Irish men and women.

English attempts to “settle” Ireland with Protestant plantations belonged in the distant past and had proved a failure: Now, it seemed, that the reverse process had begun. 

The Church of England had, in 1833, “unified” (a convenient euphemism for abolished !) several of its Sees in Ireland, marking a retreat from the old mission to bring the benefits of the Established Church to the Irish: Again, it seemed, the reverse process had begun.


In what ways, quite specifically, did the Irish immigration pattern provoke fears and anger ? 

How large was the immigration ? In which major urban and industrial centres did the immigrants settle ? 

Did they stay permanently in England or simply use England as a springboard for further emigration to the USA and Canada ? How accurate were immigration figures ?

The re-establishment of the Catholic hierarchy thus occurred at a most critical time and raised many questions. 

Did the Catholic Archbishop, with his Archdiocese in London, take diplomatic precedence over the Bishop of London ? 

What was his diplomatic status as a Cardinal ?

Should the English permit The Catholic Church full powers to proselytise and convert ? 

Did the new recognition of The Catholic Church mean that 
all the qualifying clauses which accompanied The Catholic Emancipation Act of 1829) were now in abeyance ?

Typical of the most extreme reactions and bigotry of 
the day were the vehement thunderings of The Bulwark 
or Reformation Journal , a journal published in Scotland.



It equated Catholicism with moral and political “blight,” superstition, depravity, and corruption and feared that 
“Papal Aggression” was bent on the re-conquest of England.

Wiseman was burned in effigy, several Catholic Churches had their windows broken, and “No Popery” Processions were held throughout England.

As part of the great anti-Catholic outburst, an Ecclesiastical Titles Act was passed which imposed a fine on any non-Anglican Bishop who took a Territorial Title.

It passed, however, in considerably emasculated form, its provisions were never enforced, and it was repealed in 1871.

This concludes the Article.

Saint Urban I (Reigned 222 A.D. - 230 A.D.). Pope And Martyr. Feast Day 25 May. Red Vestments.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless otherwise stated.

Saint Urban I.
   Pope and Martyr.
   Feast Day 25 May.

Simple.

Red Vestments.



English: Pope Saint Urban I
(Papacy 222 A.D. - 230 A.D.), wearing The Papal Tiara.
Polski: Pomnik świętego Urbana w Cieszowej
Photo: 12 July 2006.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Coat-of-Arms of The Holy See with Gold Key in bend
Bruno Bernhard Heim, Heraldry in The Catholic Church: 
Its Origin, Customs and Laws (Van Duren 1978 
Date: 12 December 2007.
Bruno Bernhard Heim, Heraldry in The Catholic Church: 
Its Origin, Customs and Laws (Van Duren 1978 
Author: F l a n k e r
(Wikimedia Commons)

This Holy Pope is believed to have been the same Urban who Baptised Valerian (husband of Saint Cecilia), Tiburtius (brother of Valerian), and Maximus (their gaoler (jailer)), whom we honoured on 14 April.

Pope Saint Urban I was Martyred in 230 A.D.

Mass: Protexísti.



A 12th-Century fresco of Pope Saint Urban I in a window embrasure in the Church of Chalivoy-Milon, France.
(Google Images)


English: Church in Chalivoy-Milon, France,
containing a fresco of Pope Saint Urban I (see, above).
Français: Église de Chalivoy-Milon, France.
Photo: 25 August 2011.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Saint Urban I.
Pope and Martyr.
Available on YouTube


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

Pope Urban I (Latin: Urbanus I) was Bishop of Rome, or Pope, from 222 A.D. to 230 A.D. He was born in Rome and succeeded Pope Callixtus I, who had been Martyred.

Much of Urban’s life is shrouded in mystery, leading to many myths and misconceptions. Despite the lack of sources, he is the first Pope whose Reign can be definitely dated. 

Two prominent sources do exist for Urban’s Pontificate: “Eusebius' History of The Early Church” and also an inscription, in the Cœmeterium Callisti, which names the Pope.

Urban ascended to the Chair of Saint Peter in the year of the Roman Emperor Elagabalus’ assassination and served during the Reign of Alexander Severus.

It is believed that Urban’s Pontificate was during a peaceful time for Christians in the Empire, as Severus did not promote the persecution of Christianity.

Saint Urban I is a Canonised Saint of The Roman Catholic Church and The Eastern Orthodox Church.

Saint Gregory VII (1073-1085). Pope And Confessor. Feast Day 25 May. White Vestments.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless otherwise stated.

Saint Gregory VII.
   Pope and Confessor.
   Feast Day 25 May.

Double.

White Vestments.



Pope Saint Gregory VII
Celebrating Mass
(inspired by The Holy Ghost).
Date: 1878.
Source: Scanned by Uploader.
Page 292 of Little Pictorial Lives Of The Saints.
Benzinger Brothers.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Pope Saint Gregory VII.
Available on YouTube

Born at Soana, Tuscany, Italy, Hildebrand became a Monk in the famous Benedictine Monastery of Cluny, on which, at the time, depended two thousand Monasteries. He soon became Prior, and was later Elected Abbot of the Monastery of Saint Paul-Without-the-Walls, Rome, and made a Cardinal of The Roman Church.

At the death of Pope Alexander II, in 1073, he was Elected Pope and took the name of Gregory VII. Thus, entrusted with the government of The House of God (Gospel, Communion), he participated in the full Priesthood of Jesus (Introit, Epistle).

At a time when the Bishops, mostly "Simoniacal", were the dependents of Lay Princes, he strove with such constancy to defend the liberty of The Church (Collect) that, as we are assured, no Pontiff, since the time of The Apostles, undertook more labours for her (The Church) or fought more courageously for her independence.

While he was saying Mass, a Dove was seen to come down on him: The Holy Ghost thereby bore witness of the Supernatural views that guided him in the government of The Church. Forced to leave Rome, he died at Salerno in 1085, saying those words, the first of which are from Psalm XLIV: "I have loved justice and hated iniquity: That is why I die in exile."

Following the example of Saint Gregory, let us overcome with courage all adversities (Collect).

Mass: Státuit.
Commemoration: Of Pope Saint Urban I.

Pentecost Monday 2022. Whit Monday. Within The Octave Of Pentecost.



Missa Cantata.
Pentecost Monday 2022.
Whit Monday 2022.
The Octave of Pentecost.
The Divine Mass Celebrated at 
Saint-Eugène - Sainte-Cécile, Paris.
Web-Site: HERE

Propers of The Divine Mass
 for each day can be downloaded HERE

24 May, 2026

“In Festo Beatæ Mariæ Virginis”. “Our Lady Help Of Christians”. “Sancta Maria Auxilium Christianorum”. “Nuestra Señora María Auxiliadora De Los Cristianos”. Our Lady’s Feast Day, Today, 24 May. White Vestments.



The Venerated image of “Mary, Help of Christians”
to which Pope Leo XIII granted a Canonical Coronation on 
Date: Circa 1867.
Source: Own work.
Author: 
at the request of Don Bosco.
(Wikimedia Commons)



Titulo Auxilium Christianorum.
“Our Lady, Help Of Christians”.
Feast Day 24 May.
Sharp-Eyed Readers will instantly recognise the 1861 Printer's error on this particular Feast Day entry: Instead of “Die XIV”, meaning “Fourteenth Day”, it should have been printed “Die XXIV”, meaning “Twenty-Fourth Day”. One assumes it is too late to contact the Printers to advise them of their error ?
Missale Romanum 1861.
Illustration: ZEPHYRINUS

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia,
unless stated otherwise.


Mary, Help of Christians (Latin: Sancta Maria Auxilium Christianorum; Spanish: Nuestra Señora María Auxiliadora de los Cristianos; is a Roman Catholic Marian Devotion with a Feast Day Celebrated on 24 May.

Saint John Chrysostom was the first person to use this Marian Title (“Mary, Help Of Christians”) in 345 A.D. as a Devotion to The Virgin MaryDon Bosco also propagated Marian Devotion under this Title. The Title of “Mary, Help of Christians” is associated with the defence of Christian Europe (Latin and Greek), the North of Africa, and The Middle East, from non-Christian peoples during The Middle Ages.

In 1572, during the expansion of the Islamic Ottoman Empire, which intended to invade Christian Europe, Pope Saint Pius V invoked Christian Armies, and its victory achieved was consequently attributed to the Intercession of Mary under this Title.


English: Treviso Cathedral. The Madonna Chapel.
A 19th-Century wooden statue of Mary, Help of Christians, by Ferdinand Stuflesser, artist of Val Gardena, Italy.
Français : Cathédrale de Trévise - Chapelle de la Vierge - au centre une de l'autel une statue en bois récente du XIXe par Ferdinand Stuflesser, artiste de Val Gardena, Représentant Marie Auxiliatrice.
Italiano : Duomo di Treviso - Capella della Madonna - La statua lignea al centro dell'altare, opera recente (XIXe) di Ferdinand Stuflesser, artista della Val Gardena, rappresenta Maria Ausiliatrice.
Photo: 29 May 2016.
Source: Own work.
This File is copyrighted and has been released under a licence which is incompatible with Facebook's licensing terms
It is not permitted to upload this File at Facebook.
This File is licensed under the Creative Commons
(Wikimedia Commons)


Ultimately, Pope Leo XIII granted a Canonical Coronation towards the Marian image bearing the same Title on 17 May 1903, now permanently enshrined within the Basilica of Mary, Help of Christians, Turin, Italy.

There are two inscriptions from the first Centuries of Christianity, in Greek, related to The Virgin Mary: : θεοτοκος (Teotokos, Theotokos, Mother of God) and βοηθεια (Boetheia, The Helper). The Fathers of The Church referred to Mary as “βοηθεια”. Saint John Chrysostom used the Title in a Sermon of 345 A.D., Proclus in 476 A.D., and Sebas of Cæsarea in 532 A.D.

After the Patristic Period (5th-Century A.D.), other persons used it, e.g., Romanos the Melodist in 518 A.D., the Patriarch 
of Jerusalem, Sophronius, in 560 A.D., John of Damascus in 749 A.D., and German of Constantinople in 733 A.D.


Feast Day of Our Lady,
Help of Christians. 24 May.
Missale Romanum 1861.
Illustration: ZEPHYRINUS


In the view of Fr. Johann G. Roten, SM, the Invocation of Mary as “Help of Christians” is part of the oldest Prayer addressed directly to Mary, the “Sub Tuum Præsidium”, which was found on a Papyrus dating, at the latest, from the end of the 3rd-Century A.D. “Præsidium” is translated as “an assistance given in time of War by fresh Troops in a strong manner.”[1]

Around 1576, Bernardino Cirillo, Arch-Priest of Loreto, published at Macerata, two Litanies of The Blessed Virgin, which, he contended, were used at Loreto. One is in a form which is entirely different from our present Text. Another form (“Aliæ litaniæ B.M.V.”) is identical to The Litany of Loreto approved by Pope Clement VIII in 1601 and now used throughout the entire Church.

This second form contains the Invocation “Auxilium Christianorum” (“Help of Christians”). Possibly, Soldiers returning from The Battle of Lepanto (7 October 1571) visited The Sanctuary of Loreto, and Saluted The Holy Virgin there for the first time with this new Title. It is more probable, however, that it is only a variation of the older Invocation “Advocata Christianorum”, found in a Litany of 1524.[2]


Our Lady, Help of Christians.
Patroness of Australia.
Available on YouTube

The following Text (in Blue) is from YouTube.

23 May. Feast of Our Lady Help of Christians.

“The help of God and of Mary will not fail you . . . I recommend devotion to Mary, Help of Christians and frequent Holy Communion” — Words of Saint John Bosco on his deathbed. 

“The principal objective is to promote Veneration 
of The Blessed Sacrament and Devotion to Mary, 
Help of Christians. This title seems to please 
the august Queen of Heaven very much.” 

So writes Saint John Bosco about the promotion of the Devotion to Mary, Help of Christians (Auxilium Christianorum). The Association of Mary, Help of Christians, was granted official status and Indulgences in April 1869. 

Devotion to Our Lady is not an end in itself. 
Speaking of Devotions to Mary, the Second Vatican Council stated: “While honouring Christ’s Mother, these Devotions cause her Son to be rightly known, loved, and glorified, 
and all His commands observed.” 

Similarly, Saint John Bosco often repeated: “I beg you, 
first to Adore Jesus in The Blessed Sacrament and then 
to pay homage to Mary Most Holy.” 

This Feast is the Patronal Feast of Australasia, a 
Double of The First Class with an Octave (Ordo Australasiæ, 1888), and in accordance with a Vow (1891) is Celebrated 
with great splendour in the Churches of the Fathers of the Foreign Missions of Paris. 

It has attained special celebrity since Saint John Bosco, Founder of the Salesian Congregation, 9 June 1868, 
dedicated to Our Lady, Help of Christians, the 
Mother Church of his Congregation at Turin. 

The Salesian Fathers have carried the Devotion 
to their numerous establishments.

Torsellini (1597) and The Roman Breviary (24 May, Appendix) say that Pope Saint Pius V inserted the Invocation in the Litany of Loreto after the Battle of Lepanto. 

But the form of the Litany, in which it is first found, was unknown at Rome at the time of Pope Saint Pius V.[3]

The Feast of Our Lady, Help of Christians, was instituted by Pope Pius VII. By order of Emperor Napoleon I of France, Pope Pius VII was arrested on 5 June 1808, and detained as a prisoner, first at Grenoble, France, and then at Fontainebleau, France.[4]

In January 1814, after the Battle of Leipzig, he was brought back to Savona, Italy, and set free on 17 March 1814, on the eve of the Feast of Our Lady of Mercy, the Patroness of Savona. 

The journey to Rome was a veritable triumphal march. The Pontiff, attributing the Victory of The Church, after so much agony and distress, to The Blessed Virgin, visited many of her Sanctuaries on the way and Crowned her images (e.g., “The Madonna del Monte” at Cesena, “della Misericordia” at Treja, “della Colonne” and “della Tempestà” at Tolentino).


English: Statue of Madonna and Child
in Siegenfeld (Heiligenkreuz), Lower Austria.
Deutsch: Marienstatue, sog. Bauernmadonna, in der Cholerakapelle im Helenental, Ortsteil Siegenfeld, Gemeinde Heiligenkreuz, Niederösterreich.
Photo: 24 March 2019.
Source: Own work.
This File is licensed under the 
(Wikimedia Commons)

The people crowded the streets to catch a glimpse of the Venerable Pontiff who had so bravely withstood the threats of Napoleon. 

He entered Rome on 24 May 1814, and was enthusiastically welcomed.[5] To Commemorate his own sufferings and those of The Church during his Exile, Pope Pius VII extended the Feast of the Seven Dolours of Mary to the Universal Church on 18 September 1814.

When Napoleon left Elba and returned to Paris, Murat was about to march through the Papal States from Naples. 

Joachim-Napoléon Murat, 25 March 1767 – 13 October 1815, was a Marshal of The French Empire and Admiral, during the reign of Emperor Napoleon I. 

He was also the first Prince Murat, Grand Duke of Berg, from 1806 to 1808, and King of Naples from 1808 to 1815.

Murat received his Titles, in part, by being Napoleon’s brother-in-law through marriage to his younger sister, Caroline Bonaparte, as well as personal merit. 

He was noted as a daring, brave, and charismatic Cavalry Officer, as well as a flamboyant dresser, for which he was known as “The Dandy King”).

Pope Pius VII fled to Savona on 22 March 1815.[2] After The Congress of Vienna and the Battle of Waterloo, the Pope returned to Rome on 7 July 1815. 

To give thanks to God and Our Lady, on 15 September 1815, he declared 24 May, the Anniversary of his first return, to be henceforth the Feast of Our Lady, Help of Christians. 

The 1913 Catholic Encyclopædia Article commented that: “It has spread nearly over the entire Latin Church, but is not contained in the Universal Calendar.”


Turin, Italy. Founded by Saint John Bosco.
Photo: March 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Franco56
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Marian Feast has been Celebrated by the Order of Servites since the 17th-Century. The Veneration to Mary became popular under this Title in Rome, especially, where the Feast was promoted by Saint John Bosco and Saint Vincent Pallotti. [6]

Saint John Bosco was an ardent promoter of devotion to “Mary, Help of Christians”. He even built a huge Basilica in her honour in 1868 and Founded a Religious Congregation for Women, under the Title of “The Daughters of Mary, Help of Christians”.

Interpreting the painting he had commissioned inside the Basilica, Saint John Bosco referred to it as depicting “Mary, Mother of The Church”. This suggests an identical connection to the way in which Popes have addressed Mary as both Mother and Help of The Church. 

Recall the two Marian Greek attributions of θεοτοκος (Teotokos, Theotokos, Mother of God) and βοηθεια (Boetheia, The Helper) at the start of this Article. Saint John Bosco, in fact, chose this devotion because of its affinity to his devotion to “The Church, The Bearer of Christ”.


English: Stained-Glass Window of Our Lady, 
Help of Christians. Church of Saint John the Baptist, 
Ahrem, Germany.
Deutsch: Bleiglasfenster in der katholischen Pfarrkirche St. Johannes der Täufer, Ahrem, Darstellung: Anbetung der Madonna mit Kind.
Photo: 16 April 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Reinhardhauke
(Wikimedia Commons)

Vatican II, in the Constitution on The Church (Sections 61 and 62), cites this Title of Mary, placing it in the context of Mary’s Maternal Role. “In an utterly singular way, she co-operated by her Obedience, Faith, Hope and Burning Charity, in The Saviour’s Work of restoring Supernatural Life to Souls.

For this reason, she is a Mother to us in The Order of Grace . . . By her Maternal Charity, Mary cares for the Brethren of her Son, who still wander through this World in the midst of dangers and difficulties until they are led to the happiness of their Heavenly Home”.[7]

The Church has Traditionally focused on two aspects of Our Lady’s help on this Feast Day:

Firstly, The Church focuses in this Feast on the role of Our Lady’s Intercession in the fight against sin in the life of a Believer;

Secondly, The Church focuses on Our Lady as one who assists Christians as a community, through her Intercession, in fighting against anti-Christian forces.

Michael Daniel observes that, while this approach may be regarded as outdated, in light of Vatican II, where the World and non-Christian elements therein were seen in a positive rather than a hostile or threatening light, it would seem that it would be naïve on the part of Christians to regard all Movements and all Social Trends as either good or harmless.[7]


The Dioceses of Tuscany adopted it on 12 February 1816. The Hymns of the Office were composed by Brandimarte.[8]

It became the Patronal Feast of Australasia, a “Double of The First-Class“ with an Octave.[9] After the Reforms of the Second Vatican Council, it was designated a Solemnity to be kept on the first available Sunday on or after 24 May.

The Fathers of the Foreign Missions of Paris, in accordance with a Vow (1891), Celebrated this Feast Day with great splendour in their Churches.

It has attained special renown since Don Bosco, Founder of the Salesian Congregation, dedicated his Foundation to Our Lady, Help of Christians, The Mother Church of his Congregation at Turin, Italy, on 9 June 1868. 

The Salesians have carried the devotion to their numerous establishments around the World.

It was established due to the great appreciation of Saint Don Bosco for this Marian Title, and the development of the Salesian Works in many Countries since the second-half of the 19th-Century. 

Although it is commonly associated with the Roman Catholic Church, the Orthodox Church has also known the devotion since 1030 in Ukraine, when the Country was defended from a barbarian invasion.


The Salesian National Shrine of Our Lady, Help of Christians, is located in Stony Point, New York. There is also the National Shrine of Mary, Help of Christians, in Parañaque City, Philippines, which is also in the care of the Salesians of Don Bosco. [10]

The Abbey of Mary, Help of Christians, better known as Belmont Abbey, is a small American Monastery of Benedictine Monks in the Town of Belmont, Gaston County, North Carolina, outside of Charlotte. The Minor Basilica of Our Lady, Help of Christians, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[11]

There is a Chapel of Our Lady, Help of Christians, at the Basilica of The Immaculate Conception in Washington D.C.[12]

Under this Title, The Virgin Mary is Venerated by many Chinese Catholics, particularly at the Shrine of Our Lady of Sheshan. In May 2007, Pope Benedict XVI designated 24 May her Feast Day for the Roman Catholics in China, who face persecution and restriction from The Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association.

On 17 May 1903, Pope Leo XIII granted a Canonical Coronation to the famed image through his Papal Legate, Cardinal Agostino Richelmy, which is now permanently enshrined within the Basilica of Our Lady, Help of Christians, in Turin, Italy.


The High Altar, Mariahilferkirche
(Our Lady, Help of Christians) Church,
HaydnplatzVienna, Austria.
Photo: 27 December 2005.
Source: Own work.
This File: 16 February 2006.
User: Gryffindor
(Wikimedia Commons)

The same Pontiff also instructed The Sacred Congregation of Rites to assign Mary, under this Devotional Title (“Our Lady, Help of Christians), as the Official Patroness of Australia. She is also the Patron Saint of New Zealand, and, since 1924, of China.[13]

On 24 May 2009, Pope Benedict XVI, during his Regina Cæli Papal Address, invoked this Marian Patronage, under the Venerated Title of Our Mother of Sheshan, calling for Chinese Catholics to renew their fidelity to the Pope as the sole successor of Saint Peter.[14]

On 23 March 2018, Pope Francis granted a Papal Bull for the Canonical Coronation of a namesake Seminary in San Fabian, Pangasinan, Philippines. The image is notable for having been gifted to the Philippine Islands by the Apostolic Delegate, Monsignor Guillermo Piani, S.D.B., while the privilege of Blue-Coloured Vestments was invoked by the Papal Legate.
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