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

Saturday 3 June 2023

Our Lady of Akita.




A carved wooden statue of
Our Lady of Akita, Japan.
Photo: 2 November 2015.
Source: Own work.
Author: SICDAMNOME
(Wikimedia Commons)


Text from Wikimedia the free encylopædia,
unless stated otherwise.

Our Lady of Akita (Japanese: 秋田の聖母マリア) is the Catholic Title of The Blessed Virgin Mary, associated with a wooden statue Venerated by faithful Japanese who hold it to be miraculous.

The image is known due to the Marian apparitions reported in 1973 by Sister Agnes Katsuko Sasagawa in the remote area of Yuzawadai, in the outskirts of Akita, Japan.

The messages emphasise Prayer (especially recitation of The Holy Rosary) and Penance, in combination with cryptic visions prophesying sacerdotal persecution and heresy within The Catholic Church.


The messages included the following:

. . . Each day recite the Prayer of the Rosary.

With the Rosary, Pray for the Pope, Bishops and the Priests.

The work of the devil will infiltrate even into The Church in such a way that one will see Cardinals opposing Cardinals, and Bishops against other Bishops.

The Priests who Venerate me will be scorned and opposed by their confreres . . . Churches and Altars sacked.

The Church will be full of those who accept compromises, and the demon will press many Priests and Consecrated Souls to leave the service of The Lord.

The demon will be especially implacable against Souls consecrated to God . . .


The full Wikipedia Article on Our Lady of Akita can be read HERE

Pray The Rosary. Pray The Rosary. Pray The Rosary. Pray The Rosary. Pray The Rosary. Pray The Rosary. Pray The Rosary. Pray The Rosary.



Illustration: FR. Z’s BLOG


Text (above and below) from
“SUPREMI APOSTOLATUS OFFICIO”.
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE LEO XIII
ON DEVOTION OF THE ROSARY.
1 September 1883.
© Copyright - Libreria Editrice Vaticana.
Available HERE


“SUPREMI
APOSTOLATUS OFFICIO”.

ENCYCLICAL OF POPE LEO XIII
ON DEVOTION OF THE ROSARY.

To all the Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops and Bishops of The Catholic World in the Grace and Communion of The Apostolic See.

Venerable Brethren, Health and The Apostolic Benediction.

The supreme Apostolic Office, which we discharge, and the exceedingly difficult condition of these times, daily warn and almost compel Us to watch carefully over the integrity of The Church, the more that the calamities from which she suffers are greater.


While, therefore, we endeavour in every way to preserve the rights of The Church and to obviate or repel present or contingent dangers, We constantly seek for help from Heaven - the sole means of effecting anything - that our labours and our care may obtain their wished-for object.

We deem that there could be no surer and more efficacious means to this end than by Religion and piety to obtain the favour of The Great Virgin Mary, The Mother of God, the guardian of our peace and the minister to us of Heavenly Grace, who is placed on the highest summit of power and glory in Heaven, in order that she may bestow the help of her patronage on men who, through so many labours and dangers, are striving to reach that Eternal City.


Now that the anniversary, therefore, of manifold and exceedingly great favours obtained by a Christian people through the Devotion of The Rosary is at hand, We desire that that same Devotion should be offered by The Whole Catholic World, with the greatest earnestness, to The Blessed Virgin, that by her intercession her Divine Son may be appeased and softened in the evils which afflict us.

And, therefore, We determined, Venerable Brethren, to despatch to you these Letters in order that, informed of Our designs, your authority and zeal might excite the piety of your people to conform themselves to them.

2. It has always been the habit of Catholics in danger and in troublous times to fly for refuge to Mary, and to seek for peace in her Maternal Goodness; showing that The Catholic Church has always, and with justice, put all her hope and trust in The Mother of God.


And truly The Immaculate Virgin, chosen to be The Mother of God and thereby associated with Him in the work of man's salvation, has a favour and power with her Son greater than any human or Angelic creature has ever obtained, or ever can gain.

And, as it is her greatest pleasure to grant her help and comfort to those who seek her, it cannot be doubted that she would deign, and even be anxious, to receive the aspirations of The Universal Church.

3. This devotion, so great and so confident, to The August Queen of Heaven, has never shone forth with such brilliancy as when the militant Church of God has seemed to be endangered by the violence of heresy spread abroad, or by an intolerable moral corruption, or by the attacks of powerful enemies.


Ancient and modern history, and the more Sacred Annals of The Church, bear witness to public and private supplications addressed to The Mother of God, to the help she has granted in return, and to the peace and tranquillity which she had obtained from God.

Hence, her illustrious Titles of Helper, Consoler, Mighty in War, Victorious, and Peace-Giver. And amongst these is specially to be commemorated that familiar Title derived from The Rosary, by which the signal benefits she has gained for the whole of Christendom have been solemnly perpetuated.

There is none among you, Venerable Brethren, who will not remember how great trouble and grief God's Holy Church suffered from the Albigensian heretics, who sprung from the sect of the later Manicheans, and who filled the South of France and other portions of the Latin world with their pernicious errors, and carrying everywhere the terror of their arms, strove far and wide to rule by massacre and ruin.


Our merciful God, as you know, raised up against these most direful enemies a most holy man, the illustrious parent and founder of The Dominican Order. Great in the integrity of his Doctrine, in his example of Virtue, and by his Apostolic Labours, he proceeded undauntedly to attack the enemies of The Catholic Church, not by Force of Arms; but trusting wholly to that Devotion which he was the first to institute under the name of The Holy Rosary, which was disseminated through the length and breadth of The Earth by him and his pupils.

Guided, in fact, by Divine Inspiration and Grace, he foresaw that this Devotion, like a most powerful war-like weapon, would be the means of putting the enemy to flight, and of confounding their audacity and mad impiety. Such was indeed its result.

Thanks to this new method of Prayer - when adopted and properly carried out as instituted by the Holy Father Saint Dominic - Piety, Faith, and Union began to return, and the projects and devices of the heretics to fall to pieces. Many wanderers also returned to The Way of Salvation, and the wrath of the impious was restrained by the Arms of those Catholics who had determined to repel their violence.


4. The efficacy and power of this Devotion was also wondrously exhibited in the 16th-Century, when the vast forces of the Turks threatened to impose on nearly the whole of Europe the yoke of superstition and barbarism.

At that time, the Supreme Pontiff, Pope Saint Pius V, after rousing the sentiment of a common defence among all the Christian Princes, strove, above all, with the greatest zeal, to obtain for Christendom the favour of the most powerful Mother of God.

So noble an example offered to Heaven and Earth, in those times, rallied around him all the minds and hearts of The Age. And, thus, Christ's faithful warriors, prepared to sacrifice their life and blood for the Salvation of their Faith and their Country, proceeded undauntedly to meet their foe near The Gulf of Corinth, while those who were unable to take part formed a pious band of supplicants, who called on Mary, and unitedly saluted her again and again in the words of The Rosary, imploring her to grant the victory to their companions engaged in battle.


Our Sovereign Lady did grant her aid; for in the Naval Battle by The Echinades Islands, the Christian fleet gained a magnificent victory, with no great loss to itself, in which the enemy were routed with great slaughter. And it was to preserve the memory of this great boon, thus granted, that the same Most Holy Pontiff desired that a Feast, in honour of Our Lady of Victories, should celebrate the anniversary of so memorable a struggle, the Feast which Pope Gregory XIII. Dedicated under the Title of "The Holy Rosary."

Similarly, important successes were in the last Century gained over the Turks at Temeswar, in Pannonia, and at Corfu; and in both cases these engagements coincided with Feasts of The Blessed Virgin and with the conclusion of public devotions of The Rosary.

And this led our predecessor, Pope Clement XI, in his gratitude, to decree that The Blessed Mother of God should every year be especially honoured in her Rosary by the whole Church.


5. Since, therefore, it is clearly evident that this form of Prayer is particularly pleasing to The Blessed Virgin, and that it is especially suitable as a means of defence for The Church and all Christians, it is in no way wonderful that several others of Our Predecessors have made it their aim to favour and increase its spread by their high recommendations.

Thus Pope Urban IV, testified that "every day, The Rosary obtained fresh boon for Christianity."

Pope Sixtus IV declared that this method of Prayer "redounded to the honour of God and The Blessed Virgin, and was well suited to obviate impending dangers;"


Pope Leo X said that "it was instituted to oppose pernicious heresiarchs and heresies;"

while Pope Julius III called it "the glory of The Church."

So, also, Pope Saint Pius V, that "with the spread of this Devotion the Meditations of The Faithful have begun to be more inflamed, their Prayers more fervent, and they have suddenly become different men; the darkness of heresy has been dissipated, and the light of Catholic Faith has broken forth again."


Lastly, Pope Gregory XIII, in his turn, pronounced that "The Rosary had been instituted by Saint Dominic to appease the anger of God and to implore the intercession of The Blessed Virgin Mary."

6. Moved by these thoughts and by the examples of Our Predecessors, We have deemed it most opportune for similar reasons to institute Solemn Prayers and to endeavour, by adopting those addressed to The Blessed Virgin in the recital of The Rosary, to obtain from her son Jesus Christ a similar aid against present dangers.

You have before your eyes, Venerable Brethren, the trials to which The Church is daily exposed; Christian piety, public morality, nay, even Faith, itself, the supreme good and beginning of all the other Virtues, all are daily menaced with the greatest perils.


7. Nor are you only spectators of the difficulty of the situation, but your Charity, like Ours, is keenly wounded; for it is one of the most painful and grievous sights to see so many Souls, redeemed by The Blood of Christ, snatched from Salvation by the whirlwind of an age of error, precipitated into the abyss of Eternal Death.

Our need of Divine Help is as great, today, as when the great Saint Dominic introduced the use of The Rosary of Mary as a balm for the wounds of his contemporaries.

8. That great Saint, indeed, Divinely Enlightened, perceived that no remedy would be more adapted to the evils of his time than that men should return to Christ, Who "is The Way, The Truth, and The Life," by frequent Meditation on the Salvation obtained for Us by Him, and should seek the Intercession with God of that Virgin, to whom it is given to destroy all heresies.


He therefore so composed The Rosary as to recall the Mysteries of our Salvation in succession, and the subject of Meditation is mingled and, as it were, interlaced with The Angelic Salutation and with the Prayer addressed to God, The Father of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

We, who seek a remedy for similar evils, do not doubt therefore that the Prayer introduced by that most Blessed man with so much advantage to The Catholic World, will have the greatest effect in removing the calamities of our times, also.

Not only do We earnestly exhort all Christians to give themselves to the recital of the pious Devotion of The Rosary publicly, or privately in their own house and family, and that unceasingly, but we also desire that the whole of the month of October in this year should be Consecrated to The Holy Queen of The Rosary.


We decree and order that in the whole Catholic World, during this year, the Devotion of The Rosary shall be Solemnly Celebrated by special and splendid Services. From the first day of next October, therefore, until the second day of the November following, in every Parish and, if the Ecclesiastical Authority deem it opportune and of use, in every Chapel Dedicated to The Blessed Virgin - let Five Decades of The Rosary be recited with the addition of The Litany of Loreto.

We desire that the people should frequent these pious exercises; and We will that either Mass shall be Said at The Altar, or that The Blessed Sacrament shall be Exposed to the Adoration of The Faithful, Benediction being afterwards given with The Sacred Host to the pious Congregation.

We highly approve of The Confraternities of The Holy Rosary of The Blessed Virgin going in Procession, following ancient custom, through the Town, as a public demonstration of their Devotion.


And in those places where this is not possible, let it be replaced by more assiduous visits to the Churches, and let the fervour of piety display itself by a still greater diligence in the exercise of The Christian Virtues.

9. In favour of those who shall do as We have above laid down, We are pleased to open the heavenly treasure-house of The Church, that they may find therein at once encouragements and rewards for their piety.

We therefore grant to all those who, in the prescribed space of time, shall have taken part in the public recital of The Rosary and The Litanies, and shall have Prayed for Our intention, Seven Years and Seven times Forty Days of Indulgence, obtainable each time.


We will that those also shall share in these favours who are hindered by a lawful cause from joining in these public Prayers of which We have spoken, provided that they shall have practiced those Devotions in private and shall have Prayed to God for Our intention.

We remit all punishment and penalties for sins committed, in the form of a Pontifical Indulgence, to all who, in the prescribed time, either publicly in the Churches or privately at home (when hindered from the former by lawful cause) shall have at least twice practiced these pious exercises; and who shall have, after due Confession, approached The Holy Table.

We further grant a Plenary Indulgence to those who, either, on The Feast of The Blessed Virgin of The Rosary, or, within its Octave, after having similarly purified their Souls by a salutary Confession, shall have approached The Table of Christ and Prayed in some Church according to Our intention to God and The Blessed Virgin for the necessities of The Church.


10. And you, Venerable Brethren, - the more you have at heart the honour of Mary, and the welfare of human society, the more diligently apply yourselves to nourish the piety of the people towards The Great Virgin, and to increase their confidence in her.

We believe it to be part of the designs of Providence that, in these times of trial for The Church, the ancient Devotion to The August Virgin should live and flourish amid the greatest part of The Christian World.

May now the Christian Nations, excited by Our exhortations, and inflamed by your appeals, seek the protection of Mary with an ardour growing greater day by day; let them cling more and more to the practice of The Rosary, to that Devotion which our ancestors were in the habit of practicing, not only as an ever-ready remedy for their misfortunes, but as a whole badge of Christian piety.


The heavenly Patroness of the human race will receive with joy these Prayers and Supplications, and will easily obtain that the good shall grow in virtue, and that the erring should return to Salvation and repent; and that God, Who is the avenger of crime, moved to mercy and pity may deliver Christendom and civil society from all dangers, and restore to them peace so much desired.

11. Encouraged by this hope, We beseech God Himself, with the most earnest desire of Our heart, through her in whom He has placed The Fulness of All Good, to grant you. Venerable Brethren, every gift of heavenly blessing. As an augury and pledge of which, We lovingly impart to you, to your Clergy, and to the people entrusted to your care, the Apostolic Benediction.

Given in Rome, at Saint Peter's, the 1st of September, 1883, in the sixth year of Our Pontificate.

LEO XIII

© Copyright - Libreria Editrice Vaticana


A Little Levity To Lighten Your Day . . .


A Day With Mary. On Saturday, 24 June 2023. At 1000 hrs. Church Of Our Lady Help Of Christians, Mottingham, London SE9 4ST.

 


The Web-Site of
A Day With Mary
can be found

Ember Saturday After Pentecost.



Illustration: FR. Z's BLOG


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

Ember Saturday After Pentecost.

Station at Saint Peter's.

Indulgence of 30 Years and 30 Quarantines.

Semi-Double.

Red Vestments.


Rogation Day.
Circa 1950.
The Vicar and Sunday School Children go out into the fields 
to Bless The Crops. The little boy is carrying a 
symbolic Tree of Plenty.
Picture Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images.
Illustration: ABOUT RELIGION

FEAR OF GOD.

“The Gift of Holy Fear, or, The Fear of God, is actually the foundation of all other gifts. It drives sin from the heart, because it fills us with reverence, either for The Justice of God, or, for The Divine Majesty.”

Rev. M. Meschler.

After swelling the ranks of her children during the night of Pentecost, The Holy Ghost today is about to supply The Church with the Priests who are to be her Ministers of Grace all over the World, for He will pour out His Spirit upon her servants, as Joel prophesied He would upon The Apostles (First Lesson).

Very appropriately, therefore, The Church appointed for The Station this day the Basilica of Saint Peter, the Pastor of the Fold, and the Gospel tells us of a cure worked by Jesus in the house of Simon.

The Priest, as the Minister of Christ, devotes himself to the healing of Souls consumed by the fever of sinful passions.

As it has already been pointed out, The Mass on The Saturday in Ember Week has five Lessons, with Collect and Tract between the Introit and the Epistle. The fifth Lesson never varies: It is the record of the miraculous preservation of the three young Hebrew men in the furnace, followed by an extract from their Canticle of Praise and Thanksgiving.


The Collect of The Mass is based upon this Lesson, and beseeches The Divine Goodness that we may not be consumed by the flame of vice.

In The Sacrament of Holy Orders, the Priest receives a large outpouring of The Divine Spirit (Epistle) that will enable him to Preach The Kingdom of God (Gospel).

The Second, Third, and Fourth Lessons, refer to The Harvest, and to the offerings of the first-fruits of the Earth, for Ember Weeks were instituted with the object of obtaining The Divine Blessing on each of the Seasons as they occurred.

Having entered The Promised Land, the Isrælites offered its first-fruits to God.


Let us, having entered The Church by Baptism, offer to Almighty God the first-fruits of all that we do, through the supernatural influx of The Holy Ghost into our Souls.

Let us Pray to God that He may increase our Faith in Christ (Epistle and Gospel), and fill our hearts with His Holy Love (Epistle).

Mass: Cáritas Dei.
   After the Kyrie Eleison, the Tonsure is conferred.
   After The First Lesson, is the Ordination of Door-Keepers.
   After The Second Lesson, is the Ordination of Lectors.
   After The Third Lesson is, the Ordination of Exorcists.
   After The Fourth Lesson, is the Ordination of Acolytes.
   After The Fifth Lesson, is the Ordination of Sub-Deacons.
   After the Epistle, is the Ordination of Deacons.
Sequence: Veni, Sancte Spiritus.
   After the penultimate Verse of The Sequence, is the Ordination of Priests.
Creed.
Preface: For Pentecost.
Communicantes: For Pentecost.
Hanc igitur: For Pentecost.

With the end of this Mass, Paschaltide comes to an end.




Illustration: MATER DEI LATIN MASS PARISH



Ember Day Service.
1950.
Illustration: ABOUT RELIGION



Sunday School Children Celebrate Rogation Day in 1953.
A photo at Market Lavington Museum, Wiltshire, England.
Illustration: MARKET LAVINGTON MUSEUM



Saint Michael's Church, Bunwell, Norfolk, England, 
has always been the centre of Village Life. In this picture, taken on Rogation Sunday, April 1967, the Rector, 
Rev. Samuel Collins, followed by the Choir, Parishioners, 
and The New Buckenham Silver Band, walk 
The Parish Boundaries and Bless the Stream.
Illustration: BUNWELL HERITAGE GROUP

Friday 2 June 2023

The Month Of June Is Dedicated To The Sacred Heart Of Jesus.


Catholic Hymnal: “O Sacred Heart”.
Hymn to The Sacred Heart of Jesus.
Available on YouTube at

A Little Levity To Lighten Your Day . . .



Illustration:

“DARLING, I CAN’T FIND THE CHICKEN FOR LUNCH”.
“WHERE DID YOU PUT IT ?”

Summer Time And Winter Time !!! It’s Always Such A Nuisance !!!



It’s such a nuisance, isn’t it, when Summer Time and Winter Time comes around and you have to change all the clocks.

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.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...