Showing posts with label lourdes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lourdes. Show all posts

Saturday, February 10, 2018

SATURDAY OF OUR LADY

MARY'S JOY
Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes
Wold Day of Prayer for the Sick
February 11

Photo:R.Massaro (C)2013SpiritSinging-
Grotto-Lourdes, France



Today Mary dwells in the joy and the glory of the Resurrection. The tears shed at the foot of the Cross have been transformed into a smile which nothing can wipe away, even as her maternal compassion towards us remains unchanged. The intervention of the Virgin Mary in offering succor throughout history testifies to this, and she doesn't cease to call forth, in the people of God, an unshakable confidence in her: the Memorare prayer expresses thissentiment very well. Mary loves each of her children, giving particular attention to those who, like her Son at the hour of his Passion, are prey to suffering; she loves them quite simply because they are her children, according to the will of Christ on the Cross.

Benedict the XVI on the 150 Anniversary of Lourdes



Peace be with you!
Rosemarie, OCDS

Friday, February 10, 2017

PRAYER TO OUR LADY OF LOURDES

Photo: R. Massaro (C)2017 Spirit Singing-Lourdes, France

OUR LADY OF LOURDES
FEAST DAY: FEBRUARY 11

Prayer to Our Lady of Lourdes

O HOLY VIRGIN, in the midst of your days of glory, do not forget the sorrows of this earth. Cast a merciful glance upon those who are suffering, struggling against difficulties, with their lips constantly pressed against life's bitter cup.

Have pity on those who love each other and are separated.

Have pity on our rebellious hearts.

Have pity on our weak faith.

Have pity on those we love.

Have pity on those who weep, on those who pray, on those who fear. Grant hope and peace to all. Amen.

Prayer to St. Bernadette

Bernadette, you have long sought the Lord where he called.
You asked. You listened. You trusted.
You were sure the Lord would guide you.
You surrendered yourself completely in the hands of God.

Bernadette, you intensely desired the Eucharist.
You loved to adore the Blessed Sacrament,
You united your life in the offering of that of
Christ on the altar.

Dear St. Bernadette, strengthen our trust in the Holy Virgin whom you have had the good fortune to see here on earth. Like you, we place ourselves under her protection in order to keep our hearts ever pure.

Our Lady of Lourdes, pray for us!
St. Bernadette, pray for us!

Peace be with you!
Rosemarie, ocds




Saturday, June 9, 2012

Saturday of Our lady

PRAYER TO THE
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION


O most Holy Virgin, who was pleasing to the Lord and became His mother, immaculate in body and spirit, in faith and in love, look kindly on me as I implore your powerful intercession. O most Holy Mother, who by your blessed Immaculate Conception, from the first moment of your conception did crush the head of the enemy, receive our prayers as we implore you to present at the throne of God the favor we now request...


(State your intention here...)

O Mary of the Immaculate Conception, Mother of Christ, you had influence with your Divine Son while upon this earth; you have the same influence now in heaven. Pray for us and obtain for us from him the granting of my petition if it be the Divine Will.

Amen.







Peace be with you!
Rosemarie, ocds

Thursday, December 8, 2011


SOLEMNITY OF OUR LADY
THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION OF THE
BLESSED VIRGIN MARY


Photo: R Massaro, Crowned Virgin
Lourdes, France

LOURDES LIVE WEBCAM


Peace be with you!
Rosemarie, ocds
_____________________

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Lourdes Jubilee Walk-Fourth Landmark: The Hospice

Bernadette stayed at the hospice with the Sisters of Charity of Nevers from 1860 until 1866.


The Hospice was for Bernadette a shelter from the crowds who continually sought her out to perform healing and blessings. Having Bernadette live at the Hospice gave her family much needed peace from the crowds who were constantly knocking at their door.


Bernadette received first holy communion in the chapel of the hospice on June 3, 1858. This took place between the 17th apparition on April 7 and the last apparition on July 16, the feast of our Lady of Mount Carmel. What an overwhelming grace for her to be prepared to receive this great sacrament by Our Lady!
The Eucharist becomes the center of Bernadette's life, she states:" To make the Way of the Cross, to attend Holy Mass, to receive Holy Communion, these are my great devotions."


At the Grotto in Lourdes, there is a beautiful altar chiseled from rock that looks as if it were hewn from the Grotto itself. It is here that pilgrims gather to attend mass and receive Holy Communion. The Eucharist is central to Lourdes. Many healings take place during the blessing of the sick at benediction after the Eucharistic procession. Masses are said in various chapels in various languages throughout the sanctuary. The adoration tent and adoration chapel are constantly filled with pilgrims praying before our Eucharistic Lord.


The adoration chapel in Lourdes is pictured at left. The tabernacle resembles the column of fire that led the chosen people in the wilderness to the promise land.
"Neither the column of cloud by day nor the column of fire by night ever left its place in front of the people."(Exodus 13:22)


The Eucharist plays a central role in the life of a Carmelite. We are called each day(if possible) to attend mass and receive the Eucharist. We are called to pray for 1/2 hour each day in an atmosphere of silence. We are called to pray the Liturgy of the Hours. We are called to spiritual reading each day. We are called to honor Our Lady by some particular devotion. However, it is the Eucharist that is the source and summit of our life as the Church so aptly describes this most Blessed Sacrament.


In his encyclical on the Eucharist, John Paul II states:


If the Eucharist is a mystery of faith which so greatly transcends our understanding as to call for sheer abandonment to the word of God, then there can be no one like Mary to act as our support and guide in acquiring this disposition. In repeating what Christ did at the last Supper in obedience to his command: "Do this in Memory of me!" (Luke 22:19) we also accept Mary's invitation to obey him without hesitation: "Do whatever he tells you" (Jn 2:5)


From the OCDS Rule:


The liturgical life, as a perennial participation in the Paschal Mystery, nourishes the Secular Carmelite in his daily pledge to follow Christ crucified and risen, toward an ever more perfect union with God, by making the pains and joys of his life an offering of praise and glory to God.


His liturgical life will express itself chiefly in the Eucharistic Sacrifice and in the recitation of the Church's Divine Office. He will, as far as possible, assist at Mass daily.


As Mary is central to Lourdes and to bringing us to her son in the Eucharist, even more so, is she central to the life of a Christian and in particular to us Carmelites. Let us stay close to our mother Mary so that we may hear his voice and do whatever He tells us.


Peace be with you!


Peace be with you!Rosemarie, ocds










Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Lourdes Jubilee Walk-Third Landmark: The Grotto

Arise, my love, my fair one,and come; my dove in the clefts of the rock, in the hollow of the wall, show me your face...(Sg.2;10-14)
The Grotto is a place of pilgrimage to about 5 million people each year. People of all faiths visit this holy shrine nestled in the Pyrenees mountains. There are numerous beautiful signs, sights, and sounds at Lourdes, however, it is the Grotto that mainly attracts the pilgrim. It is holy ground.

We know that rock is a symbol for Christ and his Church. It was to a little one, Bernadette , that Our Lady revealed herself in the heart of the rock to the Church. Mary asks us to listen to her humble messenger and follow her example of prayer, penance, and prayer for the conversion of sinners. Bernadette is like a type of Moses who goes up to the mountain and contemplates the face of God. Now, like Moses, she is sent to relay the message to the people.
"Penance, Penance, Penance."
"This Grotto has become the seat of an astonishing school of prayer, where Mary teaches everyone how to contemplate the face of Christ with intense love..." John Paul II, Aug. 14, 2004, Lourdes

Carmel is our spiritual school, where, with the help of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel and the Carmelite Saints we seek the face of God in prayer on behalf of the Church. In this school of Carmel we are called to imitate the Virgin Mary. We are called to imitate her holy recollection, her silence, her pondering the Word in her heart. We are called mainly to be faithful to the charism of the Order: Contemplative prayer.

"The Carmelite School of spirituality begins with the conviction that all are called to the perfect union of love with God; that imitation of Mary, the great woman of faith and spiritual union with Christ, is our model in following Christ, and the belief that by making mental prayer and practicing self-denial the central focus of our lives, we are on the surest way to God." Michael Griffin, OCD, Commentary on the Rule of Life

While we may not travel to Lourdes on pilgrimage, we are on a spiritual pilgrimage having responded to the call of Our Lady to ascend Mt. Carmel. Let us fortify ourselves with heavenly food for the journey: The Eucharist. May the Word of God reside in our heart and shed light on our path, as we cling to the rock: Christ Our Lord.

Peace be with you!
Rosemarie, ocds

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Lourdes Jubilee Walk-Second Landmark: The Cachot


"The Lord hears the cry of the poor, blessed be the Lord!"

This refrain from the familiar Catholic Hymn reminds one immediately of St. Bernadette's family situation at the time of the apparitions. One cannot but be moved when reading about or actually visiting this site where Bernadette and her family were forced to live: an abandoned jail, the Cachot.

We see in life people who are poverty-stricken from birth, those who end up poor by an number of circumstances and those who choose poverty for the sake of the Gospel.

Jesus himself said, "The Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head." Those of us who choose to follow Jesus in living the Evangelical Counsels of chastity, poverty, and obedience come across a real challenge in today's materialistic society. We must keep our eyes on heaven and not on the passing things of this world. Our prayer life will keep our hearts focused on the Lord. He is our true treasure. "Remember, where your treasure is, there your heart is also." (Mt 6:21)

From OCDS rule:

Since poverty of spirit is the first Beatitude or blessing of the Sermon on the Mount, it is not surprising that the Lay Carmelite is at once reminded that he or she "should have a particular esteem for the Beatitude of poverty. ..Poverty always brings with it simplicity of life,and this will enable us to go directly to God in love and to bring His love to others.

A quote from Fr. Maurice Zundel:

"To be perfect as the Heavenly Father is perfect, means to have the soul of the poor and to make real the first Beatitude where the perfect joy is the joy of the gift of self...God , who is only Love, cannot possess anything, God who is the opposite to narcissism, ownership, only reaches us, and can only reach us through Love."


Bernadette displayed this "soul of the poor" when she stated, "I love the poor. I want to remain poor." And about money, "It burns me!"


St. Teresa of Jesus exhorted her nuns to have full trust that the Lord would provide for their needs. If we truly follow the Gospel command of "seek first the kingdom of God", we will surely rise to the heights of Mt. Carmel-Christ Our Lord.


Peace be with you!
Rosemarie, ocds

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Lourdes Jubilee Walk-Four Landmarks in Bernadette's Footsteps. First Landmark: The Baptismal Font


The pilgrims of Lourdes are gaining a plenary indulgence this year by participating in the Jubilee Walk." The Jubilee Walk consists of Four landmarks associated with St. Bernadette.

Today I will focus on the first landmark: The Baptismal Font.

Bernadette was born on Jan. 7, 1844 and was baptized two days later on Jan. 9 in the parish church of Lourdes.

The pilgrims making the Jubilee Walk do not just visit each site and recall the life of Bernadette. This walk is an exercise of faith. On this first stop at the baptismal font we recall our own baptism and renew our promises. We ask the Holy Spirit to descend upon us once again and help us to lead a virtuous life.

"People in the world do not possess the Holy Spirit, or if they do, they only possess him temporarily. He does not dwell in them: the noise of the world drives him away." These words of wisdom from the Cure of Ars certainly describe our society today, where there are so many distractions and no sense of sin, and no goal of heaven.

Our Lady of Lourdes came as a witness to the "other world" as she called it. This is the world where Mary promised Bernadette she would be happy.

This hidden, "other world" sheds light on the interior life of the Carmelite. We make promises to live the Beatitudes, a life that sheds light on that hidden "other world" of the kingdom. If we are truly living the Carmelite life, people will see our light shine and hopefully be inspired to give Glory to the Father.
Our Lady's habit, the scapular that we wear, is a reminder of our baptismal garment, in which we "put on Christ." As Carmelites we need Our Lady's help and protection to keep our baptismal garment unstained and so enter the kingdom with a holy wedding garment fit to appear before the bridegroom.

"Why did Our Lady choose the feast of Mt. Carmel to end her apparitions? Because it is in Carmel that we best learn how to leave behind our poor heads plunged in the contradictions and the illusions of the "world," to enter into the silence and the night of the heart,where the devil cannot see us, as St. John of the Cross explains so well."
(Lourdes Magazine,October 2007)

The pilgrims of Lourdes line up at "the baths" in imitation of Bernadette who obeyed Our Lady's call to"go and wash." The pilgrims plunge themselves into the cold water after having recited a Hail Mary. This washing is a sign and symbol of our baptism as well. We are made clean to begin to live the spiritual life in Christ.

Mary is a sort of John the Baptist here at Lourdes. She cries out, "Repent." "Go and wash."

Let us heed Our Lady's Call; The silent and heartfelt call of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel to make ready the way of the Lord.

Peace be with you!
Rosemarie, ocds