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Wisconsin chapel approved as first US Marian apparition site (Catholic Caucus)
cna ^ | December 8, 2010 | Benjamin Mann

Posted on 12/09/2010 4:23:01 PM PST by NYer

Bishop David Ricken and the Shrine of Our Lady of Good Help

Champion, Wis., Dec 9, 2010 / 05:22 am (CNA/EWTN News).- With approval from Bishop David L. Ricken of Green Bay, Wisconsin, a chapel in the town of Champion is now the first approved Marian apparition site in the United States.

On Dec. 8, 2010 –the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception– the bishop decreed with “moral certainty” that the Virgin Mary had indeed appeared to a young Belgian immigrant woman, Adele Brise, on three occasions in October of 1859.

Since 1861, the site of those apparitions has been home to a chapel dedicated to the Virgin Mary under her title “Our Lady of Good Help.” Following a two-year investigation of the alleged apparitions, Bishop Ricken proclaimed them “worthy of belief,” and confirmed his diocese's official recognition of the popular shrine.

During each of those three apparitions, a lady in shining white clothes appeared to Adele. The third time, she identified herself as “the Queen of Heaven who prays for the conversion of sinners.”

“I wish you to do the same,” she told the 28-year-old woman, who had intended to become a nun before coming to America. Adele and her family lived on a small homestead in Wisconsin, which had become a U.S. state only 11 years earlier.

The Virgin Mary also gave her a mission of evangelism and catechesis: “Gather the children in this wild country, and teach them what they should know for salvation … Go and fear nothing. I will help you.”

Adele Brise went on to become a Third Order Franciscan. She traveled throughout the frontier state giving religious instruction to children and adults, striving to fulfill the heavenly mandate. Her work was especially important at a time when Wisconsin severely lacked priests, and simply attending church could involve a strenuous journey.

Near the chapel, her community of Franciscan women also established a school. When a fire ravaged the area near the apparition site in 1871, the chapel and school were the only buildings left standing, along with their convent and a surrounding area of land consecrated to the Virgin Mary.

In 1890, six years before she died, Sister Adele's adopted hometown of Robinsonville renamed itself after the Belgian town of Champion. The Franciscan sister had asked for the change, in honor of a childhood promise she had made to the Virgin Mary to enter a Belgian religious order in that region.

Bishop Ricken told CNA that Sister Adele's own life was among the most convincing testimonies to the validity of the apparition. Rather than calling attention to herself or the apparitions, she had humbly devoted the rest of her life to fulfilling the instructions she had received.

“She went all over this area, and visited the homes that were scattered far and wide,” Bishop Ricken said, recounting the sister's Franciscan spirit of humble simplicity. “She walked most of the time, and she'd spend several days with the children teaching them the catechism and talking with the parents about their faith.”

“She really had an evangelistic spirit … and lived that out, not just immediately after the message, but her whole life long.”

Bishop Ricken said the simplicity and clarity of Mary's message also testified to the truth of the apparitions. Her instructions to Sister Adele were “simple, but very much loaded with the main message of the Gospel and with the teachings of the Church.”

The bishop also recalled discovering “countless stories of answered prayers,” including reports of “what many call miracles,” among those who had visited the shrine to seeking intercession from Our Lady of Good Help.

Although the bishop's approval of the apparitions is new, his recognition of the chapel's status as a diocesan shrine simply confirms what pilgrims have implicitly understood about the sacred place for over 150 years.

Bishop Ricken explained that he has heard “story after story” of “incredible” cures and conversions – and understands that the events of October 9, 1859 are still having life-changing effects among the faithful. Like the famous French apparition site at Lourdes, the shrine in Champion has a collection of crutches that pilgrims have discarded as unnecessary after receiving healing there.

Fr. John Doefler, rector of the Shrine of Our Lady of Good Help, indicated there could be an even more profound connection between the Blessed Virgin's appearance in Lourdes, and the apparition to Adele Brise. He pointed out that she had appeared to Adele Brise one year after her appearances to St. Bernadette Soubirous, and announced herself in a way that connected both events.

“In Lourdes, Mary identifies herself as the Immaculate Conception,” Fr. Doefler explained. “Here, she identifies herself as the Queen of Heaven … Between the two of them, it encompasses all of the Marian mysteries” – from the very beginning of her life, to its culmination in “the Assumption and the Coronation.”


TOPICS: Catholic; Current Events; History; Ministry/Outreach
KEYWORDS: adelebrise; apparitions; bishopricken; greenbay; ourladyofgoodhelp; wisconsin

1 posted on 12/09/2010 4:23:03 PM PST by NYer
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To: netmilsmom; thefrankbaum; markomalley; Tax-chick; GregB; saradippity; Berlin_Freeper; Litany; ...

Ping!


2 posted on 12/09/2010 4:23:28 PM PST by NYer ("Be kind to every person you meet. For every person is fighting a great battle." St. Ephraim)
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To: NYer

I was so very happy on hearing about this yesterday, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception.

I was so excited about it and I tried to talk to my priest about it—but he seemed to blow me off about it. Very disappointing because I thought he was a big fan of the Blessed Mother as well. :(

OT—

If there are any Catholics living in South Carolina, please FREEP me—thanks.


3 posted on 12/09/2010 4:26:43 PM PST by Infidel Heather (In God I trust, not the Government.)
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To: Infidel Heather

My wife and I hope to escape to SC next year, God willing.


4 posted on 12/10/2010 2:37:42 AM PST by Straight Vermonter (Posting from deep behind the Maple Curtain)
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To: Straight Vermonter

What area? :)


5 posted on 12/10/2010 4:15:30 AM PST by Infidel Heather (In God I trust, not the Government.)
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To: Infidel Heather

We are looking at Summerville (near Charleston).


6 posted on 12/10/2010 4:27:05 AM PST by Straight Vermonter (Posting from deep behind the Maple Curtain)
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To: NYer

What a charming story. Are there pictures?


7 posted on 12/10/2010 5:50:10 AM PST by Tax-chick (He will be Peace.)
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To: Tax-chick

Other than that one, duh. Time for new glasses, I think.


8 posted on 12/10/2010 5:52:59 AM PST by Tax-chick (He will be Peace.)
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To: Straight Vermonter

I’m a transplant from Florida— SC is a very pretty state. (I live in Spartanburg—the “Upstate” area)


9 posted on 12/10/2010 5:55:32 AM PST by Infidel Heather (In God I trust, not the Government.)
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To: NYer
On Dec. 8, 2010 ... the bishop decreed with “moral certainty” that the Virgin Mary had indeed appeared ... in October of 1859.

They shouldn't rush these things through like this.

10 posted on 12/10/2010 1:35:54 PM PST by the invisib1e hand (oy.)
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To: NYer

http://www.shrineofourladyofgoodhelp.com/htmPages/g_hst_p5.html

The Peshtigo Fire—Miraculous Preservation
Much has been written about the great Peshtigo Fire, which claimed an estimated 2500 lives; 10 times more than the great Chicago Fire, which occurred the same day. Our intent here, however, is to show how this tragedy played an important role in the events which occurred at Robinsonville.

In early October of 1859 Adele Brise received her first vision of the Blessed Virgin Mary. On the following Sunday, October 9th, when the Blessed Mother appeared to Adele for the third time, she warned:

“If they do not convert and do penance, my Son will be obliged to punish them.”

We do not propose to pass judgment on the reasons for this catastrophe, but, one day short of 12 years after the Robinsonville apparition, on October 8, 1871, the great calamity fell and a tragedy begat a miracle. The Belgian colony which embraced a large part of the peninsula and included Robinsonville, was visited by the same whirlwind of fire and wind that devastated Peshtigo.

When the tornado of fire approached Robinsonville, Sister Adele and her companions were determined not to abandon the Chapel. Encircled by the inferno, the Sisters, the children, area farmers and their families fled to the Shrine for protection. The statue of Mary was raised reverently and was processed around the sanctuary. When wind and fire threatened suffocation, they turned in another direction to hope and pray, saying the rosary. Hours later, rains came in a downpour, extinguishing the fiery fury outside the Chapel. The Robinsonville area was destroyed and desolate…except for the convent, the school, the Chapel, and the five acres of land consecrated to the Virgin Mary. Though the fire singed the Chapel fence, it had not entered the Chapel grounds. Those assembled at the Chapel, realizing that they had witnessed a miracle, were asked by Sister Adele to retire to the Convent, where they were made as comfortable as possible for the rest of the night.

What’s more, the only livestock to survive the fire were the cattle brought to the Chapel grounds by farmers and their families who came to the Shrine seeking shelter from the firestorm. Though the Chapel well was only a few feet deep, it gave the cattle outside all the water they needed to survive the fire, while many deeper wells in the area went dry. Hence, the Chapel well has been sometimes referred to as the “miraculous well”.


11 posted on 12/13/2010 11:45:12 AM PST by Deo volente (God willing, America will survive this Obamination.)
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To: Tax-chick; NYer; Salvation


Brise’s father, Lambert, built a small chapel near the spot of the apparitions. When a brick chapel was built in 1880, the trees where Mary appeared were cut down and the chapel’s altar was placed over the spot.
12 posted on 12/13/2010 12:02:29 PM PST by Deo volente (God willing, America will survive this Obamination.)
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To: Deo volente

Very pretty.


13 posted on 12/13/2010 12:57:42 PM PST by Tax-chick (He will be Peace.)
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