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The Most Holy Rosary Of The Blessed Virgin Mary

"I am the Lady of the Rosary" ~~ Speaking to the three children of Fatima.

'Wonder not that you have obtained so little fruit by your labors, you have spent them on barren soil, not yet watered with the dew of Divine Grace. When GOD willed to renew the face of the earth, He began by sending down on it the fertilizing rain of the Angelic Salutation. Therefore preach my Psalter composed of 150 Angelic Salutations and 15 Our Fathers, and you will obtain an abundant harvest'.
'The rosary shall be a powerful armor against hell, it will destroy vice, decrease sin, and defeat heresies. It will cause virtue and good works to flourish; it will withdraw the hearts of men from the love of the world and its vanities, and lift them to the desire of eternal things.'
~~ Words of the Blessed Virgin Mary to Saint Dominic

Prayer To The Lady Of The Rosary

Beloved Lady of the Rosary, I thank you for your great gift of your psalter. As the beads slip through my fingers, may my heart and my lips sing your praise, and my brain contemplate those sacred mysteries of my Holy Faith. May my meditations on your beloved Rosary draw me ever closer, trustingly, to you, and through you to your divine son, my Lord and my God.

The Mysteries of Rosary of The Blessed Virgin Mary

Joyful Mysteries

Often said on Monday and Saturday, the Joyful Mysteries include: The Annunciation, The Visitation, The Birth of Our Lord, The Presentation of Our Lord, and The Finding of Our Lord in the Temple.

Glorious Mysteries

Often said on Wednesday and Sunday the Glorious Mysteries include: The Resurrection, The Ascension, The Coming of the Holy Spirit, The Assumption of our Blessed Mother into Heaven, and The Coronation of our Blessed Mother.

Mysteries of Light

Often said on Thursday, the Mysteries of Light as inspired by and proposed in 1957 by Saint George Preca:

1. When Our Lord Jesus Christ, after his baptism in the Jordan, was led into the desert.

2. When Our Lord Jesus Christ showed, by word and miracles, that He is true God.

3. When Our Lord Jesus Christ taught the Beatitudes on the mountain.

4. When Our Lord Jesus Christ was transfigured on the mountain.

5. When Our Lord Jesus Christ had his last Meal with the Apostles.

Sorrowful Mysteries

Often said on Tuesday and Friday the Sorrowful Mysteries include: The Agony in the Garden, The Scourging at the Pillar, The Crowning with Thorns, The Carrying of the Cross, and The Crucifixion and Death of Our Lord.

History Of The Rosary

Tradition holds that Our Lady gave the Rosary to Saint Dominic Guzman in 1206 as a form of gospel-preaching and popular prayer. For more than seven centuries, the Rosary devotion has been one of the most popular devotional practices in the church. Its combination of vocal and mental prayer have made it a prime tool for contemplation. Jesus is the author and source of grade; Our Lady's Rosary is the key to open the treasury of grace to us.

Although prayer beads had been popular before Dominic's time, he and his friars quickly adopted the Rosary as an excellent way to teach the mysteries of Christianity to a largely illiterate European population. In 1470, Blessed Alan of Rupe founded the first Rosary Confraternity, and thereby launched the Dominican Order as the foremost missionaries of the Rosary. Through the efforts of Blessed Alan and the early Dominicans, this prayer form spread rapidly throughout Western Christendom.

The meditations on the fifteen mysteries serve as reminders of incidents in the lives of Christ and Mary. These are divided into the joyful, sorrowful, and glorious mysteries. Thirteen of the mysteries come from incidents in the New Testament. One, the assumption of Mary into heave, comes from Sacred Tradition. The fifteens, the Crowning of Mary as Queen of Heaven is thought to be derived from images in the Book of Revelation. These meditations make the Rosary a reflection on the fundamental beliefs of our Faith.

Through the years, Our Lady has re-affirmed her approval of this devotion, and her pleasure in the title "Queen of the Rosary." To Blessed Alan, she made fifteen promises to those who devoutly recite her beads. She told him, ".. immense volumes would have to be written if all the miracles of my Holy Rosary were to be recorded." Our Lady's promises are:

  • Those who shall have served me constantly by reciting the Rosary shall receive some special grace.

  • I promise my special protection and great graces to all who devoutly recite my Psalter.

  • The Rosary shall be a most powerful armor against hell; it shall destroy vices, weaken sin, overthrow unbelief.

  • It shall make virtues and good works to flourish again; it shall obtain for souls abundant mercies of God; it shall win the hearts of men from the love of the world and its vanities, and life them to a desire of things eternal. Oh, how many souls will be sanctified by this means !


  • The soul which has recourse to me through the Rosary shall not perish.


  • Whoever shall have recited the Rosary devoutly and with meditation on its mysteries, shall never be overcome by misfortunes, shall not experience the anger of God, shall not be lost by a sudden death; but if he be in sin he shall be converted; and if he be in grace, he shall persevere and be made worth of eternal life.


  • Truly devoted servants of my Rosary shall not die without the Sacraments.


  • It is my will that those who recite my Rosary have, in life and in death, light and the plenitude of graces; and in life and death, may participate in the merits of the saints.


  • Every day I deliver from Purgatory souls devoted to my Rosary.


  • True servants of my Rosary shall enjoy great glory in heaven.


  • Whatever you shall ask through the Rosary, you shall obtain.


  • I will assist in every necessity those who propagate my Rosary.


  • I have obtained from my Son that all members of the Confraternity of my Rosary may have in life and in death all the blessed as their associated.


  • All who recite my Rosary are my children and the brethren of my Only Begotten Son Jesus Christ.


  • Devotion to my Rosary is a great sign of predestination.

Our Lady told Blessed Bartolo Longo to propagate the Rosary, and promised that those who would propagate this devotion would be saved. In 1884, Our Lady of Pompeii appeared at Naples to Fortuna Agrelli, who was desperately ill. She told Fortuna that the title "Lady of the Holy Rosary" was one which was particularly pleasing to her, and cured Fortuna of her illness.

At Lourdes, Our Lady told Saint Bernadette to pray many rosaries. When Bernadette saw the beautiful lady, she instinctively took her Rosary in her hands and knelt down. The lady made a sign of approval with her head, and took into her hands a Rosary which hung on her right arm. As Bernadette prayed, Our Lady passed the beads of her Rosary through her fingers, but said nothing except the Gloria at the end of each decade. At Fatima, Mary told the children to pray the Rosary often.

Popes throughout history have loved the Rosary. Not a single Pope in the last four hundred years has failed to urge devotion to the Rosary. From Pope Sixtus IV, in 1479, to the present day, all popes have urged the use of this devotion, and enriched its recitation with indulgences.

Pius XI dedicated the entire month of October to the Rosary.

Pope Saint Pius X said :

"Of all the prayers, the Rosary is the most beautiful and the richest in graces; of all, it is the one most pleasing to Mary, the Virgin Most Holy."

Pope Leo XIII repeatedly recommended the Rosary as a most powerful means whereby to move God to aid us in meeting the needs of the present age. In 1883, he inserted the invocation, "Queen of the Most Holy Rosary, pray for us ! " into the Liturgy for the Universal Church. John XXIII who was particularly faithful to the daily recital of the whole Rosary has said, " We can never sufficiently recommend the saying of the Rosary, not simply with the lips but with attention of the soul to the divine truths, with a heart filled with love and gratitude." John Paul II tells us to "... love the simple, fruitful prayer of the Rosary." Many of the Saints, and a number of the religious orders have praised the Rosary. Saint Charles said he depended on the Rosary almost entirely for the conversion and sanctification of his diocese. Founders of most religious orders have either commanded or recommended the daily recitation of the Rosary. The Benedictines speedily adapted this devotion in their ancient cloisters. The Carmelites were happy to receive the Rosary as well as their rule from the Dominicans. The Franciscans made their rosaries out of wood, and preached this devotion as well as poverty. The Servites wore their rosaries as a badge of that servitude which is the only true liberty. Inspired by the example of their founder, the Jesuits invariably propagated the devotion. Saint Francis Xavier used the touch of his chaplet as a means of healing the sick. Saint Vincent de Paul instructed the members of his order to depend more on the Rosary than upon their preaching.

Our ancestors had recourse to the Rosary as an every- ready refuge in misfortune, and as a pledge and a proof of their Christian faith and devotion. Saint Dominic used the Rosary as a weapon in his battle against the Albigensian heresy in France. In the last century, the Christian successes over the Turks at Temesvar and at Corfu coincided with the conclusion of public devotions of the Rosary. During the penal days in Ireland, the Rosary bound the Irish Catholics together as the church militant. When it was a felony to teach the Catholic Catechism, and death for a priest to say Mass, the Irish mothers used their rosaries to tell their little ones the story of Jesus and Mary, and thus kept the Faith green in the hearts of their children. Saint John Vianney, the Cure d'Ars, declared emphatically that in the nineteenth century it was the Rosary which restored religion in France. Likewise, in the dark days of persecution in Mexico, in our own century, the sturdy Mexican Catholics clung faithfully to their rosaries. The martyr Miguel Pro was allowed his last request before being shot by a firing squad --- he knelt and prayed his Rosary. A special society, the Society of the Living Rosary, was founded by the Venerable Marie Pauline Jaricot in the city of Lyons, France, in 1826. She formed bands of fifteen members who each said one decade of the Rosary daily. Thus, the entire Rosary is said collectively by the members of each circle daily.

Father Timothy Ricci, O.P., instituted the Perpetual Rosary, or Mary's Guard of Honor, in 1635. The aim of this devotion is to unite the members in such a way that some devoted watchers will ever be found in prayer and praise at Our Lady's shrine, telling their beads for the conversion of sinners, the relief of the dying, and the succor of the dead. In Belgium, the Dominican nuns of the Third Order established a monastery for the express purpose of maintaining the Perpetual Rosary, so that there it became not merely the devotion of a society, but the distinctive work of a community. A number of shrines of the order are to be found in the United States. Here, the Rosary is said day and night by members of the community. Rosary processions are held, and pilgrims sing again and again the praises of the Heavenly Queen of all Roman Rite Catholics.

Our Lady has 117 blessed titles. Above all, She selected this title at Fatima: "I am the Lady of the Rosary."

  • Saint Francis de Sales said the greatest method of praying is: Pray the Rosary.


  • Saint Thomas Aquinas preached 40 straight days in Rome Italy on just the Hail Mary.


  • Saint John Vianney, patron of priests, was seldom seen without a rosary in his hand.


  • "The rosary is the scourge of the devil" -- Pope Adrian VI


  • "The rosary is a treasure of graces" -- Pope Paul V


  • Padre Pio the stigmatic priest said: "The Rosary is the weapon".


  • Several popes wrote encyclicals on the rosary.

John XXIII spoke 38 times about our Lady and the Rosary. He prayed 15 decades daily.

  • Saint Louis Marie Grignion de Montfort wrote: "The rosary is the most powerful weapon to touch the Heart of Jesus, Our Redeemer, who so loves His Mother."

Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary that never was it known that anyone who fled to Your protection, implored Your help, or sought Your intercession was left unaided. Inspired with this confidence, we fly to you, O Virgin of virgins, our Mother. To You we come; before You we stand, sinful and sorrowful. O Mother of the Word Incarnate, despise not our petitions, but in Your mercy, hear and answer us. Amen.


30 posted on 02/05/2012 10:59:13 PM PST by Robert Drobot (Fiat voluntas tua)
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Commemorating
† The Feast of The Martyrs of Japan †

( Observed A.D. 5 February 2012 )


Detail from the Monument to the 26 Martyrs in Nagasaki, Japan

Christianity was introduced to Japan by Saint Francis Xavier in 1549, and made marvelous progress after his death. Until 1588 there was open expansion in the Pacific. Then, in 1587, when there were 200,000 Catholics in Japan, a persecution began. Jesuit and Franciscan missionaries were crucified and others expelled from Japan by Emperor Tagosama, absolute ruler of Japan, who obliged his subjects to adore him as a god. Many missionaries, however, remained in Japan in disguise.

After political revolutions, another persecution started in 1592. The news spread that all Catholics found in churches or harboring missionaries would be imprisoned. This raised such enthusiasm among the Catholics for martyrdom that the idolaters themselves were in admiration.

The first to give the example of martyrdom was a General of the Army, Okondono. While he was at the house of his friend, the King of Bungo, he received the news of the edict and headed to the house of Fr. Nheke, a highly respected and virtuous Jesuit missionary, in order to die with him.

While there, he was joined by the two sons of the Viceroy of Tenan, who was grand master of the Emperor’s House, a very wealthy and powerful man. Even a relative of the Emperor, who had received three kingdoms from Tagosama, came out to join the missionaries in order to not lose the opportunity of dying with them. The illustrious Queen of Bungo carefully prepared splendid dresses for herself and her two daughters so that they might “appear with pomp on their day of triumph.”

In the house of Yanagihara, a noble from Bungo, all prepared themselves to die. Even the father, age 80, who had received Baptism a short while before, refused to flee. He remained, saying that he would die for Christ, but carrying his weapons as befitting an old soldier.

A man who had cowardly abandoned the Faith tried to convince his son to do the same. He found, however, unexpected resistance in the boy. The youth told his father to be a man of honor and offer good example to his son. Then he said: “You should try to keep me in the bosom of the Church rather than take me from her. You should return to the worship of the true God, whom you so cowardly renounced. You can do whatever you please. But as for me, there is no law obliging a son to imitate the perfidy of his father.”

In 1597, 26 Catholics – six European Franciscan missionaries, three Japanese Jesuits and 17 Japanese laymen including three young boys – were executed by crucifixion in Nagasaki. On the way up the hill, a man tempted the youngest boy Louis Ibaragi, age 12, to renounce his faith. He would not yield but eagerly asked, “Where is my cross?” When they pointed out the smallest one to him, he immediately embraced it and held on to it as a child clings to his toy. The martyrs were raised on crosses and then pierced through with spears.

From 1597, the persecution spread at the instigation of the Protestants of Holland and England, who assumed in this way the role of Judas that they have often played against Catholics throughout the world. To eliminate the competition of the Portuguese and Spanish in their commercial relations with Japan, they encouraged the Emperor and the nobles to declare a war of extermination on all the Catholics in the Empire.

A new wave of martyrs crowned the Church in Japan. Among them was Juliahota, a Korean illustrious by birth and virtue. She was very esteemed and favored by Prince Kubosama, who desired to marry her. When she saw the persecution coming, she made the vow of perpetual chastity to attract graces from Our Lord.

The Prince, offended by this gesture, sent her and two companions – Lucia and Clara – to a faraway fishing village. There they remained for 40 years, abandoned by man but granted many celestial favors. At first, the noble maiden was sad because she thought she was not worthy to give her blood for the Faith. But after receiving advice in a letter from a Jesuit missionary, she understood that the Church also considered as martyrs some saints who had suffered exile.

Comments of Professor Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira :

You see how many martyrs and how many examples of heroism this selection presents us.

What a marvel that the news that Catholics would suffer martyrdom should receive such an enthusiastic reception! What faith! What a sense of honor they had! In a Christianity so far removed from Rome, so distant from the good examples of past Christendom, the reports of the coming persecution raised joy and a desire for Heaven. This indicates a flourishing general state of spirit in the nascent Church of Japan.

In that preponderantly feudal Japan, several princes and nobles were such loyal members of the Catholic Church that they were willing to give their lives for her. Even some who were close to the Emperor and had received his favors chose to seek out the persecuted Jesuit and Franciscan missionaries in order to die with them.

How admirable was that Queen of a small kingdom, probably one of those Japanese islands, who prepared herself and her daughters with splendid new garb in order to receive martyrdom. You can picture the interior of a small royal palace, with a courtyard adorned with ornamental Japanese trees and small fountains, a garden with delightful surprises in each corner, small plants with red flowers, charming little animals scurrying here and there.

And in a room opening to the courtyard, there is the Queen with her servants, calmly cutting and sewing her magnificent dress. She was preparing herself for martyrdom as she would prepare herself for a wedding. It is truly a beautiful manifestation of her faith, of how naturally she and her daughters lived the truths of our Faith.

And how appropriate and venerable was that old officer, the head of the noble household who declared he would stay and die for Christ carrying his weapons!

What can be said about that boy who resisted the invitations of his father to apostatize, and instead gave him a splendid sermon on his paternal and filial Catholic duties? He is a natural patron for those who have similar problems in their families. It is a pity that the selection does not give us his name, so that we could ask him by name to intercede in our needs.

And how admirable of the courage of that other boy of 12 years who refused to apostatize, but instead embraced his cross on the hill of Nagasaki in imitation of Our Lord!

Then, the beautiful and noble bride who renounced the favors of a powerful Prince, made a vow of perpetual chastity and prepared herself to die for Our Lord. But the Prince did not hand her over to death. Instead, he sent her and two companions to a rude place of exile among simple fishermen, far from everywhere. She spent 40 years there.

You can imagine the scene. She sits along the waters at sunset, near that little village. A red sun is falling into the ocean; at her feet is an ocean of small rolling waves, typically Japanese. She recalls with nostalgia attending a Mass, seeing and adoring the Holy Eucharist, receiving Communion, and considers how happy she would be to confess herself for her peace of conscience, even though it is pure. At the end, she serenely dies after a long exile that was a true martyrdom.

Those were the fruits of the Catholic Church in Japan soon after its conversion.

This selection does not say everything. After those initial persecutions, the Catholic Church in Japan was so intensively persecuted that one could say that she was drowned in blood. She was almost completely destroyed. Only a tiny stream of Catholics remained. It was a clandestine stream of Catholics who stayed faithful and continued to hold to the Faith until shortly before World War II. Some of the descendants of those heroic Catholics then came to the West, to Brazil, for example, and here they apostatized. Why did this happen? They could not resist our materialist and revolutionary environment of the enjoyment of life.

It is a paradoxical reality, but it is undeniable. Those Japanese Catholics were able to resist centuries of religious persecutions by their pagan monarchs; however, they were not able to resist our revolutionary ambience of material progress.

I know that in principle material progress is very good; I know that it can lead to God. But let us face a concrete fact: Those Japanese Catholics who remained faithful for centuries suffering all kinds of persecutions and privations, when they immigrated to a Catholic country and assumed our revolutionary progress - they apostatized.

You can conclude from this fact whatever you want. Right now, I will not elaborate on it. I leave the conclusions to each of you.

Let us ask the Japanese martyrs to enlighten us with a solution for this problem.

Α Ω


31 posted on 02/05/2012 11:02:02 PM PST by Robert Drobot (Fiat voluntas tua)
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