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How the Rosary Led Me to Christ
Archdiocese of Washington ^ | 10-07-15 | Msgr. Charles Pope

Posted on 10/08/2015 8:02:23 AM PDT by Salvation

How the Rosary Led Me to Christ

October 7, 2015 8 Comments

rosary-1024x632As a young child I was very close to God. I spoke to Him in a very natural way and He spoke plainly to me. Although I have very few memories of my early childhood, I vividly remember how close I was to God. When early puberty approached, though, I began to slip away, drifting into the rebellious and angry years of my teens. As the flesh came more alive, my spirit submerged.

The culture of the time didn’t help, either. It was the late 1960s and early 1970s and rebelliousness and the flesh were celebrated as “virtues.” Somehow we thought ourselves more mature than our pathetic forebears, who were hopelessly “repressed.” There was the attitude among the young that we had come of age somehow. We collectively deluded ourselves, aided by the messages of rock music and the haze of drug use, that we were somehow “better.”

So it was the winter of my soul. The vivid faith of my childhood gave way to a kind of indifferent agnosticism. Though I never formally left Church (my mother would never had permitted that as long as I lived in under my parents’ roof), I no longer heard God or spoke to Him. I’ve mentioned in previous posts that when I was in high school I joined the youth choir of my parish church. This was not precipitated by a religious passion, but rather by a passion of another kind: there were pretty girls in the choir and I “sought their company,” shall we say. But God has a way of using beauty to draw us to the truth. Week after week, year after year, as we sang those old religious classics a buried faith began to awaken within me.

But what to do? How to pray? I heard that I was supposed to pray. But how? As a child it had been natural to talk with God. But now He seemed distant, aloof, and likely angry with me. And I’ll admit it, prayer seemed a little “goofy” to me, a high school senior still struggling to be “cool” in his own eyes and in the eyes of his friends. Not only that, but prayer was “boring.” It seemed an unfocused, unstructured, and “goofy” thing.

But I knew someone who did pray. My paternal grandmother, “Nana,” was a real prayer warrior. Every day she took out her beads and sat by the window to pray. I had seen my mother pray now and again, but she was more private about it. But Nana, who lived with us off and on in her last years, knew how to pray and you could see it every day.

Rosary Redivivus – In my parish church of the 1970s, the rosary was non-existent. Devotions and adoration were on the outs during that sterile time. Even the Crucifix was gone. But Nana had that “old-time religion” and I learned to appreciate it through her.

Ad Jesum per Mariam – There are some, non-Catholics especially, who think that talking of Mary or focusing on her in any way takes away from Christ. It is as though they consider it a zero-sum game, in which our hearts cannot love both Mary and Jesus. But my own experience was that Mary led me to Christ. I had struggled to know and worship Christ, but somehow a mother’s love felt more natural, safer, and more accessible to me. So I began there, where I could. Simply pole-vaulting right into a mature faith from where I was did not seem possible. So I began, as a little child again, holding my Mother’s hand. And gently, Mother Mary led me to Christ, her son. Through the rosary, that “Gospel on a string,” I became reacquainted with the basic gospel story.

The thing about Marian devotion is that it opens up a whole world. For with this devotion comes an open door into so many of the other traditions and devotions of the Church: Eucharistic adoration, litanies, traditional Marian hymns, lighting candles, modesty, pious demeanor, and so forth. So as Mary led me, she also reconnected me to many things that I only vaguely remembered. The suburban Catholicism of the 1970s had all but cast these things aside, and I had lost them as well. Now in my late teens, I was going up into the Church “attic” and bringing things down. Thus, little by little, Mother Mary was helping me to put things back in place. I remember my own mother being pleased to discover that I had taken some old religious statues, stashed away in a drawer in my room, and placed them out on my dresser once again. I also took down the crazy rock-and-roll posters, one by one, and replaced them with traditional art, including a picture of Mary.

Over time, praying the Rosary and talking to Mary began to feel natural. And, sure enough, little by little, I began to speak with God. It was when I was in the middle of college that I began to sense the call to the priesthood. I had become the choir director by that time and took a new job in a city parish: you guessed it, “St. Mary’s.” There, the sterility of suburban Catholicism had never taken hold. The candles burned brightly at the side altars. The beautiful windows, marble altars, statues, and traditional novenas were all on display in Mother Mary’s parish. The rest is history. Mary cemented the deal between me and her Son, Jesus. I became His priest and now I can’t stop talking about Him! He is my hero, my savior and Lord. And praying again to God has become more natural and more deeply spiritual for me.

It all began one day when I took Mary’s hand and let her lead me to Christ. And hasn’t that always been her role? She, by God’s grace, brought Christ to us, showed Him to us at Bethlehem, presented Him in the Temple, and ushered in His first miracle (even despite His reluctance). She said to the stewards that day at Cana, and to us now, “Do whatever he tells you.” The Gospel of John says, Jesus did this as the beginning of his signs in Cana in Galilee and so revealed his glory, and his disciples began to believe in him (John 2:11). And so Mary’s intercession strengthened the faith of others in her Son. That has always been her role: to take us by the hand and lead us to Christ. Her rosary has been called the “Gospel on a string” because she bids us to reflect on the central mysteries of the Scripture as we pray.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; History; Theology
KEYWORDS: catholic; christ; msgrcharlespope; rosary
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To: verga

Thank you so very much.


81 posted on 10/08/2015 1:39:53 PM PDT by miss marmelstein (Richard the Third: I'd like to drive away not only the Turks (moslims) but all my foes.")
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To: fwdude
Where are Rosaries, or any religious trinkets whatsoever Toilettes, polio vaccines, or home computers , mentioned in New Testament scriptures?

If not, we can do without them just fine.

A little perspective for out separated brethren.

82 posted on 10/08/2015 1:44:01 PM PDT by verga (I might as well be playing chess with pigeons.)
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To: verga

Does “separated” mean beyond grace, or “inferior” in your lexicon?


83 posted on 10/08/2015 1:47:55 PM PDT by fwdude (The last time the GOP ran an "extremist," Reagan won 44 states.)
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To: fwdude
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/separated?s=ts
sep-a-rate
[v. sep-uh-reyt; adj., n. sep-er-it] Spell Syllables
verb (used with object), separated, separating.
1. to keep apart or divide, as by an intervening barrier or space: to separate two fields by a fence.
2. to put, bring, or force apart; part: to separate two fighting boys.
3. to set apart; disconnect; dissociate: to separate church and state.
4. to remove or sever from association, service, etc., especially legally or formally: He was separated from the army right after V-E Day.
5. to sort, part, divide, or disperse (an assemblage, mass, compound, etc.), as into individual units, components, or elements.
6. to take by parting or dividing; extract (usually followed by from or out): to separate metal from ore.
7. Mathematics. to write (the variables of a differential equation) in a form in which the differentials of the independent and dependent variables are, respectively, functions of these variables alone: We can separate the variables to solve the equation.
Compare separation of variables.
verb (used without object), separated, separating.
8. to part company; withdraw from personal association (often followed by from): to separate from a church.
9. (of a married pair) to stop living together but without getting a divorce.
10. to draw or come apart; become divided, disconnected, or detached.
11. to become parted from a mass or compound: Cream separates from milk.
12. to take or go in different directions: We have to separate at the crossroad.
adjective
13. detached, disconnected, or disjoined.
14. unconnected; distinct; unique: two separate questions.
15. being or standing apart; distant or dispersed: two separate houses; The desert has widely separate oases.
16. existing or maintained independently: separate organizations.
17. individual or particular: each separate item.
18. not shared; individual or private: separate checks; separate rooms.
19. (sometimes initial capital letter) noting or pertaining to a church or other organization no longer associated with the original or parent organization.
noun
20. Usually, separates. women's outer garments that may be worn in combination with a variety of others to make different ensembles, as matching and contrasting blouses, skirts, and sweaters.
21. offprint (def 1).
22. a bibliographical unit, as an article, chapter, or other portion of a larger work, printed from the same type but issued separately, sometimes with additional pages.
sep-a-rate pages.
Synonyms
1, 2. sever, sunder, split. Separate, divide imply a putting apart or keeping apart of things from each other. To separate is to remove from each other things previously associated: to separate a mother from her children.To divide is to split or break up carefully according to measurement, rule, or plan: to divide a cake into equal parts. 3. disjoin,

I don't see your word in the definition or in the synonyms. I hope this clears up any confusion you might have.

84 posted on 10/08/2015 2:12:41 PM PDT by verga (I might as well be playing chess with pigeons.)
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To: verga

If it’s more natural, safer and more accessible that makes it better.


85 posted on 10/08/2015 2:18:41 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: eastsider
Already given.

The only way catholicism can "find" their "support" for this concept is to read into the text something not intended by the text.

86 posted on 10/08/2015 2:20:29 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: verga

You used the term, so you define it.


87 posted on 10/08/2015 2:22:43 PM PDT by fwdude (The last time the GOP ran an "extremist," Reagan won 44 states.)
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To: miss marmelstein

When I get up at 5:00 a.m. tomorrow to say the Rosary, I’ll remember you and your mother.


88 posted on 10/08/2015 2:29:19 PM PDT by Tax-chick ("There will be no conservative issue islands left to stand on if the red tide comes in."~S. Knish)
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To: chud
I devote myself forever to your service, and I offer you my heart with all that I am and all that is mine.

You reject Christ being the sufficient sacrifice for your sins.

You reject His command to follow Him and Him only.

In John 6, When Jesus asked the disciples if they wanted to leave Him also, what was their reply?

Did they say, we devote ourselves to your mom with all that I am and all that is mine?

NO! Their wise reply was: 68 Simon Peter answered Him, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have words of eternal life. 69 We have believed and have come to know that You are the Holy One of God.

No appeal to Mary whatsoever.

It is my prayer that catholics turn away from this false belief and faith in Mary and place their trust in Christ as commanded in the Word.

89 posted on 10/08/2015 2:31:22 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: NorthMountain; Salvation
>>Do whatever he tells you.”<<

Best advice any human person ever gave.

And yet, not once, did any of that advice say to "venerate" or appeal to mary in any of the fashion roman catholicism has done.

90 posted on 10/08/2015 2:35:07 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: ealgeone

With all due respect, sir:

Leave me the heck OUT of your (that’s singular) interdenominational bickering and backstabbing, for which the English language lacks sufficient pejoratives.


91 posted on 10/08/2015 2:37:16 PM PDT by NorthMountain ("The time has come", the Walrus said, "to talk of many things")
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To: NorthMountain

Will do. I was just pinging you as I understand that’s one of the “rules” on the board when you repeat someone’s statement.


92 posted on 10/08/2015 2:41:01 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: Salvation

How beautiful! Thanks for the ping.


93 posted on 10/08/2015 2:41:04 PM PDT by Bigg Red (Let's put the ship of state on Cruz Control with Ted Cruz.)
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To: Mercat

Lovely. Thank you for sharing your story.


94 posted on 10/08/2015 2:43:20 PM PDT by Bigg Red (Let's put the ship of state on Cruz Control with Ted Cruz.)
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To: miss marmelstein

So sorry, my dear, to learn of your mother’s state.

Happy, though, to know how our Lady is helping you.

Hugs and prayers.


95 posted on 10/08/2015 2:45:53 PM PDT by Bigg Red (Let's put the ship of state on Cruz Control with Ted Cruz.)
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To: defconw

+1


96 posted on 10/08/2015 2:48:03 PM PDT by Bigg Red (Let's put the ship of state on Cruz Control with Ted Cruz.)
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To: ealgeone

Please, sir, tell me where there is anything on this thread that commands you to believe as we Catholics believe. Marian devotion is part of Catholicism. Let me know if someone is coming to your church and demanding that you conform to our beliefs.


97 posted on 10/08/2015 2:52:23 PM PDT by Bigg Red (Let's put the ship of state on Cruz Control with Ted Cruz.)
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To: Bigg Red

I think the catholic church has said on more than one occasion there is no salvation outside of the roman catholic church. I believe there is also a teaching that all are to follow the pope when he speaks “ex cathedra”.


98 posted on 10/08/2015 3:00:11 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: Bigg Red

Thank you! I’m very lucky she is in a Catholic nursing home run by absolute saints. And yes, indeed, Our Lady is helping my whole family. Bless you.


99 posted on 10/08/2015 3:03:53 PM PDT by miss marmelstein (Richard the Third: I'd like to drive away not only the Turks (moslims) but all my foes.")
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To: Tax-chick

Thank you so much, Tax-chick. Thanks to all who have expressed their sympathy.


100 posted on 10/08/2015 3:06:28 PM PDT by miss marmelstein (Richard the Third: I'd like to drive away not only the Turks (moslims) but all my foes.")
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