Logo

Supporting Catholic Clergy in the
Pro-life Cause.

Priests for Life Canada

Volume 2003                                                                         Issue Four

 We can rely on our patrons
Our Lady of Guadalupe, St. Joseph & St. Michael

 

MARIAN
VISION OF LIFE








In This Issue:

INTRODUCING
INTERNATIONAL PERPETUAL
ROSARY FOR LIFE

MARIAN MISSION OF LIFE: Our Lady, Mother, and Protectress of the Unborn
Fr. Jim Whalen
SPIRITUAL MOTHERHOOD AND PRO-LIFE FORMATION
Fr. Paul Burchat
SANCTA MARIA TE QUATLASUPE: Our Lady, Mother of All, Patroness of Life
Fr. Jim Whalen
DEFENDING THE
“SACRAMENT OF MARRIAGE”
Future Mailings
Happenings
 

Go to Priests for Life Canada Main Page

 

Our Lady of Guadalupe

PRAYER FOR LIFE

 

Let us join with Pope John Paul II in his prayer:

OMary, bright dawn of the new world, Mother of the living, to you do we entrust the cause of life. Look down O Mother, upon the vast numbers of babies not allowed to be born, of the poor whose lives are made difficult, of men and women who are victims of brutal violence, of the elderly and the sick killed by indifference or out of misguided mercy. Grant that all, who believe in your Son, may proclaim the Gospel of Life to the people of our time. Obtain for them the grace to accept that Gospel as a gift ever new, the joy of celebrating it with gratitude through their lives, and the courage to bear witness to it resolutely, in order to build, together with all people of good will, the civilization of truth and love.... (Evangelium Vitae).
Blessed Virgin of Guadalupe, Mother of the Americas, behold how great the harvest is. Intercede before the Lord for us (Jan. 27,1979). Amen.

  

 

MARIAN MISSION OF LIFE:

Our Lady, Mother, and Protectress of the Unborn

by Fr. Jim Whalen

Fr. Jim Whalen    “Blessed is she who believed that the promise made her by the Lord would be fulfilled” (Lk 1:45).
A Marian Mission of Life is needed today, not only for believers, but also for the birth of belief itself - in the sanctity of human life, in the competency of Church teaching, and in all that the Incarnation implies for human life. Mary's acceptance to be the Mother of God stands as a deep reverence for the holiness and dignity of human life, especially that which is most fragile - the unborn child. We are confronted daily by a media that for the most part has no respect for natural law or God's law and has opted for a contraceptive mentality - deceiving, misinforming and manipulating youth. It advocates and idealizes an immoral lifestyle of promiscuity, which views contraception, birth control and abortion as acceptable choices, regardless of the consequences. This is the exact antithesis of Mary’s abandonment to God's will “Thy will be done”, whereas contraception is a choice to limit life and avoid risk. Mary’s Fiat was a choice to give and live life to the full, and bear risk in the confidence that God’s providence would prevail.

There is in the world today a widespread uncertainty concerning morality and Christianity. Many seem to be reverting to pagan practices under the banner of Planned Parenthood and the New Age Movement. We need Our Lady of Guadalupe, Patroness of the unborn, to help us to battle the existing culture of death. We have much to overcome. There is a growing tendency to Skepticism, Gnosticism, and Relativism. Our society is more inclined to give thanks for the Internet than the Incarnation, to listen to the word of man rather than the Word of God, and to exploit sex rather than promote chastity. We observe the horrendous consequences that have resulted from not heeding Pope Paul VI's encyclical Humanae Vitae:


Even the institution of marriage is being threatened by same-sex advocates. Society is crumbling under the chaos!

We must turn to Mary, Our Lady of Guadalupe, to defend us and help build a culture of life. St Germanus taught that: “The protection of Mary is greater and more powerful than anything we can imagine”. At the Annunciation, Mary illustrated her threefold acceptance of life in its conception, development and birth. She accepted and affirmed life freely: “Let it be done to me according to thy word”. She rejoiced and thanked God for the gift of the developing child in her womb when she visited her cousin Elizabeth. “My spirit rejoices in God my Savior”. She exulted in the birth of Jesus. She and Joseph, protected Jesus from the holocaust of the Holy Innocents. She challenges us to conceive, cultivate, give birth, and protect life by our words, actions and example.

In his book, The Glories of Mary, St. Alphonsus Liguori quotes St. Albert the Great: “There is a certain victory that all may promise themselves who place themselves under Our Lady's Protection”. Pope John Paul II has stated that he owes his life to the protection of Our Lady of Fatima. St Alphonsus Liguori also writes: “Among all the kinds of homage we can render Mary, the most pleasing to the Sacred Heart of our Mother is to implore with great frequency, her maternal protection (The Glories of Mary).

Mary is our Patroness, our Protectress in the order of grace. Whereas Christ is the only Mediator of justice by way of His merit, Mary has been chosen to be the Mediatrix, the Dispensatrix of all the graces that Christ has merited for us, by way of prayer. Whereas, He gave Himself to Mary by the Incarnation, He gives Himself to us in Holy Communion. He came to us through Mary. We cannot choose a better way to go back to Him than through Mary.

We read: “A great sign appeared in heaven; a woman, adorned with the sun, standing on the moon” (Apoc 12:1). We can apply this to Our Lady of Guadalupe, the only self-portrait of Mary that we have. St Bernard stated that “just as no one can hide from the heat of the sun, no one can hide from the healing and love of Mary”.
We read: “He that is a little one, let him turn to me” (Prov 9:4). Beneath Our Lady of Guadalupe's mantle we will not only survive, we will thrive. As her children, we can call on her in every danger to help and protect us. She is the “Help of Christians”, our Refuge, and the one chosen to lead us to pro-life victory. “I will put enmities between you and the woman and she shall crush your head” (Gn 3:l5).

As Catholics, we have many weapons, resources and means available for our spiritual combat. We have: the Mass; Holy Mother the Church; the seven Sacraments; Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration; and the Holy Scriptures. We can rely on St Joseph, Patron Saint of Canada, St Michael the Archangel, and the Communion of Saints to defend us. We can call on the Holy Innocents, the Holy Souls in Purgatory and the Holy Martyrs to support us. We have our protective armour for battle: the belt of truth, the breastplate of righteousness, the sandals of Good News, the helmet of Salvation, the shield of faith, and the sword of the Bible. We have Our Lady of Guadalupe, Mother of Life, and Patroness of the Unborn to help and protect us.

We can always turn to prayer. St John Chrysostom tells us: “God governs the world, and prayer governs God”. A good example is the memorare of St Bernard of clairvaux, 1019-1153:             

 “Remember,  most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was it known that anyone who fled to your protection, implored your help, and sought your intercession, was left unaided...”. Our Lady of Guadalupe asked Blessed Juan Diego: “Is not my help a refuge?”
We have been promised protection and the greatest graces when we pray the Rosary in contemplation. Pope Paul VI, in Marialis Cultus reminds us: “It is one of the best and most efficacious prayers in common that the Christian family is invited to pray” (No. 54). “It stimulates our wills to draw from them the norms of living” (No. 48). Pope John Paul II has promoted greater devotion to Mary with his apostolic letter inaugurating the Year of the Rosary (2002-2003), as well as the Luminous Mysteries. He writes: “It is our Mother Mary's favorite prayer. It is training in Holiness. It marks the rhythm of human life. I trust in the power of the Rosary for the cause of peace in the world and the cause of the family”.        

Priests for Life Canada, recognizing the tremendous tasks we face in the struggle to save human lives, is inaugurating an International Perpetual Rosary for Life (see details in this newsletter).

We can practise True Devotion to Mary as a means of acquiring her protective mantle. It means “total consecration” (Totus Tuus), all to Jesus through Mary. We are told this is an easy, safe and sure way to commit ourselves to carry out our Marian Mission of Life as her ambassadors. It was on the cross that Jesus gave John to Mary: “Behold your Son”, and Mary to John: “Behold your Mother” (Jn 19-26), that the invitation was extended to all of us to bring Mary into our lives and share her pilgrimage of life. We must continue to take her into our hearts and homes as John did, and never cease to ask her to show us that she is our Mother by her love, care and protection. St John Damascene states: “Mother of God, defended by you, I will follow up my enemies and oppose them with the shield of your protection and your all powerful help” (Glories of Mary, pp.146, 147).

Just as Our Lady of Guadalupe has extinguished human sacrifice in the Aztec world of the sixteenth century, standing for protecting life and offering the abundant new life, won by the self-sacrifice of her Son, so too, she can be implored to end the sacrifice of millions of children in our world today. She showed her intercessory power, with her Son, in the many miracles that took place on her behalf::

1531: the healing of Blessed Juan Diego’s uncle Juan Bernardino.
1531: the raising of an Indian native from the dead. He had been accidentally killed by an arrow.
1538: the conversion of eight million souls in seven years.
1571: the Victory of Lepanto over the Moslems.
1629: saving Mexico from the Great Flood.
1773: saving Mexico from a Plague through the Consecration to Our Lady of Guadalupe.
1921: the Sacred image remained untouched - in spite of an attempt to destroy it by dynamite explosion.
It would seem that in our world, in which the culture of death is so pervasive, and supported by governments and mass media, we are attempting to outdo the Aztecs. Fifty-five 55 million babies are aborted annually in the world; another 250 million are killed annually by abortifacient birth control pills). We are living in a time when the lives of the handicapped, the elderly, and designated unproductive members of our society are being threatened.
There is hope as more and more are responding to Pope John Paul II’ s challenge, as well as Our Lady’s requests for prayer, sacrifice and reparation at Lourdes, Fatima, Guadalupe, and other well-known shrines. We witness the increase of Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration Chapels (i.e., 55 chapels in Canada, 42 in Ontario and one in the Ottawa Diocese at St. Margaret Mary’s Parish, Cumberland. Our Lady of Guadalupe, as Patroness of the Unborn, and as Mother and Queen of the Americas, is being asked to intercede with her Son and overwhelm the powers of darkness and the culture of death with the brightness of her presence.
Mary asks for a temple. Mary promises love, compassion, help, and protection. Mary will rectify and remedy sufferings of all those who love, seek, have confidence, and cry to her. +

Note: One way we can all participate in the Marian Mission of Life is through the International Perpetual Rosary for Life, sponsored by Priests for Life Canada. We need all the help we can get from you and our Lady.

FOR FURTHER READING AND INFORMATION ON OUR LADY OF GUADALUPE

back to index


 

A Special Project by
Priests for Life Canada
Introducing:


International
PERPETUAL ROSARY
FOR LIFE
Please click here.


back to index

 back to index


SPIRITUAL MOTHERHOOD AND PRO-LIFE FORMATION
Fr. Paul Burchat, a priest of Madonna House

 

We all need the Spiritual Motherhood of Mary. One way to acquire this is through Consecration to Jesus through Mary, which is basically a renewal of our baptismal vows, through Mary. It is of special importance to pro-life workers, as we recognize the role of Our Lady of Guadalupe as the “Patroness of Life” and “Protectress of the Unborn”. We turn to her again and again to defend and protect human life at all stages. Holy Mother the Church affirms her role in the Church and her cooperation in her Son’s work of salvation.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church and Consecration
The Catechism of the Catholic Church is a primary source of the fundamental teachings on Mary, which pertains to the Consecration (CCC: 487-501; 725-726; 963-975; 2030). St. Louis de Montfort’s “True Devotion to Mary” is without doubt a masterpiece that can direct us in the Marian way of total gift and total commitment.

To begin, we see that God chose her from all eternity to be the Mother of His Son (CCC 488) - her election was not some haphazard or random event. She was prepared for this task with special graces, most notably, that she was freed from original sin from the moment of her conception (CCC 491). However, this in no way undermined her free assent to the Annunci-ation. It was entirely possible that she could have said no to God’s offer, which was made through the Angel Gabriel. Just as Eve’s disobedience has brought death to all humanity, Mary’s yes has now again opened a channel to life for all humanity (CCC 494 & 726). She truly bore God in her womb, and is thus, rightly called, “The Mother of God”, or “Theotokos” (CCC 495 & 963). Consequently, she had a deep and profound relationship with the Son of God from His conception and shared in His work of salvation up to the moment of His death (CCC 964). “What the Catholic faith believes about Mary is based on what it believes about Christ, and what it teaches about Mary illumines in turn its faith in Christ” (CCC 487).

Mary’s Presence
After His Ascension, Mary aided the beginnings of the Church by her prayers and was present with the apostles at Pentecost. So, not only had she been the Mother of Jesus’ physical body, she is now also the “Mother of His Mystical Body”, i.e., the Church, by virtue of Christ having entrusted all of humanity to her care in the person of the Apostle John at the foot of the Cross (Jn 19:26, 27), and by her presence at Pentecost where her “Motherhood of the Church” is now ratified by a second overshadowing of the Holy Spirit.

Before she left this world to enter the next, she was present to the early Church, helping to continue to form the Apostles. She also informed them about her own life and the pre-public life of Jesus as well as the significant events of those hidden early years, which are recorded in Matthew’s and Luke’s infancy narratives.
She is clearly the “Mother of the Members of Christ”, and rightly called “Mary, Mother of Christ and Mother of the Church” (CCC 963). Thus her spiritual motherhood now extends to all men, “In whose generation and formulation she cooperates with a Mother’s love” (CCC 501). She continues to form us individually and the Church as a whole from her place in Heaven, at this very moment, and so, is also rightly called our “Mother in the order of grace” (CCC 967-970).

Spiritual Motherhood

Spiritual motherhood is a reflection of natural motherhood and vice versa. They mirror and complement each other. We all have and need a mother in the physical order and are most intimately associated with our natural mothers in the earliest times of life, as she attends to the many material needs we have during this period.  A mother is very important in the spiritual life as well, guiding our formation in the first years of our spiritual commitment and pro-life training. We see this combination of natural/spiritual motherhood, for instance, in the lives of St. Monica and her son, St. Augustine, as she helped lay the foundation for his becoming the great bishop, saint, father and Doctor of the Church that he would eventually become. St. Paul notes this same dynamic in the life of St. Timothy as he praises both the life and the faith that was passed on to him, not only by his mother, Eunice, but also by his grandmother, Lois (2 Tim 1:5).  St. Paul also pays tribute to the mother of Rufus, whom he considers to be like a mother to himself as well (Rom 16:13). Although a man well on in years, and well-seasoned in the apostolic life, by this time, he still appreciated a motherly influence in his life. There are countless other examples of these sorts of natural/spiritual motherhood combinations all throughout the history of Christianity.

Mary, and our natural mothers are intended by God to work in harmony to achieve the ends of this spiritual formation - not just in the early years of our lives, but, in fact, throughout our entire lives. However, the ultimate goal of all of this work of formation on the part of the mother is not to draw the child more tightly to herself, but to prepare the child so that it can be turned over to the father and other significant men in the child’s life for the final shaping of his or her personality. This is not to imply that the father’s influence has been or should have been absent up to this point. No, but it is the father, in particular, who is to instill the confidence and the courage the child needs in order to become the adult that God intends him/her to be. A mother who trains a child to cling more tightly to herself as the child gets older, is misguiding and malforming the child as well as doing something quite selfish. This is more likely to happen in smaller families where there are fewer children available to relate to the parents, and even more possible in single-parent households, unless the parent recognizes the need to do otherwise and gets help.

Primitive Cultures
Primitive cultures understand this very well. When boys reach a certain age, the fathers and the men of the tribe, or the community, take them from the women for some sort of rite of passage or indoctrination into the ranks of the men. They know that to postpone this process risks delaying the child’s passage into adulthood, with the possibility that it may not happen at all.

So it is with Our Lady - her ultimate goal in forming us is not to keep us all to herself, but to pass us onto her Son, and finally to the Father. St. Louis de Montfort was given a profound understanding of all of the above truths, and along with the Church’s teachings, he made them the theological foundation of the consecration.
The de Montfort Consecration

Fr. Roger Charest, a de Montfort priest who has prepared a study course on the Consecration, says that since Christ came to us through Mary, the Consecration is essentially “A total dedication of ourselves back to Christ, through the hands of Mary”. It is a perfect renewal of the vows of our Baptism. At Baptism we gave ourselves to Jesus through Mary, but only in an implicit way. Now we do it in an explicit way. De Montfort himself tells why the Consecration is so important. In his book, True Devotion, he lists eight motives for making the Consecration and the one that says it best, and sums up the others, is the fifth: “It leads us to union with Our Lord. It is an easy, short, perfect, and secure way of attaining union with Our Lord, in which union, the perfection of a Christian consists”.

From this union then comes everything we need. This last point makes perfect sense when you consider that of all people, of all time, Mary is the one who knows Jesus best, and so is able to teach us about Him better than anyone else. Plus, as I said in the first section, Jesus has entrusted all of us to her care in the person of John, while He hung on the Cross. This is in contrast to the thought of many non-Catholic Christians who see Mary as an impediment to our getting to know God better, and they suggest that she should be more ignored the closer we try to get to God.

Mary wants to take us to Christ even more than we may want to go to Him. This is very clearly indicated in Scripture at the wedding at Cana, where we have her last recorded spoken words, which are none other than, “Do whatever He tells you” (Jn 2:5). From all of this we can see Our Lady’s proper role in the order of grace and that our prayer is not intended to stop with her, but to proceed through her to the Godhead. We see that a mother’s care and guidance is important, both naturally, and supernaturally, and when properly understood and exercised, is an invaluable help in our pro-life journey to God. Most of us have  had problems with our mothers to one degree or another, but don’t let that stop you from having a relationship with Mary, the Mother of God.

Significance of the Consecration for Pro-life Disciples
If pro-life disciples are to be effective at all, prayer is critical. Mary has been chosen as the Patroness of the entire pro-life movement, under the title of Our Lady of Guadalupe. She cares about all the victims and all the perpetrators of anti-life crimes with a mother’s heart, to a much greater degree than we can, or ever will. She shows us the most prudential way of dealing with all of the issues that face us in pro-life work: promiscuity, contraception, abortion, euthanasia, etc. This will in turn ensure that we deal with everyone: the unborn, the elderly, the terminally ill, mothers, fathers, and families, in a manner that is truly just, loving, and compassionate. Finally, the consecration keeps us rooted in our primary reason for doing pro-life work, namely, to change ourselves, give example to others, and to avoid discouragement when things around us don’t seem to improve. Our primary motive must be to love God and to grow in virtue and holiness. This enables us, as pro-life disciples, to serve Him and all human life from conception to natural death. +


Fr. Paul Burchat, Chairman of Priests for Life Canada, is a priest of Madonna House, a  community of Consecrated laymen, laywomen, and priests, located in Combermere, Ontario.

back to index


DEFENDING THE
“SACRAMENT OF MARRIAGE”
Wedding


Priests for Life Canada, in its defense of life and family, would like to encourage everyone to immediately contact the following people and encourage them to uphold the definition of marriage as being the exclusive union between a man and a woman. (No postage is needed).
 

Name of your MP, House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6

The Honourable Martin Cauchon, Minister of Justice and Attorney General
284 Wellington, Ottawa, ON K1A OH8
Email: CauchM@parl.gc.ca

Mr. Patrice Martin, Clerk Committee on Justice and Human Rights
180 Wellington St., Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
Email: just@parl.gc.ca

The Right Honourable Jean Chrétien, Prime Minister of Canada
House of Commons, Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
Email: pm@pm.gc.ca
----------------------------------------------------------
Attention all Clergy: Enclosed in this mailing is a copy of “Considerations Regarding Proposals to Give Legal Recognition to Unions Between Homosexual Persons”, recently released by the Vatican.

Attention all Supporters: Anyone wishing a free copy of this document, please Contact Priests for Life Canada. Additional copies are available at $ .20 each plus postage.

This document can be found on the Internet at:
http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20030731_homosexual-unions_en.html


Has your parish had a Pro-Life Parish Mission recently? With the approval of your pastor, Priests for Life Canada is ready to conduct one in your parish.


back to index


SANCTA MARIA TE QUATLASUPE
Our Lady, Mother of All, Patroness of Life
Fr. Jim Whalen
Our Lady of Guadalupe

There is a definite parallel between our own age and that of the Aztec civilization immediately before the apparitions of Our Lady of Guadalupe in 1531. Now, as then, our society is dominated by godlessness, pagan excesses and disrespect for human life.

The original account of Our Lady of Guadalupe apparitions, The Nican Mopohuya, is still being researched today. It was written in the Nahualtl language by a native Indian convert, christianized Don Antonio Valeriano. Considerable ground breaking and planting of the seeds of faith, seeds of the Gospel, took place before the apparitions. These facts are little known or rarely acknowledged to this day, although they are of considerable importance. Of some significance is the fact that in 1464 the Ruler of the Texoco Kingdom, Nezhualcoytl, and his son, Nezhualpille, had accepted a traditional Toltec Ruler teaching, and rejected the pagan gods and worshiped the True God, who they saw as a superior being with superior intelligence who was responsible for creation. The son revealed to Montezuma, the Emperor of the Aztecs, a dream in which invaders would come from the sea and bring the ‘true religion’ and conquer the Aztec Empire. This coincided with an existing and widely accepted cultural hero legend, Quetzahoatl, who was to return one day and put an end to human sacrificing.

The first two Christian Spanish expeditions to Mexico, in 1517 and 1518, were unsuccessful. The third expedition, led by Captain Hernando Cortes, in 1519, was successful. What was different and significant was that along with the 600 soldiers, 100 sailors, 16 horses and 10 cannons on board ship, was the most powerful cargo imaginable: blessed wooden statues of the Virgin Mary, some being replicas of Our Lady of Guadalupe of Extramedura, Spain. They were called the Madonnas of Cortes. St Luke is held to be the carver of the original Immaculate Conception statue of Extramedura. Cortes had lived 50 miles from the national shrine. He and his army had a special devotion to her. He wore a large medallion of Our Lady around his neck for protection. Their first battle was fought and won on March 25th, the Feast of the Annunciation, which they called Our Lady’s Day. The first town established, Our Lady of Victor, was named in her honour. Cortes was definitely on a Christian Mission. The records quote him as saying, “Brothers let us follow the sign of the Cross with true faith and in it we shall conquer”. In one battle, they landed on Good Friday, and after destroying the pyramid temples to the Serpent gods, planted a Cross and a Madonna statue on the highest points on top of each pyramid. Cortes and his army followed a custom of kneeling before battle in front of one of these crosses and praying the Angelus, asking for Mary’s help, and recalling the Annunciation. They also knelt and thanked the Madonna after their battles for their victories, singing the Salve Regina in their evening prayer gatherings, acknowledging her as their protectress. Mass was celebrated on Easter Sunday where a Cross was planted and Mary was enthroned. This bold courageous practice outraged and terrorized the enemy.

Cortes often spoke to the Aztecs, asking them to destroy the false idols and do away with human sacrifices. He was considered by Montezuma, the ruler of the Aztecs, to be Quetzalcoatl, the cultural hero who was to return and put an end to human sacrifice. Neighboring kingdoms, such as Cempoala, asked for Cortes’ help to overcome the Emperor Montezuma as their people were being slaughtered as human sacrifices. After many battles, Cortes arrested Montezuma and captured the main city, Tenochtitlan, (Mexico City). With reinforcements from their new allies, and after smashing the main idol of the feathered Serpent god, they enthroned a Madonna Statue in its place. Temples were demolished and replaced by Catholic Churches. Missionaries spread out in schools and hospitals but conversions at first were few.

Of some significance, was the arrival of ten Franciscan Fathers and two Brothers in 1524, led by Fra Martin, preaching about the ‘True God’ and the arrival of the twelve Dominicans in 1526, who were largely responsible for spreading devotion to Mary. Among them was Fr. Gonzales, who was inspired to preach the Rosary in a new way by displaying the mysteries on canvas in a Rosary Crusade, thus drawing many Indians to conversion.

Blessed Juan Diego and his spouse, Maria Lucia, were among the first baptized in the village of Cuauhtitlan, as was his uncle, Juan Bernardino, of the village of Tolpetlac (1524-28). They were not Aztecs but Chichmecas, who had been followers of the ‘True God’. They attended Mass at the Franciscan Convent in TIaltelolco. Prior Juan Zumarraga was their first Bishop. Juan Diego’s wife died in 1529, so he went to live with his uncle. The official leader at the time was President Guzman, who was cruel to the Aztecs, monks and clergy. He was replaced on the Bishop’s advice and Our Lady was implored in prayer to intervene and stop the insurrection of the native tribes who were fighting for their rights. The records indicate that Bishop Zumarraga secretly asked the Blessed Virgin to send him some Castilian roses, then unknown to Mexico, as a sign that his desperate prayers had been heard (The Wonder of Guadalupe, Francis Johnson, p. 22;   Juan Diego, Dr Charles Wahlig, p.77).

On the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, Saturday, December 9th, 1531, then called the Feast of the Holy Conception of Mary, Juan Diego, 57 years of age, set out to go to Mass, some 14 miles away, at Tlaltelolco. As he came to the summit of the hill of Tepeyac, overlooking Lake Texcoco, he heard a woman’s voice calling him gently and insistently: “Juanito .…Juanito Dieguito”. He climbed to the summit, 130 ft. high, and a woman of overpowering brilliance and beauty faced him with garments that shone like the sun. Mary came to claim the conquest Cortes had made in her name and to respond to the prayers of the Bishop. She told Juanito that  she was the Mother of the True God through whom everything lives, the Lord of all things, who is Master of Heaven and Earth. “I ardently desire that a temple (teocalli) be built here, where I will show and offer all my love, my compassion, my help, and my protection to the people.... Here I will alleviate their sufferings, necessities and misfortunes”. She told Juan to go and tell the Bishop of Mexico that she had sent him and that it was her desire to have a temple built there. Juan did as he was told but the Bishop doubted his words and told him to come back at another convenient time. Juan reported back to the Lady who told him to return and inform the Bishop that she was the Mother of God, and to repeat her request. The Bishop listened to his account, questioned him at some length, and asked for some proof that she really was the Mother of God. Juan reported back to the Lady and she said she would give him a sign for the Bishop, on the next day. That evening his uncle took sick, and thinking he was going to die, sent Juan for a priest on the next day. Juan avoided Tepeyac hill as he was embarrassed at not returning to see the Lady as he had promised. Mary came down the hill and asked where he was going. When He told her, she responded: “Listen and be sure that I will protect you. Am I not here, l who am your Mother, and is not my help a refuge? Do not he concerned about your uncle’s illness, for he is not going to die. Be assured he is already well. Is there anything else that you need?”

She then told him to go up the hill where he would find beautiful Castilian roses and he was to pick them. Mary took them and arranged them with her own hands and put them in his cloak, telling him to take this sign to the Bishop. “He will see and recognize my will and must do what I ask”. Juan told the Bishop what had happened, opened his cloak and the roses fell to the floor and upon the tilma was a full self-portrait of the Mother of God, pregnant with child, her small hands joined in prayer. The Bishop accompanied him to Tepeyac the next day. His uncle had been cured and told him the Lady came to him and named herself as ‘Santa Maria Te Quatlasupe’. ‘Ouatlasupe’ meant, to the natives, one who breaks, stamps, and crushes the Serpent. This recalls Gn 3:14-15, “The Lord said to the Serpent she will crush your head”. The Spanish interpreted it as Guadalupe. On December 26, 1531, a small shrine was built and dedicated as Mary wanted, on the hill of Tepeyac, with the installation of our Lady’s gift of her self-portrait. A celebration was held and tribute was paid to Cortes by Bishop Zumarraga who believed that the victory of the Catholic army, under Cortes, over the gods of darkness and death, was necessary before Mary would come to Mexico.

The Blessed Virgin best reveals herself as Patroness of the Unborn in her advocation at Guadalupe. Juan Diego recognized the significance and symbolism contained in the Sacred image and explained it to his fellow countrymen. It was a Divine Codex, a record composed of picture writing. Her pregnancy is recognized by the high position of her sash. Seventy flowers decorate her mantle and robe (fifty-seven in full bloom and thirteen in buds). Only one, the four petaled flower, jasmine, is over her womb, which the natives call the ‘Flower of the Sun’ (Nahui Olin), ‘or Flute Player Flower, a cross shaped flower, a New Sun, the Sun of Justice was to be born. The natives saw it as a sign of access to an experience of the divine for truth. It announced to the natives the truth of the apparitions of Our Lady of Guadalupe to Juan Diego. It also symbolized plenitude, and represented the four directions. The primary meaning for them was ‘New Life’ (Mamalhuastli). The overall meaning of Mary’s image meant to them ‘Life’ (Xihuitl). The nine large magnolia blossoms, or Heart Flowers (Yolloxochitl), represented the only sacrifice from that time on that would give them life - Jesus Christ on the Cross. Previously the Heart Flowers had been a metaphor for them, of the hearts of their countless sacrificial victims. It also represented the nine volcanoes of Mexico in their appropriate positions. The stars represented those present on Dec 12, 1531, when Juan opened up his tilma (The Winter Solstice).

The aureole, the luminous area surrounding the figure represents supreme power. The moon symbolized perpetual virginity. The clouds represent the symbol of the unseen God. The blue mantle signifies eternity and human immortality. The gold borders signify royal dignity. The red robe signifies martyrdom for the faith. The golden brooch signifies that she is sacred, and protected against profanity. Further research discovered in 1963, an enlarged view of the reflections in the right eye of the Sacred image of Lady of Guadalupe,  three images: that of Juan Diego, Juan Gonzales, the interpreter, and Bishop Zumarraga. The 472 year-old Tilma, to this day, is still being researched.

In 1531, Baptism was administered mostly to infants, war orphans and to the dying. By 1538, the trickle of conversions became a river with approximately eight million baptized. One priest alone baptized over one million. In 1575, Our Lady of Guadalupe was recognized in Rome by Pope Gregory XIII. Since then, 26 popes have issued their approval, and Mary has been declared Patroness of Mexico and the Americas. By 1966, over 20 million pilgrims were visiting the shrine annually. In 1975, a new Basilica was built, as the shrine was sinking. It cost $70 million and had a seating capacity of 10 thousand. In 1979 Pope John Paul II was the first Pope to visit the shrine. In 1980 the Queen of Americas’ Guild was formed.

In 1991, two missionary image replicas were given to the U.S. as gifts to spread the devotion to convert millions and to end abortion. Visitations have taken place in the U.S., Canada, Europe, Russia, China, Japan and countless other countries. Plans have been made to bring a missionary image of Our Lady to Ottawa in May, 2004. Priests For Life Canada have offered to help with the Pilgrimage of Faith, whose mission is to bring about conversions, reverence for life, sanctity of the family, solidarity of the Church in the Americas, with the hope of an end to abortion and the culture of death, and a new culture of life and civilization of love through the intercession of Our Lady of Guadalupe. +



TAKE PART IN NEXT YEARS’
NATIONAL MARCH FOR LIFE IN OTTAWA

back to index




 

FUTURE MAILINGS
    Presently, Priests for Life, Canada produces the following regular publications:

Priests for Life, Canada - members’ newsletter
Catholic Life and Family - parishioners’ newsletter
Facts for Life - students’ newsletter

     In the past, mailings have been sent to supporters four times per year. In addition to the ‘Priests for Life, Canada’ newsletter, sample copies of both the ‘Catholic Life and Family’ and ‘The Facts for Life’ have been sent. In response to requests from members, and with the additional support provided by our new Ottawa Pro-Life Centre, mailings will now be increased to six times per year as follows:

                                           Month                             Newsletters being mailed

                                            September                       Priests for Life, Canada

                                            November                       Catholic Life and Family
                                                                                     Facts for Life

                                            December                        Priests for Life, Canada

                                            February                         Catholic Life and Family
                                                                                     Facts for Life

                                            March                             Priests for Life, Canada

                                            June                                Priests for Life, Canada


back to index


Happenings

Priests for Life Canada - Parish Pro-Life Mission: Saturday, January 31, 2004 to Wednesday, February 5, 2004. Holy Trinity Church, 2775 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver, BC; Pastor: Rev. Fr. Terry Larkin; Fr. Jim Whalen, Priests for Life Canada, retreat director.


Ottawa, Ontario: December 6, 2003 - Fr. Jim Whalen, National Director of Priests for Life Canada speaks to students at the University of Ottawa.

Bush Signs Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Into Law: (Randy Hall and Susan Jones, CNSNews.com, November 05, 2003): Before an emotional audience, President Bush signed a law outlawing partial-birth abortions - and promised to defend it in court. “The best case against partial-birth abortion is a simple description of what happens - and to whom it happens”, the president noted. “It involves the partial delivery of a live boy or girl and a sudden, violent end of that life. Our nation owes its children a different and better welcome”, Bush stated.

back to index


Return to Priests for Life, Canada Main Page

English Home Page        French Home Page        E-mail:  priests@priest.com

Priests for Life, Canada Newsletters     Facts for Life Newsletters     Catholic Life and Family Newsletters     Sample Homilies