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Sunday, March 29, 2020

Sunday Meditation: O Jesus, Sweet Infant of Prague, Have Mercy on Us!

I've received several emails suggesting putting the image of the Divine Mercy on the door. What a  good idea, I thought. So I pulled out my fat file of holy images and began leafing through its contents to see if I had a poster of the Divine Mercy image. I stopped short when I came to the sweet image of the Infant of Prague holding the world in his hand. Then and there I decided He would be the one to greet all who came to our door.

The story of the devotion is very appropriate to this difficult time. Here's a short summary from that wonderful biographer of the saints, Ann Ball:
In 1556, Maria Manriquez de Lara brought a precious family heirloom, a statue of the child Jesus, with her to Bohemia when she married the Czech nobleman Vratislav of Pernstyn. The statue of the child is eighteen inches tall, carved of wood, and thinly coated with wax. The left foot is barely visible under a long white tunic. The statue stands on a broad pedestal, and there is a waist-high silver case which holds it upright. The left hand holds a miniature globe surmounted by a cross, signifying the worldwide kingship of Christ. The right hand is extended in blessing in a form usually used by the Supreme Pontiff; the first two fingers are upraised to symbolize the two natures in Christ, while the folded thumb and last two fingers touch each other to represent the mystery of the Holy Trinity....
Over the years the statue was passed to successive generations until it was bequeathed to a monastery in Prague. During the Thirty Years War, the monastery was attacked and plundered and the poor little Jesus ended up on a rubbish heap behind behind the high altar. Seven years later, the statue was rediscovered by Fr. Cyrillus, an early supporter of the devotion who, suffering serious interior trials, had prayed before this very statue and received relief. How overjoyed he must have been! Sadly, the statue, mostly intact, lacked hands. Nevertheless it was given a place of honor in the church.

One day kneeling and praying, he heard the statue say, "Have pity on me, and I will have pity on you. Give me my hands, and I will give you peace. The more you honor me, the more I will bless you!" In view of the poverty of the monastery, the abbot refused Fr. Cyrillus's request to repair the statue. Later money was received, but the abbot used it to buy a new statue instead of repairing the original. On the very day the new statue was installed in the church, a falling candlestick shattered it.

Hearing a voice that told him to place the original statue in the entrance to the sanctuary, Fr. Cyrillus did. A visiting stranger noticed the damage and offered to pay for its repair. Finally the Infant of Prague was restored.

This is where the story gets particularly interesting for us during these challenging times:
At last the repaired statue was placed in the church. A pestilence was raging in Prague at the time, and the prior himself nearly died. He vowed to spread the devotion of the Infant if he were cured. Shortly thereafter, he ordered a general devotion to the Infant, in which all the friars took part. At last the Infant had won the hearts of the Carmel of Prague and become a cornerstone of their devotion.
And where do you think the statue resides today? In a magnificent shrine on the "epistle side" of the church of Our Lady of Victory in Prague.


"Have no fear, little flock, for your Father has resolved to give you the Kingdom!" Luke 13:32

Lord Jesus in your image as the Infant of Prague, have mercy on us! Join in praying to the Infant of Prague for relief from the coronavirus and the protection of your family, our priests, and all who will contract the virus.

4 comments:

  1. Dear Mary Ann. After Confession the morning, ABS assisted at the Holy Holocaust of the Mass at Queen of The Most Holy Rosary Church in West Palm Beach. a SSPX Parish.

    The SSPX will be rebuilding this old protestant building at a cost of $800 K and it is a worthy cause for any of the Faithful who desire to contribute to their collections.

    http://www.sspxflorida.com/sites/sspx/files/media/usa-p-orlando/pdf/west_palm_20mar029.pdf


    The Chaplin, Father John Jacobs, is everything the products of the local N.O seminary are not, masculine, holy, courageous, and a Priest (not a social worker in clericals) whose sermons are top notch and suffused with Tradition

    Compare the formation of an SSPX Priest with the basic goal of the Regional Diocesan Seminary

    The seminary’s primary mission is to foster the human, spiritual, intellectual, and pastoral formation of candidates for the Roman Catholic priesthood so that as ordained ministers they share the joy of the Gospel with all.

    https://www.svdp.edu

    Yeah, that Holy Holocaust Sacrifice, The Real Mass with its four different sacrificial aspects, is so yesterday and opposed to ecumenism, the universal solvent of Tradition

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  2. Praise God! I was able to attend a drive-in Mass in Front Royal by an SSPX priest from Maryland and receive Holy Communion. We couldn't hear or see, but I had my missal and we read the Mass knowing that our shepherd was there in the midst of the sheep offering comfort and mercy. He heard confessions before Mass outside with social distancing.

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  3. You asked elsewhere my Parish. SSPX Portland. One Holy Mass on Friday in conjunction with Stations; one on Saturday; five on Sunday with Confession 30 minutes prior to each (as usual); all day Adoration Saturday from 8:00 am to 6:00 pm in one hour sign up slots. Each sign up is limited to 24 (25 being the cutoff by the OR governor).

    The Priest insists we seat ourselves with separation except for families. 3 at a time to the rail. No Altar Servers, so, absent the Paten, the Priest uses his own Paten and makes separate trips to the Tabernacle for each group that approaches. Shortened Homily to keep Mass within 1 hour. No mixing between outgoing and incoming Mass attenders. Two Parishioners wipe down the pews and arm rests between Masses. Disinfectant wipes outside.

    This Priest is honoring God first, caring for souls and submitting to all rightful public safety measures, just law and authority. It can be done. If we love God, as this Priest does (God bless the SSPX!) it will be done. May Bishops and Priests roll back the darkness and open the Holy Sacrifice to the Faithful in similar ways.

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  4. I received this via email:

    Mary Ann,

    Continue to call out the sinner - and you do it charitably. Our Lady called out sinners six times in six months at Fatima - not out of spite or vengeance, but out of charity and hope to sinners and obedience to the Holy Trinity. Time is very, very short now - Divine Mercy and Fatima have confirmed that. We may be entering into final times - we do not know. The most important thing for one to do is: get oneself in a "state of grace." When one does....he sees the evil of sin and indifference to holiness. Admonish the sinner; counsel the doubtful; instruct the ignorant.

    St. Louis de Montfort and St. John Vianney were hard, but loving on sinners - because they knew the eternity of hell. Fatima exposed the horrors of hell. I believe you are not judging - but saving souls.

    Regards,

    Mark

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