Today is the feast day of Our Lady of Walsingham. Newer readers may not have stumbled across Jessica’s pilgrimage there back in 2012, so I am going, in honour of the feast day, to republish one of Jessica’s pieces on it. They can be found here, and here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here and here. They begin with this one:
In the Middle Ages, Walsingham – ‘England’s Nazareth’ was a Marian shrine of a size which rivalled Compostella. It owed its origin to Richeldis de Faverches the Saxon wife of a Norman lord. Richeldis had a deep faith in God and devotion to the Blessed Virgin, and was well known for her good works.
In 1061, Richeldis was privileged to have a vision of the Blessed Virgin. She was transported, in her vision, to Nazareth and saw the holy house where the Holy Family lived. Our Lady made it clear she wanted it rebuilt in England’s green and pleasant land:
“Do all this unto my special praise and honour. And all who are distressed or in need, let them seek me here in that little house you have made me in Walsingham. To all that seek me there I will give my help. And there at Walsingham in this little house shall be held in remembrance the great joy of my salutation when Saint Gabriel told me that through humility, I should become the Mother of the Son of God.”
Legend has it that when the masons attempted to build the house, the ground would not yield to their spades, but that in the morning the angels had built it – as she intended.
Skilled craftsmen were commissioned to carve a statue of Our Lady. Our Lady was enthroned on the Throne of Wisdom and crowned as the Queen of Heaven and Earth. She herself was a throne for the Christ-Child, Who was represented holding out the Gospels to the world. Her right hand pointed to Him, and He extended His arm in a double gesture of blessing and protection of His Mother. Each part of the statue was rich in symbolism, such as the seven rings on the throne standing for the Seven Sacraments, which Henry VIII defended centuries later, and the flowering lily-sceptre which she held in her right hand. It symbolised her Perpetual Virginity, and, in the teachings of the Cistercian saint, Bernard of Clairvaux, that She is the Flower of the Rod of Jesse. Miracles of healing were performed there from the start.
Every English King from Richard I to Henry VIII visited the great Shrine which grew there. In 1340 a final pilgrim chapel was built – the Slipper Chapel – so called because it was where pilgrims would remove their shoes and walk the last miles barefoot. It is dedicated to St. Catherine of Alexandria. Today it is the only part of the original shrine intact – and is the Catholic part of the modern shrine.
The rest of it was destroyed as part of one of the greatest acts of vandalism of the sixteenth century. In 1538 Henry VIII sent soldiers to dispossess the Augustinian Canons of Walsingham. Those who resisted were murdered on what is now called ‘Mary’s field’. The Shrine ands its buildings were gutted, the great statue of Our Lady destroyed. Sir Philip Howard’s lines from ‘The wrecks of Walsingham’ say it best:
Weep, weep, O Walsingham Whose days are nights, Blessings turned to blasphemies, Holy deeds to despites. Sin is where Our Lady sat, Heaven turned into hell, Satan sits where Our Lord did sway, Walsingham, oh farewell!
Oh Mary, save me.
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There was me thinking you wuz saved.
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Oh Semiramis, ooops, I mean Diana, ooops, I mean Mary, save me.
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Only education could save you making a fool of yourself – but you resist that too.
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Bosco, despite my new eyeglasses, I missed the part where Jessica asked Mary to save her. Could you find that part for me?
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Im asking Mary to save me. Hedge my bets. If Jesus is tired of my madness, Mary might go alittle easier on me.
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Thank you for drawing my attention to Jessica’s pilgrimage posts. I have to say I really enjoy the spiritual/historical posts the most (and hoping Gareth will eventually resume writing).
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Thanks, Zeke – I enjoyed rereading those posts 😄
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Gather yourselves and come; draw near together, you fugitives of the nations; they have no knowledge, who carry about their wooden idol and pray to a god who cannot save. Declare and set forth your case; indeed, let them consult together. Who has announced this from of old? Who has long since declared it? Is it not I, the Lord? And there is no other God besides Me, a righteous God and a Savior; there is none except Me. Turn to Me and be saved, all the ends of the earth; for I am God, and there is no other. (Isaiah 45:20-22)
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“Membership in the Militia means complete dedication to the Kingdom of God and to the salvation of souls through Mary Immaculate.” -Pope John Paul II
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Proverbs 15:14
14 The heart of the wise seeketh instruction: and the mouth of fools feedeth on foolishness.
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In the Baptistery of Parma [Italy] there is a representation of the Trinity. At the top of a triangle is the Father; at the two angles of the base are the Son and Mary; the two arms of the Father resting on the heads of the Son and Mary, form the legs of the triangle; while the arms of the Son, extended to the head of Mary, form the base. The Sacristan called it the Trinity of the Father, Son and Virgin. †
http://biblelight.net/worship_of_the_virgin_mary.htm
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1 Corinthians 2:14
14 But the sensual man perceiveth not these things that are of the Spirit of God; for it is foolishness to him, and he cannot understand, because it is spiritually examined.
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Hey, that’s my line. (;-D
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Gregory XVI., in 1832,
Says, in his Encyclical Letter [MIRARI VOS], published August 15th of that year: † “But that all things may have a prosperous and happy issue, let us raise our eyes and hands to the most holy Virgin Mary, who only destroys all heresies, who is our greatest hope; yea, the entire ground of our hope.”
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Ah indeed the ‘ground of our hope’ from whose womb sprung into this world, Love, Mercy and Forgiveness for our fallen natures and for man’s salvation.
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Mary is blessed no doubt.
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Most Holy and Immaculate Virgin! O my Mother! Thou who art the Mother of my Lord, the Queen of the world, the advocate, hope, and refuge of sinners! I, the most wretched among them, now come to thee. I worship thee, great Queen, and give thee thanks for the many favors thou hast bestowed on my in the past; most of all do I thank thee for having saved me from hell, which I had so often deserved. I love thee, Lady most worthy of all love, and, by the love which I bear thee, I promise ever in the future to serve thee, and to do what in me lies to win others to thy love. In thee I put all my trust, all my hope of salvation. Receive me as thy servant, and cover me with the mantle of thy protection, thou who art the Mother of mercy! And since thou hast so much power with God, deliver me from all temptations, or at least obtain for me the grace ever to overcome them. From thee I ask a true love of Jesus Christ, and the grace of a happy death. O my Mother! By thy love for God I beseech thee to be at all times my helper, but above all at the last moment of my life. Leave me not until thou seest me safe in heaven, there for endless ages to bless thee and sing thy praises. Such is my hope. Amen.― (Prayer of St. Alphonse Liguori, 3 yrs indulgence, Raccolta, 342)
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Proverbs 16:22
22 Knowledge is a fountain of life to him that possesseth it: the instruction of fools is foolishness.
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A bridle for the horses mouth and a rod for the fools back.
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No servant can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and despise the other
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But Bosco, why wouldn’t a servant love the family of, and especially the kind Mother of, his Master, and his adopted Mother?
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This is what Jesus said. Next time I talk to him ill ask him if he really meant that.
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Can you love someone you never met and has been dead for 2000 yrs?
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You sound like the unsaved talking about Jesus. Show us in Scripture where Mary dies.
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Show us where Lazarus dies , again, or is he still alive. Show us where Paul dies. Where is Peters death? Where did John the Revelator die? Some things just aren’t important.
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I can show you shrines to John and Peter, but none to Mary.
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That’s nice. Jesus is the door of the sheepfold.
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I remember Bosco’s trip to Walsingham in 2012.
http://ecclesandbosco.blogspot.nl/2012/08/de-return-of-bruvver-bosco.html
http://ecclesandbosco.blogspot.nl/2012/08/on-de-road-to-wallsingham.html
http://ecclesandbosco.blogspot.nl/2012/08/wallsingham.html
http://ecclesandbosco.blogspot.nl/2012/08/pussy-footing-round-wallsingham.html
Apologies for plugging this, but people need to know about Bosco’s pilgrimage (and Jessica enjoyed it…)
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Indeed they do 😄
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Are we finished having fun at my expense yet?
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No.
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Many thanks for the links to Jessica’s pilgrimage ,wonderful writings about the spirituality one experiences at Walsingham and I for one could not describe as beautifully and eloquently.
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None of us could, I think. Jess has a way with these things, that few can duplicate. I was very pleased when C. decided to run this again. 🙂
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Thank you, Eileen, it is a fine set of posts.
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I that the same house of Mary that the angels transported from Nazareth and placed in Europe?
Just wondering why, was the ground rent cheaper there or something?
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You’re thinking of the House of Loretto in Italy, Rob.
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The locals in Nazareth weren’t taking care of it 😊
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I’m fairly handy at maintenance perhaps the angels might consider another move our tourism here could do with a bit of a boost in Barbados at least to keep my apartment rented out. 🙂
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Depends if you have any relics 😄
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Well my wife says I’m a bit of a relic at my age 😉
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