CATHOLIC TEACHINGS

SAINT
CATHERINE LABOURE' & THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL
"Have
a medal struck after this model. All
who wear it will receive great graces; they should wear it around the
neck. Graces will abound
for those who wear it with confidence."
In
1830 the Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to a young novice, Catherine
Laboure, in the chapel of the motherhouse of the Daughters of Charity in
Paris and showed her the model of what came to be known as the
"Miraculous Medal." Many
consider that the Virgin's appearances to Catherine in 1830 marked the
beginning of the "Marian Age"- a century and a half of
apparitions, messages, and extraordinary graces continuing to our own
day and now approaching a climax.
Catherine
carried out Virgin's wishes and had the medal struck.
It quickly became popular and continues to be today, worn by
millions around the world. Indeed,
according to Father Philip Bebie, a Passionist priest, the images on the
medal have become a "logo for the present age," for we are
living in a time in which Mary, representing the Church, is in fierce
combat with Satan and all who embrace evil.
This battle, which is for dominion of the globe, will end with
the triumph of the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
Of this, we have received firm assurance.
This,
the front of the medal represents Mary standing on the earth, her foot
crushing the head of a serpent, her hands outstretched to all who ask
her assistance. The prayer
encircling her contains one of her most precious titles:
"Mary, conceived without sin." The rays of light from her hands symbolize the graces she is
eager to bestow upon those who wear her medal and pray to her.
The
reverse side of the Medal shows a large "M" surmounted by a
bar and a cross. Beneath
the "M" are the hearts of Jesus and Mary, the one crowned with
thorns, the other pierced with a sword.
Twelve stars encircle the images.
It is interesting to note that when, at the behest of hr
confessor, Catherine asked the Virgin why there was no writing on the
reverse side, the answer was, "The 'M' and the two hearts express
enough."
In
1832, two years after the revelation, with the approval of the
Archbishop of Paris, the medal was struck according to Our Lady's
design. Within a short time
it was being worn by millions, even by non-Catholics.
In its wake followed innumerable conversions and wonders: health restored, bad habits broken, dangers averted, special
graces given. Although
officially designated the "Medal of the Immaculate
Conception," it quickly became known as the "Miraculous
Medal."
HUMBLE
BEGINNINGS
Who
was the seer the Blessed Mother entrusted with such a great revelation?
At the time of the apparitions, Catherine Laboure was a simple,
devout French peasant girl of 24 who had been in the novitiate of the
Daughters of Charity in Paris for only three months.
There seemed to be nothing remarkable about her.
When she had entered the Order as a postulant seven months
earlier, she could barely read, and it was only because a sympathetic
sister undertook to tutor her that she became literate.
Catherine
had been born in a tiny village near Dijon, France, on May 2, 1806, the
ninth of eleven children. Her
father was a prosperous farmer who had once studied for the priesthood.
Her mother was a former schoolmistress.
When Catherine was only nine years old, her mother died; in the
midst of her terrible grief, Catherine turned to Our Lady.
Climbing up on a chair one day, she reached for a statue of the
Blessed Virgin that stood high on a shelf in her mother's bedroom and
throwing her arms around it cried, "Now, dear Blessed Mother, you
will be my mother." That
incident, with its hint of irrevocable dedication, symbolic of the
eventual turning of humanity towards Mary, might be seen as the real
beginning of the Marian Age.
At
the age of 12, Catherine had to take over the running of her father's
household, then comprising six family members and 14 hired men.
She carried out her heavy responsibilities capably while finding
time for her spiritual life. Every morning she walked six miles to Mass in the predawn
darkness, and throughout the day she managed to slip away to the village
chapel across the lane form her home, there to pray before a weatherworn
old painting of the Annunciation.
When
she was 18 she had her first mystical experience, a dream in which an
elderly priest beckoned to her and told her that God had plans for her
life. In her dream,
Catherine, fearful, ran away from the priest.
Some time late, while visiting a hospice run by the Daughters of
Charity, Catherine saw a portrait of St. Vincent de Paul, the Order's
founder, and recognized him as the priest in her dream.
She knew then that God wanted her to enter the Daughters of
Charity. When Catherine was 22, having turned down several marriage
proposals, she asked her father for permission to enter the religious
life. At first her father
refused, even sending her to Paris to work in her brother's cafe to
dissuade her, but two years later he relented.
In
the novitiate Catherine began to have a number of extraordinary
experiences- visions of the heart of St. Vincent de Paul and of Our Lord
in the Blessed Sacrament. She
reported these mystical experiences to the confessor, who advised her to
keep silent about them.
Then
on July 18, 1830, the eve of the feast of St. Vincent she saw the
Blessed Mother for the first time.
Just before midnight Catherine was awakened by an angel
resplendent with light, who appeared as a young child.
She followed him to the chapel, where all the torches and tapers
were burning brightly. The
angel led her to the sanctuary and announced, "Here is the Blessed
Virgin; here she is!" There
was a rustle of silk and suddenly Catherine saw a beautiful
lady seating herself in the blue velvet chair reserved for the
director of the sisters. When
the angel said again in a loud voice, "Here is the Blessed
Virgin," Catherine immediately fell to her knees on the altar
steps, and resting her hands on the Virgin's lap, looked up into her
eyes. For the next two
hours, the sweetest moments of her life she later wrote, Catherine and
the Blessed Mother had an intimate conversation.
Catherine was told about her mission and about future events,
some to take place very soon, some many years off.
The times were evil, she was told, and great sorrows would befall
France and the whole world. The
French throne would be overturned; there would be religious persecution. "But come to the foot of the altar," she was
encouraged. "There
graces will be shed upon all, great and small, who ask for them."
A
week after this apparition Charles X, the King of France, was deposed,
the palace of the Archbishop of Paris sacked, and priests and bishops
beaten and killed.
Four
months later, on November 27, 1830, Catherine was praying in the chapel
with the community when Blessed Virgin appeared for the second time.
Clothed all in white, she stood in the sanctuary near a painting
of St. Joseph, holding a small golden globe surmounted by a cross.
Her feet rested on a white globe, around which was coiled a
serpent, green in color with yellow spots.
Brilliant rays radiated from gemstone rings on her fingers.
Her face was of indescribable beauty.
Catherine
had an inner locution, an explanation of the vision.
The globe represented the entire world, especially France, and it
also represented each person in particular.
The rays of light streaming form her hands represented the graces
Our Lady sheds on those who ask for them,
Some of the rings gave no light, however, representing graces
that people neglected to ask for.
Suddenly
the globe in the Virgin's hands disappeared and she lowered her hands,
brilliant rays still streaming from them. An oval frame formed around her, within which was written in
letters of gold: "O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who
have recourse to thee."
Catherine
heard interiorly the direction to have a medal made on this model.
Then the tableau seemed to turn and Catherine saw the reverse of
the medal, the M, the Cross, and the two hearts.
Suddenly
the vision disappeared from Catherine's sight, "like a candle blown
our," she later wrote. Then
began Catherine's lifelong task of fulfilling her mission while guarding
her identity, for she understood that in giving the medal to the world,
she herself was to remain unknown.
After
the apparitions finished, Catherine lived out her life quietly and
humbly as a Daughter of Charity at a hospice for elderly men outside of
Paris. She worked in the
kitchen, washed and repaired clothes, nursed and saw to the spiritual
needs of the men. During
the forty-six years that Catherine worked at the hospice, not one of her
charges died without receiving the last sacraments.
Although
there was some suspicion in the community that Catherine might be the
"sister of the apparitions," the seer just laughed at such
suggestions when they were brought up.
She performed many daily duties humbly and obediently.
In
describing her prayer life during those years she related that each day
she put herself before the Lord saying, "Lord, here I am.
Give me what you wish."
If He gave her something, she was happy and thanked Him.
If He gave her nothing, she thanked Him still.
She would then tell Him all that came into her mind, her sorrows
and her joys; then she would listen.
In
1876, a few months before her death, Catherine- knowing she had not much
time left on earth and following the Virgin's instructions- admitted to
her superior that she indeed was the "sister of the
apparitions." Up to
that time she had told no one except her confessor.
Catherine
died peacefully on December 31, 1876.
She was buried in a small chapel at the hospice.
When her body was exhumed in 1933 as part of her beatification
process, it was found to be incorrupt.
Today Catherine Laboure's body, still beautifully preserved, can
be seen and venerated in the chapel of the Daughters of Charity at 140
Rue de Bac in Paris.
Catherine
Laboure was canonized on July 27, 1947, by Pope Pius XII, who declared
her the "saint of silence and the duties of her state."
Her feast day is November 28.
The preceding day, November 27, is the feast of the Miraculous
Medal, which received liturgical approbation when a Mass and Office were
assigned in its honor in 1895, one of only three sacramentals in the
history of the Church to be thus liturgically honored. (The others are
the Rosary and Brown Scapular.)
There
are two theological doctrines associated with the Miraculous Medal
apparition. The first, Mary
as Mediatrix of All Graces, has not yet been defined by the Church but
is considered certain by many theologians.
The second, the Immaculate Conception, was infallibly defined by
Pope Pius IX on December 8, 1854, twenty-four years after the
apparitions. The definition
of the doctrine, which had been developing over many centuries, was most
certainly hastened by the Miraculous Medal revelation- specifically the
words Catherine Laboure saw encircling the image of Our Lady in 1830:
"O Mary conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse
to thee." Indeed, the
Pope himself asserted that the impetus for his pronouncement came from
France. In "Defining
the Dogma of the Immaculate Conception," Pius IX decreed:
We
declare, pronounce, and define that the doctrine which holds that the
most Blessed Virgin Mary, in the first instant of her conception, by a
singular grace and privilege granted by Almighty God, in view of the
merits of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the human race, was preserved free
from all stain of original sin, is a doctrine revealed by God and
therefore to be believed firmly and constantly by all the faithful.
Four
short years after Pope Pius IX's pronouncement, the dogma of the
Immaculate Conception would be confirmed by the Blessed Mother herself
in apparition to St. Bernadette of Lourdes.
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Article by Irene Dutra
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