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Why Mary? Why Prayer? Furthermore, Why Pray The Rosary?

Pope Francis gives a favored rosary to a youngster during his visit at the Zimpeto Hospital in Maputo, Mozambique, Sept. 6, 2019. (Tiziana Fabi/AFP by means of Getty Images)

"The Rosary is a petition both so modest and straightforward and a religiously wealthy in scriptural substance. I implore you to supplicate it." — Pope St. John Paul II

The previous summer I drove a men's journey for our military men's Catholic people group here in Italy. It was unprecedented to see the development and the pushing of safe places as we ate in absolute quietness with priests and strolled the strenuous and soak street that St. Francis navigated every day.

Those were great recollections and I can recall arranging those in the expectation of the men remarking on their profound development and comprehension. What's more, they did. In any case, on the absolute a day ago there was another short occasion I arranged, in which the responses shocked me: we implored the Rosary at St. Dominic's Basilica in Bologna.

Do I have to clarify that it was so cool to implore the Rosary in the Rosary Chapel at the congregation that commends the holy person to whom the chaplet was depended by Our Lady? Obviously it was great, however to two or three the others, it was exceptional. I got a few positive remarks about the 20-minute petition we had as one, however one man of his word — a deep rooted Catholic — stunned me when he got up to speed to me, put his hand on my shoulder and stated, "You know, I've for the longest time been itching to figure out how to ask the Rosary. I stayed aware of you, however you will need to tell me the best way to do it all alone."

My heart jumped at the idea that God had motivated this man to figure out how to implore one of the most impressive, but most basic supplications of our Faith. It likewise frightened me a bit. As a believer and Catholic of eight years, I figured everybody realized how to ask the Rosary. If I somehow managed to consider one picture when I consider Catholicism, a rosary is straight up there with a cross and a minister's neckline. From that point forward, I've not underestimated this suspicion, thus I've made it a purpose of mine at whatever point conceivable to exhibit the significance of the Holy Rosary, and its adequacy. Ideally, at that point, individuals will be increasingly similar to my companion who was constrained to learn.

Why supplication?

Before we think about the Rosary, I think we deserve to ask, "Why supplication?"

I think need starts things out: There is no more noteworthy Christian instructing than that of supplication. "In the event that we disregard supplication, we trust futile in endless salvation," said Blessed Pius IX. A nearby contender to need is thought process: the certainty we have that in moving toward God, and asking anything as indicated by his will, he hears us (1 John 5:14). The truth of the matter is, the more we develop the more we discover that we need things, and the more we understand our most genuine needs, the more we understand God is the source inevitably. So we make our supplications to God.

Assurance likewise rings a bell. "My supplication isn't that you remove them from the world however that you shield them from the insidious one," Jesus implores in (John 17:15). We as a whole want security, otherworldly particularly. At that point there's the side of supplication that benefits others — in particular, those we probably won't make sure to appeal to God for. "In any case, I let you know, love your foes and appeal to God for the individuals who abuse you" (Matthew 5:44). At last, I think petition, the extent that structure, has a lot to do with diligence: "At that point Jesus advised his trains an illustration to give them that they ought to consistently implore and not surrender" (Luke 18:1).

Why the Rosary?

Other than private disclosure, for example, when Our Lady of Fatima requests that we ask the Rosary every day, the decision to implore the Rosary originates from its demonstrated adequacy. Adequacy from two head conditions: constancy, and fuse. We are told, "Ask, look for, thump" (Matthew 7:7) continually and with extraordinary industriousness (Romans 12:12, Ephesians 6:18, 1 Thessalonians 5:17); each great Father wants to enjoy the desires of his youngsters, yet when a kid asks in steadiness, they append their hearts all the more near what they need. After time, they realize what is generally deserving of mentioning. Is it true that we are to scrutinize the noteworthy heart of God in the illustration of the Persistent Widow in Luke 18?

There is likewise consolidated supplication, or public petition. "In the event that you two will assent upon earth concerning anything at all they will ask, it will be done to them by My Father who is in paradise. For where there are a few assembled in my name, there am I amidst them" (Matthew 18:19-20). What's more, the mind boggling insight of Thomas Aquinas: "It is incomprehensible that the petitions of many ought not be heard, on the off chance that one petition is made up so to speak out of numerous supplications." (In Evang. Matt. C. Xvii).

The Rosary is a petition of intentionally high quantum of reiteration, henceforth an extraordinary supplication for tirelessness. The Rosary is likewise exceptionally settled as a common petition (notwithstanding private). Joining these two makes the Rosary a profoundly compelling type of supplication that increases legitimacy and impacts, in solidarity.

Also, the essential Rosary comprises of a fairly straightforward and profoundly scriptural recipe: the petition Jesus orders us to implore in the Our Father, recitations of the Angelic Salutation straight out of the Gospel of Luke (1:28), and a modest solicitation that she appeal to God for us.

Why Mary?

This is, extremely, the hindrance for some, particularly changes over and non-Catholics. What remains is that Christ is the one and preeminent mediatrix. That is the Church's instructing, easy. What's more, alongside that, Mary is the most extreme member in Christ's intercession on account of her immediate cooperation in the salvation of humankind. Legitimacy from direct outcomes are estimated by levels of interest. The higher the investment, the higher the legitimacy. Mary, consequently, accomplishes and is expected the most noteworthy legitimacy.

But then, as the Angelic Doctor instructs, "there is no motivation behind why certain others ought not be brought with a particular goal in mind middle people among God and man, in other words, to the extent that they collaborate by inclining and serving in the association of man with God." Her job as go between, as we may all be for one another, is raised because of her raised contribution in our salvation! When making this examination, I like to ask individuals, "In the event that you thought you required petitions, okay ask the skeptic, or the minister? You'd ask the minister inevitably and you don't have to clarify why."

Why the Mysteries?

We've secured nearly everything about the Rosary: it's a compelling and productive supplication that is profoundly established in the Bible. Be that as it may, shouldn't something be said about those secrets? Try not to let yourself or others overlook the subtleties! The Rosary is a most remarkable petition against a large group of causes, sins and evil experiences. In any case, don't believe me. I leave you with what holy people and popes have said about the rosary:

"In the event that I had a military to state the Rosary, I could overcome the world." — Blessed Pope Pius IX

"The Rosary is the weapon." — St. Padre Pio

"The Rosary is my preferred supplication." — Pope St. John Paul II

"The best technique for supplicating is to ask the Rosary." — St. Francis de Sales

"At the point when the Holy Rosary is said well, it gives Jesus and Mary more magnificence and is more exemplary than some other petition." — St. Louis de Montfort

"The Rosary is the most phenomenal type of petition and the most solid methods for accomplishing interminable life. It is the solution for every one of our wrongs, the foundation of every one of our favors. There is not any more amazing method for imploring." — Pope Leo XIII

"Supplicate especially the petitions of the Rosary. Only I am ready to spare you from the disasters." — Mary in Akita, Japan

"In the event that you need to arrive at these solidified spirits and prevail upon them to God, lecture my Rosary." — Our Lady to St. Dominic

"It was not boldness, not arms, not pioneers, yet Mary of the Rosary that made us victors." — Venetian Senators after Battle of Lepanto

"The Rosary is a supplication both so modest and straightforward and a religiously wealthy in scriptural substance. I implore you to ask it." — Pope St. John Paul II

Introduction to the Most Holy Rosary of the Blessed Virgin Mary
By John M Schmidt  |  Submitted On January 31, 2012
Greetings and welcome to this virtual class on the topic of the Rosary.
The aim of this course is, admittedly, to convince you to pray your rosary. If you have already made a habit of this then the purpose of the course is to inspire you with a greater love for your devotion so that you will pray it every day. It is my hope that with God's help these lessons will instill in you so compelling of a motivation to pray your rosary that you cannot help but persevere and to spread your devotion to others.
I say "your" rosary rather than The Rosary because your first assignment, if you have not already done so, is to get a rosary. It doesn't have to be expensive! A cheap plastic one will work as well as one made of fine pearls. You can even make your own. Precious stones and metals are a beautiful symbol of our devotion to God but the real beauty comes from how we use our beads, not the material they are made from.
The use of a physical device to count prayers with is an ancient practice in the Christian religion. One of the ways in which early Christians prayed was to recite the Psalter of David which had foretold the coming of Christ. As members of His mystical body, these writings have special relevance to Christians. When monks began going into the deserts of Egypt for example, it was their custom to pray the entire 150 Psalms every day. However, because some of the monks were not able to read, they would need to either memorize the Psalms or to say other prayers in place of them.
These monks kept count of their prayers by casting pebbles into a bowl, but this was somewhat awkward, and could not easily be performed when outside of their cell. Later the use of a knotted rope helped the monks to pray unceasingly, whether inside their cell or outside about their work, thereby complying quite literally with Saint Paul's command to "Pray without ceasing" (I Thessalonians 5:17).
This is not to say we are required to recite prayers all day. Another way to pray without ceasing is by frequently lifting your thoughts to God and offering Him your efforts on whatever work is currently at hand. Anything that is done out of necessity for our state in life is accepted by God as a prayer if we have the intention of offering it as such. (It is, however, worth mentioning that there have been several saints - among them St. John Vianney and St. Padre Pio - who were rarely seen
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without a rosary in their hand.)
The Rosary combines vocalized prayer with meditative prayer and in a sense it is as ancient as Christianity itself. For example the Our Father was spoken by Our Lord as part of His Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 6:9-13). And in the Hail Mary we greet God's Mother with the same words as those used by the Angel Gabriel: "Hail [Mary], full of grace, the Lord is with thee." (Luke 1:28) and then with the words spoken by Mary's cousin Elisabeth: "Blessed art thou among women and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, [Jesus]" (Luke 1:42).
The meditations of the Rosary also center on events taken from the lives of Jesus and Mary. These events (which are called the Mysteries of the Rosary) have been known to Christians since the time of the Apostles and most of them are recorded in the written Gospels.
Nevertheless, it was not until the year 1214 that the Church received the Holy Rosary in the form and with the method according to which we pray it today. According to legend it was given to St. Dominic by the Blessed Virgin herself as a means of converting the Albigensians. This event is written of in the book "The Secret of the Rosary" by St. Louis de Montfort:
Appearing to him with three angels she said, "My dear Dominic, do you know which weapon the Blessed Trinity wants to use to reform the world?" "O my Lady," answered St. Dominic, "you know better than I because next to your Son Jesus Christ you have always been the chief instrument of our salvation."
Then Our Lady replied: "I want you to know that in this type of warfare, the principle weapon has always been the Angelic Psalter, which is the foundation-stone of the New Testament. Therefore if you want to reach these hardened souls and win them over to God, preach my Psalter."
The Rosary is sometimes referred to as the "Angelic Psalter" or "Mary's Psalter" in order to explicitly identify its correspondence to the Psalter of David from the Old Testament. As previously mentioned, much of the devotion which eventually became the Rosary grew naturally from the ancient practice of reciting the Psalms as prayers of thanksgiving, repentance and praise. There are 150 Psalms of David and corresponding to this are the 150 Hail Marys in the Rosary established by St. Dominic. Old Testament Israelites read the Psalms in anticipation of the promised Messiah. New Testament Christians meditate on His life, passion and glory as illustrated in the Mysteries of the Rosary. In the Old Testament it was Eve's disobedience which prompted Adam to sin, bringing death and disorder into the world. In the New Testament it was the Second Eve's faith which permitted the Word to take flesh when she said, "Behold the handmade of the Lord. Be it done unto me according to thy word" (Luke 1:38).
Much of what we know about the origin of the Rosary comes from the writings of Blessed Alan de la Roche. He was a zealous promoter of the Rosary and began this great work in 1460, after a special warning from our Lord. This is how he reportedly received that urgent message as written in the book, "The Secret of the Rosary" by St. Louis de Montfort:
One day when he was offering Mass, our Lord, who wished to spur him on to preach the holy Rosary, spoke to him in the Sacred Host. "How can you crucify me again so soon?" Jesus said. "What did you say, Lord?" asked Blessed Alan, horrified. "You crucified me once before by your sins," answered Jesus, "and I would willingly be crucified again rather than have my Father offended by the sins you used to commit. You are crucifying me again now because you have all the learning and understanding that you need to preach my Mother's Rosary, and you are not doing it. If you only did that, you could teach many souls the right path and lead them away from sin. But you are not doing it, and so you yourself are guilty of the sins that they commit."
This terrible reproach made Blessed Alan solemnly resolve to preach the Rosary unceasingly.
Our Lady also said to him one day to inspire him to preach the Rosary more and more, "You were a great sinner in your youth, but I obtained the grace of your conversion from my Son. Had such a thing been possible, I would have liked to have gone through all kinds of suffering to save you, because converted sinners are a glory to me. And I would have done that also to make you worthy of preaching my Rosary far and wide."
Such messages from heaven can be a great encouragement for us. And since miraculous claims from hundreds of years ago often lose their impact and can seem more difficult to believe, we will plan, in a future lesson, to examine the credibility and significance of relatively more recent apparitions and miracles such as those that have happened in Lourdes, France in 1858 and Fatima, Portugal in 1917.
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At Fatima, for example, heavenly messages were not only given to three little children but these messages were then supported by a spectacular public miracle with the very day of its occurrence given out months in advance. This "Miracle of the Sun" was witnessed by an estimated 70,000 people who, on the appointed date, flocked to the promised location to see if the claims were true. The significance of the Fatima apparitions as regards to the Rosary can be seen in that the Blessed Mother, deeply saddened at the loss of so many souls very dear to her, requested that an additional prayer be added at the end of each Mystery: "O my Jesus, forgive us our sins. Save us from the fires of Hell. Lead all souls to Heaven, especially those in most need of thy mercy."
An excellent book you may want to read is "The True Story of Fatima" by Fr. John de Marchi. Fr. de Marchi was an Italian Catholic Priest who moved to Fatima for seven years while he researched this topic at length. For now, we will simply be content to state that a central message of this and many other miraculous events throughout history has been "Pray the Rosary!"
The Rosary is largely associated with the Catholic Church. This is due to the Church's historically wholehearted reception and enthusiastic promotion of this devotion. Since the time of Blessed Alan in the 1400's through to our present day, virtually all of the Popes have celebrated and exulted it. Pope St. Pius V attributed the surprisingly successful defeat of an invading Turkish fleet in 1571 to the fact that the victory coincided with the processions of the Rosary confraternities at Rome and elsewhere. He established an annual commemoration of the Rosary to be held on the anniversary of that date. Pope Leo XIII who reigned from 1878-1903 issued a record-setting 11 encyclicals on the Rosary and was dubbed the "Rosary Pope."
Countless Saints have also been devoted to the Rosary. Padre Pio (1887-1968) was recently sainted in the last decade and is best known as being the priest who bore the Stigmata. For 50 years he carried with him the visible, bleeding, supernatural and painful wounds corresponding to the wounds of our crucified Lord. And this is only one of many miraculous phenomena attributed to St. Pio, with some of his others arguably even more remarkable than the stigmata. He was also highly devoted to the Rosary and is quoted as saying: "Some people are so foolish that they think they can go through life without the help of the Blessed Mother. Love the Madonna and pray the rosary, for her Rosary is the weapon against the evils of the world today. All graces given by God pass through the Blessed Mother." Near the end of his life, when asked what legacy he would like to leave behind for his spiritual children, he replied "My child, the Rosary."
The primary reason why the Rosary devotion has been so warmly received by so many people is because of the marvelous effect which it has upon those who practice it. St. Louis de Montfort assures us that by the Rosary sinners obtain pardon; those who thirst are refreshed; those who are fettered are set free; those who weep find joy; those who are tempted find peace; those in need find help; religious are reformed; the ignorant are instructed; the living learn to resist spiritual decline; and by our prayers the Holy Souls in Purgatory find relief.
A primary reason why the Rosary devotion is not nearly as widely practiced as it should be is because so many people are entirely unaware of its benefits either through ignorance or a lack of faith. It will be our goal then to dispel this ignorance and strengthen our faith. In these first few pages we have already touched on many important motivational topics. The strategy for upcoming lessons is to take a close look at these topics one-by-one. They will become for us like so many pillars that we can use to build a Chapel of Faith for our souls. Only after dispelling this ignorance and lack of faith will we see clearly how to lead others to the Rosary so that the Rosary can lead them to God and His Mother.
John Schmidt is the creator of PrayOften.net [http://PrayOften.net], a website dedicated to using Internet marketing techniques to distribute high quality Catholic media. Visit now for a free electronic copy of "The True Story of Fatima" by Fr. John de Marchi, a free downloadable audio-book, additional lessons to keep you motivated to pray the Rosary [http://PrayOften.net] and several other Catholic treasures.
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