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Sunday, November 6, 2011

Mother Mary





All through Zoe's illness I felt a closeness to Mother Mary.  I would find myself seeking solace in the St Mary Star of the Sea Catholic Church, Howard Street, West Melbourne just to say a prayer or light a candle for Zoe.

The Miraculous Medal is also one of my favourite medals, maybe because of the name connection to Zoe.  Even though I didn't get the miracle I so desperately prayed for I still wear this medal today and can only hope and pray that miracles will come my way and I believe that they have.  Not so much as in the way of healing Zoe physically but  in the signs that I have received helping me to believe that death is not the end.




The story of the Catholic Miraculous Medal traces back to 1806, when a poor farmer's daughter by the name of Zoe Laboure was born. At the young age of 24, she entered the Sisters of Charity and changed her name to Catherine. On July 18 of the same year, she saw a vision of the Blessed Virgin Mary, who came to her in the Chapel. Catherine and Mary supposedly spoke for more than two hours.On November 27, 1830, Mary revisited Sister Catherine and presented a beautiful picture of herself. Catherine confessed this vision, which after investigation was deemed authentic by Catholic authorities. Sister Catherine had one final vision of Mary, during which she received even more detailed descriptions about Mary's miraculous medal. Sister Catherine saw Mary standing on top of a globe, shooting rays of light from her hands. Her feet were stamping on a serpent, the representation of evil. Around the image was an inscription that described Mary's sinlessness. Two years after Sister Catherine first had these visions, the church minted and distributed medals throughout Paris. Thanks to the tale of devotion surrounding the medal's creation, the phenomenon swept across Paris. It became widely reported that the medal graced those who wore it with prosperity, health, and faith. Soon, people took to calling the medal 'Miraculous.'In 1836, six years after Sister Catherine first witnessed Mary in the Chapel, the Catholic Church launched a canonical inquiry into the legitimacy of the apparitions. This inquiry concluded that Sister Catherine's visions were indeed genuine. Today, hundreds of thousands of Catholics the world over wear Miraculous medals as testimonies of repentance, prayer, and faith.







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