New Marian apparitions approved [NC Register]

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A couple considerations:
  1. Our Lord told the apostles the same thing: he who rejects you rejects me, he who accepts you accepts me. If true of the apostles, why would this not be true of His Mother? Rejecting Our Lady would be, in a sense, a rejection of the Church who’s mother she is. One cannot be a good Catholic without venerating Our Lady (at a minimum one must participate in the liturgical veneration of Our Lady at every mass and especially on her feasts).
  2. Our Lady is the perfect prototype of the Church. The Church has long held that she is the ark of the covenant who held the eternal Word. If the Church is the ark, in a mystical sense so is Our Lady. Various authorities have spoken of the Holy Spirit, with Mary, forming each of us into the image of the God-man just as He formed Christ within Mary’s womb. There is a deep, mysterious connection between Mary and the Church. Even the Second Vatican Council speaks of this mystery. Our Lady was assumed into heaven body and soul, as will all the Church on the last day. Mary anticipates the perfection of the whole Church.
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I’m also uncomfortable with the use of the term “hyper-Marian devotion”, as if it’s something negative. St. Louis de Montfort (if I recall correctly) once pointed out that it was impossible to “love Mary too much”. Some of the attitudes expressed on this thread are a reminder of how much Protestant ideas have infiltrated the Church. 😦
 
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I’m also uncomfortable with the use of the term “hyper-Marian devotion”, as if it’s something negative. St. Louis de Montfort (if I recall correctly) once pointed out that it was impossible to “love Mary too much”. Some of the attitudes expressed on this thread are a reminder of how much Protestant ideas have infiltrated the Church. 😦
That is, the Church in North America… In the more rural “white” dioceses of the interior, the churches are relatively bareboned and little heed is given to icons and statues. Here in Vancouver we have a large Filipino population and they are constantly lighting candles, kneeling before statues of Our Lady, kissing statues, etc. The Anglo element of our Church has lost much of that Catholic sacramental (external) passion.
I see a couple other manifestations of American Evangelical influence on this board in particular- among my American brethren: the idea that all mortal sins are equally grave (obviously a corruption of the evangelical notion that all sin is equal), the passionate Defense of young earth creationism (you’d be hard pressed to find a bishop in the world who shares that view), or the strange notion that the platform of the Republican Party somehow represents the magisterium (other than the obvious issues of abortion and homosexuality).
 
The Nicene Creed states that we “believe in one God…believe in one Lord Jesus Christ…believe in the Holy Spirit…believe in one Holy Catholic Apostolic Church.” Are these not the elements necessary for salvation? How does the acceptance or rejection of Mary fit into this?

I agree with Tarpeian Rock that much of this sounds like the hyper-marian devotion that is common in Spanish culture. While the local bishop may have approved the “messages,” that is a far cry from gaining the approval of the Holy See.
No Mary, no Church.

Countries that had nothing to do with “Spanish culture” - think Poland, Ireland, Croatia, French Canada - had and in some cases still have - a powerful devotion to Mary. Better to say some parts of the world in recent decades have dehydrated Catholicism. Catholics who grew up in dehydrated parishes, with dehydrated religious education, tend to go in either direction: they discover devotional, Marian-and-so-much-more parishes - or else they leave Catholicism, become secular or non denoms.
 
Have the saints said that we can only get to Christ through Mary? Because that is certainly not what the Church has taught. It is true that Mary holds a unique place in the communion of saints but saintly veneration has always been a part of the path that is supposed to lead us to Christ. To me, the idea of Christ Himself supposedly telling someone “today my mother is the Ark” is simply bizarre. Is not the Church the Ark? Is not the Church the source of the sacraments that Christ gave us? Is it not through the Church and the sacraments that we will be saved? Isn’t it true that outside of the Church there is no salvation? How then are we to accept that “it is through her (Mary), that souls will be saved…He who rejects my mother rejects me?” Isn’t this a radical concept when compared to the place of the Church in the mystery of salvation? The Nicene Creed states that we “believe in one God…believe in one Lord Jesus Christ…believe in the Holy Spirit…believe in one Holy Catholic Apostolic Church.” Are these not the elements necessary for salvation? How does the acceptance or rejection of Mary fit into this?

I agree with Tarpeian Rock that much of this sounds like the hyper-marian devotion that is common in Spanish culture. While the local bishop may have approved the “messages,” that is a far cry from gaining the approval of the Holy See.
I have to agree with you Jesus telling someone “today my mother is the ark” sounds bizarre. There are many people today receiving visions they believe are from Heaven. I doubt most of them are true. I love to say the Rosary and I believe Mary is Our Heavenly Mother. She sends us graces from Heaven from her Son to heal us and bring us closer to Him. We go to her for help to be closer to her Son and we are to pray for the conversion of sinners, this is what Mary asks of us. This is what I was taught to believe. Jesus Christ saved us by His death on the cross. His death brings us salvation. Mary intercedes for us and helps us to obtain repentance and purification, by repentance we become closer to her Son Jesus Christ. This idea of Mary being the ark sounds strange, it is not in agreement with my understanding, it is something I will need to think about and pray about for more understanding.
 
I have to agree with you Jesus telling someone “today my mother is the ark” sounds bizarre. There are many people today receiving visions they believe are from Heaven. I doubt most of them are true. I love to say the Rosary and I believe Mary is Our Heavenly Mother. She sends us graces from Heaven from her Son to heal us and bring us closer to Him. We go to her for help to be closer to her Son and we are to pray for the conversion of sinners, this is what Mary asks of us. This is what I was taught to believe. Jesus Christ saved us by His death on the cross. His death brings us salvation. Mary intercedes for us and helps us to obtain repentance and purification, by repentance we become closer to her Son Jesus Christ. This idea of Mary being the ark sounds strange, it is not in agreement with my understanding, it is something I will need to think about and pray about for more understanding.
It may be that “my mother the ark” sounds unfamiliar, though it would not IMHO be inconsistent with much that was written by St Louis de Montfort, or St. Alphonsus Liguori, Doctor of the Church. The bishop is not saying he agrees with it, he is in effect saying it is not inconsistent with revealed truth. The problem is that Mary is so rarely mentioned, let alone her role explained, in the US or Western countries, that a lot which would have been quite understandable to my parents or childhood pastor strikes me as unfamiliar.

I fully agree with your concern about the temptation to use “visions”, or for that matter charismatic gifts, to indulge spiritual pride. This doubly reinforces the need to rely on the Magisterium to guide us in these times.
 
No Mary, no Church.
I believe that there is an certain element of hyperbole in your statement. Certainly, Mary holds a singular position in the mystery of salvation but traditional teaching has always been that Christ founded the Church upon Peter the apostle who was given the keys to the kingdom. It was to the apostles that Christ gave the mandate to forgive sins and spread the Gospel to the corners of the world. To say that it is because of Mary that we have the Church is nuanced at best and just plain wrong at worst.
 
Our Lord told the apostles the same thing: he who rejects you rejects me, he who accepts you accepts me. If true of the apostles, why would this not be true of His Mother?
The apostles were the first bishops of the Church. We know from scripture that Christ spoke those words, “he who rejects you rejects me” to them. Nowhere in scripture did Christ say the same about Mary.
Rejecting Our Lady would be, in a sense, a rejection of the Church who’s mother she is. One cannot be a good Catholic without venerating Our Lady (at a minimum one must participate in the liturgical veneration of Our Lady at every mass and especially on her feasts).
I never said that we should or even can reject Our Lady and still be a good Catholic. But I also think that the pendulum shouldn’t swing too far the other way in trying to elevate her position in the Church. Mary has a unique role in the communion of saints. I do not think it necessary to try and extrapolate her position into something else that requires highly nuanced descriptions to avoid overstating things.
 
No Mary, no Church.

Countries that had nothing to do with “Spanish culture” - think Poland, Ireland, Croatia, French Canada - had and in some cases still have - a powerful devotion to Mary. Better to say some parts of the world in recent decades have dehydrated Catholicism. Catholics who grew up in dehydrated parishes, with dehydrated religious education, tend to go in either direction: they discover devotional, Marian-and-so-much-more parishes - or else they leave Catholicism, become secular or non denoms.
You do know God could have picked someone else to bear His Son?
 
👍

I’m also uncomfortable with the use of the term “hyper-Marian devotion”, as if it’s something negative. St. Louis de Montfort (if I recall correctly) once pointed out that it was impossible to “love Mary too much”. Some of the attitudes expressed on this thread are a reminder of how much Protestant ideas have infiltrated the Church. 😦
Yah, “hyper-Marian devotion” is a perjorative. It is to shame people into not talking about Her so much. It was St. Maximilian Kolbe who said that you can’t love Our Lady too much. The same Saint had said that you won’t have Jesus for a brother, if you won’t have Mary for a mother. So saying that rejecting Mary is rejecting Jesus, is not at all inconsistent. Anything else is semantics, disguised as intellectual discourse. This is why I will never celebrate Protestant influences on the Church. It should be despised. To some Catholics, She was just some nice replaceable lady who gave birth to Jesus; however they don’t consider that God the Father was pleased with Her to the point where He chose Her, to bear His only Son. She was full of grace, and the Lord is with Her, as the archangel Gabriel had said to Her. God was always with Her and He always will be. She wouldn’t have been the Chosen Mother, that He, God personally, the alpha and the omega, would choose to lean on in His infancy, otherwise. Consider that God, Himself, the greatest, most powerful being in the universe, chose Mary, and delightfully so, then, why won’t you?
 
Yah, “hyper-Marian devotion” is a perjorative. It is to shame people into not talking about Her so much. It was St. Maximilian Kolbe who said that you can’t love Our Lady too much. The same Saint had said that you won’t have Jesus for a brother, if you won’t have Mary for a mother. So saying that rejecting Mary is rejecting Jesus, is not at all inconsistent. Anything else is semantics, disguised as intellectual discourse. This is why I will never celebrate Protestant influences on the Church. It should be despised. To some Catholics, She was just some nice replaceable lady who gave birth to Jesus; however they don’t consider that God the Father was pleased with Her to the point where He chose Her, to bear His only Son. She was full of grace, and the Lord is with Her, as the archangel Gabriel had said to Her. God was always with Her and He always will be. She wouldn’t have been the Chosen Mother, that He, God personally, the alpha and the omega, would choose to lean on in His infancy, otherwise. Consider that God, Himself, the greatest, most powerful being in the universe, chose Mary, and delightfully so, then, why won’t you?
Did Jesus say, “My mother is the way, the truth and the life?” No! He said, “I AM the Way, the Truth, and the Life!”
 
Yah, “hyper-Marian devotion” is a perjorative.
No, it isn’t. I have seen people who suggest that Mary is the Holy Spirit. You cannot deny that there are some who carry Marian devotion to extremes.
Consider that God, Himself, the greatest, most powerful being in the universe, chose Mary, and delightfully so, then, why won’t you?
Choose her for what, exactly? Mary belongs at the top of the list of the communion of saints. What more do you wish to give to her?
 
No, it isn’t. I have seen people who suggest that Mary is the Holy Spirit. You cannot deny that there are some who carry Marian devotion to extremes.

Choose her for what, exactly? Mary belongs at the top of the list of the communion of saints. What more do you wish to give to her?
You’re gonna have to tell me how people are suggesting that Our Lady is the Holy Spirit. She glorifies God, unlike most people, She won’t take any glory for Herself. You say Mary, She says God. I also find it interesting that you responded to me in that kind of way, as if it isn’t clear what I mean, when it perfectly is. I choose Her for my Mother. I also find it interesting that you won’t answer my charge of semantics. Why so defensive towards someone who will actually defend the Mother of Christ?
 
Here is a quote from the article mentioned
When Jesus appeared to Gladys he referred to Mary as “my Ark.” Jesus emphasized this major identification again. Gladys first saw the ark of Moses, then the ark of Noah. Jesus said: “In the past, the world was saved by the Ark of Noah. Today my mother is the Ark. It is through her, that souls will be saved, because she will lead them to me. He who rejects my mother, rejects me.”
**Mary also announced this title: B]“God gives complete freedom and he allows each one…to make his own choice: to purify oneself or to live in sin, **
grow in Christ or be annihilated. I advise my children to stay away from the somber night, for the dawn is going to appear soon. While you wait, let yourselves be prepared by this mother. Introduce your hearts into the Ark which Jesus has sent. Read Galatians 4:3-11.”

The message does say that “through her, souls will be saved” doesn’t it? Does this sound like something our Holy Mother Mary or our Lord Jesus Christ would say?
 
I have to agree with you Jesus telling someone “today my mother is the ark” sounds bizarre.

Haven’t most Catholics been taught about the different Covenants God has made with His people and the Solid teachings on our Blessed Mother being the New Ark of the Covenant??? Scott Hahn does a wonderful job explaining this in the most beautiful way! Go to Lighthouse Media and check out any on this subject from either Dr Scott Hahn or Dr Edward Sri- both excellent and explain this term with solid biblical background!!!

mlz
 
JosieN;13933214:
I have to agree with you Jesus telling someone “today my mother is the ark” sounds bizarre.

Haven’t most Catholics been taught about the different Covenants God has made with His people and the Solid teachings on our Blessed Mother being the New Ark of the Covenant??? Scott Hahn does a wonderful job explaining this in the most beautiful way! Go to Lighthouse Media and check out any on this subject from either Dr Scott Hahn or Dr Edward Sri- both excellent and explain this term with solid biblical background!!!

mlz
Thanks, I will check out this subject more.
 
My point: We have Jesus saying one thing and this apparition another.
Except they don’t contradict. And if anything the apparitions are consistent with what the Saints have been saying. You still haven’t debunked anything.
 
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