Silly question

  • Thread starter Thread starter Katie1723
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
K

Katie1723

Guest
I have asked this question of several people and get 2 different answers. So here goes again to all you wonderful people: Can I wear a medal that hasn’t been blessed? Some have said yes…some have said no. I want the correct answer.
Kathy
 
I think it depends on the medal.

Most medals, I think, are fine unblessed but getting them blessed is always nice (as with other sacramentals like rosaries).

Some medals are different. For example, if you are wearing a scapular medal after being enrolled in the Brown Scapular, then the medal needs to be blessed.
 
40.png
kmktexas:
I think it depends on the medal.

Most medals, I think, are fine unblessed but getting them blessed is always nice (as with other sacramentals like rosaries).

Some medals are different. For example, if you are wearing a scapular medal after being enrolled in the Brown Scapular, then the medal needs to be blessed.
I have a Miraculous Medal. But now I must ask another question…What is the Brown Scapular?
 
Katie you asked if your question was silly.

Your question is not silly.

In my life I have worn three medals, all crucifixes, just one blessed.

The very nice golden crucifix I have not removed in 8 years is not blessed.

Ask this: What advantage is it to wear a blessed medal. A medal can’t do anything. I cannot think of but one thing. Satan’s demoms may have entered that medal somewhere before you got it. That would prevent any advantage for you. But tell me what can a medal do, under the best of circumstances. You’d have to be a fanatic to expect the medal to protect you.
 
40.png
Katie1723:
I have a Miraculous Medal. But now I must ask another question…What is the Brown Scapular?
This site has one of the best explanations of the Brown Scapular that I know of. It also explains wearing a scapular medal instead of the cloth scapular.

domestic-church.com/CONTENT.DCC/19980701/SCRMNTL/SCAPUL.HTM

I don’t think any blessing is specifically called for with the Miraculous medal. But as I said, it is nice to have sacramentals blessed.
 
You can wear anything you like. Blessed or not. So long as it is not offensive to God.
But get it blessed, and often there is an enrolement in one or more confraternities with sacramentals. You receive many blessings when enroled. And often the Popes have attached indulgences to the sacramentals. To take advantage of these you need the blessing and enrolement if applicable. Read the following article by a famous priest being considered for canonisation about an experience he had.
By Fr John Hardon.

How the Miraculous Medal Changed My Life

by Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J.

Below is from a talk Fr. Hardon has given various times.


One of the most memorable experiences that I ever had was with the Miraculous Medal! It changed my life. In the fall of 1948, the year after my ordination, I was in what we call the Tertianship. This is a third year of Novitiate before taking final vows.

In October of that year, a Vincentian priest came to speak to us young Jesuit priests. He encouraged us to obtain faculties, as they are called, to enroll people in the Confraternity of the Miraculous Medal. Among other things, he said, “Fathers, the Miraculous Medal works. Miracles have been performed by Our Lady through the Miraculous Medal.”

I was not impressed by what the Vincentian priest was telling. I was not the medal-wearing kind of person and I certainly did not have a Miraculous Medal. But I thought to myself, “It does not cost anything.” So I put my name down to get a four page leaflet from the Vincentians, with the then-Latin formula for blessing Miraculous Medals and enrolling people in the Confraternity of the Miraculous Medal. About two weeks later, I got the leaflet for blessing and enrollment, put it into my office book and forgot about it.

In February of the next year, I was sent to assist the chaplain of St. Alexis Hospital in Cleveland, Ohio. I was to be there helping the regular chaplain for two weeks.

Each morning I received a list of all the patients admitted into the hospital that day. There were so many Catholics admitted that I could not visit them all as soon as they came.

Among the patients admitted was a boy about nine years old. He had been sled-riding down hill, lost control of the sled and ran into a tree head-on. He fractured his skull and X-rays showed he had suffered severe brain damage.

When I finally got to visit his room at the hospital, he had been in a coma for ten days, no speech, no voluntary movements of the body. His condition was such that the only question was whether he would live. There was no question of recovering from what was diagnosed as permanent and inoperble brain damage.

After blessing the boy and consoling his parents, I was about to leave his hospital room. But then a thought came to me. “That Vincentian priest. He said, ‘The Miraculous Medal works.’ Now this will be a test of its alleged miraculous powers!”

I didn’t have a Miraculous Medal of my own. And everyone I asked at the hospital also did not have one. But I persisted, and finally one of the nursing sisters on night duty found a Miraculous Medal.

What I found out was that you don’t just bless the medal, you have to put it around a person’s neck on a chain or ribbon. So the sister-nurse found a blue ribbon for the medal, which made me feel silly. What was I doing with medals and blue ribbons.

However, I blessed the medal and had the father hold the leaflet for investing a person in the Confraternity of the Miraculous Medal. I proceeded to recite the words of investiture. No sooner did I finish the prayer of enrolling the boy in the Confraternity than he opened his eyes for the first time in two weeks. He saw his mother and said, “Ma, I want some ice cream.” He had been given only intravenous feeding.

This Experience Changed My Life

Then he proceeded to talk to his father and mother. After a few minutes of stunned silence, a doctor was called. The doctor examined the boy and told the parents they could give him something to eat.

The next day began a series of tests on the boy’s condition. X-rays showed the brain damage was gone.

Then still more tests. After three days, when all examinations showed there was complete restoration to health, the boy was released from the hospital.

This experience so changed my life that I have not been the same since. My faith in God, faith in His power to work miracles, was strengthened beyond description.

Since then, of course, I have been promoting devotion to Our Lady and the use of the Miraculous Medal. The wonders she performs, provided we believe, are extraordinary.

In teaching theology over the years, I have many semesters taught the theology of miracles. And I have an unpublished book manuscript on “The History and Theology of Miracles.” My hope is to publish the manuscript in the near future.

Copyright © 2003 by Inter Mirifica
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top