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Genesis315
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To be fair, those weren’t the mysteries prayed at the time of St. Dominic. The earliest set of mysteries on record from just after his time are only three: Annunciation, Nativity, and Assumption.But now I prefer to pray it without. I feel a connection to Mother Mary knowing that I am praying the rosary with the same decades as in the time of St. Dominic, the same decades as the ones she prayed with St. Bernadette and the children of Fatima. There’s also a sense of connection to my ancestors who prayed the rosary the traditional way.
The famous Ulm handbook gives the “method of St. Dominic” as a variation of the Vita Christi method, which had 50 mysteries on the life of Christ (including those in the luminous mysteries).
Along those lines, in the apparition to Bl. Alan de Rupe, where we first learn of the Rosary being associated with St. Dominic, Mary merely says to meditate on “the life and passion” of her Son (no specifics on the mysteries are mentioned, but that description makes it sound like the Vita Christi method).
By the 16th century, the Rosary had become mostly what we consider traditional, but with the Final Judgment as the last glorious mystery, instead of the Coronation of Mary. That change would solidify by the late 17th century or so.
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