Saint September 24 : Our Lady of Walsingham of whom Pope Leo XIII made the Prophecy ‘when England goes back to Walsingham, Mary will return to England.’ - with Entrustment Prayer
Pope Leo XIII made a prophecy in 1893, ‘when England goes back to Walsingham, Mary will return to England’, strengthens our hope that the spread of the spirituality of Walsingham will help our country return to its deepest identity as a Christian nation.
ACT of ENTRUSTMENT: Hail Mary full of grace Holy Mary Mother of our Redeemer Mother of Vocation, Our Lady of Walsingham With great joy we call upon you Remember we are your children Called to wholeness Called to the fullness of joy Called to realise our heart’s deepest desire, God’s dream for us Woman of all graces Woman of all Amens Woman who followed him Teach us to live always in the presence of God, Who wills us to become holy. Sustain us, O Mother of Vocation On our pilgrimage of faith Help us to live the fullness of the call to life and love Wherever we find ourselves. Guide us in making Spirit-filled choices So that your Immaculate Heart will triumph And the Kingdom of God will come in this land and throughout the world To you we entrust ourselves and all peoples with our hopes and fears. Joining our ‘fiat’ to yours May our lives become a constant song of praise and thanksgiving to God’s glory. O clement, O loving, O sweet Lady of Walsingham Mother of Vocation we trust in you Mother of England (name of country one is in), of all nations and of all creation Mother of our community/parish/family Pray for us. Amen.
The late eleventh century and all through the twelfth and thirteenth century was the era of the crusades, which saw a growing interest in the sites consecrated by the human presence of Jesus in the Holy Land. But now pilgrims need not go so far; in England itself there was a ‘new Nazareth’ built by one of their own countrywomen.
After some time Augustinian canons took over the care of the holy house and enshrined it in a special chapel within a much larger church. Pilgrims began to come from all over England and even abroad. From the time of Henry III nearly all the kings and queens of the realm visited Walsingham, as well as hundreds of ordinary people seeking help, healing and inner peace. Walsingham ranked with Rome, Jerusalem and Compostella in importance as a pilgrimage destination.
However, the Shrine was destroyed at the time of the Reformation, and only rebuilt at the beginning of the twentieth century, mainly due to the inspired leadership of the Anglican vicar of Walsingham, Fr Hope Patten. He revived devotion to Our Lady under this title and built a new shrine Church and Holy House in the village, together with a statue modelled on that depicted on the ancient priory seal. It shows a seated Mary with her Son on her lap holding a book of the gospels. Meanwhile a Miss Charlotte Boyd had purchased and restored the ancient Slipper Chapel a mile away and gifted it to the Catholic Church. This has since become the National Shrine of the Catholic Church in England. So Walsingham is a village dedicated to Mary, a place of ecumenical pilgrimage with a growing understanding of the original message of Walsingham as received by Richeldis – that it should be a place where the joy of the Annunciation could be remembered and celebrated, for the Word became flesh and dwelt amongst us through Mary’s joyful and ready ‘yes,’ spoken within an ordinary house that would become the boyhood home of the Son of God himself.
The late eleventh century and all through the twelfth and thirteenth century was the era of the crusades, which saw a growing interest in the sites consecrated by the human presence of Jesus in the Holy Land. But now pilgrims need not go so far; in England itself there was a ‘new Nazareth’ built by one of their own countrywomen.
After some time Augustinian canons took over the care of the holy house and enshrined it in a special chapel within a much larger church. Pilgrims began to come from all over England and even abroad. From the time of Henry III nearly all the kings and queens of the realm visited Walsingham, as well as hundreds of ordinary people seeking help, healing and inner peace. Walsingham ranked with Rome, Jerusalem and Compostella in importance as a pilgrimage destination.
However, the Shrine was destroyed at the time of the Reformation, and only rebuilt at the beginning of the twentieth century, mainly due to the inspired leadership of the Anglican vicar of Walsingham, Fr Hope Patten. He revived devotion to Our Lady under this title and built a new shrine Church and Holy House in the village, together with a statue modelled on that depicted on the ancient priory seal. It shows a seated Mary with her Son on her lap holding a book of the gospels. Meanwhile a Miss Charlotte Boyd had purchased and restored the ancient Slipper Chapel a mile away and gifted it to the Catholic Church. This has since become the National Shrine of the Catholic Church in England. So Walsingham is a village dedicated to Mary, a place of ecumenical pilgrimage with a growing understanding of the original message of Walsingham as received by Richeldis – that it should be a place where the joy of the Annunciation could be remembered and celebrated, for the Word became flesh and dwelt amongst us through Mary’s joyful and ready ‘yes,’ spoken within an ordinary house that would become the boyhood home of the Son of God himself.
Source: https://walsinghamcommunity.org/
Comments