Pope John Paul II went as a pilgrim to
Pompeii,
Italy to the
Shrine of Our Lady of the Rosary on October 7, 2003, her feast day to
pray for world peace. He proclaimed the year 2003 as the Year of the
Rosary. He prayed, “May Mary's maternal intercession obtain justice
and peace for the entire world. How important it is that during this
Year of the Rosary we persevere in praying the Rosary to implore
peace! I ask that you continue to do so, especially in Marian shrines.
Let us raise our prayers to God that love may conquer hatred, that
peace, justice and solidarity may grow in every corner of the earth,
in the spirit of the Gospel."
This article will explain the Feast of Our Lady of the
Rosary, the intercession of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Blessed Bartolo
Longo, the founder of the Shrine of Our Lady of the Rosary and New
Pompeii, and the importance of praying the Rosary for peace,
especially the new mysteries composed by the Holy Father, the Luminous
Mysteries.
The Feast
of Our Lady of the Rosary was occasioned by the victory of the
Christian fleet over the Ottoman Turks at the Battle of Lepanto on
October 7, 1571.
It was forty years after the apparitions of Our Lady of Guadalupe to
St. Juan Diego in
Mexico. The very first
replica image of Our Lady of Guadalupe was present in the cabin of
the flagship of the Christian fleet under the leadership of
Admiral Andrea Doria. The Turks had planned to use the greatest navy
that the world had ever seen to conquer all of Christendom. The
Christian naval fleet was out-shipped, out-gunned and out-manned by
the powerful Turkish fleet under Admiral Ali Pasha and defeat looked
imminent.
The Pope called for a Rosary Crusade. Christians prayed throughout
Europe and Admiral Andrea Doria prayed before
the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe. He prayed as the Christian and
Turkish fleets approached each other. Suddenly, the winds changed and
the Turkish fleet was thrown into disarray. Their ships were blown
into each other. Two hundred and thirty Turkish ships were destroyed
and 1500 of their Christian galley slaves were freed. This victory
brought an end to Turkish sea power and its threat to the Christian
world.
Three centuries
later in 1872, Blessed Bartolo Longo, a lawyer, went to
Pompeii to help administer some land
of the Countess Marianna De Fusco. Ancient
Pompeii was destroyed when
Mount Vesuvius erupted in 79 AD and covered it
in rocks and ash. Bartolo was moved by the plight of the poor and
criminal people who lived in the ruins of ancient
Pompeii. One evening, as he walked
near the ruined rat infested chapel at
Pompeii, he had a profound mystical
experience. He heard a voice, "If you seek salvation, promulgate the
Rosary. This is Mary's own promise."
The physical and moral
misery of the people so moved his heart that he decided to dedicate
himself to spread the Rosary to them. He promised Our Lady, "If it be
true that you promised St. Dominic that whoever spreads the Rosary
will be saved, I will be saved, because I will not leave
Pompeii until I have spread your
Rosary." The rest of his life was a fulfillment of this vow. He
undertook a great mission of evangelization, going from house to house
distributing medals, holy pictures, scapulars, and catechisms and
instructing the poor in the knowledge and power of the Rosary. He
cared for orphans
and children of prisoners and built homes for them.
Later he
married the Countess and with her help he inaugurated a Confraternity
of the Rosary. He needed an image of Our Lady before which the Rosary
could be recited every day. He obtained a very poor quality image from
a junkshop dealer and received permission from the Bishop to build a
new church where it was installed. Many miracles occurred and
pilgrimages to the church began. Eventually, the
great basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary of Pompeii was completed.
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Blessed Bartolo Longo |
Pompeii
grew from a hamlet of three
hundred inhabitants in 1872 to a city of thirty thousand in a
hundred years. Bartolo founded this new city that he called “New
Pompeii” in order to distinguish
it from its opposite of the old
Pompeii. He wrote, "Next to a
land of dead appeared, quite suddenly, a land of resurrection and
life: next to a shattered amphitheatre soiled with blood, there is
a living Temple of faith and love, a sacred Temple to the Virgin
Mary; from a town buried in the filth of gentilism, arises a town
full of life, drawing its origins from a new civilization brought
by Christianity: The New Pompeii! . . . It is the new
civilization that openly appears beside the old; the new art next
to the old; Christianity full of life in juxtaposition to long
surpassed Paganism." ("The History of the Shrine of
Pompeii", Bartolo Longo). |
| |
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The Shrine of Our Lady of the
Rosary, Pompeii, Italy |
The city of
Pompeii has a monument to
Bartolo on which is inscribed, “Pompeii
/ Marian town / Where Faith and Charity / Create miracles / Where
prayer is perennial / Honors its founder / Bartolo Longo / Apostle
of the Rosary / Father of the orphans / MCMLXII”. |
Bartolo died in 1926. Pope John Paul II beatified him in 1980. His
feast day is observed on October 6. Pope John Paul II called
him "a layman who had lived his ecclesial pledge to the full". He was
a forerunner of the modern catholic layman.
The Shrine represented to Bartolo Longo
a monument dedicated to universal peace. One day he had a prophetic
vision of “the white figure of the representative of Christ gazing out
to bless the people calling for universal Peace." This vision was
fulfilled by the Pope’s visit to Pompeii.
In
his Apostolic Letter, On the Most
Holy Rosary, Pope John Paul II said,“ A number of
historical circumstances make a revival of the Rosary quite timely.
First of all, the need to implore
from God the gift of peace. At the start of a millennium
which began with the terrifying attacks of September 11, 2001, a
millennium which witnesses every day in numerous parts of the world
fresh scenes of bloodshed and violence, to rediscover the Rosary means
to immerse oneself in contemplation of the mystery of Christ who "is
our peace", since he made "the two of us one, and broke down the
dividing wall of hostility". (Eph
2:14).
“Never
as in the Rosary do the life of Jesus and that of Mary appear so
deeply joined. Mary lives only in Christ and for Christ! In proposing
to the Christian community five significant moments – "luminous"
mysteries – during the phase of Christ’s public ministry, I think that
the following can be fittingly singled out: (1) his Baptism in the
Jordan, (2) his self-manifestation at the wedding of Cana, (3) his
proclamation of the Kingdom of God, with his call to conversion, (4)
his Transfiguration, and finally, (5) his institution of the
Eucharist, as the sacramental expression of the Paschal Mystery.”
Let us pray these Luminous
Mysteries for the Pope’s cause of world peace.
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