(Sharing at the
Novena to Our Mother of Perpetual Help on 7 July 2012)
• Faith “is
the lifelong companion that makes it possible to perceive, ever anew, the
marvels that God works for us”. With the Apostolic Letter, Porta fidei, Pope Benedict XVI declared a Year
of Faith. This year will begin on 11 October 2012, and will conclude on 24
November 2013, the Solemnity of our Lord Jesus Christ, Universal King.
• Pope
Benedict speaks of the need to rediscover the journey of faith so as to shed
ever clearer light on the joy and renewed enthusiasm of “the encounter with
Christ“.

• “I know him in whom I have believed”. These
words of Paul to Timothy help us to understand that faith is “first of all a personal
adherence of man to God. (2 Tm 1:12). It is also a free assent to the whole
truth revealed by God.” Faith, which is a personal trust in the
Lord and the faith which we profess in the Creed are inseparable;
they focus on each other and require each other. A profound bond exists between
the lived faith and its contents. The faith of the Witnesses and Confessors is
also the faith of the Apostles and Doctors of the Church.
• This year
will be a special occasion for the faithful to understand more profoundly that
the foundation of Christian faith is “the encounter with an event, a
person, which gives life a new horizon and a decisive direction.”
Founded on the encounter with the Risen Christ, “Faith is a
gift to rediscover, to cultivate and to bear witness to” because the
Lord “grants each of us to live the beauty and joy of being Christians.”
• The Second Vatican Council noted in Lumen gentium: "Devoutly meditating on Mary and contemplating her in the light of the Word made man, the Church reverently penetrates more deeply into the great mystery of the Incarnation” and... “looks to Mary” for “… She not only contemplates the wondrous gift of her fullness of grace, but strives to imitate the perfection which in her is the fruit of her full compliance with Christ's command: "You, therefore, must be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect" (Mt 5:48).” (Lumen gentium #65; Pope John Paul II, 1997)
• The Second Vatican Council noted in Lumen gentium: "Devoutly meditating on Mary and contemplating her in the light of the Word made man, the Church reverently penetrates more deeply into the great mystery of the Incarnation” and... “looks to Mary” for “… She not only contemplates the wondrous gift of her fullness of grace, but strives to imitate the perfection which in her is the fruit of her full compliance with Christ's command: "You, therefore, must be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect" (Mt 5:48).” (Lumen gentium #65; Pope John Paul II, 1997)
• For the
community of believers, in the great prayer of the Magnificat, Mary represents “the
authentic holiness that is achieved in union with Christ…the
perfect harmony with the person of Her Son and by her total dedication to
the redeeming work He accomplished.” (Pope John Paul II, 1997)


• In the image of Her Immaculate Heart pierced by a sword, we see the heart of the Blessed Virgin stabbed for all of those who have lived – and died – by the sword, and by sin. Jesus said, “Put your sword back, for all who have lived by the sword, die by the sword.” (Mt 26:52)
• During
this Year, the faithful are invited to turn with particular devotion
to Mary, model of the Church. Despite the sins of her members, the Church is
first and foremost the community of those who are called to holiness and to strive
each day to achieve it. In this arduous path to perfection, Mary who “shines
forth to the whole community of the elect as the model of faith, hope and love”
succours and encourages us to live as she lived, in obedience to God’s will…so
that we may rediscover the journey of faith…and shed ever clearer light on the
joy and renewed enthusiasm of “the encounter with Christ“. (Congregation for
the Doctrine of Faith, 2012; Pope John Paul II, 1997)
N.b.: * [Summary of History of Our Lady of Akita]
In 1973, the Blessed Virgin Mary gave Sister
Agnes Katsuko Sasagawa in Akita, Japan, three Messages through a statue of
Mary. Bathed in a brilliant light, the statue became alive and spoke with a voice
of indescribable beauty. Her Guardian Angel also appeared and taught her to
pray.
The wooden statue, about 3 feet high, had been carved by an artist on
the request of the Sisters of the Institute of the Handmaids of the Eucharist,
founded by the local Bishop, Most Rev. John Shojiro Ito, of the Diocese of
Niigata. This statue, from which the voice came, wept 101 times over a course
of several years, from January 4, 1975, to September 15, 1981, the Feast of Our
Lady of Seven Sorrows. It also perspired abundantly, and the perspiration sent
out a sweet perfume. Its right palm bled from a wound that had the form of a
cross.
References:
• Congregation
for the Doctrine of Faith. (6 January 2012.) Pastoral Recommendations for the Year of Faith. Retrieved from http://www.annusfidei.va/content/novaevangelizatio/en/annus-fidei/indicazioni-pastorali-per-l-anno-della-fede.html
• Pope John
Paul II. (10 September 1997). Mary: Model
of Faith, Hope, and Charity in L'Osservatore Romano, Weekly Edition
in English, p. 11.
• Mother
Adela. (n.d.) Mary, Model of Faith, Hope
and Charity for the Third Millennium. Retrieved from http://www.piercedhearts.org/mother_adela/mary_faith_hope_charity.htm
• Buck, R. (5
March 2010). Marian Apparitions, the Bible and the Modern World – Donal Anthony
Foley (Review). Retrieved from http://corjesusacratissimum.org/2010/03/book-review-marian-apparitions-the-bible-and-the-modern-world-donal-anthony-foley/
Recommended reading:
1. Finley, Mitch. (1997).
Surprising Mary. Meditation and Prayers
on the Mother of Jesus. Mineola, New York: Resurrection Press. ISBN
1-878718-37-1.
2. Gambero, Luigi. Mary and the Fathers of the Church. The
Blessed Virgin Mary in Patristic Thought. Translated: Thomas Buffer. (1997).
San Francisco: Ignatius Press. ISBN 978-0-89870-686-4.
3. Hahn, Scott Walker.
(2001). Hail Holy Queen. The Mother of God
in the Word of God. Darton Longman Todd. ISBN 9780 2325 24321.
4. The Anglican-Roman
Catholic International Commission. (2005). Mary
grace and Hope in Christ. Harrisburg, London: Morehouse. ISBN 0-8192-8132-8
5. Buono, Anthony. (2008).
The Greatest Marian Titles – their
History, Meaning and Usage. The Philippines: St. Pauls. ISBN
978-971-004-004-9.
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