Fall/Winter 2014 - Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe
Transcription
Fall/Winter 2014 - Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe
A P U B L I C AT I O N O F TH E SH R IN E O F O UR L ADY O F GUADALUPE Fall/Winter 2014 A PU B LI C AT I O N O F T H E S H RI N E O F O U R L ADY OF GUADALUP E Fall/Winter 2014 A Word from the Executive Director ON THE COVER: The dome of the Shrine Church is shown along with four Doctors of the Church (enlarged to be seen clearly) featured on medallions in the four pendentives. The four Doctors featured are: St. Ambrose, St. Cyril of Jerusalem, St. Ephrem, and St. John Damascene. Artist Anthony Visco, from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, painted these with oil on linens. In the cupola of the dome can be seen the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet, alpha and omega, along with a triangle. The constellations of the stars and the turquoise color come from Our Lady’s mantle that she is wearing in the Tilma of St. Juan Diego. The Latin text inscribed around the inside of the dome beneath the clear glass windows is taken from the Wedding Feast at Cana. The English translation of the text is: “And Jesus said to her, ‘O woman, what have you to do with me? My hour has not yet come.’ His mother said to the servants, ‘Do whatever He tells you’” (John 2:4-5, RSV). Tepeyac is a publication for the pilgrims, benefactors and friends of the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, located in La Crosse, Wisconsin. The Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe is a place of religious pilgrimage that serves the spiritual needs of all pilgrims, particularly of those who suffer poverty in body and soul. If you or someone you know would like to receive this publication, please notify the editor using the contact information below. We make every effort to ensure the information in Tepeyac is accurate. If we have made an error in this publication, please notify the editor. TEPEYAC Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe 5250 Justin Road La Crosse, Wisconsin 54601 USA T E L E P H O N E (877) 799-4059 E - M A I L [email protected] W E B S I T E www.guadalupeshrine.org E D I T O R Sister M. Ancilla Matter, F.S.G.M. A S S I S T A N T E D I T O R Gregory Marco G R A P H I C D E S I G N E R Danelle Bjornson Having grown up working on family fishing boats in Alaska, I often ponder the ways in which the work of the Church is similar to fishing. After all, Christ called fishermen to be His first disciples. One day, when He walked along the shore of the Sea of Galilee, He spoke with Peter and Andrew, who were casting a net into the sea, and James and John, who were mending their nets. “Come after me,” He told them, “and I will make you fishers of men” (Mt. 4:19). I recall fishing outside of a salmon hatchery in Alaska’s Prince William Sound one beautiful summer day. We set our net and watched excitedly as a steady stream of salmon swam up the beach and into our net. Thousands and thousands of salmon formed a solid line and swam directly into the net. When we closed-up the net, the net was full of salmon, and they were jumping in every direction. We called over workers on a large tender boat (to which we deliver fish). They tied onto our net so that it would not sink because of the weight of the fish. They put a large pump into the net and sucked the fish out of our net and into their fish hold – over 200,000 pounds of salmon! Shrine. Many of them gathered in the plaza in front of the Shrine Church before Mass. Then someone opened a door to the church, and a line of pilgrims poured into the church. I could not help but think back to my fishing days when we would watch fish pour into our nets. The multitude of pilgrims went inside and filled the Shrine Church. Our nets were full. A good day’s catch for the Church. “Put out into the deep, and let down your nets for a catch” (Luke 5:4). The nets of the Shrine are wide and deep. In the Sacred Heart of Jesus Mr. Leif E. Arvidson Executive Director At the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, we have been filling our nets, too. Over the last two months, more than 18,000 pilgrims have come to the Shrine to pray. I recall one recent day when more than 1,000 pilgrims visited the New Employee Profile - Doug Reinhart By: Gregory Marco Pilgrimage Coordinator On May 4, 2014, Doug Reinhart joined the staff at the Shrine as Assistant to the Pilgrimage Coordinator. In this capacity, Doug is assisting Greg Marco in working with pilgrim groups, namely, greeting groups and guiding their visit to the Shrine, and promoting pilgrimages to the Shrine through multiple outreach efforts. in the Peace Corps in Iran for two years. Upon returning home, Doug attended Michigan State University at which he earned a degree in dairy science. Having completed his studies, for over twenty-five years Doug managed dairy herds in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. For the past fifteen years, he has worked for a cooperative in Wisconsin in which he currently holds the position of national marketing manager. spiritual experiences of their marriage. Doug enjoys reading non-fiction, especially regarding the American Civil War, studying and reading about the Faith and the lives of the saints, and evangelizing during his travels. Doug is originally from Paulding, Ohio, and grew up in a strongly Catholic home. He attended Ohio State University for a short time, and then decided to enter the Peace Corps. He served Doug has been married to his wife Beth for thirty-eight years. Beth recently entered into the full communion of the Catholic Church, which was one of the most memorable and With his knowledge of marketing and strategic planning, and with three years of volunteer experience at the Shrine, Doug brings a wealth of knowledge to this new position. 2 FAL L / WIN TE R 2014 Volunteer Profile Pat Harnisch-Smith: “The honor is mine!” By: Sister M. Ancilla, F.S.G.M. Director, Communications and Volunteers Pat Harnisch-Smith has been a volunteer at the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe for over five years. She was introduced to the Shrine by way of friend and Shrine volunteer, Henry Althoff. “I lost my husband and a son in 2007. It had been two years … until one day at a breakfast Henry told me that I needed something in my life where I’d get out and meet people.” Henry took Pat to the Shrine in the Spring of 2009. the various aspects of the Shrine as she has grown in her knowledge. When she’s in the Votive Candle Chapel, she will explain all the stories behind the windows, and will gladly help pilgrims to light a candle. When she is in the Gift Shop with me, I Pat Harnisch know she will take excellent -Smith care of our visitors, answering questions, and helping them find just the right item. Her outgoing personality is a great asset, and her faith certainly shines through all she does here at the Shrine.” Pat volunteers in both the Mother of Good Counsel Votive Candle Chapel and the Flores Mariae Gift Shop. Pat comments: “The Votive Candle Chapel was really something fabulous and something thought-provoking, inspirational, informational about things I had never In either area, Pat likes the camaraderie with heard of, about Our Lady and the different the people who come - so many different people, from so many walks of titles and apparitions.” The “Bottom-line: life and so many places. “I Gift Shop was perfect for Pat the reason I like volunteering like it when children come. because of her former career. “I am a natural-born salesper- here is that I like helping people. I can tell they are paying I am a ‘helper’. I want to help attention because they get son. I talk to people, get their the pilgrims find what very quiet and they really attention, tell them about they are seeking.” listen. I like the expressions what we have to sell for a speon their faces when they cial occasion. One day we had a diamond cross necklace, very high-priced. are hearing something they think is so powBut after I just simply showed it to a woman, erful. Their faces shine. They smile. I like the 3 day-lilies on a single stem in each window, I sold it!” because it is a great example to the children Joe O’Keefe, Gift Shop associate, describes about the Trinity.” Pat as one who “has always been very peopleoriented and eager to share information on The sharing of the faith is mutual. Because Filming Productions Crews arrive on Anniversary Dedication Day a youth group came to the Votive Candle Chapel one day and prayed the Divine Mercy Chaplet in song, Pat now prays it when she is at the Shrine, every Thursday. “It is very humbling. It makes me happy that I’m a Catholic. I feel that Jesus looks at me.” Pat says that a lot of times the pilgrims who come to the Shrine are experiencing sorrow in their lives. Although she has experienced a lot of suffering, she realizes there are many people who experience even greater sorrows and sufferings. “My favorite window is Our Lady of Sorrows. I pray the Seven Sorrows every day.” Volunteering at the Shrine has brought Pat closer to God. “Bottom-line: the reason I like volunteering here is that I like helping people. I am a ‘helper’. I want to help the pilgrims find what they are seeking.” For Pat, volunteering is something that happens on a deeper level. She encourages those who are experiencing a void in their life – perhaps recently retired or widowed, or lonely – to volunteer at the Shrine! “You will get more out of it than you put into it. The satisfaction of doing a good job for somebody else.” The Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe expresses its gratitude to our volunteers. Pat Harnisch-Smith replies: “The honor is mine!” By: Jack Socha Communications Assistant During the days surrounding the anniversary of the Dedication of the Shrine Church, not one but two film crews visited the Shrine on July 30th and 31st. The first crew, Ahava Productions, filmed for a documentary series with Auxiliary Bishop Donald Hying of Milwaukee. Because their project was already scripted, the major challenge was finding suitable backgrounds. Shrine staff assisted them in finding good locations. The second film crew was from the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus. They were filming a major documentary on Our Lady of Guadalupe which will be similar to something you might see in a National Geographic Special! Cardinal Burke took time from his schedule to grant the crew a 30 minute interview. Various volunteers were interviewed, and they spoke from the heart. The director and crew were sincerely moved by the cheerfulness, sincerity and dedication of our volunteers. And, finally, a personal story. The director of one of the film crews is essentially an “inactive” Catholic, but she was sincerely moved by her experience at the Shrine. In fact, she asked for our prayers. w w w. g u a d a l u p e s h ri n e. o rg • Shri ne of O u r Lad y of G uadalupe 3 St. Ambrose of Milan Western Church Who are the four saints depicted below the interior dome, and why are they there? Compiled by: Sister M. Ancilla, F.S.G.M. Director, Communications and Volunteers Sources: Missio Immaculatae International, various issues. Perhaps, these four images are sometimes missed, or perhaps glossed over, because the dome itself attracts a pilgrim’s gaze. Our eyes are drawn upward as we walk down the nave of the church, approaching the sanctuary. Our gaze proceeds naturally from the tabernacle to the mosaic, then up another step to the figures on top of the baldacchino, then straight up to the star-studded dome, with the symbol of the Holy Trinity at its highest point. The dome is decorated with the constellation of the stars as they appeared on the morning of December 12, 1531, the day of Our Lady’s culminating appearance to Saint Juan Diego. The saints assist us on our pilgrimage. So, let us consider the four saints below the dome. What do they have to say to us? The saints who are seen at the circular base of the dome (in its four-corners, as it were) are St. Ephrem and St. John Damascene, who represent the Eastern Church, and St. Cyril of Jerusalem and St. Ambrose of Milan, who represent the Western Church. These saints are honored with the title “Doctor of the Church” because of their important teaching which contributed to the understanding of the Faith. The Catholic Church honors 35 saints with the title of “Doctor.” As the plans were being drawn for the Shrine Church, these four saints were chosen to be honored because of their contributions toward a better understanding of Our Lady’s Immaculate Conception. The Church Doctors are presented in four round “medallions,” or paintings that appear to be three-dimensional. These “medallions” are located in the four pendentives. A “pendentive” is that triangled transition that goes from the circumference of the dome to the square of the nave to transcepts. 4 FAL L / WIN TE R 2014 St. Ambrose, the great bishop and Doctor of the Church, lived in the fourth century, and made a profound impact on his age through his illuminating writings and example. He was the chief instrument for the conversion of that other great Doctor of Christendom, St. Augustine. St. Ambrose had a special devotion to the Virgin Mary, whose essential importance and virtues he underlined in order that one might properly understand and practice faith in Christ. According to St. Ambrose, the Blessed Virgin Mary is the prototype of faith. The most sublime proof of the perfection of her faith is evidenced at the Foot of the Cross when she remained steadfast in her resolve to follow her Divine Son and Lord, even unto death. Already by reason of her perpetual virginity, Mary gives evidence of a new and extraordinary faith that had not existed in the entire history of ancient Israel. St. Ambrose teaches that Our Lady’s virginity was her first act of consecration to God and was the cause of the entire spiritual itinerary which brought her, through the exer- cise of the loftiest and most sublime faith, to the point of offering herself completely to God, perfectly united to the holocaust of Her Son. Mary appears in the Gospel also as one who must give her children faith and protect them in the faith. St. Ambrose tells us that Mary “fortified [him] for three months with the oil of her presence and the ointment of integrity,” indicating that Mary has the power of consecrating persons to God by her mere presence and by the gift of her purity. St. Ambrose writes that John the Evangelist had the grace of having “the dwelling place of heavenly mysteries” in his own dwelling! By this Marian title we are given to understand that the Blessed Virgin is the temple and perennial depository of all the mysteries of Christ, including the most complex and hidden ones. “Courage! Look to Mary, invoke Her, make room for Her in the little house of your hearts, and never make her leave by committing a grave sin! She is God’s dwelling and will lead you to His plentitude.” (Quoted in Missio Immaculatae International, November/December 2013: p. 17) St. Ephrem the Syrian Eastern Church Deacon and Doctor of the Church, St. Ephrem is famous for his theological tracts and homilies, but above all for the hymns and prayers he composed for liturgical celebrations of the Church. He is known as the “Harp of the Holy Spirit.” He is also known as “Mary’s Own Singer” because he translated the praises of her beauty into strophes overflowing with ineffable love St. John Damascene Eastern Church St. John Damascene was a monk, Marian theologian, and Doctor of the Church who lived until 749 A.D. In addition to composing treatises and homilies on the Blessed Virgin Mary, he employed liturgical chant to sing her praises. These hymns were designed to instruct the unlettered in the Faith, and above all to extol the glories of the Mother of God. Through St. John’s sacred poems, the merits and glories of the Holy Virgin come to life. “A solemnity of the Virgin today, O brethren! Let creation exult, let humanity dance in chorus. The holy Mother of God, the unsullied treasure of virginity, the rational paradise of the second Adam, the workshop of the union of the two natures, the solemn assembly of the saving covenant, the bridal chamber in which the Word espoused flesh, the truly light cloud which carried in her body the One who rides upon the Cherubim, has in fact called us together.” (Parakletike, in Testi Mariani del Primo Millennio, vol. 2). St. John Damascene, with extraordinary refinement and theological skill, emphasizes that it is through Mary, and only through her, that we are raised to the divine heights. In taking His human nature from her, Christ did not take anything from her; rather, He gave her what she did not possess in order that she could become like God (cf. 2 Peter 1:4). This is the great plan of mercy and divine love. There remains nothing left for us to do but to unite ourselves to the prayers of those truly devoted to Mary, who love her for who she is, desiring only what she desires, aiming solely to please her Immaculate Heart and the Divine Heart of her Son: “O stainless Virgin, who ineffably conceived God, receive the petitions of your suppliants, and O Immaculate One grant us purification from our sins. O Immaculate Virgin, save us once again from this world in decline. Only you can help us and desire to attain it for us from the most holy Heart of your Son!” (Missio Immaculatae International, September/October 2013: page 5) St. Cyril of Jerusalem — Western Church St. Cyril of Jerusalem, a bishop who lived in the fourth century, is best known for his Jerusalem Catecheses. The Catecheses contains writings of an exhortative character aimed at introducing catechumens to the realities of the Faith and instructing neophytes about the Sacraments. He attended the great Council of Constantinople in 381 AD, which promulgated the Nicene Creed. St. Cyril lived at a time when heresies prevailed, particularly regarding the Person of for her, and his lyrics already anticipated the dogmatic definition of the Immaculate Conception. Little is known about his life, except that, in the year 363 A.D., the Persian invasion of Syria drove him from Nisibis, where he was born in 303, into exile at Edessa until his death in 373. There he carried on his work as hymnodist and liturgist, and he became renowned for his charitable works in favor of the poor. His literary works spread far and wide, particularly in the Eastern Roman Empire, because his Jesus Christ. St. Cyril’s presence and contributions were indispensable in the defense of the Faith. The figure of Mary is ever-present in St. Cyril’s catecheses. His teachings revolve around the spiritual maternity of Mary. St. Cyril explains that the Virgin is not an accidental presence in the life of Christ. She is one who actively and essentially collaborated in the realization of the divine plan. She, more than any other, is close to Christ and knows Him, because she is united to Him by a unique and inseparable works, written in his native Syriac tongue, were translated into the other popular languages spoken in that realm: Greek, Persian, Coptic, and Georgian. and Your Mother are more beautiful than the others, for there is no blemish in You, nor any stains upon Your Mother.” (Nisibene Hymns, XXVII, 8). St. Ephrem is considered the greatest poet of the patristic age. His sacred poetry illuminates the profound relationship between Mary and artistic beauty. St. Ephrem clearly affirms that Mary is the most beautiful creature, who brings to the light “the fairest of the sons of men” (Ps. 45:32): Jesus Christ. St. Ephrem wrote of Christ: “You alone St. Ephrem’s writings are considered a precursor to the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, thanks to his outbursts of ineffable love evident in the lyrics in which he describes the Virgin’s interior beauty. bond: her Maternity. Therefore, she alone can teach us who Christ truly is; and, she bears witness that Jesus is true man and that in this man “the fullness of the deity dwells bodily” (Col. 2:9). The Church’s teachings regarding Mary, the Virgin Mother of God, are the bulwark that upholds and protects the true divinity and humanity of Christ against all heresies. The Immaculate Virgin is the model and Mother of the pure of heart – that is, of those who submit to God and to His announcements. Her Heart and intellect are all-pure, and she receives the divine Word in all simplicity. “Many are the true testimonies concerning Christ. The Father bears witness from heaven of His Son: the Holy Ghost bears witness, descending bodily in likeness of a dove: the Archangel Gabriel bears witness, bringing good tidings to Mary: the Virgin Mother of God [Theotokos] bears witness: the blessed place of the manger bears witness.” (Catechetical Lectures, 10:19) Pray for us, St. Ephrem, that we may come to contemplate in Mary the divine beauty! w w w. g u a d a l u p e s h ri n e. o rg • Shri ne of O u r Lad y of G uadalupe 5 SHRINE EXCLUSIVES - GIFT SHOP By Gregory Marco Pilgrimage Coordinator When pilgrims walk into Flores Mariae Gift Shop, they are often wishing to purchase reproductions of the images they have seen on the grounds of the Shrine. These pilgrims are not disappointed. The gift shop features many copies of paintings and statues, and pictures of the Shrine grounds. It is the very creative ways in which some of these images are presented that surprises people. Many times these original Shrine items have been inspired by the ideas of staff and volunteers. Guadalupe Shrine Rosary One of these items is the Guadalupe Shrine Rosary. Ghirelli Rosaries, located in Santa Maria Maddalena in northeastern Italy, offers to design rosaries for their customers. Gift Shop associate Joe O’Keefe jumped at the opportunity because he was impressed with Development news The 2014 Annual Appeal is now underway! Thank you to all of you who have already supported this yearly effort! The Shrine has a debt-free policy and depends entirely on the support of generous donors. Just as there are increasing costs each year to run a household, so the Shrine’s costs increase as well. We have a goal of $500,000 for our 2014 Annual Appeal and have already raised $235,371 to date. With your support we can reach our goal and continue to serve the thousands of pilgrims who enter our doors each year! May God bless your generosity! WAYS TO MAKE A DONATION TO THE SHRINE: WEBSITE www.guadalupeshrine.org/donate CALL Thomas Thimons at 1-877-799-4059 IN PERSON Ask at the information desk for a Gift Card or Donation Envelope MORE INFO For other ideas on how to support the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, please contact Thomas Thimons at [email protected] or call 1-877-799-4059. 6 FAL L / WIN TE R 2014 their quality and creativeness. “I spent some time over the phone with Dino (a Ghirelli representative in Indiana), and we looked at various elements for the design,” Joe explained. The rosary features artwork from the Shrine Church. The crucifix is a replica of the twelve foot wooden crucifix suspended above the baldacchino in the Shrine Church. The statue of St. Juan Diego from the church plaza is depicted on the centerpiece of the rosary. On the reverse side of the centrepiece is the Shrine’s coat of arms. The Our Father beads show the four doctors of the Church depicted beneath the dome of the Shrine Church, St. Ambrose, St. Cyril of Jerusalem, St. Ephrem, and St. John Damascene. “Once Ghirelli designed the elements, I picked out the various bead materials and colors,” Joe noted. These rosaries are rich with meaning! Other Shrine-specific items include: Mother of the Unborn Statue A nine-inch reproduction of the iconic bronze statue of Our Lady of Guadalupe seated, holding three unborn babies in her arms at the Memorial to the Unborn. Comforting and inspiring, the intricate details of sculptor Antonio Castellanos-Basich come through beautifully in the reproduction. Shrine Keepsake Ornament An original Shrine design with final production through the La Crosse Preservation Alliance, this heirloom quality keepsake is layered in gold and includes a beautiful rendering of the Shrine Church with accents in three dimensions. The gift box includes a leaflet with information about the Shrine Church. The Shrine Story Booklet This booklet explores the development and construction of the Shrine Church, with original articles and stories and many interesting facts. It includes professional photos of the church and grounds. Shrine Official DVD This exclusive DVD tells the history of the Shrine in La Crosse, the story of Our Lady of Guadalupe, and much more, with historical footage and photography and a reenactment of the Guadalupe story which was filmed in Mexico. The DVD includes a version with Spanish subtitles and a performance of an inspiring song, “The Salvation Poem,” which was filmed in the Shrine Church. Devotional Area Booklets The Stations of the Cross This beautiful booklet features the bronze Stations from the outdoor Stations of the Cross, including the small symbols found above the large station image. Each of the symbols is explained. The prayers were composed by Saint Alphonsus Liguori. Mother of Good Counsel Votive Candle Chapel Make a virtual visit to the Votive Candle Chapel with this full-color booklet that explores our stainedglass images and much more. This small booklet contains a treasury of information on Marian apparitions from around the world. Rosary Walk – Coming soon! FROM THE RECTOR’S DESK dEAR TEPEYAC rEADERS, The month of October ushers in the beautiful fall season, particularly here at the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, with all the natural beauty surrounding it. The month of October is itself a beautiful time because it is the Month of the Rosary, a month to commit ourselves anew to the prayer of the Rosary in our daily lives. Given the current state of affairs in the Church and in the world, there is every reason to pray this greatest of Marian prayers. power of the Rosary, Sister Lucia dos Santos, the principal Fatima seer, could assure us, “There is no problem, I tell you, no matter how difficult it is, that we cannot resolve by the prayer of the Holy Rosary.” Blessed Pius IX could add, “Give me an army saying the Rosary, and I will conquer the world.” Let us be dedicated members of this “Rosary Army” and thus contribute to true peace in the world! In his letter on the Rosary, St. John Paul II offers another reason why the Rosary is so urgent for our times, namely, the family. As the Sovereign Pontiff observes, the family has been “increasingly menaced by forces of disintegration on both the ideological and practical planes, so as to make us fear for the future of this fundamental and indispensable institution and, with it, for the future of society as a whole” (n. 6). Though the forces Prior to and accompanying any peace nego- of evil have always sought to undermine the tiations between conflicting parties, there is family, we are presently witnessing assaults the need to pray for peace, because peace on the family of truly epic proportions, with is, first and foremost, a gift from God, who is the worldwide epidemic of divorce and reour Peace. Furthermore, marriage, contraception, peace can be obtained abortion and so-called “Listen, put it into your heart, my from God through the in- youngest and dearest son, that the “samesex marriage.” tercession of Our Lady, thing that frightens you, the thing The Church has always “Queen of Peace,” and by that afflicts you, is nothing...” been and always will be carrying out her repeated the great defender and requests at Fatima in champion of the family. This is especially 1917: “Pray the Rosary every day, in order to apparent in light of the Synod on the Family obtain peace for the world, and the end of the war” (May 13, 1917). The devout recitation of (held in Rome in October 2014) and the next the Rosary can truly work wonders and defeat World Meeting of Families (to be held in Philall enemies of peace, as it did, for example, adelphia in September 2015), from which we at the Battle of Lepanto in 1571, or, again, at can certainly expect much good fruit. In his Apostolic Letter Rosarium Virginis Mariae (The Rosary of the Virgin Mary), St. John Paul II offers two particular reasons why the prayer of the Rosary is so urgent and timely. “First of all,” he explains, “is the need to implore from God the gift of peace” (n. 6). Is not peace sorely needed in today’s world, so full of violence, hatred, war and division? the Battle of Vienna in 1683, and, more recently, in the defeat of Communism in Brazil in 1964. Because of the seemingly limitless Here, too, the prayer of the Rosary will prove to be indispensable, for the Rosary is the prayer of the family and for the family! Let us be generous and fervent in our prayer of the Rosary in this battle for the family, that it might be safeguarded and flourish according to God’s plan! With such a great need for peace and for the welfare of the family throughout the world, we would have every good reason to be discouraged, humanly speaking. But, as Christians, we know that “nothing will be impossible for God” (Luke 1:37), and that prayer, especially the devout and fervent prayer of the Rosary, can and does “tap into” the power of the Almighty! We know full well that Our Lady is with us as our most powerful intercessor and as our most loving mother. May Our Lady’s words to St. Juan Diego serve as a consoling reminder that her maternal presence is never lacking in our lives: “Listen, put it into your heart, my youngest and dearest son, that the thing that frightens you, the thing that afflicts you, is nothing: do not let it disturb you […] Am I not here, I, who am your mother? Are you not under my shadow and protection? Am I not the source of your joy? Are you not in the hollow of my mantle, in the crossing of my arms? Do you need something more?” Our Lady of Guadalupe, Queen of Peace and Queen of the Family, pray for us! Fr. Jacinto Chapin, F.I., Rector Memorial to the Unborn Brochure and Prayer Card The Shrine now offers an informative brochure and an attractive prayer card about the Memorial to the Unborn. The brochure describes the purpose and beauty of the Memorial to the Unborn. It also offers a new opportunity for pilgrims to donate on behalf of families who may not be able to afford the suggested donation for an engraving or for the entombment of the remains of an unborn child. The prayer card features an image of the Mother of the Unborn, and a prayer for all deceased children and for their families. w w w. g u a d a l u p e s h ri n e. o rg • Shri ne of O u r Lad y of G uadalupe 7 Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe PAID P.O. Box 1237 Eau Claire, WI permit #1557 La Crosse, Wisconsin 54602-1237 USA I N SI DE 2 Executive Director’s Message 3 Volunteer Profile 4-5Who are the four saints depicted below the interior dome, and why are they there? Events First Saturday Devotions November 1 | December 6 All Saints’ Day November 1 All Souls’ Day November 2 Shrine Saints – Venerate First Class Relic Blessed Miguel Pro - November 23 Shrine Saints Blessed John Duns Scotus November 8 Saint John Damascene (Church pendentive) December 4 Saint Ambrose (Church pendentive) December 7 6Shrine Exclusives - Gift Shop 7 From the Rector’s Desk SHRINE OF OUR LADY OF GUADALUPE Saint Nicholas of Myra: A Celebration for children December 6 Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception December 8 Saint Juan Diego December 9 Solemnity of Our Lady of Guadalupe December 12 FOR ALL EVENTS, VISIT: www.guadalupeshrine.org/events SHRINE CLOSED: November 27 Thanksgiving Day December 25 Christmas Day January 1 New Year’s Day www.guadalupeshrine.org CO MI N G TO TH E SHRINE Blessing of the Guardian Angel Statue! December 12 Memorial to the Unborn by Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke Find us at: