Rosary – Prayer of
Vain Repetition
Almost
all non-Catholic Religion accuses Catholics of praying in vain repetition like
the Rosary when Jesus spoke of it in KJV’s MATTHEW 6:7 “But when ye pray, use not vain repetitions, as the
heathen do: for they think that they shall be heard for their much speaking.”
None
Catholics would always say, Jesus condemned such kind of praying in Matthew 6:7.
However, is not the Lord’s Prayer
part of the prayers in the Rosary?
When
Jesus was asked by one of his disciple, James to teach the people how to pray, Jesus
replied: MATTHEW
6:9-13 “After
this manner therefore pray ye: Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy
name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven. Give us
this day our daily bread. And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors. And
lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil: For thine is the
kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever. Amen.”
Let us then look at the context of what is in the bible.
Jesus
said: “But when ye pray, use not vain repetitions,
as the heathen do:” First of all, let us understand who the Heathen were
and what were their practices at that time. Heathen (Heb. plural goyum), at
first the word goyim denoted generally all the nations of the world. The Jews
afterwards became a people distinguished in a marked manner from the other
goyim. They were a separate people (Leviticus 20:23; 26:14-45; Deuteronomy 28),
and the other nations, the Amorites, Hittites, etc., were the goyim, the
heathen, with whom the Jews were forbidden to be associated in any way (Joshua
23:7; 1 Kings 11:2 ). The practice of idolatry was the characteristic of these
nations, and hence the word came to designate idolaters (Psalms 106:47;
Jeremiah 46:28; Lamentations 1:3 ; Isaiah 36:18 ), the wicked (Psalms 9:5
Psalms 9:15 Psalms 9:17).
The
corresponding Greek word in the New Testament, ethne, has similar shades of
meaning. In Acts 22:21 , Galatians 3:14 , it denotes the people of the earth
generally; and in Matthew 6:7 , an idolater. In modern usage the word denotes
all nations that are strangers to revealed religion.
It is therefore very clear that Jesus was reminding the Jews not to do what the Heathen
(pagans) were doing.
Jesus
as he continued: “…for they think that they shall
be heard for their much speaking.” Again, Jesus is only critical of the
Heathen's vain repetition way of praying.
When
the Heathens pray, they babble loudly thinking and wanting that their babbling will
be heard by many because of their many words. They pray not in meditative form or in the silence of their heart but they pray to be seen and heard by as many to show people that they are praying or for their idol gods to hear and see, yet their idol gods are lifeless because they are man-made and products of their mind.
Faith in God is to believe to see not to see to believe. The Heathens want to be seen and heard when they are praying. And since their prayers are worthless, they just chant and keep repeating same chanting over and over again. Chanting endlessly is the true "vain repetition" when you pray to lifeless man-made idols. When you pray to God it is pleasing in his eyes.
If ever these idol gods can see and hear them, surely they are not of God. This is what the First of the Ten Commandments is all about. What is not of God is of the devil.
On the other hand, many at times, Catholics pray the Rosary in the silence of their hearts, homes, in church or in places of prayers. I have not seen a single person prayed allowed when they are alone or even in houses of prayers but of course it is different situation during group praying when someone would lead the congregation.
The spiritual side of "vain repetition" is when one prays for forgiveness and yet keeps repeating the same sin over and over again. One simple example is when one is accustom to cursing even in a slightest situation, then ask God for understanding and forgiveness, then does the cursing day in and day out. But God reads our hearts and mind and he knows if we are sincere or not. If one is not sincere, then it may fall into this category of "vain repetition".
Faith in God is to believe to see not to see to believe. The Heathens want to be seen and heard when they are praying. And since their prayers are worthless, they just chant and keep repeating same chanting over and over again. Chanting endlessly is the true "vain repetition" when you pray to lifeless man-made idols. When you pray to God it is pleasing in his eyes.
If ever these idol gods can see and hear them, surely they are not of God. This is what the First of the Ten Commandments is all about. What is not of God is of the devil.
On the other hand, many at times, Catholics pray the Rosary in the silence of their hearts, homes, in church or in places of prayers. I have not seen a single person prayed allowed when they are alone or even in houses of prayers but of course it is different situation during group praying when someone would lead the congregation.
The spiritual side of "vain repetition" is when one prays for forgiveness and yet keeps repeating the same sin over and over again. One simple example is when one is accustom to cursing even in a slightest situation, then ask God for understanding and forgiveness, then does the cursing day in and day out. But God reads our hearts and mind and he knows if we are sincere or not. If one is not sincere, then it may fall into this category of "vain repetition".
Further,
Jesus teaches in MATTHEW 6:
Take heed that ye do not your alms before men, to be seen of
them: otherwise ye have no reward of your Father which is in heaven. Therefore when thou doest thine alms, do not sound a trumpet
before thee, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, that
they may have glory of men. Verily I say unto you, They have their reward.
But when thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy
right hand doeth: That thine alms may be in secret: and thy Father which seeth
in secret himself shall reward thee openly.
And when thou prayest, thou shalt not be as the hypocrites
are: for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and in the corners of the
streets, that they may be seen of men. Verily I say unto you, They have their
reward.
But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when
thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret; and thy Father
which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly. But when ye pray, use not vain repetitions, as the heathen do:
for they think that they shall be heard for their much speaking. Be not ye therefore like unto them: for your Father knoweth
what things ye have need of, before ye ask him.
Moreover when ye fast, be not, as the hypocrites, of a sad
countenance: for they disfigure their faces, that they may appear unto men to
fast. Verily I say unto you, They have their reward.
What are the prayers in the
Rosary?
The
Rosary is a Scripture-based prayer. It begins with the Apostles' Creed, which
summarizes the great mysteries of the Catholic faith. The Our Father (the Lord’s Prayer), which introduces each mystery, is
from the Gospels.
The first part of the Hail Mary is the angel's words
announcing Christ's birth and Elizabeth's greeting to Mary.
St. Pius V
officially added the second part of the Hail Mary. The Mysteries of the Rosary
center on the events of Christ's life. There are four sets of Mysteries:
Joyful, Sorrowful, Glorious and––added by Pope John Paul II in 2002––the
Luminous.
The
repetition in the Rosary is meant to lead one into restful and contemplative
prayer related to each Mystery. The gentle repetition of the words helps us to
enter into the silence of our hearts, where Christ's spirit dwells. The Rosary
can be said privately or with a group.
During
the Agony in the Garden, in Gethsemane, Jesus repeated His own prayer three
times. Once surely was sufficient, but the distress of His own mind and the
human part of Him needed more; His repeated prayer was neither babbling nor
meaningless.
For
that matter, The seraphim in heaven, engage in repetitive prayer for eternity:
“They do not stop exclaiming: ‘Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord God almighty” REVELATION 4:8 ”And the four living
creatures had each of them six wings; and round about and within they are full
of eyes. And they rested not day and night, saying: Holy, holy, holy, Lord God
Almighty, who was, and who is, and who is to come.”
Earnest
prayer made to God, through vocal or silent means — extemporaneous, liturgical
or ROMANS 12:12 “Rejoicing in hope.
Patient in tribulation. Instant in prayer.” — can never be vain, and St.
Paul would have us “persevere in prayer, always rejoice” and “pray without ceasing” 1 THESSALONIANS 5:17. Devotional
prayers such as the Rosary help us with this by bringing us into contemplation
of and appreciation for the depths of God’s love for us, outside of time or
seasons.
T.
L. Frazier
Perhaps
the most emblematic sacramental in Catholicism is the rosary, that string of
beads with a crucifix attached. Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart pictured one on
the dust jacket of his anti-Catholic book, <Catholicism and
Christianity>.1 Swaggart wrote, "The rosary (or prayer beads) was
introduced by Peter the Hermit in A.D. 1090. This was copied from the Hindus
and Muhammadans [sic]. The counting of prayers is a pagan practice and is expressly
condemned by Christ (Matt. 6:5-7)."2
Aside
from the fact that the rosary consists of prayer beads, Swaggart got nothing
right. This is regrettable since such crude misrepresentations frighten away
uninformed Christians from a powerful aid to prayer and contemplation.
Tradition
links the rosary not to Peter the Hermit but to St. Dominic (1170-1221), who is
said to have received it from the Virgin Mary to combat the Albigensian heresy.
This legend seems to be derived from the writings of Alan de la Roche
(1428-1475), that indefatigable Dominican preacher of the rosary. Modern
critical scholarship from Dominicans and others reveals a far more complicated
history, though one having nothing to do with Hindus and Muslims.
Medieval
monks had a practice of daily praying the 150 psalms. Since lay brothers of the
orders were illiterate and couldn't read the psalms, among them arose the
practice of reciting the Our Father 150 times. Beads were used to keep track of
the prayers. (The word "bede" in Middle English, from which we derive
the word "bead," originally meant "prayer.") This practice
spread among the laity, and other easily-remembered prayers were added. During
the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries the rosary settled into its present form.
It now consists of the Apostles' Creed, the Our Father, the Hail Mary, and the
Gloria.
The
Apostles' Creed appeared first as a second-century Roman baptismal creed, and
it took its present form in the 400s. Although this creed wasn't written by the
apostles, it's generally agreed it could very well have been of apostolic
origin.
The
Our Father is prayed on the solitary beads that separate the groups of ten
beads (the "decades"). Every Christian is familiar with this prayer,
which is found in Matthew 6:9-13. Significantly, it is given in the same
passage of Scripture in which Jesus says, "But when you pray, do not use
vain repetitions as the heathen do. For they think that they will be heard for
their many words" (Matt. 6:7). This is the verse Jimmy Swaggart says
condemns the "pagan practice" of "counting prayers." Though
Jesus himself gave us the Our Father, some Fundamentalists try to discourage
Christians from using it as anything other than a model prayer because they
feel that actually praying it would constitute a "vain repetition."
But
let's look at the context of the "vain repetitions" verse. Matthew
6:5-6 deal with the prayer practices of the Jews themselves; Jesus derides
these as hypocritical. He doesn't condemn repetitive Jewish prayers, of which
there were a countless number. For example, the book of Psalms is a collection
of hymns and prayers repeatedly used in Jewish celebrations in which Jesus
himself participated. The Passover, celebrated by Jesus before his Crucifixion,
had fixed prayers that were repeated annually. Following the Last Supper, Jesus
went to the Garden of Gethsemane and prayed the same prayer three times in a
row (Matt. 26:39-44)—he engaged in repetitive prayer.
In
the next pair of verses Jesus warns against the prayer practices of the pagans,
who held a magical view of prayer and whose repetitious prayers he <does>
condemn. Verse 7 reads, in the King James Version, "[D]o not use vain
repetitions [<battalogeo>] as the heathen do." This is a misleading
rendering. The Greek word <battalogeo> is better translated as
"babbling," and it is so translated in the New International Version.
(The Revised Standard Version has "empty phrases.")3 Jesus isn't
condemning mere repetition—something he himself engaged in, as did other good Jews—but
the babbling of the pagans.
What
sort of babbling did the pagans practice? Look at 1 Kings 18:2629, where the
pagan prophets on Mount Carmel tried to invoke Baal all day long, repeatedly
calling on his name and performing ritual dances: "[They] called on the
name of Baal from morning until noon, saying, 'Oh Baal, answer us!' But there
was no voice, no one answered. And they leaped about the altar which they had
made.... And they cried aloud, and cut themselves after their custom with
swords and lances, until the blood gushed out of them. And as midday passed,
they raved on until the time of the offering of the [evening] oblation, but
there was no voice, no one answered, no one heeded." Once the pagan
prophets had given up, Elijah came forward and called on the God of Israel, and
immediately his prayer was answered.
The
prayers of the pagan prophets were "vain" because, after spending the
entire day frantically calling upon him, Baal never responded. He wasn't a real
god, unlike the God of Israel, who always answers sincere prayer. Jesus' point
in Matthew 6:7 is that we don't need to spend all day leaping over altars,
cutting ourselves, and raving to get our heavenly Father's ear. He hears our
prayers no matter what type of prayer is offered: lengthy or short, composed or
extemporaneous, group or individual, repetitious or unique.
Thus
Jesus says in the next verse: "Therefore do not be like them [the pagans].
For your Father knows the things you have need of before you ask him"
(Matt. 6:8). This doesn't mean that, since God already knows our needs, we
don't have to pray at all. As Jesus taught in the parable of the persistent
widow (Luke 18:1-8), we are to be tenacious in prayer, freely and repeatedly
(repetitiously) bringing our petition before the seat of grace.
Paul
says we are to "pray without ceasing" (1 Thess. 5:17), not "pray
reservedly lest we repeat ourselves" (as is inevitable in ceaseless
prayer). One of the benefits of the rosary is that it leads naturally to the
ceaseless prayer and meditation which Scripture enjoins upon us.
If
there should be any lingering doubt that God doesn't look askance on repetition
in prayer, note that in Revelation 4:8-11 we find the heavenly host engaging in
repetitive prayer ("Holy, holy, holy Lord God Almighty"), said
"day and night" before the throne of the Almighty, followed by
repetitious antiphons from the elders.
The
Hail Mary is the heart of the rosary and is said on each of the ten beads which
are grouped together to form a decade, there being fifteen decades totaling 150
Hail Marys- as many Hail Marys as there are psalms. The first part of the
prayer is composed of two Bible verses strung together: "Hail Mary full of
grace, the Lord is with thee" (Luke 1:28) and "blessed art thou among
women and blessed is the fruit of thy womb" (Luke 1:42).
The
remainder of the prayer reads, "Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us
sinners now and at the hour of our death. Amen." As she was on earth
called the object of divine grace (Luke 1:28) and is now in heaven a glorified
saint, Mary is called "holy."
The
title "Mother of God" (Greek, <Theotokos>,
"God-bearer") is an ancient one. A piece of papyrus found in Egypt
and dating to 250-270 invokes the intercession of the <Theotokos>.4
Catholics maintain that the person born of the Virgin Mary is the Second Person
of the Blessed Trinity, the divine Word (Greek, <Logos>), and is therefore
God (John 1:1,14). As Jesus is God, humanity and divinity fully united in one
Person, the mother of Jesus is therefore the mother (but not the originator or
creator) of God; she is the <Theotokos>.5
Many
non-Catholics object to the practice of asking the saints in heaven, including
the Virgin Mary, to pray for us. Often cited is 1 Timothy 2:5, "For there
is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus."
Since Jesus is our only mediator, they argue, Mary (or any other saint) shouldn't
be asked to pray on our behalf. By praying "Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray
for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death," Catholics intrude on
the sole mediatorship of Christ. But this idea can be held only if one believes
that death creates a chasm between Christians on earth and Christians in
heaven.
Catholics
believe that Christians aren't separated from Christ or each other at death
(Rom 8:38-39). The Body of Christ "is one though it has many parts"
(1 Cor. 12:12), and Christians don't become amputated from the Body when they
go to heaven. Nor are there two Churches, one in heaven and another on earth,
separated by death and thus somehow not in communion with each other. The
Church is the Bride of Christ (Rev. 21:9ff), and Jesus is a strict monogamist.
We reject any idea that separates us from one another and consequently destroys
the unity of the Church.
As
stated in the Apostles' Creed, Catholics believe in "the communion of
saints." This means that since we're all one in Christ, we can ask the
saints in heaven to pray for us every bit as much as we can ask our brothers
and sisters in the Lord here on earth to pray for us. Since we are specifically
commanded to pray for each other (1 Tim. 2:1, Eph. 2:1, Heb. 4:16), and since
the word of the Lord "stands firm in the heavens" as well as on earth
(Ps. 119:89), we don't violate Scripture by asking for the prayers of the
saints in heaven. It is precisely because of Christ's mediatorship that
Christians in heaven can pray for those on earth.
We
know the saints in heaven are aware of what occurs to us (Heb. 12:1, Luke 15:7)
and that they offer prayers (Rev. 5:8-10, 8:3), including praying for God's
intervention on the earth (Rev. 6:9-10). Hebrews 12:22-24 tells us we approach
not only Jesus, "the mediator of the new covenant," but the heavenly
Jerusalem and the "assembly of the first-born enrolled in heaven" and
"the spirits of the just made perfect." We don't hesitate to ask them
for their prayers because the prayers of the righteous "availeth
much" (Jas. 5:16b).
Some
object that the saints are dead and that the Bible forbids communication with
the dead (Lev. 19:31, 20:6, 27) through mediums and other occultic means
(necromancy).
But
Catholics do not attempt to get information from spirits, as is done in
seances. The Church condemns occult practices. Moreover, the saints in heaven
aren't "dead"; they're more alive than you or I: "I am the God
of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob," Jesus quoted from
Exodus. "He is not the God of the dead, but the God of the living. Ye
therefore do greatly err" (Mark 12:26-27). If Jesus did not intend the
saints on earth to communicate with the saints in heaven, he certainly set a
rather poor example in appearing to Peter, James, and John on Mount Tabor (Matt.
17:1-8).
Sometimes
Fundamentalists such as Jimmy Swaggart say that praying ten Hail Marys to every
Our Father confirms their worst fears about Catholicism: Catholics prefer Mary
to God by a margin of ten to one. This assertion is not only offensive to
Catholics, but it's logically awry as well. Looking at a King James Bible, does
the fact that Paul's name occurs 126 times in the book of Acts compared with
only 68 times for Jesus' name imply that the author of Acts thought Paul twice
as important as Jesus? Does the fact that the Protestant translation of the
book of Esther contains neither the word "God" nor the word
"Lord" mean that the author of that book was an atheist? Such
statistical "proofs" prove nothing at all. The rosary is a devotion
in honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary, who, under divine inspiration, herself
prophesied that all generations would call her blessed (Luke 1:48). In such
devotions Catholics happily fulfill the prophecy, recalling that God blesses us
when we bless those whom he has especially favored (Gen. 12:3, 27:29, Num.
24:9).
After
the ten Hail Marys, the Gloria is said on the solitary bead separating the
decades. It's a doxology that has been used since the Trinitarian controversies
of the early Church: "Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the
Holy Spirit. As it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be, world
without end. Amen." It is, like the Apostles' Creed and the Our Father, to
be found in most mainline Protestant churches.
Yet
there is more to the rosary than "rattling off" prayers. The rosary
is a contemplation of the Gospels. With each decade is associated a
"mystery," Gospel episode to be meditated upon, the word
"mystery" being used in the theological sense of divine revelation.
There are fifteen mysteries divided into three groups of five: joyful,
sorrowful, and glorious.
The
joyful mysteries are the Annunciation (Luke 1:26-38), Mary's visitation to
Elizabeth (Luke 1:3956), the Nativity (Luke 2:1-20), the presentation of Jesus
in the Temple (Luke 2:22-38), and the finding of Jesus in the Temple (Luke
2:41-52).
The
sorrowful mysteries are the agony in the garden of Gethsemane (Luke 22:39-53),
the scourging (John 19:1; Is. 53:5), the crowning with thorns (Mark 15:17-20),
the way of the cross (Mark 15:20-22), and the Crucifixion (John 19:18-30).
The
glorious mysteries comprise: the Resurrection (John 20:1-29), the Ascension
(Acts 1:6-12), the descent of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:1-13), the Assumption of
Mary (Rev. 12:12), and Mary's coronation in heaven (Rev. 12:1-2, 5).
Note
that all of the fifteen mysteries, except for the last two, are explicitly
taught in the Bible. We'll close with an examination of the two that are
present only by implication.
The
bodily Assumption of Mary into heaven at the end of her life is neither
explicitly taught nor contradicted by the Bible, though there are precedents
(Hebrews 11:5 mentions the assumption of Enoch; 2 Kings 2:113 recounts that of
Elijah; Paul admits the possibility of his own bodily assumption in 2
Corinthians 12:2-4). There is no indication that Mary's remains were venerated
as relics (a customary practice in the early Church), and the belief in her
Assumption is held both in the East (Orthodox) and in the West (Catholic).
Mary
is perceived in Catholic thought as the proto-Christian and the symbol of the
Church as a whole. Hence her Assumption is seen as a sign of the ultimate
destiny of the Church: Christ will come at the end in order to take his Bride
into the kingdom and to glorify her (2 Thess. 4:16-17). The belief in the
Assumption is affirmed by all Christian communities having historic links with
the ancient Church—which our Lord promised to lead into all truth (John
16:12-13; cf. Matt. 16:18, 28:20). The belief is very old as well as
widespread, and those who deny this teaching do so without scriptural warrant,
for Christians are to follow <all> apostolic traditions, whether or not
written in the New Testament (2 Thess. 2:15).
The
coronation of Mary in heaven should be understood against the Jewish background
of early Christianity. In Judah, partly because of the Fourth Commandment (Ex.
20:12), the mother of the anointed king had a function of considerable
importance, and her name is with only two exceptions associated with the
accession of the king in the official annals.6 The king's mother bore the
powerful and prestigious title of Gebirah7 and received honors of the first
order. She had an official place at the court, was mistress of the harem, had
enough power to seize complete control over the nation (as did Athaliah in 842
B.C., 2 Kgs. 11:1-3), was sent into exile with the king (as was Nehushta in 597
B.C., Jer. 29:2), and could be deposed (as was King Asa's idolatrous
grandmother, Maacah, who first became queen mother during the reign of her son
Abijam,1 Kgs. 15:2, 10,13, 2 Chron. 15:16). The <Gebirah> was a
monarchical institution and had a throne and a crown.8
As
Jesus is the ultimate King of the Jews, fulfilling the messianic prophecy in 2
Samuel 7:10-17, it would be strange indeed if Mary did not have this crown as
the ultimate queen mother. The monarchical nature of the kingdom of God,
complete with queen mother, may be difficult to appreciate for those who live
in a democratic culture, but it was something accepted as natural in early
Christendom, as witnessed by the art and literature.
In
1 Kings 1:16, 31 we see Queen Bathsheba petitioning King David, her husband, by
bowing "her face to the earth, and [doing] homage to the king, and
[saying], 'Let my lord, King David, live forever!'" This was common
protocol in the court of an Oriental monarch, though the position of the queen
seems to have been somewhat higher in other Near Eastern countries than it was
in Judah and Israel (but compare Jezebel in 1 Kings 21:7-11).
Contrast
this to the next chapter. In 1 Kings 2:13-20 Solomon, the son of David, has
come to the throne. Adonijah approaches "Bathsheba the mother of
Solomon" with a request and says, "Please speak to King Solomon, for
he will not refuse you." Bathsheba promises to intercede with Solomon on
his behalf (compare John 2:1-11, where Mary intercedes with Jesus), not seeing
through Adonijah's plot to seize the throne. "Bathsheba therefore went to
King Solomon, to speak to him for Adonijah." The use of the title
"King Solomon" hints that Solomon acts in his official capacity (cf.
verse 23).
Instead
of Bathsheba scraping her face on the floor before Solomon as previously she
had done before David, King Solomon "rose up to meet her and bowed down to
her and sat down on his throne and had a throne set for the king's mother; so
she sat at his right hand. Then she said, 'I desire one small petition of you;
do not refuse me.' And the king said to her, 'Ask it, my mother, for I will not
refuse you'" (vv. 19-20). Solomon wasn't merely being a nice son. It was a
custom throughout the ancient world to make the right-hand seat the place of
honor and of delegated authority, which is precisely why the New Testament
speaks of Christ as being seated at the right hand of the Father. Bathsheba's
status in society had changed; she had become the "king's mother."
The
Bible teaches that the Old Testament types (such as the Passover lamb, the
Flood, Hagar, and Sarah) find their fulfillment in the New Testament (John
1:29, 1 Pet. 3:18-21, Gal. 4:21-31). As Christ is superior to the Passover lamb
which foreshadowed him, the fulfillment of the type is always greater than the
type itself. Christians have recognized that Jesus Christ, Son of David and
King of Israel <par excellence>, is the perfect fulfillment of King
Solomon, the original son of David. Christians have also recognized that the
Virgin Mary fulfills perfectly the role of Solomon's mother, the original
<Gebirah> who foreshadowed the mother of the Messiah.
Catholics
believe Jesus rose from his throne in heaven and, like Solomon, came down to
meet his mother and elevated her to be with him (the Assumption). He then led
her to a throne set up for her at his right hand in a position of authority and
special honor (the coronation). Here, like Bathsheba, she intercedes on our
behalf as the queen mother of the Church, the spiritual Israel (Rom. 11:17ff, 1
Pet. 2:9). From lowly handmaid of the Lord to <Gebirah> of the kingdom of
God: "For he has regarded the lowly state of his maidservant; for behold,
henceforth all generations will call me blessed. For he who is mighty has done
great things for me.... He has put down the mighty from their thrones and
exalted the lowly" (Luke 1:48-49, 52).
Epicetus
in the second century said that "if your heart is set upon a crown, make
and put on one of roses, for it will make the prettier appearance."
"Rosary" comes from the Latin <rosarium>, which means
"rose garden" and suggests the presention of a rose wreath to our
Lady.
Here
is the crowning of the King's Mother (Rev. 12:1) and, more importantly, of the
King of Kings himself (Rev. 6:2). It is through persevering in the faith that
we hope to be given our own crowns (Rev. 2:10), and no other devotional
practice surpasses the rosary in obtaining and strengthening the grace
necessary for this end. "Every athlete exercises discipline in every way.
They do it to win a perishable crown, but we an imperishable one" (1 Cor.
9:25).
T.
L. Frazier writes from the Los Angeles area, where he prays the rosary
regularly.
“pray without ceasing” 1 THESSALONIANS 5:17
The Rosary is Biblical
"In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost."
The Apostles Creed:
I believe in God,
the Father Almighty,
Creator of Heaven and earth.
I believe in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord,
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,
born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, died and was buried.
He descended to the dead.
On the third day, He rose again.
He ascended to Heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again to judge the living and the dead.
I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the Holy Catholic Church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and life everlasting. Amen.
The Lord's Prayer
"Thus therefore you pray:
Our Father who art in heaven,
hallowed be thy name.
Thy kingdom come.
Thy will be done on earth, as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread,
and forgive us our trespasses,
as we forgive those who trespass against us,
and lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil."
(Matthew 6:9-13)
Monday - Joyful Mysteries of the Rosary
Saturday - Joyful Mysteries of the Rosary
Tuesday - Sorrowful Mysteries of the Rosary
Friday - Sorrowful Mysteries of the Rosary
Sunday - Glorious Mysteries of the Rosary
Wednesday - Glorious Mysteries of the Rosary
Thursday - Luminous Mysteries of the Rosary
“pray without ceasing” 1 THESSALONIANS 5:17
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